Der Unfallchirurg
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In February 2020 Germany was also hit by the SARS-CoV‑2 pandemic. Even patients infected by SARS-CoV‑2 or COVID-19 may need operative procedures. Currently, no uniform recommendations exist on precautions to be taken when operating on these patients. Furthermore, they may differ from one hospital to another. ⋯ The recommendations are principally used for all kinds of surgery and comply with the currently available knowledge. Nevertheless, all recommendations represent a compromise between maximum safety of all medical staff and practicability in the routine hospital workflow.
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The operating room (OR) accounts for the highest fraction of hospital costs and also has the largest proportion of revenue. Classical goals of optimizing OR efficiency are to increase the quality of treatment and economic success. As the reduction of qualified personnel as the largest cost factor was favored for many years, nowadays a shortage of nursing personnel is threatening the surgery departments in many German hospitals. ⋯ Optimization of the processes in the OR is possible and necessary, despite the lack of personnel. Even only a few structural changes can eliminate bottlenecks, resulting in qualitative and quantitative improvements.
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It is not infrequent for physicians or lawyers who only occasionally deal with medical expert opinions to have difficulty understanding terms used in a legal context. A question of proof relating to consequences of an accidental injury can refer to the accidental injury itself and it seems relatively unknown that the term accident can apply to both the event and the damage/harm to health. ⋯ This article explains the concepts and terms that are frequently used in relation to questions of causality and explains the fundamentals of medical causality assessment, from the viewpoint of both medical expertise and law. The focus is on private and public accident insurance, but the law relating to accidents at work of public officials and liability are also considered.