Tag: Quality

Significant CMS moves include withdrawal of emergency abortion care guidance

Editor's Note CMS has rescinded a 2022 guidance that protected clinicians providing emergency abortion care under the Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act (EMTALA), removing a key federal safeguard for providers in states with abortion restrictions, according to a June 2 article in Becker’s Hospital Review. The guidance, originally issued…

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By: Matt Danford
June 5, 2025
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Leaders translate legislative priorities to perioperative practice

The wave of new legal requirements for surgical smoke evacuation across the country has given OR leaders a crash course in how to act on any new legislation. Based on this experience, complying with other new and pending laws will put these skills to the test. Major hurdles are likely…

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By: Carina Stanton
June 5, 2025
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Partnership with Epic fuels ASA’s push for smarter, safer anesthesia

Editor's Note The American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) has partnered with Epic to launch the Anesthesia Community Registry (ACR), which is designed to enable easier data collection, benchmarking, and insight generation at scale. Powered by Epic’s new Community Registries platform, the ACR will complement ASA’s existing National Anesthesia Clinical Outcomes…

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By: Matt Danford
June 4, 2025
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Study: Blood test detects colorectal cancer but misses most precancerous polyps

Editor's Note A new blood test shows promise in detecting colorectal cancer—the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the US—but was less effective at identifying precancerous polyps, according to a June 2 announcement from Kaiser Permanente. Not yet approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, the test is…

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By: Matt Danford
June 4, 2025
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Study: OR waste training boosts recycling, but impact fades with time

Editor's Note A single training session on waste segregation significantly increased recycling rates among OR staff, but gains began to erode within two months, according to a study published May 26 in Nature: Scientific Reports. Conducted at Ankara University Cebeci Hospital, the quasi-experimental study assessed the impact of a single-session,…

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By: Matt Danford
June 4, 2025
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Painkiller without opioid risks shows potential in animal trials

Editor's Note An experimental compound developed at Duke University School of Medicine provides strong pain relief without the side effects or addiction potential of opioids, according to a May 19 announcement from the university. Known as SBI-810, the drug targets a specific receptor in the nervous system and uses a…

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By: Matt Danford
June 3, 2025
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Proposed HHS, NIH budget cuts reveal administration priorities

Editor's Note The Trump administration’s proposed fiscal year 2026 budget calls for slashing the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) discretionary budget by $32 billion, a nearly 25% cut that brings the total to $95 billion. Fierce Healthcare reported the news June 2.  Although many of the proposed cuts…

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By: Matt Danford
June 3, 2025
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Study: Surgeon-anesthesiologist familiarity could reduce complications in select surgeries

Editor's Note Greater familiarity between surgeons and anesthesiologists was associated with reduced major morbidity in certain high-risk procedures, according to a Canadian retrospective cohort study published in JAMA Surgery. As detailed in a May 28 report from MedPage Today, the population-based analysis included more than 711,000 index procedures, finding an…

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By: Matt Danford
June 2, 2025
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New collaboration links National Trauma Awareness Month, Stop the Bleed Month

Editor's Note America’s Blood Centers (ABC) and the American College of Surgeons (ACS) Stop the Bleed program have launched a national collaboration to strengthen trauma response and emergency preparedness, according to a May 30 announcement. The initiative connects public education in bleeding control with efforts to maintain a stable national…

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By: Matt Danford
June 2, 2025
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Study: Simple hysterectomy survival comparable to more radical procedures in early cervical cancer

JAMA (healthcare publication) Network logo

Editor's Note Simple hysterectomy provides similar long-term survival outcomes to modified radical or radical hysterectomy for patients with low-risk, early-stage cervical cancer, according to a large cohort study published May 15 in JAMA Network Open. Consistent with prior research, the findings add to the growing body of evidence supporting conservative…

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By: Matt Danford
June 2, 2025
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