The Healthcare Leadership Council issued the following news:
Experts from across healthcare have identified specific policy and regulatory recommendations to improve the nation s ability to prepare for and respond to future health crises. The recommendations are part of a new report released by the
Healthcare Leadership Council and
Duke-Margolis Center for Health Policy and result from collaboration with more than 100 private-sector, nonprofit, and government organizations and stakeholders to assess the response to COVID-19 and the nation s existing disaster preparedness infrastructure.
The recommendations include some temporary steps taken to address the COVID-19 pandemic, which have proven beneficial and should be made permanent going forward, the experts say. These include making it easier for public and private organizations to work in partnership, prioritizing supply chain readiness before crises arise, streamlining regulations that allow providers to practice medicine whe
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Mischief @ No Fixed Address second leg of its work for Pfizer has arrived in the form of out-of-home ads running across the US in more than 175 markets. It is powered by $2.7M in donated media from Quan Media Group. In addition, the NBA will run the ads across its network.
The goal of the spots is to remind Americans that it is because of each of the intimate, interpersonal moments featured that we should all get vaccinated. The ads feature real people who provided personal footage to be used for this campaign to encourage Americans to seek vaccination.
The vaccine confidence PSAs are a collaborative effort from the American Nurses Association, National Black Nurses Association, American Pharmacists Association, The American College of Emergency Physicians, American College of Preventive Medicine, Pfizer and BioNTech.
Coronavirus: Doctors, facing burnout, turn to self-care
An October poll of 862 emergency physicians nationwide from the American College of Emergency Physicians and Morning Consult found that 87% felt more stressed since the onset of COVID-19, with 72% experiencing a greater degree of professional burnout New York Times February 03, 2021 / 02:20 PM IST
Dr. Michelle Thompson, a family medicine physician, at her home in Vienna, Ohio on Jan. 15, 2021. A growing number of programs aim to help doctors, nurses and medical students who are struggling with mental health issues during the pandemic. (Dustin Franz/The New York Times)
Abby Ellin
Dr. Michelle Thompson knows a lot about self-care. A family medicine physician in Vienna, Ohio, she specializes in lifestyle and integrative care, using both conventional and alternative therapies to help her patients heal. She also teaches medical personnel how to prevent and treat burnout.
March 23, 2021
You are here: Home / World Economic Forum / COVID-19 practices are constantly changing – this app helps emergency doctors cope
COVID-19 practices are constantly changing – this app helps emergency doctors cope
(Credit: Unsplash)
This article is brought to you thanks to the collaboration of The European Sting with the World Economic Forum.
Author: Victoria Masterson, Senior Writer, Formative Content
The Elemeno Express app keeps emergency doctors and nurses up-to-date on latest COVID-19 best practices.
It has been developed by California-based software company Elemeno Health and the American College of Emergency Physicians.
The creators are seeking market awareness and expert partner support on UpLink, the World Economic Forum’s innovation crowdsourcing platform.
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