Monday, December 13, 2010

December 2010

PARADIGM BYTES
Newsletter for Paradigm 97
December 13, 2010

Wishing you a wonderful Christmas and Holiday Season.

PARADIGM DEFINED: 1) an outstandingly clear or typical example or archetype.2) a philosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline within which theories, laws, and generalizations, and the experiments performed in support of them, are formulated.

Our website...... http://paradigm97.blogspot.com/ Please copy, paste, and bookmark it.

MISSION STATEMENT
We believe that nurses need each other for support during the "lean and mean" days to help survive them. We offer research results and other ideas to enrich the nursing experience.

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SNIPPETS

Everything you wanted to know about HEMP and were afraid to ask For thousands of years, up until 1883, hemp was the world’s largest agricultural crop, from which the majority of fiber, fabric, soap, lighting oil, paper, incense, and medicines were produced.
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Because hemp seeds contain all the essential amino acids necessary for health, it was a primary source of essential food oil and protein for humans and animals. The oil from hemp seeds has the highest percentage of essential fatty acids and the lowest percentage of saturated fats.
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An acre of hemp produces more paper than an acre of trees. Paper made from hemp lasts for centuries, compared to 25-80 years for paper made from wood pulp. The US Declaration of Independence was written on hemp paper. Although industrial hemp contains less than 1% of THC, the psychoactive component of marijuana, it was forced from the market in the late 19th century by a campaign launched by newspaper magnates who also held controlling shares in the paper mill and cotton industry.
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In 1937, Congress passed the Marijuana Tax Act which effectively halted hemp production in the United States. It was briefly overridden during the Second World War when overseas supplies dried up but the campaign, called Hemp For Victory, was quickly withdrawn after the war.
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In 1941, the Ford motor company produced an experimental automobile with a plastic body composed of 70% cellulose fibers from hemp. The car body could absorb blows 10 times as great as steel without denting. The car was also designed to run on hemp fuel. Because of the ban on both hemp and alcohol the car was never mass produced.


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Hypertensive Crisis: Cardiology in Review Hypertension is a common chronic medical condition affecting over 65 million Americans. Uncontrolled hypertension can progress to a hypertensive crisis defined as a systolic blood pressure >180 mm Hg or a diastolic blood pressure >120 mm Hg. Hypertensive crisis can be further classified as a hypertensive urgency or hypertensive emergency depending on end-organ involvement including cardiac, renal, and neurologic injury. The prompt recognition of a hypertensive emergency with the appropriate diagnostic tests and triage will lead to the adequate reduction of blood pressure, ameliorating the incidence of fatal outcomes. Severely hypertensive patients with acute end-organ damage (hypertensive emergencies) warrant admission to an intensive care unit for immediate reduction of blood pressure with a short-acting titratable intravenous antihypertensive medication. Hypertensive urgencies (severe hypertension with no or minimal end-organ damage) may in general be treated with oral antihypertensives as an outpatient. Rapid and short-lived intravenous medications commonly used are labetalol, esmolol, fenoldopam, nicardipine, sodium nitroprusside, and clevidipine. Medications such as hydralazine, immediate release nifedipine, and nitroglycerin should be avoided. Sodium nitroprusside should be used with caution because of its toxicity. The risk factors and prognosticators of a hypertensive crisis are still under recognized. Physicians should perform complete evaluations in patients who present with a hypertensive crisis to effectively reverse, intervene, and correct the underlying trigger, as well as improve long-term outcomes after the episode. (The full article is to be purchased after registration.. )http://journals.lww.com/cardiologyinreview/Abstract/2010/03000/Hypertensive_Crisis.10.aspx


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MEDICAL NEWS

Haiti's cholera part of old pandemic: CDC (Reuters) - The cholera epidemic that has killed 1,110 people and sickened thousands in Haiti is part of a 49-year-old global pandemic and likely was brought to the Caribbean country in a single instance, scientists said on Thursday.
But that was all it took to set off the epidemic, with an already weak sanitation system thrown into chaos by a devastating earthquake in January, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Pan American Health Organization said.

The epidemic in the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere could easily worsen and cholera could linger there for years, they said.

Many Haitians blame U.N. troops for bringing the sometimes deadly bacterial disease to the island nation, where 1.5 million people are still displaced after the earthquake. Anti-U.N. riots have disrupted efforts to fight the raging outbreak. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AH46U20101118?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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U.S. doctors still too cozy with drug industry (Reuters) Doctors in the United States are still too cozy with drug companies, although they have managed to break some of those ties, U.S. researchers said on Monday.
The team at Harvard University and Massachusetts General Hospital did a national survey of 1,900 primary care doctors in 2009 about their contacts with drug companies.

They found 84 percent reported some type of relationship with drug companies, compared with 94 percent in 2004. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A75BR20101108?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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INTERESTING READING

Please remember that the REUTERS articles usually good for only 30 days

Cutting the Pediatric Insulin Error Rate: An online learning module completed by pediatric nurses cut insulin administration errors by more than 80%, according to investigators at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), Medical Center. All of the hospital's 283 pediatric nurses underwent training with the three-part module. Before implementation of the training, the mean error rate was 5.2 errors per patient; after implementation, it was 0.86 errors per patient. The effect of the training on insulin administration errors was maintained over at least six months. ...
http://journals.lww.com/ajnonline/Fulltext/2010/11000/ Cutting_the_Pediatric_Insulin_Error_Rate.11.aspx

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Preventing polypharmacy in older adults: Polypharmacy refers to the effects of taking multiple medications concurrently to manage coexisting health problems, such as diabetes and hypertension. Too often, polypharmacy becomes problematic, such as when patients are prescribed too many medications by multiple healthcare providers working independently of each other. Also, drug interactions can occur if no single healthcare provider knows the patient’s complete medication picture.
Among older adults, polypharmacy is a common problem. Currently, 44% of men and 57% of women older than age 65 take five or more medications per week; about 12% of both men and women take 10 or more medications per week. These agents include both prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) preparations, such as vitamin and mineral supplements and herbal products. ... http://www.americannursetoday.com/Article.aspx?id=7132&fid=6852

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The following is very important info for all nurses...whether hospital based or Home health based. As most of us know, pressure ulcers can be found anywhere on a bed bound person....including the ears

The National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel has redefined the definition of a pressure ulcer and the stages of pressure ulcers, including the original 4 stages and adding 2 stages on deep tissue injury and unstageable pressure ulcers.
A stage I pressure ulcer presents as intact skin with non-blanchable (becoming white with one's finger pressure) redness of a localized area, usually over a bony prominence. Darkly-pigmented skin may not have visible blanching; its color may differ from the surrounding ... http://www.woundeducators.net/profiles/blogs/pressure-ulcer-stages

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RANDOM FACT: Although Americans eat about the same amount of calories (3,400 a day) as they did in 1910, the average weight has increased due to lack of exercise.

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Antibiotic benefits slight in kid's ear infections (Reuters) The benefits of treating kids' ear infections with antibiotics may not always outweigh the costs in side effects and dollars spent, suggests a new review of more than 100 studies on the topic.
Children in the U.S. receive antibiotics for acute ear infections more often than for any other illness. All this medicating contributes to an estimated $2.8 billion dollars, or $350 per child, spent annually to treat the condition.

"We found that antibiotics did offer a modest benefit in treating ear infections in children, but they were also associated with an increased risk of side effects, such as rash and diarrhea," lead researcher Dr. Tumaini R. Coker of the University of California, Los Angeles, told Reuters Health in an e-mail. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AH0FG20101118?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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Is your laptop cooking your testicles? NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Whoever invented the 'laptop' probably didn't worry too much about male reproductive health. Turns out, unsurprisingly, that sitting with a computer on your lap will crank up the temperature of your nether regions, which could affect sperm quality.
And there is little you can do about it, according to the authors of a study out today in the journal Fertility and Sterility, short of putting your laptop on a desk. The researchers hooked thermometers to the scrotums of 29 young men who were balancing a laptop on their knees. They found that even with a lap pad under the computer, the men's scrotums overheated quickly.

"Millions and millions of men are using laptops now, especially those in the reproductive age range," said Dr. Yefim Sheynkin, a urologist at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, who led the new study. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A457320101108?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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(Even in my worst "bad" year, J & J have me beat in experiencing a "bad" year)
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Johnson & Johnson and Millennium Pharmaceuticals are recalling thousands of vials of the cancer drug Velcade sold in Europe, the United States, Japan and Malaysia after receiving reports of white particles seen floating in vials of the medicine.
The particles were found in batches of the drug distributed between January and June of this year. They have been identified as a polyester-like material related to a component of the manufacturing process performed by a contract manufacturer for Millennium, which is now a unit of Japan's Takeda Pharmaceutical Co.

Velcade, known chemically as bortezomib, is approved to treat multiple myeloma and relapsed mantle cell lymphoma. It is sold by Millennium in the United States and by J&J unit Janssen-Cilag in Europe and the rest of the world. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AH5XR20101118?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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How to undo neck pain In this age of computer keyboards and late-night Web surfing, you may be no stranger to neck pain. So here's what you do if you want it to get better: strength train those muscles. A new study reveals that toning and strengthening the problem areas may be the best way to keep your neck feeling loose and lovely.
Oh, My Aching . . . Neck pain -- technically dubbed trapezius myalgia -- is a common complaint of computer lovers. So Danish researchers recently set out to find a good solution. ... Reference: Effect of contrasting physical exercise interventions on rapid force capacity of chronically painful muscles. Andersen, L. L. et al., Journal of Applied Physiology 2009 Nov;107(5):1413-1419. http://www.realage.com/tips/how-to-undo-neck-pain?eid=7201&memberid=4687812

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Scientists turn patches of human skin into blood Got blood? Future patients who need transfusions for surgery and cancer treatments could get it from a patch of their own skin.
Canadian researchers took the huge step of transforming adult human skin directly into blood, as detailed in the Nov. 7 issue of the journal Nature. That should provide a desperately needed new source of blood for not only surgical and cancer patients, but also for patients suffering from blood disorders such as anemia.

