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Sunday, November 2, 2014

Dozens of sick children moved to gleaming new expansion of Delaware hospital (6 stories)

Topix Nursing

Nursing News - November 2, 2014

They moved the sickest patients first - children in isolation, with ventilators and feeding tubes, blood pressure pumps and IV poles carrying many medicines. A team of five or even six nurses, respiratory therapists, and doctors surrounded each bed, piloting it out of the old room, down hallways and around corners, applauded and cheered by colleagues at every turn, until each patient was safely reconnected to pumps and monitors in a new room. - Read More

He lay there in his hospital bed, wheezing and blinking through his catatonic state. It was apparent he had been there for a while. - Read More

New research into the treatment of COPD is being pioneered by Bradford Institute for Health Research, pictured with patient DavidMoone is Dr Dinesh Saralaya and a team of nurses. A PIONEERING drugs trial has started in Bradford to help protect patients who suffer from a lung disease from a bug that worsens their condition and often lands them in hospital. - Read More

Nina Pham, the nurse who became the first person to contract the deadly Ebola virus on American soil, was reunited with her dog in Dallas Saturday, after the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel was declared not to have the disease and released from his three-week quarantine. The reunion with the dog, who's just shy of 2 years old, came 8 days after Pham was found to be free of Ebola and released from a special facility at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. - Read More

In this Oct. 24, 2014 file photo, health alerts regarding people who may have traveled to particular West African countries are posted the main lobby entrance of Bellevue Hospital, Friday Oct. 24, 2014 in New York. Dr. Craig Spencer, a resident of New York City and a member of Doctors Without Borders, was admitted to Bellevue Thursday and has been diagnosed with Ebola. - Read More

Top medical experts studying the spread of Ebola say the public should expect more cases to emerge in the United States by year's end as infected people arrive here from West Africa, including American doctors and nurses returning from the hot zone and people fleeing from the deadly disease. No one knows for sure how many infections will emerge in the U.S. or anywhere else, but scientists have made educated guesses based on data models that weigh hundreds of variables, including daily new infections in West Africa, airline traffic worldwide and transmission possibilities. - Read More

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