What's great for moviegoeers is bad for lab safety
Medical Environment Update, August 10, 2017
This is an excerpt from a member only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login or subscribe to Medical Environment Update.
Seeing the movie for the first time used to be like turning the pages of a book you’ve never read. That's how I like it today. ... I don’t want to know too much before going in. The opposite is true for my work in laboratory safety.
This is an excerpt from a member only article. To read the article in its entirety, please login or subscribe to Medical Environment Update.
Related Products
Most Popular
- Articles
-
- Don't forget the three checks in medication administration
- Note similarities and differences between HCPCS, CPT® codes
- The consequences of an incomplete medical record
- Complications from immobility by body system
- Practice the six rights of medication administration
- Q&A: Primary, principal, and secondary diagnoses
- Nursing responsibilities for managing pain
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- Prevent dehydration with nursing interventions
- Differentiate between types of wound debridement
- E-mailed
-
- Correctly bill ancillary bedside procedures in addition to the room rate
- Coding, billing, and documentation tips for teaching physicians, interns, residents, and students
- Coding tip: Watch for different codes for SI joint injections
- Q/A: Understand requirements for separately reporting CBC with manual differential
- Q/A: Coding infusions to correct low potassium levels
- Q&A: Utilization Review Committee Membership
- Q&A: Bill blood administration the same way for inpatient and outpatient accounts
- OB services: Coding inside and outside of the package
- Know the medical gas cylinder storage requirements
- Intravenous therapy guidelines
- Searched