• JAMA Performance Improvement: Do No Harm

  • By: JAMA Network
  • Podcast

JAMA Performance Improvement: Do No Harm

By: JAMA Network
  • Summary

  • From the JAMA Network, this is JAMA Performance Improvement: Do No Harm, the podcast about performance improvement and medicine that aims to elevate the quality of care, one patient at a time, with host Ed Livingston, MD.
    2024 American Medical Association. All rights reserved, including those for text and data mining, AI training, and similar technologies.
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Episodes
  • A Better Way to Manage Chronic Medical Conditions in Homeless Emergency Department Patients
    Dec 22 2020

    Homeless patients with chronic medical conditions who need long-term care often repeatedly present to emergency departments to receive treatment. Following a performance improvement analysis, clinicians at UCSF developed an emergency department–based team who work with the community to provide care for this challenging population. Hemal Kanzaria, MD, and Jack Chase, MD, discuss how UCSF has addressed this clinical problem.

    Related Article(s) available here

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    36 mins
  • Improving Management of Elevated Liver Function Tests in Post Liver Transplant Patients
    Nov 10 2020

    There are hundreds of thousands of liver transplant patients, all of whom will be seen in general clinical practices. It is common for them to develop elevated liver enzymes—a potentially serious problem that may be a sign that the transplanted liver is failing. Traditionally, patients with these findings are sent to a liver transplant center for an inpatient workup. A new protocol facilitating management of most of these patients in routine outpatient clinics has been developed, greatly improving the efficiency of managing patients with this clinical problem. Fady Kaldas, MD, director of the Dumont-UCLA transplant center, discusses how to manage elevated liver function results in liver transplant patients on an outpatient basis.

    Related Article(s):

    Outpatient Management of Liver Function Test Abnormalities in Patients With a Liver Transplant

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    17 mins
  • The Aging Clinician: When Should Older Clinicians' Cognitive Abilities Be Evaluated?, Part 2
    Apr 28 2020

    As physicians age, they experience the inevitable decline of cognitive and physical function. It is not clear how that affects clinical practice. Jeffrey Saver, MD, vice chair of neurology at UCLA and a JAMA Associate Editor, discusses how to best assess the clinical performance of aging physicians.

    The Aging Clinician: When Should Older Clinicians' Cognitive Abilities Be Evaluated?, Part 1

    Read the article:

    Cognitive Testing of Older Clinicians Prior to Recredentialing

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    9 mins

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