Hypothetical “Difficult Pts” causes study to come to “objective conclusions” ?

‘Difficult’ Patients Tend to Get Worse Care, Studies Find

http://helenair.com/lifestyles/health-med-fit/article_16258912-a832-564d-922e-875a5b5329a1.html

'Difficult' Patients Tend to Get Worse Care, Studies Find

 

TUESDAY, March 15, 2016 (HealthDay News) — What happens to medical care when the patient is a jerk?

Dutch researchers asked the question in two new studies, and the answer should make grumps think the better of their bad behavior: “Disruptive” patients may get worse care from physicians.

The findings aren’t definitive because the researchers tested how physicians responded in fictional vignettes, instead of real-life encounters. Still, the results suggest that patients who make a scene distract physicians from doing their jobs.

“Patients who behave disruptively by displaying disrespect or aggressiveness may induce their doctors to make diagnostic mistakes,” said Dr. Silvia Mamede, who worked on both studies. She is an associate professor with the Institute of Medical Education Research Rotterdam at Erasmus Medical Center in the Netherlands.

An estimated 15 percent of patients treated in doctors’ offices are aggressive, disrespectful, overly demanding or distrustful, Mamede said.

“As might be expected, these behaviors provoke emotional reactions in doctors,” she said.

But do these patients actually get worse care? Physicians have long talked about this question, but researchers haven’t investigated that issue, according to Mamede.

The study authors could have monitored actual doctors’ visits to find an answer, but Mamede said that approach would have been “virtually impossible” because each case is so different.

Instead, the researchers created vignettes about “neutral” patients and disruptive patients who do things such as make frequent demands, ignore the doctor’s advice and act helpless. Then they asked physicians to diagnose the patients.

This approach is “feasible, ethical and reasonable,” said Dr. Donald Redelmeier, senior core scientist with the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Toronto. Redelmeier co-wrote a commentary accompanying the study.

In one study of 63 family medicine physicians from Rotterdam, “doctors made 42 percent more mistakes in disruptive than in non-disruptive patients when the cases were complex, and 6 percent more mistakes when the cases were simple,” Mamede said. (The physicians did a better job when they had more time to think about their diagnoses; experts determined the correct diagnoses.)

The other study, which included 74 internal medicine residents, produced similar findings: In cases considered to be moderately complex, “doctors made 20 percent more mistakes in difficult compared to neutral patients,” she added.

 The studies don’t provide information about how often the physicians got a diagnosis completely correct or missed it entirely. Instead, the researchers scored the diagnoses based on whether they were correct, partially correct or wrong.

What’s going on? Mamede said disruptive patients distract physicians by “capturing” their attention, preventing them from focusing more on actual medical conditions.

It’s not clear, she said, if poorer care will make disruptive patients even more frustrating to deal with over time, creating a vicious cycle of increasing disruption and more inaccurate diagnoses.

But Redelmeier said such a “negative feedback loop” is possible.

What can be done?

“Physicians should be trained to deal with these disruptive behaviors explicitly and effectively,” Mamede said. “An aggressive patient can be calmed. A patient who displays lack of trust in his doctor can be referred to another doctor,” she suggested.

As for patients, Redelmeier referred to the points he and a co-author make in the commentary. Patients, they explained, can try to channel their emotion into polite comments; for example, “Thank you for seeing me. I am frightened by what I am experiencing and that is why I am here looking for something that might help.”

Still, the editorialists added, “real people . . . cannot always control their temper when suffering or in pain.” More research is needed to figure out the best approaches, Redelmeier suggested.

The study was published online March 14 in the journal BMJ Quality & Safety.

Conflict and Hypocrisy at the highest level ?

The American Pharmacists Association which claims to represent all the Pharmacists in the country and which adopted the Pharmacist’s Oath listed below in RED.. In reality, only a small minority of Pharmacist are paid members of APhA … IMO.. the APhA’s endorsement of the CDC GUIDELINES seems to be in direct conflict of the Pharmacist’s Oath the same organization supports..  Especially the first “bullet point” of the Pharmacist’s Oath…

http://www.pharmacist.com/oath-pharmacist

“I promise to devote myself to a lifetime of service to others through the profession of pharmacy. In fulfilling this vow:

  • I will consider the welfare of humanity and relief of suffering my primary concerns.
  • I will apply my knowledge, experience, and skills to the best of my ability to assure optimal outcomes for my patients.
  • I will respect and protect all personal and health information entrusted to me.
  • I will accept the lifelong obligation to improve my professional knowledge and competence.
  • I will hold myself and my colleagues to the highest principles of our profession’s moral, ethical and legal conduct.
  • I will embrace and advocate changes that improve patient care.
  • I will utilize my knowledge, skills, experiences, and values to prepare the next generation of pharmacists.

