DoctorQuality, Inc. (Members on the Move).Thomas (language) Thomas - A language compatible with the language Dylan(TM). Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM). The first public release of a translator to Scheme by Matt Birkholz, Jim Miller, and Ron Weiss, written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory runs G. Lundquist, MD, MMM MMM Myeloid metaplasia with myelofibrosis, see there , is senior vice president, chief medical officer for DoctorQuality, Inc., which provides medical error and adverse event reporting applications to over 100 hospitals across the country. Adverse events are reported in real time to hospital leaders who can then implement changes to improve patient outcomes, often before the patient ever leaves the hospitals. Lundquist will be working closely with leaders of patient safety initiatives in all their client hospital and will serve in helping to establish and further enhance cultures of blame-free error reporting. He will also be instrumental in analyzing the over 70,000 adverse events DoctorQuality already has in its national comparative database. Prior to joining DoctorQuality, Inc., he was vice president, performance improvement of Allegheny General Hospital Allegheny General Hospital is a large urban hospital located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. Allegheny General Hospital, also commonly known locally by the acronym "AGH," was founded in 1885 in Pittsburgh's North Side, in the area formally known as Allegheny City. , Pittsburgh, Pa. Before that he served as medical director for Allegheny University Medical Practices. A graduate of Penn State University, Lundquist received his medical degree f rom The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, located in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, is a highly regarded medical school and biomedical research institute in the United States. . He earned his Masters in Medical Management from Carnegie Mellon University Carnegie Mellon University, at Pittsburgh, Pa.; est. 1967 through the merger of the Carnegie Institute of Technology (founded 1900, opened 1905) and the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research (founded 1913). in Pittsburgh. |
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