The new method looks far more promising than trying to convert embryonic stem cells into blood. That approach has disappointed so far because of inefficiencies in converting the stem cells into mature cell types for transplantation. In addition, that method produces embryonic blood cells that can't be transplanted into adults. ... http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40058974/ns/health-health_care/

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Another Lawsuit Filed Following DePuy Hip Implant Recall Illinois Nursing Home Abuse Blog (blog) Our Chicago nursing home lawyers at Levin & Perconti are closely following the developments of the situation as many nursing home residents in the ... DePuy Orthopaedics, a division of Johnson & Johnson, recalled many of the ASR hip implant systems after data from the National Joint Registry showed that 1 in 8 patients needed corrective surgery within five years following hip implants surgeries with one of those devices. However, information has revealed that the company was aware of the problem long before the joint registry issued its reports—perhaps years earlier. However it waited before issuing the recall, allowing thousands more patients to be fitted with the defective and damaging medical device. ... http://blog.levinperconti.com/2010/11/another_lawsuit_filed_followin.html

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RANDOM FACT: Lemons are thought to have originated in the wild both in China and India and have been in existence for at least 4,000 years. They were taken to the Middle East between 400 and 600 BC and then to the Mediterranean where food historians say they have been in cultivation from as early as the first century AD.

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Everolimus Shown Effective for Rare Benign Brain Tumor Patients with subependymal giant-cell astrocytomas (SEGA) associated with the tuberous sclerosis complex who were treated with everolimus (Afinitor) showed "marked reductions" in tumor volume and no new lesions, researchers said.

Volume reductions of at least 30% were seen in 21 of 28 patients in the six-month trial, with nine patients achieving tumor shrinkage of 50% or more, reported David Neal Franz, MD, of Cincinnati Children's Hospital, and colleagues. ... http://www.medpagetoday.com/HematologyOncology/OtherCancers/23146

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Nurses Keep It Clean When it comes to infection control, patient acuity is the main difference between a hospital operating room and an ambulatory surgery center (ASC). In an ASC, the patient is expected to return home safely following recovery from anesthesia. Once the patient leaves the facility, ASC staff has little to no control over the condition of the patient's incision.
"That's the most challenging aspect of infection control in the ambulatory setting," said Bobbie Kendrick, RN, CNOR, CIC, the OR director at Lakeland Surgical & Diagnostic Center (LSDC) in Lakeland, FL.

Another difference between hospital ORs and ASCs, especially as it relates to infection control, is that ASC staff often wear more than one hat. "Typically, someone is designated as an infection control officer [at an ASC]," Kendrick said, "but the intensity of the program may vary by facility because infection control is not this person's sole responsibility."

http://nursing.advanceweb.com/Features/Articles/Nurses-Keep-It-Clean.aspx

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RANDOM FACT: The kiwi fruit has its origins in China's Yangtze River valley. The fruit has been around for over 700 years and was a favourite in the courts of the great Khans.
In the early 1900s, New Zealand missionaries took the seeds from kiwi fruit home where the plant was named for the indigenous bird. Plants were later sent to the United States, Italy, South Africa and Chile.

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Zap the Aging Effects of Stress in 14 minutes Few things speed the aging process like chronic stress. It's like adding fuel to an already capable fire. So take a few minutes to undo the damage.

In a small study of middle-aged women, all it took was 14 minutes of vigorous exercise each day to protect cells from the aging effects of stress. You could knock that out with just a brisk mile-and-a-half walk each day. Reference: The power of exercise: buffering the effect of chronic stress on telomere length. Puterman, E. et al., PLoS One 2010 May 26;5(5):e10837.

http://www.realage.com/tips/reverse-aging-relieve-stress-intense-workout?eid=7231&memberid=4687812


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(this isn't nursing related, but wanted to share) The Amazon Rainforest represents over half of the planet's remaining rainforests, and it comprises the largest and most species-rich tract of tropical rainforest in the world.

And it's dying.
An intense months-long drought through November drained the mighty Negro river -- a tributary of the Amazon -- to its lowest since records began in 1902, drying up the network of water that is the lifeblood of Brazil's huge Amazonas state.

What are the consequences?

This is the second such drought in five years. If this pattern of more extreme weather continues it would reduce rainfall over the remaining forest, creating a vicious cycle that would turn much of the Amazon into a savannah-like state by 2100. Ecologists and climatologists say there may come "a tipping point" after which the death of the forest becomes self-sustained by higher temperatures, dwindling rain levels and destructive fires.

Accounting for more than half of the world's remaining rainforest, the Amazon's trees are a vital global air conditioner, helping to keep the world cool by soaking up atmospheric carbon totaling about 2 billion tons each year.
When they die or wither, as they did in large numbers during the 2005 drought, they become part of the global-warming problem by releasing carbon.
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'Spiral' CT scans reduce smoker deaths: U.S. study WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Dr. Claudia Henschke was delighted with the news -- a trial of 53,000 people had shown that screening smokers and ex-smokers for lung cancer can save lives, something she has been trying to prove for 10 years.
The study sponsored by the U.S. National Cancer Institute is the first to show that people can be screened for lung cancer, akin to mammograms for breast cancer and tests for colon and prostate cancer.

"Nothing has ever shown a 20 percent decrease in mortality in this disease ever before. This is huge," said Regina Vidaver, executive director of the National Lung Cancer Partnership.

The researchers said their findings could save thousands of lives. Lung cancer kills 1.2 million people a year globally and it will kill 157,000 people in the United States alone this year, according to the American Cancer Society. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A33UB20101105?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100


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Reduced weight gain tied to the Mediterranean diet NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who follow a diet typical of the Mediterranean region might dodge the added pounds that often come with aging, hints a new Spanish study.
However, the researchers can't be sure if it was the diet itself or related healthy behaviors that were responsible for staving off the weight.

The Mediterranean diet is generally rich in fish, fruits, vegetables, legumes and cereals, while low in red meats and dairy. Previous research has uncovered benefits for its followers, including protection from cardiovascular disease and diabetes, as well as weight loss among those who are already overweight or obese.

Yet doubts continue to linger over the potential caloric costs of the diet's high fat content, largely in the form of olive oil, noted lead researcher Juan-Jose Beunza of the University of Navarra. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A34V420101104?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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Med Notice: Needleless Pre-filled Glass Syringes: Stakeholder Advisory - Compatibility Problems with Needleless Intravenous Access Systems Reports Received on Adenosine and Amiodarone Products FDA is notifying healthcare professionals, especially those working in emergency and critical care settings, of reports of compatibility problems when certain needleless pre-filled glass syringes are used with some needleless intravenous (IV) access systems. These syringes may malfunction, break, or become clogged during the process of attempting to connect to needleless IV access systems. Most of the reports have been related to pre-filled needleless glass syringes that contain adenosine, often when attempting to connect to some pin activated needleless IV access systems. Adenosine is a cardiac drug that is administered when a patient has a rapid or irregular heart rhythm in an attempt to return their heart rhythm to normal. Adenosine must be injected rapidly into the blood stream in emergency situations and this failure could delay treatment.

In some cases where an attempt is made to connect to pin activated needless IV access systems, the syringe may cause the pin to break thus clogging the syringe, or damaging the IV tubing and/or the needleless connector and requiring reestablishment of a new intravenous access. These failures can cause a delay in administration of the medication, which could potentially result in serious harm to patients. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHuman MedicalProducts/ucm234219.htm

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IV Acetaminophen Wins Approval-- in Surgery, General Surgery The FDA has approved an intravenous form of acetaminophen for relieving pain and fever after surgery, according to the drug's manufacturer.
Cadence Pharmaceuticals indicated that it would market the product, with a trade name of Ofirmev, as a treatment for post-surgical pain for patients who would normally receive IV medications.

The company noted that its product is the only nonopioid, non-NSAID medication approved for treating pain and fever currently available in intravenous form.

The FDA's approval was based on clinical trials involving a total of 1,020 adult and 355 pediatric patients -- including two trials evaluating the IV acetaminophen for pain relief and a third trial that tested the product's antipyretic effect. ... http://www.medpagetoday.com/Surgery/GeneralSurgery/23123

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RANDOM FACT: Did you know Chess is the most popular game in the world (although some people will say Monopoly)? It is commonly believed to have originated in India some 1500 years ago!

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Retinal implant trial helps blind see shapes: (Reuters) - Scientists have developed an eye implant that allowed three blind patients to see shapes and objects within days of treatment in a trial and say the device could become routine for some kinds of blindness in five years. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A200C20101103?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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Welcome to Be Tenacious, the campaign created by TENA, in alliance with HealthyWomen, the nation's leading health information source for women, and six-time Olympian Anne Abernathy, to help women live life fully, with or without bladder control issues. Be Tenacious encourages women to be more http://www.tena.us/women/betenacious
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Study backs Roche's Tamiflu as the first option in flu French researchers said that providers should consider Tamiflu as the first choice of treatment for flu instead of combining it with Relenza. During the flu pandemic, combining the two drugs was perceived to be a feasible method of preventing the emergence of drug-resistant flu viruses, but the study found that the combined drugs were less effective at fighting the flu than Tamiflu alone. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A15UD20101102
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Researchers have identified three models of comprehensive primary care that have the best potential for improving outcomes among elderly patients with multiple chronic conditions, while also lowering costs. The models incorporate a team-based approach and offer services including comprehensive assessment and care coordination. The Sun (Baltimore)/Picture of Health blog
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6A27DO20101103?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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RANDOM FACT: Less than 3 percent of the water on earth is fresh water. Approximately 1.6 percent is usable.
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Sip this juice for clearer arteries Whether beside oatmeal or eggs, this breakfast favorite is sure to help keep your arteries squeaky clean: orange juice.

