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Outpatient Surgery E-Weekly May 26th, 2009

THIS WEEK'S ARTICLES

Tomorrow is OR Excellence's Early-bird Contest Deadline
Study: Prostate Drug Complicates Cataract Surgery
Overcoding Overestimates Incidence of Barrett's Esophagus
Instapoll: Do You Need a Vacation?

NEWS & NOTES

Tip of the week
Medicare: ASCs must monitor infection
Comment on healthcare laundry standards
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LAST WEEK'S E-WEEKLY ARTICLES

Jury Awards $4.75M in Pain Pump Suit
Haiti Efforts Lead Florida to Ease Nursing Regulations
Insurer Drops ENT Who Gave Genital Exams
InstaPoll: Sexual Harassment in the Healthcare Workplace
News & Notes
Tomorrow is OR Excellence's Early-bird Contest Deadline

Wednesday, May 27, is your last chance to participate in Outpatient Surgery Magazine's OR Excellence Early-bird Contest. There is no time like the present to secure your spot and lock in great savings for the surgical conference of the year, while also entering the running for great prizes. Early-bird registrants receive a $100 discount off the conference's full registration fee, guarantee their spots at the meeting and secure discounted rooms at the San Francisco Hilton, the center of the conference action. In addition, all attendees who are paid in full on May 27 will be entered into a drawing for prizes that include $50 Union Square gift certificates, special dinners and the grand prize: a free luxury suite at the Hilton during their OR Excellence stay. Please visit the OR Excellence Web site for more information.

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January 26th E-WEEKLY

Haitian Earthquake Inspires Surgical Assistance
Judge Rejects Fentanyl Tech's Plea Deal
Surveillance Colonoscopy Over- and Underused
InstaPoll: Which Procedure Do You Want to Add?
News & Notes
Study: Prostate Drug Complicates Cataract Surgery

Men who take the drug tamsulosin for the treatment of enlarged prostate-related urinary disorders in the 2 weeks prior to cataract surgery are at significantly higher risk of experiencing such post-operative complications as retinal detachment or lost lens, according to a new study.

For the study, published in the May 20 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, Chaim M. Bell, MD, PhD, and a team of researchers at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto reviewed the cases of 96,128 Canadian men, 66 years of age or older, who were prescribed tamsulosin or other medications for the treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia at the time they underwent cataract surgeries between 2002 and 2007.

An analysis of post-procedure adverse events showed that patients who'd taken tamsulosin within 14 days of the surgery had a 7.5% rate of complications, as compared to the control group's 2.7%. Patients who'd taken other medications showed no increased rate of complications.

The researchers note that tamsulosin, marketed under the brand name Flomax, treats the symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia by relaxing smooth muscle in the prostate and bladder, which it also may do to the smooth muscle of the iris, causing intraoperative floppy iris syndrome.

"It is unclear whether drug discontinuation prior to surgery reduces this risk," the researchers write. But since it's not uncommon for older men to have both cataracts and enlarged prostates, they say, patients should be warned of and healthcare providers should identify the risk in order to anticipate possible complications.

In an accompanying editorial, Alan H. Friedman of the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York argues that, while intraoperative floppy iris syndrome is already noted as a precaution on tamsulosiin's prescribing information, this large study's data may warrant a federal black-box warning.

David Bernard

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January 19th E-WEEKLY

Mass. Anesthesiologist Charged with Fraud
Bariatric Outcomes Improved with Medicare Coverage
State Reports Focus on Surgical Safety
InstaPoll: Do You Measure Depth of Anesthesia?
News & Notes
Overcoding Overestimates Incidence of Barrett's Esophagus

Only a portion of the patients who are assigned a billing code for Barrett's esophagus actually have the condition, according to research published in the May issue of the journal Gastrointestinal Endoscopy.

The study involved a manual review of 2,470 California patients coded with Barrett's esophagus between 1994 and 2005. Researchers at the Oakland Medical Center and division of research at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, Calif., discovered that final pathology reports confirmed the condition in only 61.9% of the records. They cite two reasons for the discrepancy: Physicians might note the diagnosis code of Barrett's in endoscopy reports based on visual evidence before a path lab confirms the findings, and facility coders sometimes overcode the condition when physicians report the possibility of Barrett's in procedural paperwork.

