- Nevada hospital reports kept secret amid coronavirus spread (reviewjournal.com)
The Nevada Hospital Association has reportedly threatened to stop providing state health officials with daily reports detailing acute-care hospitals’ coronavirus activity, if those officials share the information with the public...For almost four weeks, the Review-Journal has sought copies of the documents from state and local governments under Nevada’s Public Records Act in order to provide the information to the public. The NHA has refused to provide the reports, which are provided to Gov. Steve Sisolak and other top state officials as they make critical decisions during the COVID-19 outbreak...While the hospital association is a private nonprofit that is not bound to respond to record requests, (Patrick) File (Nevada Open Government Coalition president) said the daily reports became subject to the state’s public records act as soon as the government received copies...READ MORE
- Nevada health care workers demand on-site OSHA hospital inspections (reviewjournal.com)
State investigators must inspect hospitals before resolving workplace safety complaints during the coronavirus pandemic, Nevada’s largest health care union formally demanded Friday...In a two-page letter sent to the state’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the Nevada chapter of Service Employees International Union outlined hazards it alleges are still ongoing at a swath of large hospitals across the state...Among the union’s allegations:
— Front-line health care workers are being forced to reuse protective equipment meant for a single use. Additionally, some hospital staff were not being provided proper safety equipment.
— Hospital workers who are at risk for coronavirus complications, or have at-risk family members, are being required to treat and work near coronavirus patients.
— Hospital workers are being exposed to patients with coronavirus symptoms but are never informed if the patients tested positive for the virus. Those same workers were later diagnosed with the disease themselves...READ MORE
- Las Vegas hospital blazes own path with malaria drug to treat COVID-19 (reviewjournal.com)
University Medical Center…began prescribing hydroxychloroquine to high-risk emergency room patients who test positive for COVID-19 but do not require immediate hospitalization…In doing so, UMC became the first Las Vegas-area hospital to dispense it on an outpatient basis, taking a cutting-edge position nationally in the use of the controversial experimental drug… Dr. Thomas Zyniewicz, an emergency medicine physician at UMC, said the drug, which is frequently used to treat malaria and autoimmune diseases, has shown promising results in thwarting the progression of COVID-19… Dr. Thomas Zyniewicz, an emergency medicine physician at UMC, said the drug, which is frequently used to treat malaria and autoimmune diseases, has shown promising results in thwarting the progression of COVID-19…READ MORE
- Data shows Southern Nevada hospitals using higher percentage of beds, ventilators than rural, northern counterparts (thenevadaindependent.com)
Hospitals in Nevada are still not near their maximum capacity as the number of confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus grow, though Southern Nevada hospitals appear to be experiencing the most strain so far, according to a Nevada Hospital Association report shared with government officials...The data...shows that Southern Nevada hospitals have a higher percentage of occupied beds, occupied ICU beds and ventilators in use than their counterparts in northern and rural Nevada. In Southern Nevada, 65 percent of hospital beds are occupied, 79 percent of ICU beds are occupied and 56 percent of ventilators are in use, compared to 57 percent occupied beds, 43 percent occupied ICU beds and 30 percent of ventilators in use in Washoe County...READ MORE
- Southern Nevada hospitals to resume elective surgeries next week (reviewjournal.com)
Southern Nevada’s major hospitals plan to resume “medically necessary” elective surgeries and procedures Monday, according to a Nevada Hospital Association letter...The letter, dated Tuesday, was sent this week to medical staff at University Medical Center, North Vista Hospital and The Valley Health System, Dignity Health and HCA Healthcare hospital systems. The companies own and operate more than a dozen local hospitals that have more than 4,000 staffed acute-care beds...Scheduling elective surgeries and procedures can begin immediately...READ MORE
- Nevada State Board of Pharmacy Newsletter: April 2020 (bop.nv.gov)
The Board Welcomes New Members
-Helen Park
-Richard Tomasso
-Krystal Freitas
-Rolf ZakariassenTransferring a Prescription
-NAC 639.713 Transfer of information between pharmacies: Conditions; Prohibitions
-NAC 639.714: Transfer of information between pharmacies: Procedure for oral transfers.
