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Specialty: Universities & Medical Training
Management: Hospitals

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Total 144 results found since Jan 2013.

Hospitals in GWTG-Stroke program more likely to provide recommended stroke treatment
Timely stroke treatment is critical to ensuring good outcomes for patients. A new national study compared two programs designed to help hospitals adhere to nationally accepted standards and guideline recommendations for stroke treatment and found that hospitals participating in the Get With The Guidelines–Stroke program were more likely than Primary Stroke Center–certified hospitals to provide all the guideline-based measures of care for patients.   The study appears in the Oct. 14 issue of the Journal of the American Heart Association.   The American Heart Association/American Stroke Association's ...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - October 15, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

UCLA, USC get $2M to develop stroke center network in Southland
Stroke is the second leading cause of death in Los Angeles County and the fourth in the U.S. In order to cut those numbers, it's imperative that new treatments be developed and refined for stroke prevention, acute therapy and recovery after stroke.   Now, a three-way partnership between the UCLA Stroke Center at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the USC Comprehensive Stroke and Cerebrovascular Center at Keck Medicine of USC, and UC Irvine has been awarded a $2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to address these three stroke priorities.   Together, the three universities will form the Los A...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - October 15, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

Upstate to aid Carthage Area Hospital with stroke care
Through the use of a special telemedicine program, Upstate neurologists are in contact with Carthage Area Hospital physicians on stroke cases.
Source: SUNY Upstate Medical - October 11, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

Growth, not just size, boosts brain aneurysms' risk of bursting
Brain aneurysms of all sizes — even small ones the size of a pea — are up to 12 times more likely to rupture if they are growing, according to a new UCLA study.   Published July 2 in the online edition of the journal Radiology, the discovery counters current guidelines suggesting that small aneurysms pose a low risk for rupture, and it emphasizes the need for regular monitoring and earlier treatment.   "Until now, we believed that large aneurysms presented the highest risk for rupture and that smaller aneurysms may not require monitoring," said lead author Dr. J. Pablo Villablanca, chief of diagn...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - July 2, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

Timely treatment after stroke is crucial, UCLA researchers report
For years, the mantra of neurologists treating stroke victims has been "time equals brain." That's because getting a patient to the emergency room quickly to receive a drug that dissolves the stroke-causing blood clot can make a significant difference in how much brain tissue is saved or lost.   But specific information has been limited on just how the timing of giving the intravenous drug — known as a tissue plasminogen activator, or tPA — influences outcomes for victims of ischemic (clot-caused), stroke, the most common type of stroke.   Now, a team led by UCLA researchers has conducted a major stud...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - June 18, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

Upstate receives top performance awards for treating stroke and heart failure patients
Honors from the American Heart and American Stroke associations highlight outstanding care for treatment of heart failure and stroke at Upstate University Hospital
Source: SUNY Upstate Medical - May 10, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

WALL-E, meet EVA: 'Robo-doc' navigates on its own, frees doctors to focus on the critically ill
Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, the world's first hospital to introduce a remote-presence robot into its neurological intensive-care unit in 2005, now welcomes the RP-VITA, the first robot able to navigate the hospital on its own.   UCLA staff affectionately dubbed the 5'5", 176-pound robot "EVA," for executive virtual attending physician. Unlike earlier models that physicians steered via a computer-linked joystick, this version drives on auto-pilot, freeing doctors to devote more time to patient care.   "During a stroke, the loss of a few minutes can mean the difference between preserving or losing brain func...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - May 6, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

UCLA-led study finds devices no better than meds in recovery from clot-caused strokes
When someone has a stroke, time equals brain. The longer a stroke is left untreated, the more brain tissue is lost. Since the only proven treatment — a clot-busting drug — works in less than half of patients, stroke physicians had high hopes for a mechanical device that could travel through the blocked blood vessel to retrieve or break up the clot, restoring blood flow to the brain.   But in a recently completed multi-site trial in which UCLA served as the clinical coordinating center, researchers found there was no overall recovery benefit to patients treated with clot-removal (embolectomy) devices, compa...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - March 13, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news

UCLA Stroke Center awarded 'comprehensive stroke center' certification
The UCLA Stroke Center has been certified as a comprehensive stroke center by the Joint Commission and the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. The center, part of UCLA Health and the UCLA Department of Neurology, is one of the first 12 stroke centers in the nation to receive the prestigious designation.   The certification, which confirms that the UCLA Stroke Center has met the highest national standards for safety and quality of care, further enhances the center's national reputation as an innovator in clinical care.   "This is a true team effort, reflecting the efforts of over 200 physicians...
Source: UCLA Newsroom: Health Sciences - March 12, 2013 Category: Universities & Medical Training Source Type: news