Placing COVID patients in skilled nursing facilities during the early pandemic led to increased cases, deaths, study finds
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Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
Gaps persist in hiring enough U.S. public health workers, and health departments continue to face challenges in recruiting new employees, according to a new study by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and Indiana University. Insufficient funding, a shortage of people with public health training, and a lack of visibility for public careers, in addition to lengthy hiring processes, are cited as barriers contributing to an absence of progress for achieving a satisfactory level of workers. The results are published in Health Affairs.
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Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
Submitted by mike kraft on
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Submitted by mike kraft on
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Before the mid-December 2020 introduction of COVID-19 vaccines, the pandemic caused approximately 480,000 hospitalizations, and 350,000 deaths in the United States.
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KFF Health News found that more than 1,100 covid-related lawsuits, most alleging wrongful death or other negligent care, were filed against nursing homes from March 2020 through March of this year.
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