-NAC 639.7145: Transfer of information between pharmacies: Requirements for transfer by facsimile machine.President Trump Signs Legislation Extending Schedule I Status for Fentanyl Analogues
Drug Overdose Deaths Related to Prescription Opioids Declined by 13% in 2018
Drug-Resistant Infections Are Increasing
NASEM Report Recommends Framework for Opioid Prescribing Guidelines for Acute Pain
New Research Shows Pharmacists Positively Impact Hospital Care Transitions
- Data show rapid spread of COVID-19 in Nevada nursing homes (reviewjournal.com)Facilities with Reported Covid-19 Cases (app.powerbigov.us)
Institutional living facilities that serve seniors and others at higher risk of the most serious infections, as well as prisons, where it is difficult to adhere to social distancing guidelines, have been hard hit by the easily spread virus...HHS analysts, compliance officers and epidemiologists are attempting to use the data “to identify, control and contain the spread of COVID-19 among our most vulnerable residents living within skilled nursing and assisted living facilities,” according to a news release from the state’s COVID-19 response team...According to initial data state investigators are compiling, poor hand hygiene has emerged as the No. 1 factor in the spread of COVID-19 in skilled-nursing homes and similar communal care facilities in Nevada...READ MORE
- Gov. Sisolak says some necessary medical, dental procedures may go forward (thenevadaindependent.com)Sisolak loosens restrictions on golf, drive-in worship services May 1; other elements of stay-at-home order extended (thenevadaindependent.com)Business leaders slam Sisolak on slow reopening plans (reviewjournal.com)
Gov. Steve Sisolak announced late Tuesday that the Nevada Hospital Association was preparing to resume some “medically necessary” elective procedures in the coming days — the first sign that some restrictions put in place to slow the spread of COVID-19 may be eased in the coming weeks...Unlike many other industries that were temporarily closed by emergency order, Sisolak never issued an order legally curtailing such procedures. State hospitals had instead sought to postpone unnecessary hospital visits on their own, especially as they geared up for an influx of coronavirus infections during March...READ MORE
- Telemedicine takes off in Southern Nevada with rise of COVID-19 (reviewjournal.com)
Within the last month or so, more Las Vegas Valley medical offices have started offering telemedicine appointments in response to the COVID-19 outbreak — part of a nationwide trend that has seen an explosion in use of the technology. A big selling point is that many patients are uneasy about going to a doctor’s office because of the risk of getting infected or infecting others…Some doctors and telemedicine experts say the COVID-19 outbreak is spurring more acceptance of telemedicine — a change that could have a long-lasting impact on the nation’s health care system… Telemedicine took off in Nevada after Gov. Steve Sisolak’s stay-at-home order and social distancing guidelines, cardiologist Dr. Jeffrey Levisman said. “It’s an attempt to continue to provide medical care, especially for patients who are sick and elderly who are at a higher risk of getting the virus and (experiencing) a bad outcome.”…READ MORE
- State lab has plenty of capacity to test under status quo, not for widespread ‘surveillance;’ antibody tests coming soon (thenevadaindependent.com)
Though the Nevada State Public Health Laboratory has enough resources to continue testing at current levels, its capacity remains well below the level needed to conduct widespread disease surveillance to keep the spread of the novel coronavirus under control as governments begin easing restrictions on citizens, lab director Dr. Mark Pandori said...the lab is planning to bring additional equipment online in mid-May that could allow the lab to quadruple its current ability to test...“If we were to quadruple our throughput here at this lab and several other labs then we would be approaching a moment when we could start to screen well beyond just contacts of known cases and symptomatic people,” Pandori said...READ MORE