Skip to main content

All Access Subscription

Get unlimited access to our full publication and article library.

Get Access Now

Interested in Group Sales? Learn more

Logo SDS

Same-Day Surgery – December 1, 2005

December 1, 2005

View Archives Issues

  • Have a problem physician? Your program is liable, even with nonemployees

    A plastic surgeon offers free mammary endowments to his female staff and expects them to wear scrubs two sizes too small to show them off.
  • 3.7% HOPD increase also could affect ASCs

    Hospital outpatient surgery departments (HOPDs) have been given good news: They will receive a 3.7% increase in Medicare payment rates in 2006 under a final Outpatient Prospective Payment System (OPPS) rule from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS originally had proposed a 3.2% increase.
  • Anesthesiologists: Brain monitors aren’t standard

    A newly approved report on intraoperative awareness from the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) says that depth-of-anesthesia monitors are not standard, but that they should be available for cases that may be high risk, such as cardiac cases.
  • You never forget a wrong-site surgery

    These words from a surgical administrator involved in a wrong-site surgery early in his career at another facility convey the devastation that providers feel when they are involved in a wrong-site surgery.
  • Less anesthesia, careful scheduling boost efficiency

    In 1996, myringotomy with tympanostomy tube insertion was the most frequently performed procedure on children younger than the age of 15. More than 95% or 490,000 of the 512,000 myringotomies performed that year were performed in an ambulatory surgery setting.
  • The right parent calms a child

    Over the years, outpatient surgery program managers have struggled with the dilemma of whether parents should be allowed into the operating room. While some programs have prohibited the practice, other programs do allow parents in the operating room with the belief that a parents presence reduces a childs anxiety.
  • Journal Review

    A study of more than 16,000 Medicare patients who underwent bariatric surgery shows a higher mortality rate than reported in previous studies.
  • Same-Day Surgery Manager: The view from 30,000 feet is better than at sea level

    How frustrating to miss an opportunity that rarely comes. How many times have we looked back on missed opportunities, such as the phone call never answered that offered a great opportunity. Or you declined a new job position where the company went public and your stock options would have been worth millions.