Category: Articles, Education, Medical & Healthcare, Safety, School Safety/Violence The Last Mask TASA ID: 1646 Some state governors seem obsessed about blocking President Biden, CDC, and NIH, with multiple mandates requiring that masks in schools be worn by teachers, students, campus office workers, janitors, principals, student aids, parent volunteers, bus drivers, and counselors. Read more
Category: Articles, Medical & Healthcare, Resources for Attorneys Mitigating Compliance Issues in the COVID-19 Environment TASA ID: 15395 In the healthcare arena, compliance issues are raised, especially when a crisis comes along. COVID-19 is such a crisis which has been enhanced from a compliance perspective by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act which has released over $2.2 Billion into the economy to various businesses, healthcare facilities, providers’ offices, and more. Read more
Category: Articles, Medical & Healthcare, Resources for Attorneys One of the Most Chronic Conditions Today Is the Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) TASA ID: 15395 According to Buzi, Smith, and Weinman (2014), one of the most chronic conditions today is the major depressive disorder (MDD). As per the U.S department of health and human services, 8% of the U.S. population aged between 12 to 17 years had at least one MDD episode in 2010. The researchers also found out the rate of mental illness among individuals who are 18-25 years was twice as high in comparison to the rate of mental illness among elderly individuals aged 50 years and above. Read more
Category: Articles, Business & Commerce, Medical & Healthcare, Resources for Attorneys Elements of an Effective Compliance Plan for Healthcare Businesses TASA ID: 15395 In the early beginnings of compliance plans for healthcare businesses, big and small, there was a strong suggestion that all healthcare businesses, practices, hospitals and the like adopt a compliance program but there was no directive as to ensuring that the plan actually worked or was comprehensive enough to ensure the mitigation of potential issues, False Claims Act matters, kickbacks, and the like. The important part of this in approximately 1998 was to have a plan in place, put it on a shelf and if anyone asked to review it, most practices that did implement a plan would pull it off that shelf, dust it off and provide it to the requester. Read more
Category: Articles, Medical & Healthcare, Resources for Attorneys Medical Malpractice and Post-op Medical Care TASA ID: 3656 Optimal medical care after a patient has abdominal surgery should involve general surgery. As an Internal Medicine expert, I was recently asked to review a case involving a bad outcome caused by poor post-operative care after urologic surgery, where care was rendered only by the urology team and medical hospitalist. This patient was a 60-year-old woman who’s only prior medical condition was recurrent kidney stones. Her urologist had performed several outpatient procedures to remove kidney stones from her ureter that required placement and removal of stents. Due to scarring in her ureter, he then opted to do Robotic ureteral re-implant surgery, which involved removing a piece of her scarred ureter and reconnecting her remaining ureter back into her bladder. Read more