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News You Need to Know Today
Practice Management: Excellence in cardiology | A new guidance on TAVR | Reducing burnout among cardiologists
Thursday, October 29, 2020
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Editor's Choice: Practice Management

Top Stories

Excellence in cardiology: The top U.S. hospitals in cardiac care, cardiac surgery and coronary intervention

Hospitals in California, Illinois and New York performed especially well, according to the outcomes-based rankings. 

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Excellence in cardiology: The top U.S. hospitals in cardiac care, cardiac surgery and coronary intervention

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quality excellence star stethoscope
Hospitals in California, Illinois and New York performed especially well, according to the outcomes-based rankings. 
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Expert cardiologists answer 5 tough questions about COVID-19 and the hearts of athletes

How does COVID-19 impact most athletes? When should clinicians turn to cardiac imaging? A team of specialists discussed these topics, and more, in JAMA Cardiology. 

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Expert cardiologists answer 5 tough questions about COVID-19 and the hearts of athletes

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How does COVID-19 impact most athletes? When should clinicians turn to cardiac imaging? A team of specialists discussed these topics, and more, in JAMA Cardiology. 
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‘This is a disaster’: El Paso cardiologist says patients are dying ‘because COVID has impaired the ability to deliver care’

“This is a disaster,” the specialist said. “People are going to start dying. As a matter a fact, they started dying already.”

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The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF), a related organization of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), this week released a statement on the criminalization of medical errors. The APSF said criminal prosecution is unjust and counterproductive is healthcare organizations want to find ways to mitigate errors by understanding how they happen and create protocols or IT systems can can help prevent future errors. The criminal trial of nurse RaDonda Vaught was counterproductive to safety.
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‘This is a disaster’: El Paso cardiologist says patients are dying ‘because COVID has impaired the ability to deliver care’

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The Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation (APSF), a related organization of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA), this week released a statement on the criminalization of medical errors. The APSF said criminal prosecution is unjust and counterproductive is healthcare organizations want to find ways to mitigate errors by understanding how they happen and create protocols or IT systems can can help prevent future errors. The criminal trial of nurse RaDonda Vaught was counterproductive to safety.
“This is a disaster,” the specialist said. “People are going to start dying. As a matter a fact, they started dying already.”
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Prominent Ohio cardiologist dies from COVID-19

The veteran cardiologist had been battling COVID-19 for several months. 

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Mukul Chandra, MD
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Prominent Ohio cardiologist dies from COVID-19

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Mukul Chandra, MD
The veteran cardiologist had been battling COVID-19 for several months. 
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American College of Cardiology shares new guidance on TAVR-related conduction disturbances

The new guidance was designed to help clinicians provide high-quality care before, during and after TAVR procedures. 

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American College of Cardiology shares new guidance on TAVR-related conduction disturbances

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The new guidance was designed to help clinicians provide high-quality care before, during and after TAVR procedures. 
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5 ways to help keep patients safe this fall as the pandemic continues

The new guidelines come straight from the American College of Cardiology. 

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New findings out of the University of Missouri suggests that the long-lasting impact of COVID-19 may not be quite as substantial as some researchers originally believed. The study’s authors evaluated nearly 50 different symptoms to see if they were more common up to one year after a person has been infected with COVID-19. They found, however, that this was true of just seven symptoms: heart palpitations, chest pain, shortness of breath, joint pain, hair loss, fatigue and obesity. #COVID19 #longCOVID
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5 ways to help keep patients safe this fall as the pandemic continues

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New findings out of the University of Missouri suggests that the long-lasting impact of COVID-19 may not be quite as substantial as some researchers originally believed. The study’s authors evaluated nearly 50 different symptoms to see if they were more common up to one year after a person has been infected with COVID-19. They found, however, that this was true of just seven symptoms: heart palpitations, chest pain, shortness of breath, joint pain, hair loss, fatigue and obesity. #COVID19 #longCOVID
The new guidelines come straight from the American College of Cardiology. 
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2 new strategies for identifying COVID-19 patients at a higher risk of severe illness or death

The teams behind two new studies explored very different ways to predict severe illness or death among hospitalized COVID-19 patients. 

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2 new strategies for identifying COVID-19 patients at a higher risk of severe illness or death

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The teams behind two new studies explored very different ways to predict severe illness or death among hospitalized COVID-19 patients. 
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Medical scribes can reduce burnout among cardiologists—and they practically pay for themselves

Medical scribes can save cardiologists a lot of time, and seeing just one additional patient a day would cover the additional costs. 

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Medical scribes can reduce burnout among cardiologists—and they practically pay for themselves

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Medical scribes can save cardiologists a lot of time, and seeing just one additional patient a day would cover the additional costs. 
READ MORE >

Clinicians more likely to use telehealth when using shared inpatient-outpatient EHR

The analysis focused on more than 241,000 patients with diabetes.

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Telecardiology saw a major boost during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many health systems now want to keep it as a permanent treatment option.
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Clinicians more likely to use telehealth when using shared inpatient-outpatient EHR

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Telecardiology saw a major boost during the COVID-19 pandemic. Many health systems now want to keep it as a permanent treatment option.
The analysis focused on more than 241,000 patients with diabetes.
READ MORE >

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