Hospital Supplies
Mostrando 13-24 de 28 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. MANAGEMENT AND RATIONALIZATION IN THE DISTRIBUTION OF MEDICINES AND CLINICAL MATERIAL: a study of a case at School Hospital of Taubatà University. / GESTÃO E RACIONALIZAÃÃO NA DISTRIBUIÃÃO DE MEDICAMENTOS E MATERIAIS CLÃNICOS: um estudo de caso no Hospital Escola da Universidade de TaubatÃ
The intense modifications in the global business environment has been turning the hospital atmosphere competitive, demanding a new organization with the adhesion in concepts that turn the productive process turned to the client and may reach better levels of productivity. The managers became, so, to be responsibles for the initiative of the expenses control
Publicado em: 2005
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14. Proposta de modelo de gerenciamento de risco aplicado ao desempenho de equipamentos eletromedicos em estabelecimentos assistenciais de saude / Proposal of risk management model applied to the performance of medical device in hospitals
There is growing concern of the health professionals for the safety of their teams and the patients in the hospital environment. Among the factors that affect the safety are the hazards resulting from functional problems of medical electrical equipments (MEEs), that can happen during its useful life. With the objective of reducing the functional risks of tho
Publicado em: 2004
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15. Keeping Our Hospitals Operating, Survey of Continental United States Non-federal Hospital Requirements for Maintenance Repair, and Operating Equipment and Supplies
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16. Mycobacterial contamination of fibreoptic bronchoscopes.
Contamination of bronchoalveolar lavage specimens by environmental mycobacteria in hospital water supplies may lead to diagnostic confusion, particularly in immunocompromised patients. Mycobacteria may become concentrated in the tubing of bronchoscope disinfecting machines. It is very difficult to eradicate these organisms once contamination has occurred.
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17. Surge Capacity for Response to Bioterrorism in Hospital Clinical Microbiology Laboratories
Surge capacity is the ability to rapidly mobilize to meet an increased demand. While large amounts of federal funding have been allocated to public health laboratories, little federal funding has been allocated to hospital microbiology laboratories. There are concerns that hospital laboratories may have inadequate surge capacities to deal with a significant
American Society for Microbiology.
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18. Molecular epidemiology of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1.
The DNA of patient and environmental isolates of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 was analyzed by restriction endonuclease cleavage. The electrophoretic patterns of the DNA digests of isolates from a group of patients with Legionnaires disease acquired in a hospital were indistinguishable from one another and were identical to the DNA pattern of a strain i
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19. Family planning in genitourinary medicine: an opportunistic service?
OBJECTIVE--To evaluate and serve the need for contraception in those not using conventional sources of family planning services. SETTING--South London outpatient genitourinary medicine department at King's College Hospital. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS--Prospective study of 200 women seen consecutively in the clinic by the same doctor (LM) during 1993. Women at risk
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20. Excess acute care bed capacity and its causes: the experience of New York State.
OBJECTIVE. The study was developed to identify numbers of excess hospital medical-surgical and pediatric bed capacity and the variables that produce them in the counties of New York State. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING. Data were collected from New York's Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS) for 1991. This system includes data for all hos
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21. Infant mortality in SMSAs before Medicaid: test of a causal model.
Path analysis is applied to data on infant mortality, supplies of physicians and hospital beds, and population percentages of blacks and low-income families in 201 standard metropolitan statistical areas (SMSAs) to test the hypothesis that medical resources mediate the effects of racial composition and low income on infant mortality rates. The hypothesis is
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22. Pulsed field electrophoresis of genomic restriction fragments for the detection of nosocomial Legionella pneumophila in hospital water supplies.
Ten Legionella pneumophila strains isolated from different sources were analyzed according to their restriction fragment patterns obtained by cleavage of genomic DNA with NotI and SfiI and separation by pulsed field electrophoresis. Three L. pneumophila isolates from a nosocomial outbreak in Lübeck (Germany) and three other L. pneumophila strains independen
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23. LATCH at the Washington Hospital Center, 1967-1975.
Immediate access to needed information is essential if medical personnel are to provide quality health care. At the Washington Hospital Center, Literature Attached to Charts, LATCH, was created in 1967 to provide the required information quickly. As a collection of a few relevant articles attached to the patient's chart, it supplies current literature on som
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24. Iatrogenic Injury to the Long Thoracic Nerve: An Underestimated Cause of Morbidity after Cardiac Surgery
After heart surgery, complications affecting the brachial plexus have been reported in 2% to 38% of cases. The long thoracic nerve is vulnerable to damage at various levels, due to its long and superficial course. This nerve supplies the serratus anterior muscle, which has an important role in the abduction and elevation of the superior limb; paralysis of th