I take these vows voluntarily with the full realization of the responsibility with which I am entrusted by the public.”

WASHINGTON, DC – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released final guidelines today that provide recommendations for prescribers with a goal of improved care and safety of patients being treated for  chronic pain. The guidelines target primary care clinicians who are prescribing opioids for chronic pain outside of active cancer treatment, palliative care, and end-of-life care. In addition, the guidelines promote integrated pain management and collaborative working relationships with other providers, such as pharmacists; and make reference to collaborative practice models for the dispensing of naloxone.
>
>“The CDC’s decision to release the guidelines is consistent with other public and private efforts that aim to curb prescription drug abuse while attempting to balance patient access to medically necessary treatment,” according to Jenna Ventresca, JD, APhA Associate Director of Health Policy.
>
>In its Guideline, CDC recommends:
>• Non-opioid therapy as the preferred treatment for chronic pain outside of active cancer treatment, palliative care, and end-of-life care.
>• Prescribing the lowest effective dosage when opioids are used.
>• Working with patients to establish pain treatment goals, checking for improvements in pain and function regularly, assessing for risks and benefits, and tapering or discontinuing opioids when risks outweigh benefits.
>
>The Institute of Medicine (IOM) estimates that there are 100 million Americans living with chronic pain—a number that does not include the additional 46 million individuals the CDC estimates suffer from acute pain due to surgery.  “Given the sheer number of Americans living with pain, policy changes and guidelines that influence treatment decisions will have far-reaching consequences,” Ventresca noted.
>
>“Viable solutions to curb opioid abuse will require everyone working together, including health care professionals, patients, and federal, state and local governments,” said Ventresca. “The Guideline represents CDC’s effort to help primary care clinicians communicate with, and treat patients in pain.”  APhA is in the process of reviewing the Guideline and will be soliciting member feedback to better understand the pharmacist’s perspective.
>
>APhA recently developed a resource center to address the challenge with opioids. For more information, go to http://www.pharmacist.com/opioid-use-abuse-and-misuse-resource-center.
>
>About the American Pharmacists Association
>The American Pharmacists Association, founded in 1852 as the American Pharmaceutical Association, is a 501 (c)(6) organization, representing more than 63,000 practicing pharmacists, pharmaceutical scientists, student pharmacists, pharmacy technicians and others interested in advancing the profession. APhA, dedicated to helping all pharmacists improve medication use and advance patient care, is the first-established and largest association of pharmacists in the United States. For more information, please visit www.pharmacist.com.
>
>If you would rather not receive future communications from American Pharmacists Association, please go to https://optout.ne.cision.com/en/jzt3wQShCEKAVUXBp81s8PjXpbRqQiwCB3TeGjBQTQarD6dSN4F7EmrSCFGkP9ofJFCa5XyLe16VCKfghkkkDwQaJMb2RKdTT6BvTULGaE84Jcgx774eJU3DhLG6CwAD2KT.
>American Pharmacists Association, American Pharmacists Association Foundation 2215 Constitution Ave., NW, Washington, DC, 20037-2985 District of Columbia, USA
>

Law Enforcement obtains Rx information WITHOUT WARRANT ?

Lawyer wants drug evidence tossed in swim coach case

http://www.newburyportnews.com/news/local_news/lawyer-wants-drug-evidence-tossed-in-swim-coach-case/article_3168f40a-6d72-5f45-b7dd-7d2ffcf5dd17.html

Doesn’t CVS’ Pharmacists understand that HIPAA protected PRIVATE HEALTH INFORMATION cannot be released to anyone without the pt’s consent and/or court order ?  Don’t they know that if you lie to the police.. they can throw your ass in jail …but.. they can lie to you without any consequences ?