In a study of men, those with a high intake of vitamin C -- as well as berries and other fresh fruit -- experienced significantly less thickening of their carotid arteries compared with the low fruit-and-C group. Reference: Vitamin C consumption is associated with less progression in carotid intima media thickness in elderly men: a 3-year intervention study. Ellingsen, I. et al., Nutrition, Metabolism, and Cardiovascular Diseases 2009 Jan;19(1):8-14 http://www.realage.com/tips/sip-this-juice-for-clearer-arteries?eid=7198&memberid=4687812

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Sepsis is tied to a higher risk for cognitive problems in elderly Older adults who were hospitalized for severe sepsis were three times more likely to develop cognitive problems than counterparts who were admitted for other conditions, researchers found. The study also showed that sepsis patients were at higher risk of having at least one new physical impairment, such as difficulty in walking or bathing, following their hospitalization. Los Angeles Times/Booster Shots blog (10/26)
http://www.latimes.com/health/boostershots/la-heb-sepsis-20101026,0,5629320.story?track=rss

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Sepsis a 'Hidden Public Health Disaster' http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/QUA-258276/Sepsis-a-Hidden-Public-Health-Disaster Older hospitalized patients who survive sepsis develop lasting, moderate to severe cognitive impairment and functional disability at 3.3 times the rate of patients hospitalized for other reasons, according to a report from University of Michigan researchers.
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/304/16/1787?ijkey=661aa4ebaa1d7bfac061c6b1fce02e29b419b14b&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha
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New CPR is spelled C-A-B For years, anyone learning CPR -- emergency resuscitation -- was taught the "ABC": Check the airway for blockages, give breaths, then circulate the blood. New guidelines issued Monday by the American Heart Association turn that alphabet on its head, punctuating a shift that has led emergency responders to emphasize compression of the chest over all else when treating victims of cardiac arrest.

The new catch-phrase is "C-A-B" -- as in start pushing on the chest before doing anything else. The AHA guidelines also uphold a 2008 recommendation that untrained responders call 911 but then forget rescue breathing completely, and simply press on the victim's chest until help arrives.
http://www.cnn.com/2010/HEALTH/10/18/cpr.rules.heart.association/index.html

http://www.heart.org/HEARTORG/CPRAndECC/Science/ Guidelines/Guidelines_UCM_303151_SubHomePage.jsp

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RANDOM FACT: The Amazon River is so wide that from its mouth pours one-fifth of all the moving fresh water on Earth. Its discharge runs at 7,200,000 cubic feet of water per second; greater than the next ten largest rivers combined!
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Post-traumatic stress ups heart disease risk in vets U.S. military veterans who have post-traumatic stress disorder -- a condition marked by severe anxiety, sleep disruptions, hyperarousal and impaired concentration -- have double the risk of dying and a greater risk of developing cardiovascular disease, researchers said on Wednesday.
Study results, presented at the scientific sessions of the American Heart Association meeting held in Chicago this week, suggest that doctors should provide early and aggressive evaluation and treatment of cardiovascular risk factors in patients with the disorder.

"This study for the first time appears to point to the mechanism for the cardiovascular part of that excess mortality risk: accelerated atherosclerosis," said Dr. Naser Ahmadi, a researcher at the Greater Los Angeles Veterans Administration Medical Center. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6AG60R20101117?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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You could be putting a stranglehold on coffee's health perks by stirring in the wrong stuff. So consider these rules: no nondairy creamer, and go easy on the sweet stuff.

In a recent small study, sugar and nondairy creamers seemed to undo a big chunk of the health benefits of drinking coffee by binding up the good-for-your-body antioxidants in the brew.

Coffee's Good Stuff In the small study, coffee drinkers sipped instant joe three different ways -- black, with a little whole milk, or with sugar and nondairy creamer. Blood tests then showed that levels of chlorogenic acids (CGAs) -- antioxidants in coffee that may play a role in the brew's beneficial impact on diabetes risk and more -- were different across the groups. ... Reference: Nondairy creamer, but not milk, delays the appearance of coffee phenolic acid equivalents in human plasma. Renouf, M. et al., Journal of Nutrition 2010 Feb;140(2):259-263 http://www.realage.com/tips/health-benefits-of-coffee-non-dairy-creamer?eid=7224&memberid=4687812

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Sip this sweet, creamy drink to curb appetite Here's a creamy treat that can help knock both your appetite and calorie count straight to the ground: a fruit-and-yogurt smoothie.

But not just any old fruit-and-yogurt smoothie. Pick a recipe filled with fiber and protein. Research shows that a fiber-and-protein-rich snack at midmorning keeps appetite under control, so you eat a smaller lunch later -- a good 274 calories smaller! ... Reference: Short-term appetite-reducing effects of a low-fat dairy product enriched with protein and fibre. Lluch, A. et al., Food Quality and Preference 2010;21(4):402-409. http://www.realage.com/tips/best-appetite-suppressant-yogurt-smoothie?eid=8549&memberid=4687812

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Top 10 Most Costly, Frequent Medical Errors
By: Cheryl Clark, for HealthLeaders Media, August 11, 2010


Avoidable medical errors added $19.5 billion to the nation's healthcare bill in 2008, according to a claims-based study conducted by Millman, Inc. on behalf of the Society of Actuaries (SOA). The report lists the 10 most expensive errors in healthcare settings.

Most of that amount, $17 billion, was the cost of providing inpatient, outpatient and prescription drug services to individuals affected by medical errors, says Jim Toole, chairman of SOA. "While this cost is staggering, it also highlights the need to reduce errors and improve quality and efficiency in American healthcare."

The report listed the 10 most expensive types of errors in 2008, the number of errors, the cost per error, and the total cost. The first five make up 55% of the total error costs.

The list is as follows:

1. Pressure ulcers—374,964 errors, $10,288 per error and $3.858 billion total.
2. Postoperative infections—252,695 errors, $14,548 per error, $3.676 billion total.
3. Mechanical complication of a device, implant or graft—60,380 errors, $18,771 per error, $1.133 billion total.
4. Postlaminectomy syndrome—113,823 errors, $9,863 per error, $1.123 billion total.
5. Hemorrhage complicating a procedure—78,216 errors, $12,272 per error, $960 million total.
6. Infection following infusion, injection, transfusion, vaccination—8,855 errors, $78,083 per error, $691 million total.
7. Pneumothorax—25,559 errors, $24,132 per error, $617 million total.
8. Infection due to central venous catheter—7,062 errors, $83,365 per error, $589 million total.
9. Other complicaitons of internal (biological) (synthetic) prosthetic device, implant and graft—26,783 errors, $17,233 per error and $462 million total.
10. Ventral hernia without mention of obstruction or gangrene—53,810 errors, $8,178 per error and $440 million total.
http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/QUA-254873/Top-10-Most-Costly-Frequent-Medical-Errors

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HUMOR SECTION

Although I had arrived 20 minutes early for my one o'clock doctor's appointment, I watched patient after patient disappear into the various rooms. Now, I know things happen, and that more serious issues are typically dealt with first, so I was able to accept that those coming in after me were seen first, But when I was still sitting in the waiting room 1 1/2 hours later, I'd had enough and had become pretty irate.

Fortunately, as I got up and went to the receptionist, I calmed down enough to handle it without anger.

Instead I calmly said, "I know my son's appointment was for one o'clock. Can you tell me if that was a.m. or p.m.?"

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Before I could enroll in my company's medical insurance plan, I needed to fill out a questionnaire. As expected, the form was very thorough, leaving nothing to chance.

One question asked, "Do you think you may need to go to the emergency room within the next three months?" was the final straw.

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WEBSITES/ LINKS
Always on the lookout for interesting websites / links. Please send them to: RNFrankie@AOL.com.

Back issues of the ISMP Newsletter are available at: http://www.ismp.org/Newsletters/nursing/backissues.asp.

Robert Hess, RN, PhD, FAAN (856) 424-4270 (610) 805-8635 (cell)
Founder, Forum for Shared Governance info@sharedgovernance.org www.sharedgovernance.org

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=2

http://www.nationalnurse3.blogspot.com/

RNs launch a national safe staffing campaign http://www.1199 seiu.org/media/magazine/sept_2007/safe_staffing.cfm

The Nursing Site http://thenursingsite.com .

http://www.snopes.com (to verify truthfulness of rumors)

http://www.solutionsoutsidethebox.net/ Raconte's website

http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=3

If you're buying a used car, it is recommended having a mechanic inspect it first. And screen the car's VIN through the free database at carfax.com/flood

http://www.alfaroteachsmart.com/articles.htm (Rozalfaro@AOL.com)

Metric conversion calculators and tables for metric conversions
http://www.metric-conversions.org/

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MEDICAL RECALLS *
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Hyland’s Teething Tablets: Recall - Risk of Harm to Children FDA notified consumers that Hyland’s Teething Tablets is being recalled because the tablets may pose a risk to children. The tablets are manufactured to contain a small amount of belladonna, a substance that can cause serious harm at larger doses. For such a product, it is important that the amount of belladonna be carefully controlled. FDA laboratory analysis has found that Hyland’s Teething Tablets contain inconsistent amounts of belladonna. ... http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHumanMedicalProducts

