About 50,000 people are alive today because U.S. hospitals committed 17% fewer medical errors in 2013 than in 2010, government health officials said on Tuesday. The lower rate of fatalities from poor care and mistakes was one of several "historic improvements" in hospital quality and safety...
Some influential healthcare groups are urging Florida's state lawmakers to expand the use of telehealth—web and videoconferencing technology that allows physicians and other healthcare providers to treat patients—as a way to save money and deal with a growing shortage of physicians. Several...
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 15, Issue 48
Okon Umana, MD, pleaded guilty to participating in a scheme that fraudulently billed Medicare and Medicaid more than $13 million from 2009 to 2012 for physical therapy, diagnostic testing, and other services that were unnecessary or did not actually occur.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 15, Issue 48
Fifty thousand fewer hospital patients died due to avoidable errors from 2011 to 2013, according to a report released by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) this week.
Credentialing Resource Center Digest - Volume 15, Issue 48
“[L]ook forward at the innovations that have come to medicine that are helpful. Be grateful for the improvements in treatment for many diseases that used to have no hope.”
- Starla Fitch, MD, discusses the benefits of technology to the practice of medicine...