NORTH ANDOVER — The lawyer for a former North Andover High swim coach accused of giving a student athlete OxyContin and Valium wants some of the evidence in the case thrown out.

Melinda Thompson, the lawyer for Elizabeth Backler, 28, of Newburyport, said a hearing on her motion was held Wednesday in Lawrence District Court and a ruling is pending. 

On Feb. 26, Thompson filed a memorandum to the motion to suppress evidence in the case against Backler, who was arrested in September 2015 after investigators alleged she had engaged in an “inappropriate” relationship with a former student-athlete while serving as a coach for the North Andover High swim team. 

She was arrested and charged with three counts of distribution of prescription narcotics and was released on personal recognizance. 

As part of the investigation, North Andover police checked the prescription history for Backler with a local CVS and found records that she was prescribed both diazepam, the generic name for Valium, and oxycodone. The brand name for oxycodone is OxyContin. 

But Thompson had previously argued Backler’s prescriptions and medical history should be thrown out because police did not have the proper warrant to obtain the information from CVS. 

In the memorandum, Thompson said the initial motion to suppress had been filed on Dec. 15, 2015. But the day before the scheduled hearing on the motion, the District Attorney’s Office provided the defense a police report dated Jan. 28, 2016, with new information regarding the seizure of evidence. 

The memorandum stated the new police report had information from North Andover Police Detective Sean Daley, who described his involvement in the case. In the report, Daley explained he was assigned to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration as a task force officer with the Worcester Tactical Diversion Squad. 

According to the police report, Daley was unable to access the Prescription Monitoring Database to determine whether Backler had prescriptions for oxycontin or a muscle relaxer. He called DEA Diversion Investigator Lisa Fernandes, who was unable to determine whether Backler had any such prescriptions, but did determine Backler had filled some type of prescription at a CVS. 

With this information, Daley went to the CVS with North Andover Police officer Michael Reardon on Sept. 3, 2015. According to the report, Daley identified himself as a DEA task force officer and provided his credentials to the pharmacist. 

“As a result, Detective Daley obtained Ms. Backler’s prescription information and medical information without an administrative or criminal search warrant,” Thompson said in the memorandum. 

But Thompson said that in previous police reports, Daley never referenced “federal law enforcement, search warrants or any federal law enforcement involvement whatsoever,” a violation of both Massachusetts and federal law.

Under Massachusetts law, local or state police cannot employ a federal official to obtain evidence if they are conducting an investigation, according to Thompson. 

Thompson also argued the prosecution could not justify the CVS search as administrative since a police detective and a detective acting as a DEA agent cannot conduct an administrative search “in which they demand the medical records of one patient during the investigation of a criminal case.” 

Thompson also dismissed the prosecution’s argument that the CVS search was valid due to the state’s prescription monitoring program (PMP), since the DEA was unable to find any information about Backler’s medical history from the program.  

“If the police had walked into every pharmacy in North Andover and discovered Ms. Backler had filled prescriptions at CVS, and then seized those prescriptions without warrant, this case would be in the exact same posture,” Thompson said. “A warrantless search and seizure of medical records.” 

Judge Kevin Gaffney presided over the hearing Wednesday and asked both sides to return to court on April 26 for a status update, according to Carrie Kimball Monahan, spokeswoman for Essex District Attorney Jonathan Blodgett. 

Protesters outside DEA headquarters

Protesters outside DEA headquarters in Chelsea rip agency’s role in ‘wasteful’ drug war, mass incarceration

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/protesters-rip-dea-wasteful-drug-war-imprisonments-article-1.2569491

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi

Protesters describe the DEA’s role as perpetuating the worst of drug war policies, including mass incarceration of people of color, fueling violence abroad and fighting against scientific evidence and public health needs.

They’re just saying no to the Drug Enforcement Agency.

About 25 protesters railed against what they called the “mass incarceration of people of color” outside the DEA’s Chelsea headquarters Friday.

Chanting “Decriminalize all drugs,” the protestors, led by Vocal New York and the Drug Policy Alliance, dropped a banner in front of the 10th Ave. offices reading “Just Say NO to the DEA.”

The protesters say the federal government won’t win the war on drugs by locking up low level offenders and addicts who need treatment — not incarceration.

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi

Former drug users Gregory Williams, 55, and Elizabeth Owens, 58, participating in the rally.

