Today's Top 20 Clinical Leadership Articles
  • Columbia U virus database aims to improve illness severity research

    Researchers from Columbia University in New York City built an open-access viral database to "to longitudinally explore respiratory viral infections, their interactions with other pathogens and host transcriptomic changes" per the project's description. Its creation could help advance research into the severity of illnesses.
  • Impersonators calling Kentucky RNs claim licenses in jeopardy

    Impersonators claiming to be from the Kentucky Board of Nursing have been making calls to registered nurses, falsely stating that their licenses are under investigation and asking for payment of a fine, as confirmed by a spokesperson for the Kentucky Nurses Association to Becker's.
  • States, specialties with highest demand for travel nurses

    California has the highest demand for travel nurses, and med-surg was the specialty in highest demand, according to a Nomad Health report.
  • How do care-at-home programs fit into your hospital's strategy?

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  • Penn Medicine completes first successful pig liver experiment on donor

    Philadelphia-based University of Pennsylvania researchers completed the first successful experiment of circulating a deceased donor's blood through a genetically engineered pig liver.
  • The work improvement strategies actually boosting nurse leader satisfaction

    Enabling nurse leaders to take days off when needed and supporting work-life balance are the two most effective strategies organizations have used to improve leader job satisfaction, according to an American Organization for Nursing Leadership Foundation study.
  • Nurse staffing, reenvisioned — 4 takeaways on new models that drive improvements

    In an interactive session at Becker's 11th Annual CEO + CFO Roundtable, Curtis Anderson, founder and CEO of Nursa — a healthcare staffing platform — led a discussion with hospital and health system executives on technology-based strategies that address challenges in the nursing workforce. 
  • New research sets path forward for long COVID tests, treatments

    Persistent research into understanding the condition known as "long COVID" is finally clearing up clinical confusion and is also paving the way for the development of tests and treatments.
  • Surgical gloves: A vital strategy in the battle against HAIs

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  • What the federal reclassification of marijuana could mean for nursing

    The American Nurses Association has come out in support of the federal government's efforts to reconsider the drug classification for marijuana, the organization announced Jan. 18.
  • 1 in 5 MIS-C cases don't fit updated definition

    Close to 1 in 5 past diagnoses of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children would now not technically qualify as cases under an updated definition from the CDC, according to a study published Jan. 11 in Pediatrics.
  • Nurses keep pressure on CDC to reject looser mask guidelines

    Newly released survey findings from National Nurses United indicate a significant proportion of hospital nurses don't have regular access to N95s or other types of respirators, a situation the nation's largest union of registered nurses claims could worsen if the CDC moves forward with draft guidelines that don't make firm recommendations on the use of respirators to prevent the spread of common pathogens like flu and COVID-19. 
  • The latest on measles spread in the US

    A ninth case of measles has been confirmed in connection with the outbreak in Philadelphia, the city's health department reported Jan. 17.
  • Nurse change agent, advocate dies at 97

    Claire Fagin, PhD, RN, a leading change agent and nurse advocate, died Jan. 16, The New York Times reported Jan. 17. She was 97.
  • Flu admissions at 3rd-highest level in 13 seasons

    The 2023-24 flu season is well underway, with the U.S. seeing a higher hospitalization rate at this point in the year than eleven of the past thirteen flu seasons.
  • Fungal infection death rate likely almost double original estimates

    The number of deaths related to fungal infections is complicated to measure and as a result likely underreported. The updated mortality rate is almost double that of past estimates, according to a study published Jan. 12 in The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
  • 15 most common reasons for hospital citations in 2023

    Among the 4,980 citations delivered to hospitals in 2023, the most common were for care in a safe setting deficiencies, according to CMS data.  
  • A paradox in longevity: More years with more sickness for American adults

    Illness and disease are common with age, but new research suggests that U.S. adults are now spending more time in their life sick than well, The Wall Street Journal reported Jan. 17.
  • New strain of drug-resistant bacteria identified

    A new strain of multidrug resistant Pseudocitrobacter bacteria has been identified by researchers. The novel strain was resistant to seven different classes of antibiotics, according to the data, published Jan. 17 in The Journal of Hospital Infection.
  • The nursing school with highest NCLEX pass rate in every state

    Iowa, Kentucky, New Mexico and Wisconsin were the only states with nursing programs that had a perfect score, according to a registerednursing.org ranking.
  • 35 states where respiratory virus levels remain high

    Thirty-five states are experiencing high or very high respiratory virus activity, according to the CDC, despite a recent dip in flu hospital admissions and a slower increase in the rate of new COVID-19 hospitalizations.
  • How effective 17 strategies are for staff retention, per nurse leaders

    Nurse leaders said allowing days off when necessary and listening and responding to feedback from nurses were the two most effective strategies for improving staffing at their organization, according to an American Organization for Nursing Leadership Foundation's study.

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