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How safe is your hospital? New grades released by Leapfrog Group
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Radial Hemostasis Time Cut by 50 Percent With StatSeal in Combination With TR Band
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New device reduces hemostasis time following catheterization and improves efficiency
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Study Shows Heart Issues Resulting From COVID-19 Not as Prevalent in Athletes as Previously Reported
Fewer than one percent of college athletes who tested positive for COVID-19 developed heart-related problems, according to a recent study published in the American Heart Association’s journal, Circulation, on April 17.
The prospective observational study involved 3,018 COVID-positive athletes from 42 colleges or universities across 26 sports. Data on the “prevalence, clinical characteristics, and outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 cardiac involvement” were collected from Sept. 1, 2020 to Dec. 21, 2020.
Most of the athletes (2,820) received at least one of the three screening protocols that consist of an electrocardiogram, an echocardiogram (ultrasound), or a blood test for troponin protein, followed by a cardiac MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) if “clinically indicated.” The rest of the 198 athletes underwent only a cardiac MRI.
Mental health advocates say a Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital patient with cognitive disabilities and a diet restriction choked to death on fast food not typically allowed in the state hospital, a claim a New Jersey health official denies.
The patient died Thursday at Morristown Medical Center, according to Robert Davison, CEO of the Mental Health Association of Essex and Morris.
New Jersey Department of Health spokesperson Dawn Thomas disputed the claim on Sunday. Thomas, who declined to identify the victim, said that on April 15, a Greystone patient suffered a medical emergency, not related to choking, and was transferred to the hospital. The patient passed away at the hospital several days later.