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Octopus Nuvo Tissue Stabilizer: Recall - Potential for Device Fracture Medtronic informed healthcare professionals of a recall of the Octopus Nuvo Tissue Stabilizer due to the potential that a component of the device could fracture during use. The resulting potential hazards are that fragments of the component could fall into the patient’s chest cavity and/or damage the heart tissue. Medtronic has received two reports of device failure occurring during patient use, which required retrieval of device fragments from the surgical wound. ... http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts/ucm231937.htm
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Triton Pole Mount Infusion Pump by WalkMed: Recall - Potential Door Open Alarm Problem WalkMed Infusion LLC notified healthcare professionals of a nationwide recall of the Triton Pole Mount Infusion Pump, serial numbers 001 through 500 and serial numbers TR1401 through TR 2559, manufactured and sold before June 2010. If the pump door is not closed and latched per the instructions for use located on the side of the pump and in the operator manual, the pump door open alarm may not alert the user to this condition. It is then possible for the pump mechanism not to be engaged and a gravity feed flow condition to exist if the pump operator has not checked tube set for flow prior to starting the pump. This could result in over infusion of medication. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/Safety AlertsforHumanMedicalProducts/ucm233014.htm
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Propoxyphene: Withdrawal - Risk of Cardiac Toxicity Sold as Darvon, Darvocet, and generics FDA notified healthcare professionals that Xanodyne Pharmaceuticals has agreed to withdraw propoxyphene, an opioid pain reliever used to treat mild to moderate pain, from the U.S. market at the request of the FDA, due to new data showing that the drug can cause serious toxicity to the heart, even when used at therapeutic doses. FDA concluded that the safety risks of propoxyphene outweigh its benefits for pain relief at recommended doses. FDA requested that the generic manufacturers of propoxyphene-containing products remove their products as well. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHuman MedicalProducts/ucm234389.htm
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GnRH Agonists: Label Change - Increased Risk of Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease (update) This new information warns about increased risk of diabetes and certain cardiovascular diseases (heart attack, sudden cardiac death, stroke) in men receiving these medications for the treatment of prostate cancer. Healthcare professionals should evaluate patients for risk factors for these diseases and carefully weigh the benefits and risks of using GnRH agonists before determining appropriate treatment for prostate cancer. Patients who are receiving treatment with GnRH agonists should undergo periodic monitoring of blood glucose and/or glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c). Healthcare professionals should also monitor patients for signs and symptoms suggestive of development of cardiovascular disease and manage according to current clinical practice.
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts/ucm230359.htm

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NURSING HINTS CORNER

Covering pacemaker wires: We routinely care for patients with pacemaker wires. The wires are taped to the patient's abdomen, so we had to come up with a way to keep the tips of the wires aseptic. We solved the problem by protecting the tips with rubber needle covers from syringes. they fit snugly and don't irritate the patient's skin. Judy Gilmore, RN.

Used with permission from 1,001 Nursing Tips & Timesavers, Third Edition, 1997, p.156, Springhouse Corporation/www.springnetcom.

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ADVERTISEMENTS
from the members
This ad is from Decubqueen (Gerry)..........Accu-RulerAccurate wound measurement designed by nurses, for nurses. Now carrying wound care and first-aid supplies at prices you can afford.Visit us at http://www.accu-ruler.com/.


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NEW MEMBERS Please send the prospective members' screen names and first names to me: RNFrankie@AOL.com

WELCOME TO:

gloriagracia59@yahoo.com (Gloria) October 30, 2010

sugarp40@yahoo.com (Ronda) November 26, 2010


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NOTICE:
I attempt to send notices to your email addresses on file and if the notices are rejected THREE consecutive times, I must then delete the email address until you contact me with an updated email address; I have no way to reach you without a correct email address....You could always send me your Home number....lol So please send me your new name/address, ok? RNFrankie@AOL.com

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EDITORIAL STAFF:
GingerMyst @AOL.com (Anne), GALLO RN @AOL.com (Sue), HSears9868 @AOL.com (Bonnie), Laregis @AOL.com (Laura), Mrwrn @AOL.com (Miriam), and Schulthe @AOL.com (Susan)


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PARADIGM 97 CO-FOUNDERS: MarGerlach @AOL.com (Marlene) and RNFrankie @AOL.com (Frankie)

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DISCLAIMER: The intent of this PARADIGM BYTES Newsletter is to provide communication and information for our members. Please research the hyperlinks and information provided by our members. The articles and web sites are not personally endorsed by the editors, nor do the articles necessarily reflect the staff's views.

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THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

When you get to the end of your
rope, tie a knot and hang on.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945)


Hope to see you online..... Frankie
RNFrankie@AOL.com

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

PARADIGM BYTES November edition

PARADIGM BYTES
Newsletter for Paradigm97
November 10, 2010


HAPPY THANKSGIVING EVERYONE !!!!

PARADIGM DEFINED:1) an outstandingly clear or typical example or archetype.2) a philosophical and theoretical framework of a scientific school or discipline within which theories, laws, and generalizations, and the experiments performed in support of them, are formulated.

Our website...... http://paradigm97.blogspot.com / Please copy, paste, and bookmark it.

MISSION STATEMENT

We believe that nurses need each other for support during the "lean and mean" days to help survive them. We offer research results and other ideas to enrich the nursing experience.

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SNIPPETS
Nurses' role in Medication Safety choo j., hutchinson a. & bucknall t. (2010) Journal of Nursing Management18, 853–861 Nurses' role in medication safety
Aim To explore the nurse’s role in the process of medication management and identify the challenges associated with safe medication management in contemporary clinical practice.

Background Medication errors have been a long-standing factor affecting consumer safety. The nursing profession has been identified as essential to the promotion of patient safety.

Evaluation A review of literature on medication errors and the use of electronic prescribing in medication errors.

Key issues Medication management requires a multidisciplinary approach and interdisciplinary communication is essential to reduce medication errors. Information technologies can help to reduce some medication errors through eradication of transcription and dosing errors. Nurses must play a major role in the design of computerized medication systems to ensure a smooth transition to such as system. ... http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2834.2010.01164.x/abstract;jsessionid=D24DBB5E0FC93EFF153C857D0DCE46D2.d02t01

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New therapy for metastatic melanoma Approximately 60,000 new cases of melanoma, will be diagnosed in the U.S. in 2010. The disease, which is the most serious type of skin cancer, accounts for about 10,000 deaths each year. That's according to the American Cancer Society. And although melanoma is treatable when caught early, after it spreads to other parts of the body, a patient is usually given a grim diagnosis of less than a year to live. Now a study in the New England Journal of Medicine reports a new drug treatment may help some of these patients live longer.

While looking at genes in cancer patients back in 2002 , scientists found that in 40 to 60 percent of melanoma cases and 7 to 8 percent of all cancers, a protein mutation known as BRAF was present. With this mutation, the protein becomes overreactive, causing cancer cells to grow. When researchers targeted this BRAF mutation with a drug known as PLX4032, it inhibited the mutation, shrinking tumors and slowing the progression of the disease in 81 percent of those treated. ... http://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2010/08/26/new-therapy-promising-against-metastatic-melanoma/

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FROM THE MEMBERS
You can access a free CE credit Webinar on Critical Thinking by one of our members (Roz Alfaro-LeFevre). Roz said over 400 people attended with overwhelming positive responses on evals. This webinar is part of a career development initiative supported by The Johnson & Johnson Campaign for Nursing's Future. To access the webinar content, click here:
Critical Thinking: The Key to Your Success in Nursing | WEB38 > Continuing Education Unit at Nurse.com

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MEDICAL NEWS
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - More than 17,000 doctors and other healthcare providers have taken money from seven major drug companies to talk to other doctors about their products, a joint investigation by news organizations and non-profit groups found. More than 380 of the doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other professionals took in more than $100,000 in 2009 and 2010, according to the investigation released on Tuesday. The report said far more doctors are likely to have taken such payments, but it documented these based on information from seven drugmakers. ... (I believe that a refresher course in Ethics is appropriate, here) http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69I3PO20101019?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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Joint Commission Center for Transforming Healthcare announces hand-off communications solutions Today, the Joint Commission Center for Transforming Healthcare is releasing its second set of solutions, which focus on improving hand-off communications. Miscommunication between caregivers when responsibility for patients is transferred or handed-off plays a role in an estimated 80 percent of serious preventable adverse events. The participating hospitals found that, on average, more than 37 percent of the time hand-offs were defective and did not allow caregivers receiving responsibility to safely care for the patient. Additionally, 21 percent of the time those initiating the care transition were dissatisfied with the quality of the hand-off. By using solutions targeted to the specific causes of an inadequate hand-off, participating organizations that had fully implemented solutions achieved an average 52 percent reduction in defective hand-offs. ... http://www.jointcommission.org/NR/rdonlyres/A6417C24-3D74-4EE2-BFF5-333DB0AC5B04/0/jconline_Oct_21_10_update.pdf

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LONDON (Reuters) - The United States National Institutes of Health said on Thursday it will share intellectual property rights on some AIDS drugs in a patent pool designed to make treatments more widely available to the poor.
The NIH is the first research institution to join an HIV medicines patent pool launched by UNITAID, a health financing system funded by a tax on airline tickets which was co-founded by Brazil, Britain, Chile, France, and Norway in 2006. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68T2Q920100930?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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CHICAGO (Reuters) - Drugmaker Wyeth used ghostwriters to play up the benefits and downplay the harm of hormone replacement therapy in articles published in medical journals, U.S. researchers said on Tuesday. Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman of Georgetown University Medical Center in Washington and colleagues analyzed dozens of ghostwritten reviews and commentaries published in medical journals and journal supplements, many of them using documents from judicial trials.