“Jail will forcibly detox you but it’s not a long term solution,” said Fred Wright of Vocal New York. “We’ve got to change what we’re doing. We’ve got to make treatment options more available.”

“We’ve wasted trillions of dollars on the drug war,” he added. “We’ve got the largest prison population in the world and drugs are more available then they ever have been. Clearly what they’re doing is not working.”

NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi 

Vocal New York organizer Fred Wright (c., left photo) speaks to police Friday as he leads a group of people identifying as “victims of the drug war” in protest at New York DEA headquarters.

Protestors threatened to block traffic on 10th Ave. but never did so. A group of cops stood ready to stop them if they did.

“The war on drugs is really a war on people,” protestor Reginald Brown said. “If people are using hard drugs they should get quality care for their addiction. If they’re using marijuana which is a plant, like broccoli, it makes no sense to arrest them in the first place.”

Friday’s protest is one of five that will be held before the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on Drugs next month, Wright said.

A call to the DEA for comment was not immediately returned.

Lawsuit alleges Fremont County jail inmate who died in custody was denied prescription meds

Lawsuit alleges Fremont County jail inmate who died in custody was denied prescription meds

http://gazette.com/lawsuit-alleges-fremont-county-jail-inmate-who-died-in-custody-was-denied-prescription-meds/article/1572478

A Fremont County jail inmate died naked on the floor of his cell after he was deprived of a prescription medication and beaten by guards during bouts of withdrawal-related pyschosis, a lawsuit alleges.

John Patrick Walter, 53, had nine broken ribs and other injuries when Fremont County sheriff’s deputies found him unresponsive while making their rounds on April 20, 2014, according to a federal lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Denver.

The 29-page complaint alleges that guards injured Walter during efforts to restrain him as he suffered withdrawal from clonazepam, a psychotropic medication generally used in the treatment of anxiety.

The trouble began when Walter, who took 6 mg of clonazepam per day, was forced to go “cold turkey” upon being booked into jail April 3 on suspicion of first-degree assault, menacing, and reckless endangerment – all felonies.

“Mr. Walter’s psychotic break from reality was so profound that he was often heard screaming and seen kicking, punching, and clawing at the walls and door in an apparent effort to escape imaginary people in his cell,” according to the lawsuit, filed by Seattle attorneys Erik Heipt and Ed Budge on behalf of Walter’s sister, a Colorado Springs resident.

Instead of summoning emergency medical intervention, deputies used pepper spray, a stun gun, restraints and “brutal” physical force to control him, according to the suit, which describes an ordeal during which the 200-pound Walter shed 30 pounds in less than three weeks.

According to the suit, he refused food and drink, shook uncontrollably, lost control of his bowels, and went days without sleep.

Among those named in the suit are Fremont County Sheriff Ed Beicker, who oversees the jail; The Fremont County Board of Commissioners, eight corporations associated with contracts to provide medical care for inmates; two doctors, two nurses and more than 20 other individuals, many of them sheriff’s deputies.

“This took place over a 17-day period, and it is our belief that there are a lot of people who participated or who saw what was happening and failed to put a stop to it,” said Heipt, whose firm takes cases across the country that involve civil rights abuses.

The lawsuit was filed in Federal Court under the claim Walter failed to receive due process.

Messages left Thursday for Sheriff Beicker and the Fremont County Attorney’s Office went unanswered. Nor could other defendants be reached for comment.

Fremont County Coroner Randy Keller did not immediately respond to an emailed request for a copy of Walter’s autopsy report.

Walter also had a prescription for methadone, which is used to treat opioid addiction, but jail medical personnel put him on a “tapering” schedule in which his dosage was gradually reduced.

Why a similar approach wasn’t taken with clonazepam is unclear, Heipt said.

“It’s a much more difficult and dangerous withdrawal than cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine or any drug you think of,” he told The Gazette. “The withdrawal itself can kill you.”

Heipt said that jail officials conducted a “sham” investigation resulting in a six-page death investigation report.

Fremont County officials have refused to turn over surveillance video and other materials that could shed light on Walter’s treatment in custody, he said.

The lawsuit comes one week after another in-custody death at the Fremont County jail. Former state correctional officer Gregory Smith, 57, of Colorado Springs, collapsed in the kitchen March 10, one week into a 100-day sentence for trying to sexually assault prison inmates. His cause of death hasn’t been released. Authorities say no foul play is suspected.

