06Jun

We interrupt all the bad news about COVID with this from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation: surviving the virus has improved dramatically since the early days of the pandemic.

The likelihood of someone dying from COVID-19 has declined by a third.

In an interview with Reuters news agency, IHME Director Dr. Christopher Murray said 0.6% of those infected with the virus die, compared to 0.9% last spring. Improvements in treatment, including the use of blood thinners, oxygen and the generic steroid dexamethasone are a large part of the reason for the decline, he said.

Two research studies of patients in New York and in the UK bear out the positive news, finding sharp decreases in mortality.

Published last month in the Journal of Hospital Medicine, the New York City study found an 18% decline in COVID deaths since March among 5,121 hospitalizations.

second study released just recently found a 20% decrease in mortality among hospitalized patients in England in June compared to the beginning of the pandemic in April.

US Covid Deaths Decline - blog.jpg

“I would classify this as a silver lining to what has been quite a hard time for many people,” Bilal Mateen, a data science fellow at the Alan Turing Institute in the United Kingdom, told NPR.

Leora Horwitz, M.D., an author of the New York City study, echoed those findings. “We find that the death rate has gone down substantially,” she told NPR. “I do think this is good news,” she said, adding, “but it does not make the coronavirus a benign illness.”

The Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation, based at the University of Washington, cautions that with the advancing winter months, it expects the infection rate globally to increase to 4 million new cases a day. It estimates daily deaths will reach over 15,000 a day in mid-January declining to under 13,000 by March 1.

“If universal mask coverage (95%) were attained [by last week], our model projects 571,000 lives could be saved by March 1, 2021,” the Institute said in its weekly global report.

Specifically in the United States, another Institute report predicts “daily deaths to reach 2,200 in mid-January and slowly decline to 1,750 on March 1… we expect daily infections to reach 325,000 by early January.”

Estimating national mask use at 67% — lower than many other organizations have found – the IHME report projects the US could save 68,000 lives by March 1 if 95% of the population wore masks.

CDC report released at the end of October said that as of June, 88.7% of the US population wore masks. Even among the youngest group surveyed, those 18-29, 86.1% wore masks.

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Green Key
Jun 6, 2023

In Recognition of Perioperative Nurses

You may never have heard of a perioperative nurse, but if you’ve had surgery, that’s who cared for you before, during and after the procedure.

These healthcare professionals are warriors and advocates for patients and their families, declares the Association of periOperative Registered Nurses, reason enough to join with them this week in celebrating Perioperative Nurses Week.

In medical dramas, the nurses you see in the operating rooms selecting and passing instruments to the surgeon and jumping in to assist are perioperative nurses. Especially in complex surgeries when multiple practitioners are involved, these RNs will also serve as circulating nurses, managing the nursing care and ready to assist wherever they may be needed.

What you won’t see on TV is the less dramatic, yet just as essential role of perioperative nurses in caring for patients immediately following a procedure, counseling them and their families and educating patients and caregivers on what they need to do to ensure a speedy and safe recovery.

Perioperative nurses work in hospitals, outpatient centers and in doctors’ offices, working with new patients and are in regular contact with surgeons and other members of the surgical team. The Mayo Clinic says that though the work environment is stressful, “many nurses find it a rewarding role.”

Hopefully, you’ll never need surgery, but if you do, know that a perioperative nurse will be there as your advocate.

Join with us at Green Key Resources in recognizing perioperative nurses for the work they do.

Photo by Graham Ruttan on Unsplash

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Green Key
Jun 6, 2023

Healthcare Again Tops the 100 Best Jobs List

The annual 100 Best Jobs list is out from U.S. News and to no one’s surprise healthcare dominates the best of the Best list.

Six of the top 10 – 7 if you include veterinarian – are healthcare jobs. Data scientist and software developer are also in the top 10, ranking 8 and 2 respectively. Completing the top of the list at 6th is statistician.

The U.S. News best jobs list has been an annual feature for years. The magazine collects those jobs with the largest number and percentage of openings over 10 years as determined by the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. Then it factors in salary, the unemployment rate for people in those jobs, stress level, job growth rate and other data to narrow the list to the top 100.

From year-to-year the specific roles shift around, though not by much. One striking difference from previous years is the absence of registered nurse from the top 10 and top adjacent. Though the position has periodically been edged out of the top 10 by the growing number of openings for physician assistants (#3 in 2020) and nurse practitioners (#5 in 2020), this year RNs ranked 37th. Last year they were 13.

Why the dramatic drop isn’t explained by the magazine. However, one reason might be the “above average” stress rating of the profession. “Nursing can be a physically, emotionally and mentally demanding job,” says U.S.News, and that’s especially so since the start of the COVID pandemic.

Overall, healthcare jobs not only dominate the top of the list but are the most heavily represented among all 100 jobs. This year, as was true last year, medical jobs of all types account for four of every 10 positions on the list.

U.S. News breaks the healthcare sector into two groups:

  1. Healthcare: These 25 are the hands-on, patient-facing positions that in most cases require both an advanced degree and a license to practice. The category includes surgeons, dentists and nurses.
  2. Healthcare support: In this category are such jobs as dental hygienist, phlebotomist, massage therapist and home health aide. Several of the 17 positions here require extensive training though not necessarily in a degree granting program.

Technology is represented on the 100 list with 9 jobs, the most after healthcare. Besides software developer and data scientist, the other tech jobs are: IT Manager (#12), Information Security Analyst (#15), Computer Systems Analyst (#47), Network Architect (#51), Database Administrator (#55), Web Developer (#59) and Systems Administrator (#86).

Photo by National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

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