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MGH’s clinical research center, opened in 1925, created a model for the NIH to open similar facilities across the country.
Treating delirious patients can be costly and difficult, where hospitalization itself may exacerbate the disorder.
The sounds of talking and footsteps, overhead paging, and beeping equipment can add up to quite a cacophony.
Storing newborns’ blood for research creates a valuable resource—but some parents are trying to put a stop to the practice.
Percutaneous injuries among medical students and health care workers hurt in more ways than one.
An author and seasoned pilot talks about what aviation can teach hospitals about safety.
To save money and increase quality of care for Medicare patients, the government is considering denying payment to hospitals for certain procedures.
Ordinarily resistant to economic ills, health care this time is suffering too. Poor and uninsured patients are most at risk.
Emergency room jam-ups threaten patients, inflate costs and disrupt hospital operations. Small fixes might solve this big problem.
Point: Yes, they are key in the nation’s efforts to develop a value-driven health care system. Counterpoint: No, because the wrong kind of measurements can do more harm than good.
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