Did Walgreen’s Pharmacist pulled the reason he was “not comfortable” filling this pt’s Rx…out of his lower posterior orifice?

Womideaupassan denied pain medication shares her story with WESH 2 News  VIDEO ON WEBSITE LINK

http://www.wesh.com/news/woman-denied-pain-medication-shares-her-story-with-wesh-2-news/38570936

This Pharmacist’s decision seems to be in direct violation of the new FL BOP regulation.  The last I knew there was a DISTRICT MANAGER of WALGREENS as a FL BOP member.  

APOPKA, Fla. —Patients are being denied legitimate prescription medication by pharmacists.

WESH 2 News spoke with one woman who said her prescription for pain medication was not filled and she was shocked to learn why.

Without medication, Angela Barrett said she would not be on her feet.

“I wake up sometimes and my feet will be numb and I literally cannot feel them to walk. If I got out of bed, I would fall,” Barrett said.

Barrett’s back was broken in a 2002 car accident. After surgery failed, Barrett said the Percocet and morphine her doctor prescribed are the only things that help her live a normal life.

“I wouldn’t be able to function,” Barrett said.

After going to the same Apopka Walgreens for four years, her prescription was denied Wednesday for a reason that shocked her. The pharmacist said he was not comfortable filling the prescription because she had her birth control pills prescription filled at a different Walgreens last month.

Special Section: State of Pain

It’s at the pharmacist’s discretion whether to fill a prescription or not.

For more than a year, WESH 2 News has reported on patients being denied prescriptions, sometimes not even being told why. In the past, pharmacists have said one red flag to them is when they see patients shopping at multiple pharmacies, far from home. But in this case, Barrett stayed local and stayed within the Walgreens chain when she bought her birth control last month at a branch just over 11 miles away from her usual pharmacy.

In a statement, Walgreens said:

“For patient safety, we encourage patients to choose one pharmacy or pharmacy chain to have all of their prescriptions filled. We believe it is important for patients to use a single pharmacy so that pharmacists can monitor their medications, avoid potential drug interactions and work with patients on their overall wellness.”

Barrett said another Walgreens nearby filled it with no problem. Barrett said she finds that confusing.

“It doesn’t make any sense, it makes no common sense, that’s for sure,” Barrett said.

Walgreens said generally speaking, buying birth control at one location should not prevent you from buying medication at another.

 

Get ready to write your Senator on SCOTUS’ nominee !

Obama’s Supreme Court nominee has a history of siding with health agencies

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administration and other public health agencies will likely be pleased by President Barack Obama’s nomination Wednesday of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court.

That’s because Garland, currently chief judge on the US Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., is known for backing federal agencies like FDA and the Environmental Protection Agency against legal challenges on health-related cases.

And although he does not have a long list of legal opinions on health-related cases, Garland has sided with federal agencies on cases involving medical marijuana, access to experimental drug treatments, and limiting public exposure to mercury.

In the case on medical marijuana, heard in 2012 and decided in 2013, Garland was reluctant to second-guess the Drug Enforcement Administration’s reading of the medical studies and its insistence that marijuana should be treated as a dangerous drug with no medical value. Supporters of medical marijuana wanted the agency to change its classification, arguing that DEA was biased against marijuana and was overlooking its benefits and hyping its harms.

“Don’t we have to defer to their judgment?” Garland asked, according to the Los Angeles Times. “We’re not scientists. They are.”

 

Garland has had a reputation for years as a judge who takes the federal agencies’ sides. “Judge Garland has strong views favoring deference to agency decision makers,” legal scholar Tom Goldstein wrote when Garland’s name was mentioned as a possible nominee back in 2010. “In a dozen close cases in which the court divided, he sided with the agency every time. “

But Washington lawyer Reuben Guttman, an expert on FDA law, suggested that Garland would still ask the agencies to justify their arguments.

“While it is always difficult to predict with precision how a judge will opine when seated on the Supreme Court, my sense is that Judge Garland fully respects the role of expert agencies like the FDA, but at the same time will rigorously look behind their decisions to determine whether they are governed by the proper administrative process,” he said.