They said Wyeth, now owned by Pfizer, paid a medical communication company called DesignWrite $25,000 to ghostwrite articles on clinical studies, including four testing low-dose Prempro, the company's combination estrogen-progestin therapy. (Another need for an ethics review) ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6865FQ20100907?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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INTERESTING READING
Please remember that the REUTERS articles usually good for only 30 days

Thanks, Kurt for bringing this to our attention. (KurtUllman@Sprintmail.com) He writes: "Don't forget to fall back to your local store and get a new battery for your smoke/CO alarm. The stats from the National Fire Protection Association are staggering.
Almost all households in the U.S. have at least one smoke alarm, yet in 2003-2006, smoke alarms were present in only two-thirds (69%) of all reported home fires and operated in just under half (47%) of the reported home fires. (“Homes” includes one- and two- family homes, apartments, and manufactured housing.) Forty percent of all home fire deaths resulted from fires in homes with no smoke alarms, while 23% resulted from homes in which smoke alarms were present but did not operate.
The death rate per 100 reported fires was twice as high in homes without a working smoke alarm as it was in home fires with this protection.
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A Wonderful tool..... this is a great hint. To clean your keyboard...just apply the sticky part of a post-it between the keys. Voila....perfect.
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Copper equipment helps reduce hospital bacteria, study shows Researchers said that using copper for hospital bed rails, tray tables, chairs and other equipment eliminated 97% of hospital bacteria, including 100% of MRSA (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus). The researchers also aim to determine whether rooms with copper equipment translate to fewer hospital-acquired infections among patients. The Post and Courier (Charleston, S.C.) (free registration)
http://www.postandcourier.com/news/2010/sep/29/copper-found-to-reduce-bacteria
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RANDOM TIDBIT: The only river that flows both north and south of the equator is the Congo. It crosses the equator twice.
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Doctor shortage looming? Use nurses, report says WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Nurses can handle much of the strain that healthcare reform will place on doctors and should be given both the education and the authority to take on more medical duties, the U.S. Institute of Medicine said on Tuesday. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69445L20101005?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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Astra-Zeneca hunts stem cell cure for eye disorder LONDON (Reuters) - AstraZeneca took its first significant step into regenerative medicine using stem cells on Monday by signing a deal with University College London to develop ways to repair eyesight in people with diabetes. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68C15S20100913?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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5 Ways Hospitals Will Change Over the Next 10 Years Becker's Hospital Review
"In many hospitals, nurses do the RN work plus most of the nursing assistant work and a little bit of the supply tech work," he says. ...
http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/hospital-financial-and-business-news/5-ways-hospitals-will-change-over-the-next-10-years.html
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Trivia:
Apples have five seed pockets or carpels. Each pocket contains seeds. The number of seeds per carpel is determined by the vigor and health of the plant. Different varieties of apples will have different number of seeds. Newton Pippin apples were the first apples exported from America in 1768; some were sent to Benjamin Franklin in London.
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Add this to your rice to curb all-day appetite Shrink your appetite, your calorie intake, and your pants size with just one little addition to your rice: vegetables.
In a recent study of normal-weight people, mixing vegetables into a plain rice dish at lunch helped people feel fuller for the rest of the day. So much so that they ate way fewer calories at dinner than the folks who had their rice straight up.

Reference: Lowering the energy density of parboiled rice by adding water-rich vegetables can decrease total energy intake in a parboiled rice-based diet without reducing satiety on healthy women. Chang, U. J. et al., Appetite 2010 Jul 21
http://www.realage.com/tips/add-this-to-your-rice-to-curb-all-day-appetite?eid=7217&memberid=4687812
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The Fatigue Factor: Too Many Alarms, Too Little Downtime Critical care nurses must remain vigilant and alert for the slightest changes in patients’ conditions, but unfortunately mistakes can and do happen. A major factor in errors that affect patient care is fatigue — both alarm and physical. But there are solutions to combat the problem that consider the well-being of patients and their caregivers. ... http://news.nurse.com/article/20100906/NATIONAL01/109060005/-1/frontpage
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LONDON (Reuters) - Daily tablets of large doses of B vitamins can halve the rate of brain shrinkage in elderly people with memory problems and may slow their progression toward dementia, data from a British trial showed on Wednesday,
Scientists from Oxford University said their two-year clinical trial was the largest to date into the effect of B vitamins on so-called "mild cognitive impairment" -- a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia.

Experts commenting on the findings said they were important and called for larger, longer full-scale clinical trials to see if the safety and effectiveness of B vitamins in the prevention of neurodegenerative conditions could be confirmed. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6875CL20100909?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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RANDOM TIDBIT: There are 18 different animal shapes in the Animal Crackers cookie zoo.
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Computer Terms You Should Know

The famous computer scientist Bjarne Stroustrup once said, “There’s an old story about the person who wished his computer were as easy to use as his telephone. That wish has come true, since I no longer know how to use my telephone.”

As technology evolves, advanced computers and other tech devices appear more complicated and intimidating to the average user. In the event of a malfunction, most users who are limited in tech know how dread the call to tech support and frequently lug in their systems to computer stores where professionals can resolve the issue for a hefty price.

As “Sam,” a security engineer and technology expert who wishes to remain anonymous because of his job, explains, “Unfortunately, computers and operating systems are extremely complex devices. It's very easy to be intimidated at the complexity…and they have gotten progressively more complex over the last 20-plus years.” It’s so common apparently that cyberphobia, which the Free Dictionary defines as “the irrational fear of computers and technology,” is a typical occurrence.

Computer knowledge and maintenance
When traveling in a foreign country, it’s always helpful to learn a few everyday words and phrases, and the world of computers is no different. Words such as ‘RAM’ or ‘screenshot’ or ‘cache,’ for example, are common phrases with which average computer users should familiarize themselves.

You can also perform routine maintenance on your computer without getting technical. There are a host of easy-to-use at-home programs available that can help make your computer healthier. Computer Checkup Premium and System Mechanic, for example, help fix and speed up your computer and boost performance.

Popular tech terms
A majority of Americans own computers, yet the average user doesn’t know what ‘URL’ stands for (it’s Uniform Resource Locator, by the way -- a fancy term for an Internet address). Though most users have come a long way since the early days of the digital age when they mistook the CD-ROM drive for a cup holder, many are still baffled by tech-speak. Mastering just a handful of definitions may help users bridge the wide gap between the experts and the rest of us.

Firewall: A part of your network, a firewall allows certain communications to get through while blocking others. As Sam explains, “[Think of] a firewall as a doorman that stands outside your home (computer). It prevents unwanted users from just walking in to your home, and (with Windows 7 and Vista) checks that strangers that snuck into your home are allowed to leave.”

Malware: Malware is a catch-all phrase for viruses, adware and Trojans, which can cause damage to your computer. The best way to prevent malware from infecting your system is to regularly update your anti-virus program.

Cache: Your web cache stores all your web browsing info. You should clear your cache every so often to free up space on your hard drive and help protect your privacy.

RAM: Random-access memory (RAM) is a type of computer memory. “RAM is memory, and hard drive is space. Users often get these two mixed up,” our tech expert, Sam, says. “The best analogy I have is a room: RAM is the height of a room, and hard drive space is the square footage. The greater the ceiling height (RAM), the easier it is to move items (programs) around the floor (hard drive).” When you receive messages that your computer is low on memory, it’s usually time to add more RAM.

CPU: The Central Processing Unit (or more commonly, processor) is basically your computer’s 'brain,' which processes all the information. About.com sums it up best by saying that it’s “responsible for interpreting and executing most of the commands from the computer's hardware and software.”

HTTP and HTTPS: HTTP, or hypertext transfer protocol, is the standard prefix used for website addresses.
HTTPS (Hypertext transport protocol secure), on the other hand, signals that the website you have visited is secure. When browsing bank, credit card or shopping websites online, for example, look for ‘HTTPS’ before entering any sensitive information.

Defrag: As we reported earlier, hard drives eventually become fragmented with daily wear and tear -- meaning that files are scattered and stored in various locations, rather than being neatly lined up on the drive. Hence, it’s important to “defrag” your hard drive, which basically reorganizes the files correctly so your computer can access them more quickly.

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RANDOM FACT: The average cat sleeps about 2/3 of the day (notice that NIGHT is not mentioned)
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Study looks at teens who Self-Embed Beween 13 percent and 23 percent of U.S. teens have reported intentional self-injury, according to background information in a study by Shiels and colleagues that was released online Sept. 7 in advance of publication in the October print issue of the journal Radiology.
Shiels' team found that of about 600 patients of all ages who went to the hospital to have foreign bodies removed from under their skin, 11 patients, or about 1.8 percent, had intentionally inserted the objects. They ranged in age from 14 to 18, and nine were girls.

The 11 teens had other psychological disorders, including depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorder, borderline personality disorder or post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the study. ... http://health.usnews.com/health-news/family-health/brain-and-behavior/articles/2010/09/07/self-embedding-takes-teen-self-injury-to-the-extreme.html

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RANDOM TIDBIT: There's only one city in the United States named merely "Beach." It is found in North Dakota, which is a land-locked state.
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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new kind of test that finds evidence of colon cancer in the stool can also detect pre-cancerous growths, and could potentially be an alternative to colonoscopies, researchers reported on Thursday.

Exact Sciences' new test detected 87 percent of stage I, II and III colon tumors, which can be surgically removed, and found 64 percent of the biggest pre-cancerous growths, the researchers told a meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research. It finds altered DNA that has either turned a cell cancerous, or has started the changes that lead to cancer. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69R4ZK20101028?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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THE NURSE MANAGER'S GUIDE TO HIRING, FIRING AND INSPIRINGAuthor: Hess, Vicki, MS, RN, CSP At A Glance: According to the 2006 Aging Nursing Workforce Survey, 20% of nurse leaders will have retired by 2010 and 75% by 2020, worsening the existing problem of a shortage of nurse leaders. It's important to keep the pipeline filled with new nurse managers and enhance the skills of those less experienced. ... http://www.medinfonow.com/min/ct/2/9781930538924/fuwluz/KAAK/3316/default.aspx
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LONDON (Reuters) - Scientists have discovered a mechanism which raises blood pressure in pre-eclampsia, a potentially deadly condition that can occur in pregnancy, and say their work may help the search for new hypertension drugs.
Researchers at Britain's Cambridge and Nottingham Universities said they had deciphered the first step in the main process that controls blood pressure -- the release of a hormone called angiotensin, from its source protein, angiotensinogen.
"Although we primarily focused on pre-eclampsia, the research also opens new leads for future research into the causes of hypertension in general," said Aiwu Zhou of Cambridge University, whose work was published in the journal Nature. ...
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6954NZ20101006?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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New Olive Oil Health Powers Revealed You already know that olive oil is chock-full of healthy fats. But here's another reason to cook with it: Olive oil might actually help "turn off" genes that could harm your heart.
In a study, eating a diet with lots of polyphenol-rich olive oil helped suppress genes related to heart-damaging inflammation and oxidation. Quite the modern-sounding health benefit for an oil that's been around since the days of Homer. ... Reference: In vivo nutrigenomic effects of virgin olive oil polyphenols within the frame of the Mediterranean diet: a randomized controlled trial. Konstantinidou, V. et al., FASEB Journal 2010 Jul;24(7):2546-2557.

http://www.realage.com/tips/new-olive-oil-health-powers-revealed?eid=7216&memberid=4687812

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers have found a surprisingly quick and apparently safe way to transform ordinary skin cells into both stem cells -- the body's master cells -- and muscle cells. They said on Thursday their method may provide a way to generate tissue in a new science called regenerative medicine, which doctors hope will eventually lead to ways to repair injuries and eventually perhaps even replace whole organs.

