comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Hospital programs - Page 2 : comparemela.com

Safe Streets changes coming as part of violence intervention plan

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20210528:11:43:00

work for them. we can t we re short on psychiatrists, we re short certainly on child psychiatrists, nurses, and our bachelor s level counselors that really help hold these units together. you know, what s happening is, those people are also getting stuck in these in-patient units, because there s no stepdowns. we re short on residential beds. we have excessive long waits for partial hospital programs. and there aren t enough outpatient therapists to help people in the community. so dr. dave, you ve been looking into this, and i would say the next place where this problem goes is into the nation s schools. there have been a lot of politicians in the campaigns, presidential campaign, who have been talking about social, emotional training in schools, needing teachers to be equipped with dbt skills, so they can help handle this type of crisis. they re going to be getting students who have been isolated for a year and any problems

Antibiotic use during COVID raises concern for rising resistance

Doctors tended to overprescribe antibiotics to COVID-19 patients in hospitals during the early pandemic months, but programs designed to limit overuse are helping, according to an analysis from Pew Charitable Trusts.Why it matters: Antibiotic resistance is a serious threat globally and in the U.S., with rising deaths due to bacterial infection, dwindling novel drugs to treat them, and huge associated economic costs. Many worry the pandemic will only make the problem worse.Stay on top of the latest market trends and economic insights with Axios Markets. Subscribe for freeDriving the news: Looking at the first six months of the pandemic, Pew researchers found 52% of COVID-19 patients in 5,838 hospital admissions were given at least one antibiotic, 96% of them within the first 48 hours of admission.But, only about 20% of those admitted were diagnosed with suspected or confirmed bacterial pneumonia and 9% were diagnosed with a community acquired UTI — a discrepancy indicating a conc

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20170826:04:47:00

in the world we had collapses at every level of government. here we won t quite see that. but we will see the coordination and cooperation among the agencies for the most efficient, and safe management of this horrible storm. we won t know what the damage estimates are nor a few days. this could be a 30, 40, $50 billion event. correct. we have had in the current budget proposal cuts to fema. there s been cuts to fema and health and human social securer there s been specifically cuts in hospital programs for major disasters. that s have been 50% the last 12 or 13 years. we have systems that are actually not prepared to manage big-time events like this. we ll see what goes. at least we could see the feds look in pretty good shape. we ll see what happens with the states and local resources. it s going to be a long haul.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.