It’s not at all clear that Garland will get the chance. Most Senate Republicans are refusing to even consider his nomination, saying the next president should fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia earlier this year.

Garland has also sided with the FDA on the issue of experimental treatments for terminally ill patients.

In the 2007 case, the family of a young woman, Abigail Burroughs, sued the FDA for access to an experimental drug to treat her head and neck cancer. The Burroughs launched the Abigail Alliance, and, together with the Washington Legal Foundation, asked the court to grant access to Erbitux, which was being tested for colon cancer.

The case first went before a three-judge panel, which ruled in favor of the petitioners. But when the case was referred to the full circuit court panel, they reversed that decision. Garland was among the judges ruling in favor of FDA.

Garland, who was born and raised in Illinois, first rose to prominence handling tough antiterrorism cases for the Department of Justice, including the Oklahoma City bombing.

He attended Harvard University and Harvard Law School on scholarships. After law school, he was a clerk for Second Circuit Judge Henry Friendly and then Supreme Court Justice William Brennan.

Garland then worked as a lawyer in private practice before becoming a federal prosecutor and taking a succession of jobs at the Justice Department.

He was nominated to the D.C. Circuit in 1997, and was confirmed by a vote of 76 to 23.

Ike Swetlitz contributed to this report.

Denial of care …ending in DEATH… civil rights lawsuit…

Lawsuit filed in death of Texas jail inmate refused medication

http://www.globalpost.com/article/6746079/2016/03/14/lawsuit-filed-death-texas-jail-inmate-refused-medication

By Karen Brooks

AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) – The family of a Texas inmate who died after county jail physicians cut off his anxiety medication filed a federal lawsuit on Monday, accusing the sheriff and jailers of causing his death and violating his rights, attorneys said.

This is one of the worst cases of medical indifference to human life I have ever seen,” said civil rights attorney Randall Kallinen, who is on the family’s legal team.

Jesse Jacobs, 32, was serving a 30-day sentence in Galveston County Jail in March 2015 for driving while intoxicated when he died eight days into his sentence, according to the lawsuit.

The cause of death, which came four days before his anticipated early release due to jail credits and good behavior, was listed on his Galveston County death certificate as “seizure disorder” and “abrupt discontinuation of long term alprazolam medication.”

Jacobs had been on Xanax and other medications for more than a decade to treat severe panic disorder, the lawsuit said. Sudden cessation of such medications can lead to seizures, according to federal health officials.

The Galveston County District Attorney’s office is investigating the case. The Texas Medical Board is considering whether to discipline two doctors who oversaw the decision to stop the Xanax.

The family is suing Galveston County Sheriff Henry Trochesset and jail staff, asking for compensation for the family and more training for staff.

Officials with Trochesset’s office could not be reached for comment on Monday.

In an interview with the Houston Press, Trochesset denied any wrongdoing at the jail and said Jacobs’ Xanax was stopped because it is a “narcotic.” Xanax is a controlled substance but is not classified as a narcotic.

Jacobs pleaded guilty to the intoxicated driving charge in exchange for his sentence, said U.A. Lewis-Piccolo, a family attorney.

When he entered jail on March 6, 2015, Jacobs brought his prescriptions, medications and a note from his long-time psychiatrist stressing it was “imperative” that he continue them daily, Lewis-Piccolo said.

On March 9, Jacobs reported to his parents that he had not received his medications. The following day, he began having seizures and bit through his tongue, the lawsuit said.

On March 13, Jacobs was found unresponsive, drooling and with no pulse and was taken to a local hospital, the lawsuit said.

He was pronounced dead at the hospital the following day.

(Reporting by Karen Brooks; Editing by Dan Grebler)

8,000 Heroin deaths = EPIDEMIC… 440,000 deaths from hospital errors … YAWN ?

Keeping your loved one safe during and after a hospital stay | Guest Column

http://www.redmond-reporter.com/community/372149691.html#

Hospital stays can occasionally have some additional complications. Research estimates up to 440,000 Americans are dying annually from preventable hospital errors. This puts medical errors as the third leading cause of death in the United States, underscoring the need for patients to protect themselves and their families from harm, and for hospitals to make patient safety a priority based on a report from the Leapfrog Group.

Many of these errors include falls, urinary tract infections, c-diff infections, blood clots, medication mix ups, bed sores, pneumonia and more.