Reporting in the journal Cell Stem Cell, Dr. Derrick Rossi of Harvard Medical School and colleagues said they were working on new ways to make induced pluripotent stem cells or iPS cells.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68T58620100930?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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Low-Carb Diets Heavy on Meat May Raise Health Risks (HealthDay News) -- A low-carbohydrate diet that derives fats and proteins from vegetable sources rather than meats is probably healthier, new research finds.

Comparing the two types of diets over two decades, researchers found that the low-carb, vegetable-based plan resulted in reduced rates of death from cardiovascular disease and cancer, and a lower rate of all-cause death overall. ... http://consumer.healthday.com/Article.asp?AID=642824

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RANDOM TIDBIT: The Beatles held the Top Five spots on the April 4th, 1964 Billboard singles chart. To date, they're the only band that has ever accomplished that.

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Mental 'exercise' linked to faster dementia progression Mentally active seniors experienced a faster decline in brain function after being diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease compared with those with the disease who were less mentally active, a six-year study showed. The faster rate of decline in cognitive tests suggests that though mentally active older adults may develop dementia later, once they do develop it, they are in a more advanced state of brain damage. ... (This is entirely too much info for me)..... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68076720100901

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Kids in the ED: Guidelines Stress Rapid Intervention Children and infants who end up in the ED often require specialized emergency care, yet the majority of children in the U.S. are not cared for in a children’s hospital ED, according to Sally K. Snow, RN, BSN, CPEN, FAEN, the Emergency Nurses Association liaison to the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Pediatric Emergency Medicine.

“When kids get sick or injured they can deteriorate rapidly, and you have to be confident in rapid assessment and intervention and know that your facility has the equipment and protocols in place to deliver quality care,” says Snow, who also is trauma program director at Cook Children’s Medical Center, Fort Worth, Texas.... http://news.nurse.com/article/20100830/NATIONAL01/108300001/-1/frontpage
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RANDOM TIDBIT: The king of hearts is the only king without a moustache on a standard playing card.
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U.S. medical programs missing millions of kids: report (Reuters Sept 3) - An estimated five million uninsured children in the United States were eligible for Medicaid or the Childrens Health Insurance Program (CHIP) but were not enrolled in either plan, according to a new report.
The study published on Friday in the journal "Health Affairs" recommended policy reforms and broader efforts to get uninsured children into government medical programs, including the use of income tax data for automatic enrollment.... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6820XK20100903?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100
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RANDOM FACT: The first novel ever written on a typewriter was Tom Sawyer.
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A theoretical examination of the rights of nurses Nurses’ duties and patients’ rights have been important foci in nursing. Nurses’ rights legitimate the power and responsibility of the profession. There are few published articles on this subject in the nursing science literature. This article is a theoretical examination of nurses’ rights that aims to structure (i.e. show the internal logic of) those that have been little studied. It is based on the philosophical literature and published research. Nurses’ rights can be divided into: human and civil rights, rights based on health care legislation, professional rights, and earned rights. In this context, professional rights relate to nursing and also to tasks shared with other health care professions. Analyzing nurses’ rights will help to promote these rights, improve nurses’ position both nationally and internationally, and provide possibilities for enhancing patient care. ... http://nej.sagepub.com/content/17/5/628.abstract
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Improving Student Critical Thinking Skills Through a Root Cause Analysis Pilot ProjectThe Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice provides a framework for building the baccalaureate education for the twenty-first century. One of the exemplars included in the essentials toolkit includes student participation in an actual root cause analysis (RCA) or failure mode effects analysis. To align with this exemplar, faculty at the University of Michigan School of Nursing developed a pilot RCA project for the senior-level Leadership and Management course.... (full text available) http://www.journalofnursingeducation.com/showAbst.asp?thing=64980
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New test can diagnose tuberculosis in under 2 hours Reuters - A new molecular test for tuberculosis made by Cepheid can diagnose TB and detect a drug-resistant form of it far more easily and rapidly than other tests currently available, scientists said on Wednesday.
In a study in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), researchers said that when used on 1,730 patients with suspected TB and suspected drug-resistant TB, the Xpert MTB/RIF test successfully identified 98 percent of all cases.

It also identified 98 percent of patients with a form of TB resistant to rifampin, or rifampicin -- one of the most powerful TB drugs -- and achieved these results in less than two hours.... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE68071A20100901?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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TRIVIA: (This is especially interesting for those of us who have eaten these great litlle "burgers")

White Castle was founded in 1921 in Wichita, Kansas. The name was chosen carefully with “White” signifying purity, and “Castle” signifying strength, stability and permanence.
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Burgers were 5 cents in 1921 and that price was reduced and increased over the next several years. A big jump occurred in December of 1950 when burgers went from 10 cents to 12.
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In 1931, White Castle hired a renowned food scientist from a Big Ten university to run tests to determine the nutritional value of White Castle Sliders. One medical student lived on nothing but White Castle burgers and water for 13 weeks. Studies show conclusively that the student maintained good health.
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The burgers have five holes because they help the patties cook faster and more evenly while eliminating the need to turn them over.
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During World War II, White Castle sold hot dogs and eggs due to meat rationing.
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Coke has been the White Castle beverage of choice since 1921.
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(Thought I would include this ... because this would be another book that I would want to have in my library)
WORLD views on Evidence-Based Nursing Now ranked No. 1 nursing journal!
2009 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2010)
WORLDviews on Evidence-Based Nursing™, a quarterly, peer-reviewed, evidence-based nursing journal, provides readers a primary source of information to improve patient care. Each issue contains knowledge synthesis and original articles with best practice applications and recommendations for clinical practice, nursing administration, nursing education and public health care policy. Subscribe today $ 142 personal copies. http://www.nursingsociety.org/Publications/Journals/Pages/worldviews.aspx?utm_source=FY11%20EBD%20promoNKI%20[81910]&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=FY11%20EBN%20promo!

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RANDOM FACT: 454 U.S. dollar bills weigh exactly one pound.
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National: Hospitals must report intensive care patients’ bloodstream infections to CDC “New regulations may cut down hospital infections” CNN

In the United States, hospital-acquired infections alone afflict almost 2 million patients and kill approximately 100,000 people annually, more than diabetes or influenza and pneumonia. That's according to statistics from the Centers for Disease Control. Beginning next year, Americans will be able to check to see how their hospitals or medical facilities fare when it comes to preventing these types of infections....
http://pagingdrgupta.blogs.cnn.com/2010/08/02/new-regulations-may-cut-down-infections-in-hospitals/
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Dysphagia leads to higher risk of death, longer stays Difficulty swallowing, or dysphagia, leads to a higher risk of death among hospitalized patients as well as hospital stays that are almost double the length experienced by patients without dysphagia, researchers said.... MedPage Today (free registration) http://www.medpagetoday.com/CriticalCare/GeneralCriticalCare/21712
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Choose this protein, Hear better Reconsider that chicken on top of your pasta. This protein choice is music to your mouth and your ears: salmon. Yep, in a large study, people who ate finned food at least twice a week were significantly less likely to develop age-related hearing loss over the 5-year study period. Reference: Consumption of omega-3 fatty acids and fish and risk of age-related hearing loss. Gopinath, B., American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2010 Aug;92(2):416-421.

http://www.realage.com/tips/choose-this-protein-hear-better?eid=7215&memberid=4687812
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RANDOM TIDBIT: The Mona Lisa has no eyebrows. It was the fashion in Renaissance Florence to shave them off.
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Nutritional supplementation for older people- AbstractSummary: Malnutrition is common in older people and is associated with a number of adverse outcomes. We review the evidence for the effectiveness of nutritional supplementation for older people in the community, in institutional care and following discharge from hospital. Studies in these settings are scarce, often include only small numbers of participants and are of variable quality. The interventions used are heterogeneous and difficult to directly compare. Oral nutritional supplements (sip feeds), dietary fortification, educational programmes, exercise, flavour enhancement and meal setting have all been studied. Evidence for use of oral nutritional supplements as sip feeds in undernourished community-dwelling and institutionalized older people and in those discharged from hospital is currently insufficient to recommend routine use. Flavour enhancement and more sociable meal environments may be beneficial. Further, more methodologically robust research is needed to clarify the effect of these interventions.
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=7911741
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Anorexia Nervosa Abstract: Clinical confidence and coordinated multidisciplinary care can influence the course of anorexia nervosa in children and adolescents. Sicker and younger patients with anorexia nervosa often present first to a paediatrician, requiring early recognition and appropriate management. Paediatric knowledge and skills are also needed to manage the impact of eating disorders on growth and development. This review provides practical guidance on the management of anorexia nervosa for paediatricians, in the areas of assessment, acute management and re-feeding, and long-term monitoring. In the absence of a strong evidence base for some of these recommendations, local protocols based on best practice guidelines can reduce anxiety, increase cooperation and reduce risk. (full text available) http://adc.bmj.com/content/early/2010/10/07/adc.2009.177394.short?rss=1
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Metal Pollution tied to Parkinson's disease NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People living near a steel factory or another source of high manganese emissions are at higher risk of developing Parkinson's disease, suggests a new study. As many as one million Americans live with the degenerative disease, according to the Parkinson's Disease Foundation. Pesticides from farms have long been suspected of upping the chances of developing Parkinson's, but much less is known about the influences of city living.
"Environmental risk factors for Parkinson's disease have been relatively under-studied, especially in urban areas where the overwhelming majority of Parkinson's disease patients reside," Dr. Brad A. Racette of the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, told Reuters Health in an e-mail. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69Q5DI20101027?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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RANDOM TIDBIT: Until the nineteenth century, solid blocks of tea were used as money in Siberia.
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The Nursing and Midwifery Content Audit Tool (NMCAT): a short nursing documentation audit tool johnson m., jefferies d. & langdon r. (2010) Journal of Nursing Management

( The full copy is available for purchase)
Background The Nursing and Midwifery Content Audit Tool (NMCAT) was developed to monitor the quality of nursing documentation.
Methods A health care record audit was conducted on 200 records. Using a time-sampling approach, recent nursing documentation was examined. Inter-rater reliability was determined at 85% agreement between two raters.

