October 2016 Criminologist Board Exams Results

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Fifth high profile departure at scandal-hit Colchester General Hospital (7 stories)

Topix Nursing

Nursing News - October 8, 2014

THE woman in charge of nursing in Colchester's hospitals has left her post amid concerns over ward staffing levels, the Gazette understands. Dee Hackett, director of nursing at Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust, left the post after not seeing eye to eye with interim chief executive Lucy Moore. - Read More

The serious-faced physicians practice pulling on bulky white suits and helmets that make them look more like astronauts than doctors preparing to fight a deadly enemy. These training sessions at U.S. hospitals on Ebola alert and for health workers heading to Africa can make the reality sink in: Learning how to safely put on and take off the medical armor is crucial. - Read More

West Georgia Technical College and LaGrange College signed a nursing articulation agreement last week that makes it simpler for students who earn an associate degree in nursing at WGTC to transfer to LaGrange College and complete their bachelor's degree in nursing. - Read More

The new requirement that visiting aides and nursing assistants and companions be paid minimum wage and higher overtime rates will still take effect in the new year -- but only on paper. A U.S. Labor Department policy quietly released Tuesday indicates the rule won't be fully enforced until a year later. - Read More

The largest ever medical study into near-death and out-of-body experiences has discovered that awareness may continue even after the brain has shut down completely. Scientists at the University of Southampton spent four years examining more than 2000 people who suffered cardiac arrests at 15 hospitals in the UK, US and Austria. - Read More

It's "unavoidable" that more cases of Ebola will surface in Europe. A top World Health Organization official made that comment just hours after Europe's first local case of Ebola was confirmed in Spain. - Read More

A new model for stroke care is being studied in rural Alberta to reduce inequities in health across communities. This model, presented at the Canadian Stroke Congress, shows how hospitals in rural areas can mimic the type of care that's often only available in larger centres. - Read More

More Nursing News

Popular News from the Topix Network

I'm not sure I trust these people to be parents.

Oh dear.

Tattoos are permanent, unfortunately for these people.

I feel a little bad - but also: I laughed REALLY hard.

These animals are FLUFFY. Like...dangerously fluffy.

No comments:

Post a Comment