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Titles
- A different mindset: one facility's experience with the anonymous report process1
- Abuse and neglect: CMS should strengthen reporting requirements to better protect individuals receiving hospice care : report to the Honorable Charles E. Grassley, United States Senate1
- Act 52 of 2007: the Authority's role, progress to date, and future goals1
- Address Presented to the 50th Anniversary Annual Conference of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Cincinnati, Ohio1
- Address Presented to the 50th Anniversary Annual Conference of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Cincinnati, Ohio [Reminiscence]1
- Ambulatory surgery facilities: a comprehensive review of medication error reports in Pennsylvania1
- Biological product deviation reporting for blood and plasma establishments1
- CDC has improved the nursing home reporting process for COVID-19 Data in NHSN, but challenges remain1
- CMS validated hospital inpatient quality reporting program data, but should use additional tools to identify gaming1
- Challenges to public health reporting experienced by non-federal acute care hospitals: 20191
- Clostridium difficile infections in nursing homes1
- Connecticut implemented our prior audit recommendations and generally complied with federal and state requirements for reporting and monitoring critical incidents1
- Consumers' priorities for hospital quality improvement and implications for public reporting1
- DOD health care: Defense Health Agency should improve tracking of serious adverse medical events and monitoring of required follow-up : report to Congressional committees1
- Data snapshot: group A streptococcus in Pennsylvania long-term care facilities1
- Entities' experiences and perceptions of reporting the theft, loss, or release of select agents or toxins to CDC1
- Falls rates improved in Southeastern Pennsylvania: the impact of a regional initiative to standardize falls reporting1
- Guardianship monitoring: a national survey of court practices1
- Home health agencies failed to report over half of falls with major injury and hospitalization among their Medicare patients1
- In five states, there was no evidence that many children in foster care had a screening for sex trafficking when they returned after going missing1