Results 101 to 110 of about 488,145 (159)
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Hospital Laboratory Inventory Management
Clinics in Laboratory Medicine, 1985Standard business inventory procedures can be cost effective when they are adapted to hospital laboratory inventory management in a 500-bed hospital. The investment in a central laboratory store-room and one additional employee yields financial benefits and indirect service benefits.
W, Weinstein, R E, Wenk
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Forecasting hospital laboratory procedures
Journal of Medical Systems, 1992Improved forecasts of hospital laboratory procedures can provide the basis for better resource planning and enhanced operating efficiency. The research reported here-in describes how multiple regression models can be both a source of insight into causal relationships and a tool for achieving accurate monthly forecasts.
J H, Wilson, S J, Schuiling
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Hospital In-house Laboratories
The Health Care Manager, 2010As hospitals fight for their portion of reimbursed health care expenditures, it will become increasingly necessary to investigate alternative funding mechanisms. In-house laboratories, which have likely been seen in the past as pure cost centers, can be repositioned to provide additional revenue to hospitals.
Cortelyou-Ward, Kendall +3 more
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The computer in the hospital laboratory: Is it premature?
International Journal of Bio-Medical Computing, 1970Abstract Suggested reasons are given for the increase in the amount of biochemical work carried out in hospital laboratories. The role of the computer is considered in the context of data processing in hospital laboratories; advantages and limitations are analysed. The author stresses the value of the computer on the clerical side of laboratory work,
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Electrical Safety in the Laboratory and Hospital
2009The principles of electrical safety are of great importance in clinical neurophysiology. All of the electrophysiological studies that are performed require the application of electrical connections to equipment that, through connections with the patient, pass small amounts of electrical current to the patient.
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From the Hospitals and Laboratories
Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 1936G.M. Higgins, Joseph Stasney
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