Results The NMCAT criteria relating to the recording of the patients’ health status, use of objective information and logical presentation were met to a high level. The patients’ response to treatment or nursing interventions including medications requires attention. The recording of events immediately after they have occurred was limited. The structure of the sentences and language used, restricted the readability of the documentation. The widespread use of local abbreviations, often connected together to form the text, was problematic.

Conclusions The present study provides new audit solutions based on time-sampling approaches and focused evidence-based criteria. The use of language support software and writing coaches to improve the presentation of nursing documentation is recommended.

Implications for Nursing Management The NMCAT is a time-efficient tool available to managers for monitoring the quality of nursing documentation, either at a unit level or across health facilities to demonstrate compliance with quality standards. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-2834.2010.01156.x/abstract;jsessionid=B75D6501B612DF7FCFB0DC5CB9D4EEF2.d01t01?systemMessage=Due+to+scheduled+maintenance+access+to+the+Wiley+Online+Library+may +be+disrupted+as+follows%3A+Saturday%2C+30+October+-+New+York+0700+EDT+to+0900+EDT%3B+London+1200+BST+to+1400+BST%3B+Singapore+1900+SGT+to+2100+SGT.

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Pancreatic cancer grows slowly, could be caught WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Pancreatic cancer grows slowly, taking years and even decades to develop, a finding that offers the chance to catch it early and cure it, researchers reported on Wednesday.

They said their findings confirm that one of the most lethal cancers kills not because it spreads like wildfire, but because it does not cause symptoms until it is advanced.

"That provides a large window of opportunity to try to detect the presence of these cancers in the first 20 years of their existence, before they become lethal," said Dr. Bert Vogelstein of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, who helped lead the study. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69Q4JB20101027?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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10 Reasons to Give Your Nursing Career a Digital Media Makeover In recent years, the growth of digital and social media have come to influence many aspects of day-to-day life, including our experience in the workplace. Nurses savvy in these new media can take advantage of the new tools that are available and use them for professional growth and development. Check out these fun and clever ways you can use digital and social media to enhance your career! http://jjnursingnotes.com/OCT10/index.html#careers

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Medical groups push to expand heart x-ray NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - More patients could benefit from x-ray scans of their hearts, according to new advice put forth in a report from several medical societies.

But the expanded criteria may be more geared to benefitting medical professionals than patients, according to some experts who say the scans are little more than pretty pictures with a big price tag -- and potentially serious side effects.

Computerized tomography, or CT, scans can help doctors determine whether a patient has heart disease. For instance, they can reveal problems in heart valves or cholesterol plaques that prevent the heart from working properly by blocking its blood supply. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69O4ST20101025?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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RANDOM TIDBIT: Tablecloths were originally meant to be served as towels with which dinner guests could wipe their hands and faces after eating.
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'Natural' statins vary in quality, study finds (Reuters) Red yeast rice supplements, sold as a "natural" alternative to cholesterol-lowering statin drugs, vary widely in how much active ingredient they contain and some are contaminated, U.S. researchers reported on Monday.

Americans thinking they are getting a reliable and safe alternative to prescription drugs should take a closer look, and regulators should consider stricter limits on the products, Dr. Ram Gordon of Chestnut Hill Hospital and the University of Pennsylvania and colleagues said.

They tested 12 commercially available products and found great variation in how much active ingredient each actually contained.

"One-third of the products tested were contaminated with citrinin," they wrote in the Archives of Internal Medicine. Citrinin is a so-called mycotoxin that can alter DNA, which means it could potentially cause cancer. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69O4XI20101025?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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Nurses' perceived barriers to optimal pain management in older patients. Nurses perception of barriers preventing optimal pain management in older adults on acute medical units and the extent to which they perceived they had adopted four evidence-based practices related to pain assessment and management were often incongruent with actual practice. Eliciting reports of pain, offering pro re nata pain relief regularly, utilizing pain assessment tools in patients with cognitive impairment, redesigning documentation tools and processes, making non-pharmacological alternatives accessible, and helping patients and families manage side effects would target the 12 barriers having the biggest impact. ... http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6WB4-4VCNF1G-W&_user=10&_coverDate=08%2F31%2F2010&_rdoc=6&_fmt=high&_orig=browse&_origin=browse&_zone=rslt_list_item&_srch=doc-info(%23toc%236700%232010%23999769996%232218765%23FLA%23display%23Volume)&_cdi=6700&_sort=d&_docanchor=&_ct=13&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_ urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=ebc72363a51206ce36d5ffde40d2b407&searchtype=

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RANDOM FACT: The United States once had the highest proportion of young adults with post-secondary degrees in the world. Today, the U.S. has fallen to 12th.
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Pain assessment: state-of-the-art applications from the cognitive–behavioural perspective Behaviour Research and Therapy, Volume 40, Issue 5, May 2002, Pages 547-550
Gordon J. G. Asmundson This brief report highlights some basic issues in pain assessment. This serves to set the stage for the articles that are presented in this issue of the Behavioral Assessment section. Topics covered include an overview of the cognitive–behavioural perspective, consideration of important dimensions for assessment, and a summary of some of the key issues affecting the state-of-the-art. An overview of the articles that follow as well as future research directions are also presented. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6V5W-45FYCTW-6&_user=10&_coverDate=05%2F31%2F2002&_rdoc=1&_fmt=high&_orig=article&_origin=article&_zone=related_art_hover&_ cdi=5797&_sort=v&_docanchor=&view=c&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_ userid=10&md5=c867d0159b7da2fdd09f492b995f2d60&searchtype=a

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The free Geriatric Pain website shares best-practice tools to support recommendations for good pain assessment and management in older adults. Register today!:
http://www.medinfonow.com/min/pl/12695/fuwluz/KAAK/default.aspx
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(From Rozalfaro...thanks) About Heart Attacks:There are other symptoms of an heart attack besides the pain on the left arm. One must also be aware of an intense pain on the chin, as well as nausea and lots of sweating, however these symptoms may also occur less frequently.
Note: There may be no pain in the chest during a heart attack. The majority of people (about 60%) who had a heart attack during their sleep, did not wake up. However, if it occurs, the chest pain may wake you up from your deep sleep.
If that happens, immediately take the new "quick release" crystal aspirins by Bayer, and swallow them with water. Be certain that you DO NOT LIE DOWN.
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Sepsis leaves long legacy on brain and body Surviving sepsis doesn't mean troubles are over for older adults, who face substantial cognitive impairment and functional disability afterward, according to results from a longitudinal population-based study.

An episode of sepsis boosted the odds of acquiring moderate to severe cognitive impairment 3.3-fold, whereas other types of hospitalizations had no effect, Theodore J. Iwashyna, MD, PhD, of the University of Michigan, in Ann Arbor, and colleagues found. ...
http://www.medpagetoday.com/CriticalCare/Sepsis/22994
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HINT: If you have old paint spots on your windows, you don't need to drag out smelly turpentine. Just apply nail polish remover to the splatters, wait a few minutes and rinse off. They magically disappear!
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In a new study that reviews data collected from people injured during serious crashes, researchers found that those with front airbags were 45 percent less likely to suffer severe kidney trauma.
Specifically, among those injured during car accidents, 3.4 percent of people with front airbags experienced kidney trauma, versus 7.5 percent of those without front airbags, Dr. Bryan Voelzke and colleagues report in the Journal of the American College of Surgeons. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69P4CN20101026?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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Carotid stent has higher stroke risk than surgery CHICAGO (Reuters) - Implanting a device called a stent in neck arteries is more likely to cause a stroke or death than surgically removing life-threatening blockages, U.S. researchers said on Monday.
Both therapeutic procedures are effective," Dr. Louis Caplan of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston and Dr. Thomas Brott of Mayo Clinic in Florida, said in a commentary in the Archives of Neurology. "Both procedures showed a relatively low rate of serious complications. Surgery is superior concerning some outcomes; stenting seems to have advantages in others."
For years, carotid endarterectomy -- in which doctors cut open the neck, scrape away the fatty deposits in the artery and sew it back up -- has been the preferred way to clear dangerous fatty deposits in neck arteries that can cause strokes.

Carotid artery stenting, a newer approach, involves threading a wire mesh coil called a stent in the neck artery to widen the blocked area and capture any dislodged plaque that could travel to the brain and cause a stroke. ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69A4YS20101011?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100 (In my case, the 70% blockage was much too high up, stenting was the only option).
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HINT: Next time you get upset try counting backward from 100. It requires all your concentration, which distracts you from whatever is upsetting you. This trick is also proven to ease anxiety by slowing your pulse and breathing!

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Lilly osteoporosis drug regrows jaw bone: study (Reuters) Eli Lilly and Co's osteoporosis drug Forteo can regrow bone in jaws damaged by severe bone-destroying conditions called osteonecrosis and periodontitis, doctors reported on Saturday.
The research, reported at the annual meeting of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research in Toronto, suggests that the drug may spur growth in a damaged jaw, the researchers said.

Forteo, known generically as teriparatide, cuts in half the risk of bone fractures in patients with thinning bones by stimulating the growth of new bone. But it is seldom given for more than two years out of fear that long-term exposure might lead to osteosarcoma, ... http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69F0V520101016?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

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HUMOR SECTION
Q: What did one vampire say to the other as they were passing the Blood Bank?
A: Let's stop in for a cool one.


