Today's Top 20 Clinical Leadership Articles
  • The healthcare generation with highest depression rates, lowest burnout: Vivian

    Gen Z and millennials healthcare workers are less likely to report feeling unsafe at work and suffering burnout, but are more likely to report experiencing depression, a Vivian report found.
  • WHO updates terminology for airborne diseases

    Following several years of collaboration with major public health agencies, the World Health Organization has broadened its classification of airborne diseases — a move that could have significant influence over infection control policies in countries around the world. 
  • WHO unveils 10 patient safety rights

    WHO announced 10 patient safety rights for healthcare.
  • How do care-at-home programs fit into your hospital's strategy?

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  • Screen all pregnant patients for syphilis, medical group says

    The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists updated its syphilis screening guidelines April 18, encouraging physicians to screen for the sexually transmitted infection three times during pregnancy.  
  • Heat-related ED visits hit 6-year high in 2023: CDC

    July and August 2023 had the highest rates of heat-related illness emergency department visits across the nation, and the risk was three times higher than in other warm months — demonstrating a rising trend in heat-related illnesses compared to the previous five years, the CDC said in an April 18 report.
  • Health disparities across states: 6 new findings

    The Commonwealth Fund released a new report April 18 examining racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare access, quality and outcomes across the U.S.
  • How Mercy accelerated rare disease diagnoses in rural areas

    Children's Mercy Kansas City (Mo.) researchers found a way to reduce the time to diagnosis for rare disease by 5.5 months.
  • Surgical gloves: A vital strategy in the battle against HAIs

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  • The rise of 'social prescribing'

    Nature walks. Dance classes. Volunteering. These are among the social activities being prescribed across at least 30 programs in the U.S. Social prescribing — or the practice of connecting people with nonclinical activities that target underlying concerns such as isolation, stress and access to healthy foods — is a well-known concept in Britain and is increasingly stirring interest in the U.S., experts told The New York Times in an April 17 report. 
  • Americans getting less sleep than ever before: Gallup

    For the first time, the majority of U.S. adults say they are not getting enough sleep, a recent Gallup poll found.
  • 30 systems sign on to new effort to advance age-friendly care

    Thirty health systems are participating in a new collaborative through the Institute for Healthcare Improvement that aims to accelerate the adoption of age-friendly care for older adults. 
  • Adults may need whooping cough booster as cases rise: CDC

    In recent months, parts of the U.S. have reported outbreaks of pertussis, or whooping cough. While some regional outbreaks are expected each year, health officials are underscoring the importance of boosters in adults to protect infants from severe illness, NBC News reported April 17. 
  • White House unveils new strategy to prevent future pandemics

    The Biden administration launched a new global health security strategy April 16 to prepare for future outbreaks, pandemics or biological threats. 
  • 18 hospitals with 6+ Magnet designations

    Eighteen of the 599 Magnet-designated hospitals have received the certification at least six times. 
  • Nurses' workweeks grow longer: 5 notes

    On average, registered nurses' workweeks were 84 minutes longer in 2022 than in 2018, federal data shows.
  • FDA nixes anti-ivermectin posts — but maintains its stance

    The FDA has removed social media posts decrying the use of ivermectin for treating COVID-19 following a court ruling, Bloomberg News reported April 16.
  • After rise in ED visits, melatonin makers asked to tweak standards

    Following a spike in emergency department visits among children ingesting unsafe amounts of melatonin, the Council for Responsible Nutrition recommended melatonin manufacturers adjust their labels and formulations. 
  • HHS: Vaccines targeting bird flu strain that infected Texas resident underway

    Vaccines are in development that target the bird flu strain that infected a Texas resident, an HHS official told Politico in an April 12 report. Earlier this month, state and federal officials confirmed a person in Texas who had worked on a dairy farm tested positive for H5N1. 
  • CDC probing illnesses linked to fake Botox in 9 states

    The CDC is working with the FDA to investigate at least 19 reports of harmful reactions linked to counterfeit or mishandled Botox injections in nine states. Nine of the patients were hospitalized, the agency said. 
  • Akron Children's, Cincinnati Children's expand partnership

    Akron (Ohio) Children's Hospital has expanded its collaboration with Cincinnati Children's to provide a wider range of specialty care for children in eastern Ohio, the organization said April 16. 
  • 66,000 qualified nursing applications turned down amid faculty shortages: AACN

    From 2022-23, four-year colleges and universities turned down 65,766 qualified applications — not applicants, as people may apply to more than one program — which likely resulted in thousands of applicants being turned away, according to a new report from the American Association of Colleges of Nursing. 

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