Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Friday, October 19, 2007
50 percent of women doctors and nurses in the Kingdom tend to be single.
According to a social specialist, 50 percent of women doctors and nurses in the Kingdom tend to be single.
Arab News qualitatively surveyed this phenomenon and found that many young men prefer not to marry doctors and nurses for a number of reasons. Perhaps the primary concern is to do with the fact that hospitals operate in mixed-gender environments and during extremely unsociable working hours.
“Unfortunately, people still continue to look down on women doctors. Men tend not to want to marry doctors. Moreover, some families threaten to ostracize their sons if they marry doctors or nurses,” said Aisha, who is a doctor at a local hospital.
Read them fullDebate on Nursing Profession - Saudi Arabia
"that Saudi nurses constitute only five percent of the total 70,000 nurses in the Kingdom."
DAMMAM, 20 October 2007 — Following a recent episode about Saudi nurses on the popular Ramadan comedy series Tash Ma Tash, a number of nurses spoke to Al-Madinah newspaper about the social stigma they face working as nurses and the type of opposition they face from their families.
Some Saudi nurses say that following the episode, which satirically took a look at the profession, opposition has increased. Exasperated by the situation, they are now calling on wider society to change its perception.
From Arabnews.. Read More !!!Friday, February 02, 2007
Enhanced Wound Care Through I.T.
"This is a great example of a specific way telemedicine technology can add value to the practice of medicine," says Joseph C. Kvedar, M.D., director at Partners Telemedicine and a dermatologist."
The Full Story...Click Here!
Thursday, January 18, 2007
7,000 people die and at least 1.5 million are harmed
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"In the 21st century, the legibility of a doctor's handwriting should not determine whether a patient lives or dies," said Gingrich, who founded the advocacy group Center for Health Transformation.
"Yet the paper prescription system has remained essentially unchanged for 200 years. There is simply no excuse for medical errors when they are caused by an antiquated system that can easily be modernized and replaced," Gingrich added.
Dr. Nancy Dickey, former president of the American Medical Association, called electronic prescribing a way to improve patient safety.
"You would think if you were a pharmacist and you couldn't clearly read what I (as a doctor) had written, that you would simply pick up the phone and call. But it's astonishing how often they make their best guess," said Dickey, president of the Texas A&M University Health Science Center.
About a fifth of U.S. doctors currently prescribe drugs electronically, with the rest using pen and paper.
Read the full story...
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-6150715.html
Saturday, November 18, 2006
Hospital Leaders Target Electronic Medical Record Implementation
HIPAA continued in April 2005 with the implementation of the standards that dealt with electronic security and maintenance of health information. Lessons learned from the hurricanes of fall 2005 were that paper medical records are easily lost or destroyed, and if electronically kept, data needs to reside on computers far away from disaster areas, preferably in multiple backups.
Read More...
Thursday, November 09, 2006
Learn More About Aspririn...
Learn More About Aspririn...