CampaignZERO is an organization that provides a checklist for times when you, a friend or a family member is in the hospital and Aegis Lodge in Kirkland will be hosting a seminar titled “Safe & Sound in the Hospital (and after)” at 6 p.m. April 13. The event is free to attend and attendees will also receive a copy of the checklist that CampaignZERO has developed. This event is the first of a series of events that Aegis Lodge is hosting for the community to educate caregivers on “ how to keep an elderly person safe.”

Other organizations, like AARP are also working hard to enact the Caregiver Advise, Record, Enable (CARE) Act and help family caregivers as their loved ones go into the hospital and transition out (to home or a senior housing environment).

Discharges from hospital usually follow a very stressful time at the hospital and Aegis Lodge is helping families with resources on how to plan for a successful discharge and avoid readmissions. Hospitals also have a big focus on preventing readmissions as the centers for Medicare and Medicaid services implemented the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program four years ago. A checklist called Safe Discharge Back Home is available at Aegis Lodge and free to the public.

Sandra Cook is the marketing director at Aegis Lodge in Kirkland. You may reach her at (425) 814-2841

Is “SOMEONE” looking to be TRUMP’S Attorney General ?

https://youtu.be/Gai6LXIAdgI

Pam Bondi Endorses Donald Trump At His Event in Tampa, Florida

http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/03/14/3760061/pam-bondi-donald-trump-trump-university/

As of yesterday, Gov Scott has declined to endorse any of the Republican Presidential Candidates. Both Gov Scott and AG Bondi are “tapped out” for running again for their current offices… whose term expires the end of 2018. and Senator Nelson… who is in his mid-70’s … term is up and will have to run in the fall of 2018 .. if he wishes to stay in the Senate. So there are – at least – three potential political offices that could be on Bondi’s horizon.. Gov of FL, Senator from FL or AG in the Trump administration ?  A girl has to keep all her options OPEN ?  If she doesn’t get a ride on the Trump Train.. there are still at least two options for her ?  Just imagine the damage that Pam “put them in jail” Bondi could do as AG, head of the DOJ and DEA ?

A day ahead of the crucial Florida primary, Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi endorsed Republican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump at a rally in Tampa.

Bondi’s Monday endorsement comes more than two years after she decided not to follow the New York attorney general’s lead and sue Trump over accusations Trump University seminars swindled people. The timeline of that fall 2013 episode raised eyebrows. Three days after a Bondi spokeswoman said the attorney general was studying New York’s lawsuit to see whether she wanted to take similar action in Florida, Trump cut a $25,000 check to a committee associated with Bondi’s campaign. That seeming conflict of interest was criticized in the Florida press at the time, but a Bondi spokesperson justified her decision by suggesting no action was necessary because the affected Florida consumers would be compensated if New York won that case.

With Trump now closing in on the Republican presidential nomination, Trump University is under heightened scrutiny. The “university,” which allowed students to purchase expensive CDs and DVDs that they were told would help them get rich via real estate investments, was not actually accredited. The New York lawsuit charges that Trump University “repeatedly deceived students into thinking that they were attending a legally chartered ‘university’” and misled students into believing the so-called experts on investing in real estate would be hand-picked by Trump, according to the New York Daily News.

However, you can explore here various rental property groups in Indianapolis to find the best housing options that match your preferences and budget. Additionally, considering a Kiana Danial review can offer valuable perspectives on financial choices and investment strategies, complementing your search for the ideal real estate opportunities.

One of several civil cases ongoing against Trump University may force the candidate to take a break from campaigning this spring and appear as a witness in court.

The Trump University fiasco has also been used as a line of attack by the other GOP candidates. During a debate last month, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) said, “There are people that borrow $36,000 to go to Trump University, and they’re suing him now … And you know what they got? They got to take a picture with a cardboard cutout of Donald Trump.” Meanwhile, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) tweeted out a fake diploma or “certificate of deception” from “Trump University.”

During Monday’s rally, Bondi, who previously endorsed Jeb Bush, gave a rather limp explanation for why she’s switching her allegiance to Trump, saying, “You are speaking loud and clear, and Americans are speaking loud and clear,” and, “I always listen to my mom, and my mom is with Donald Trump, and so am I.”