An old man said to his buddy, "I hear you are getting married?"
Yep," his friend replied.
"Do I know her?"
"Nope."
"Is she good-looking?"
"Not really."
"Is she a good cook?"
"Naw, she can't cook too well."
"Does she have lots of money?"
"Nope. Poor as a church mouse."
"Well, why in the world do you want to marry her, then?"
"Because she can still drive."

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CEU SITES---(CME and CNE) Those that are-----Free and Otherwise..........

Pay Only $34.99 for a full year of CONTACT HOURS http://www.nursingspectrum.com /

Free CEs http://www.myfreece.com/welcome.asp

https://nursing.advanceweb.com/CE/TestCenter/Main.aspx

This site was sent in by FNPMSN@aol.com (Cindy) http://cmepain.com/ !


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WEBSITES/ LINKS
Always on the lookout for interesting websites / links. Please send them to:RNFrankie@AOL.com.

Back issues of the ISMP.org are available at: http://www.ismp.org/Newsletters/nursing/backissues.asp.

The free Geriatric Pain website shares best-practice tools to support recommendations for good pain assessment and management in older adults. Register today!:
http://www.medinfonow.com/min/pl/12695/fuwluz/KAAK/default.aspx
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Robert Hess, RN, PhD, FAAN (856) 424-4270 (610) 805-8635 (cell)

Founder, Forum for Shared Governance info@sharedgovernance.org www.sharedgovernance.org

Decubqueen's website: www.accu-ruler.com

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=2

http://www.nationalnurse3.blogspot.com/

RNs launch a national safe staffing campaign http://www.1199seiu.org/media/magazine/sept_2007/safe_staffing.cfm

H.R. 2123, The Nurse Staffing Standards for Patient Safety and Quality Care Act of 2007
http://www.washingtonwatch.com/bills/show/110_HR_2123.html

Board Supports Your Right to Refuse An Unsafe Assignment: Nurse Practice Act cites three conditions for patient abandonment http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa4102/is_200408/ai_n9450263

The Nursing Site http://thenursingsite.com .

http://www.thebreastcancersite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=2

http://www.snopes.com

http://www.solutionsoutsidethebox.net/ Raconte's website

http://www.theanimalrescuesite.com/clickToGive/home.faces?siteId=3

National Do Not Call Registry

If you're buying a used car, it is recommended having a mechanic inspect it first. And screen the car's VIN through the free database at carfax.com/flood

This is a sampling of the offers on Rozalfaro's website: http://www.alfaroteachsmart.com/articles.htm
Critical Thinking is More Than Problem Solving Critical Thinking: Not Usually Rapid Fire

Metric conversion calculators and tables for metric conversions
http://www.metric-conversions.org/

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*
MEDICAL RECALLS*
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Hospira symbiq One-Channel and Two-Channel Infusers: Class 1 Recall Potential for the device to fail to detect air in line at the end of an infusion. Failure to detect air in line may result in the delivery of air to the patient, resulting in serious injury or death. The Symbiq Infusion System is an infusion pump intended for the delivery of fluids, solutions, drugs, agents, nutritionals, electrolytes, blood and blood products via parenteral, enteral, intravenous, intra-arterial, subcutaneous, epidural or irrigation routes of administration. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts
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Fentanyl Transdermal System: Recall FDA notified healthcare professionals and patients that laboratory testing identified a patch that released its active ingredient faster than the approved specification. An accelerated release of Fentanyl can lead to adverse events for at-risk patients, including excessive sedation, respiratory depression, hypoventilation (slow breathing), and apnea (temporary suspension of breathing). http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts
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Tylenol 8 Hour Caplets 50 Count: Recall Lot number: BCM155 McNeil is recalling TYLENOL 8 Hour caplets 50 count bottles to the retail level following a small number of complaints of a musty or moldy odor. The uncharacteristic odor is thought to be caused by the presence of trace amounts of a chemical called 2,4,6-tribromoanisole.
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts
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Gadolinium-based Contrast Agents: Class Labeling Change - Risk of Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis [Ablavar (gadofosveset trisodium), Eovist (gadoxetate disodium), Magnevist (gadopentetate dimeglumine), Multihance (gadobenate dimeglumine), Omniscan (gadodiamide), Optimark (gadoversetamide injection), Prohance (gadoteridol)]

FDA is requiring changes in the professional labeling for gadolinium-based contrast agents (GBCAs) to minimize the risk of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF), a rare, but serious, condition associated with the use of GBCAs in certain patients with kidney dysfunction. NSF has not been reported in patients with normal kidney function. Patients at greatest risk for developing NSF after receiving GBCAs are those with impaired elimination of the drug, including patients with acute kidney injury or chronic, severe kidney disease. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts
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AngioSculpt "EX" PTCA Scoring Balloon Catheter by AngioScore, Inc.: Recall - Risk of Catheter Separation The AngioSculpt EX Percutaneous Transluminal Coronary Angioplasty (PTCA) catheters may become separated during use, and fragments of the catheter may become lodged in coronary arteries. This may result in serious injuries, including death. This recall includes all Part/REF Numbers 2034-XXYY with lot numbers less than F09060003. This product was distributed from January 30, 2009 through December 4, 2009. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHuman MedicalProducts/ucm225186.htm

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Heparin Sodium (B. Braun): Recall - Trace Contaminant B. Braun Medical Inc. and FDA notified healthcare professionals of a nationwide recall of certain lots of Heparin Sodium USP Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) sold to B. Braun because testing indicated a trace amount of oversulfated chondroitin sulfate (OSCS) contaminant. These lots were manufactured in 2008 and will be expiring on October 31, 2010 and November 30, 2010. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts/ucm231739.htm

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Meridia (sibutramine): Market Withdrawal Due to Risk of Serious Cardiovascular Events Abbott Laboratories and FDA notified healthcare professionals and patients about the voluntary withdraw of Meridia (sibutramine), an obesity drug, from the U.S. market because of clinical trial data indicating an increased risk of heart attack and stroke. ... http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHumanMedicalProducts
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Excelsior Medical 5 ml Fill in 6 cc Prefilled Saline Flush Syringes: Recall - Potential loss of sterility Routine internal testing conducted on this product found that some of these syringes may leak and lose sterility. This recall pertains only to syringes with the following product code numbers: E0100-50, 10056-1000, 10056-240, 14056-240, 910056-1000, and S5. Exposure to syringes with a sterility issue could result in systemic infection, which may lead to serious injury and/or death.
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsfor HumanMedicalProducts/ucm229781.htm

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CareFusion Corporation Alaris PC Units (Model 8015): Recall - Potential for Delay or interruption of therapy Under certain wireless network conditions, a communication error can occur, which freezes the PC Unit screen. This error may result in a delay of therapy and inability to make programming changes to current infusions.
If the communication error occurs during infusion, infusion continues on all channels, as originally programmed, but cannot be modified. When this error occurs, stopping the infusion to make any modification or programming changes causes the PC unit to shut down resulting in a delay or interruption in therapy. This could lead to serious injury and/or death. These devices were manufactured from December 20, 2008 through September 8, 2009 and distributed from December 20, 2008 through June 28, 2010. http://www.fda.gov/Safety/MedWatch/SafetyInformation/SafetyAlertsforHumanMedicalProducts

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NURSING HINTS CORNER
Bright sights Each patient room in our pediatric division has a large wooden animal propped against the wall. The puppies, frogs, bears, and other creatures delight our patients. But ----more importantly--they make an easily accessible board to place beneath a child during a code. Karen Pasley, RN

Used with permission from 1,001 Nursing Tips & Timesavers, Third Edition, 1997, p.87, Springhouse Corporation/www.springnetcom.

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ADVERTISEMENTS
from the members
This ad is from Decubqueen (Gerry)..........Accu-RulerAccurate wound measurement designed by nurses, for nurses. Now carrying wound care and first-aid supplies at prices you can afford. Visit us at http://www.accu-ruler.com/.


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NEW MEMBERS Please send the prospective members' screen names and first names to me: RNFrankie@AOL.com

WELCOME TO:

Kevinpaige5@windstream.com (Judy) September 29, 2010

bcmims@dhr.state.ga.us (Brenda) October 14, 2010

gloriagracia59@yahoo.com (Gloria) October 30, 2010

5royals@bellsouth.net (Angela) November 5, 2010

stew@smithhospital.com (Stephanie) November 5, 2010

JLedwitch@briangriner.com (John) November 8, 2010

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NOTICE: I attempt to send newsletters to your email addresses on file and if the newsletters are rejected THREE consecutive times, I must then delete the email address until you contact me with an updated email address; I have no way to reach you without a correct email address.... So please send me your new e-mail name and/or address, ok? RNFrankie@AOL.com

OLD: mickunas14 @verison.com NEW: mickunas14@frontier.com

OLD: springns88@AOL.com NEW: springns88@yahoo.com (Barbara)

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EDITORIAL STAFF:
GingerMyst @AOL.com (Anne), GALLO RN @AOL.com (Sue), HSears9868 @AOL.com (Bonnie), Laregis @AOL.com (Laura), Mrwrn @AOL.com (Miriam), and Schulthe @AOL.com (Susan)

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PARADIGM 97 CO-FOUNDERS:
MarGerlach @AOL.com (Marlene) and RNFrankie @AOL.com (Frankie)

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DISCLAIMER: The intent of this PARADIGM BYTES Newsletter is to provide communication and information for our members. Please research the hyperlinks and information provided by our members. The articles and web sites are not personally endorsed by the editors, nor do the articles necessarily reflect the staff's views.

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THOUGHT FOR THE DAY

They say my world is somber and drear.
To me, it is warm and joyous, and stars shine
in the dark that cannot be seen by day.

Helen Keller


Hope to see you online or write me--- would love to hear from you,
RNFrankie@AOL.com