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Rethinking Hospital Expenditures: The Road to Financial Recovery and Enhanced Patient Care

In a landscape where the financial health of many hospitals is ailing, a prudent examination of operational costs is not just smart management—it’s an imperative. A recent report by Kaufman Hall revealed a modest uptick in hospital margins in the US, from 0.9% in July to 1.1% in August, hinting at a gradual, albeit nonlinear, […]

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How to avoid a heatstroke?

To avoid heatstroke, it’s important to take preventive measures, especially during hot weather or when engaging in activities that can lead to excessive heat exposure. Here are some tips to help prevent heatstroke: Stay hydrated: Drink plenty of fluids, especially water, throughout the day. Avoid excessive consumption of caffeinated or alcoholic beverages, as they can

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Why should hospitals stop using disposables like throwaway thermometer caps?

There are still a lot of hospitals that use throwaway thermometer caps. The use of these use-once caps for thermometers should be reduced or eliminated in hospitals and healthcare facilities for several reasons. Here are five reasons why you should switch from throw-away caps to cleaning thermometers between patients:     Environmental impact: Disposable items

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Allergies don’t cause a fever but might make you more susceptible to a virus infection

Fever is a concern for many people who suffer from seasonal or permanent allergies. Often, they use their thermometer to check their body temperature as soon as they feel congested and ill. Allergies do not cause raised body temperatures or fevers, so people with allergies need not worry too much. A term like ‘hay fever

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New research indicates fever may play a role in multiple sclerosis

Is multiple sclerosis caused by Epstein-Barr virus? Researchers aren’t sure, but new research suggests there may be a connection. A fever is one of the symptoms of Epstein-Barr infection, especially when it occurs later in life. As an autoimmune disease, MS results from the body’s immune system attacking healthy cells by mistake. According to some

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Covid Can Be the Last Pandemic

We started this series with a question: What if the next pandemic happens tomorrow. For this newsletter — the final installment in this series — we are exploring the idea of whether it’s possible for Covid to be the last pandemic. It has been a pleasure exploring and debating pandemic preparedness with you over the

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Explained: What Is Disease X? Why Are Top Experts Warning Of A Deadlier Pandemic?

In June last year, health experts in Britain had reportedly warned the UK government to be prepared for ‘Disease X’ amid reports of cases of poliovirus being detected in sewage samples in London, monkeypox, Lassa fever and bird flu in the recent years. Days after the World Health Organisation (WHO) announced that Covid-19 was no

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Long COVID–like symptoms can happen after the flu, too. Here’s how to prevent both

When looking at the percentage of those infected who develop post-viral illness, as well as the severity of symptoms, post-viral illness from COVID generally isn’t more of a problem than that from flu—in the Omicron era, at least. That’s according to new findings presented this week at the European Congress of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious

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Drop in COVID alertness could create deadly new variant, WHO says

For the first couple of years of the pandemic, other respiratory viruses seemed to be on hiatus. (Rhinoviruses, which cause the common cold, were an exception.) Social distancing measures, sharp declines in international travel, and potentially some interplay between SARS-2 and the other viruses are thought to explain their absence. There was no flu season

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