In an accompanying editorial, Joel H. Rubenstein, MD, MSc, of the Veterans Affairs Center for Clinical Management Research and the division of gastroenterology at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, says the misuse of billing codes for Barrett's is in part due to the confusion among providers regarding the criteria required to make a correct diagnosis: the endoscopic identification of columnar-appearing mucosa residing in the distal esophagus and the histologic identification of intestinal metaplasia in biopsy specimens obtained from that area.

To improve the accuracy of coding for Barrett's, Dr. Rubenstein advises endoscopists to send biopsy specimens to path labs with a precise record of where they were obtained, to take a few extra minutes to identify sliding and subtle hiatal hernias and minimize overdiagnosis of columnar-lined esophagus, to use precise language in endoscopy reports suggesting the finding of Barrett's instead of confirming it (that conclusion must be based on the pathology report) and to communicate with patients verbally and in writing that newly suspected Barrett's needs to be confirmed by pathologic examination.

Daniel Cook

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January 12th E-WEEKLY

Surgical Prep Comparison Touts Chlorhexidine-Alcohol
Arthroscopic Revision Can Rescue Failed Shoulder Surgery
Nasal Ointment and CHG Soap Cut SSIs by 60%
InstaPoll: Are Medical Sales Reps Fixtures in Your ORs?
News & Notes
Instapoll: Do You Need a Vacation?

Breaking away for a vacation is no easy feat for our readers. Last week's online poll found that only 36% of the 56 surgical facility managers who responded take all the vacation time they earn in a year. For those that don't take all the time they've accrued, 30% said that their facilities would crumble without them there. Another 34% said that they take some of it and carry over the allowable to the following year.

Dan O'Connor

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January 5th E-WEEKLY

HHS Defines "Meaningful Use" of EHRs
Disinfectants Linked to Antibiotic Resistance in Pathogens
OSA Presents No Anesthesia Risks in Endoscopy
InstaPoll: Do You Buy Refurbished Equipment?
News & Notes
News & Notes
  • Tip of the week Surgeons who show up late for their procedures can be expensive in terms of wasted staffing time, delayed schedules and postponed or canceled cases. Gregory Cunniff, chief financial officer for National Surgical Care in Chicago, describes how one facility made the offenders pick up the cost. Surgeons who arrived more than 15 minutes late, for whatever reason, were fined $100 per incident, and weren't given their distribution checks until they paid up. The fines were announced at partnership meetings and funded lunches and other incentives for the facility's employees. Should you implement this tactic, says Mr. Cunniff, "I expect you'll see your schedule tightening up like those purse strings."

  • Medicare: ASCs must monitor infection Medicare's revised ASC Conditions for Coverage, issued last fall with its 2009 payment final rules and effective as of last week, highlight the importance of infection prevention and control in surgery centers. According to section 416.51 of the Nov. 18, 2008 Federal Register, ASCs "must maintain an ongoing program designed to prevent, control, and investigate infections and communicable diseases." That program, CMS says, "must include documentation that the ASC has considered, selected, and implemented nationally recognized infection control guidelines" and must be supervised by a qualified infection control professional as part of proactive quality improvement efforts.

  • Comment on healthcare laundry standards The Healthcare Laundry Accreditation Council is seeking input from healthcare professionals on its "Accreditation Standards for Processing Reusable Textiles for Use in Healthcare Facilities." The standards, first developed in 2006 in consultation with the Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and other government agencies and industry organizations, aim to verify that healthcare laundry services meet safety and quality standards in handling, transporting, processing and delivering healthcare textiles. Public comments can be submitted between June 1 and July 31 on HLAC's Web site.
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    December 29th E-WEEKLY

    Healthcare Bill May Halt Physician-Owned Projects
    Study: Cataract Patients at Low Risk of Aspiration
    Outpatient Robotic Prostatectomy Possible
    InstaPoll: Do Your Anesthesia Providers Save You Money?
    News & Notes