107 results on '"Raban, Magdalena Z."'
Search Results
2. Falls in focus: an analysis of the rate of falls in 25 Australian residential aged care facilities from 2019 to 2021, pre- and during COVID-19 lockdowns
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Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Wabe, Nasir, Raban, Magdalena Z., Seaman, Karla, and Westbrook, Johanna
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- 2024
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3. Vitamin D supplementation and falls in residential aged care: A longitudinal multisite cohort study
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Wabe, Nasir, Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Firempong, Desiree C., Raban, Magdalena Z., Nguyen, Amy D., Close, Jacqueline T., Lord, Stephen R., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2024
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4. Child Age and Risk of Medication Error: A Multisite Children's Hospital Study
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Badgery-Parker, Tim, Li, Ling, Fitzpatrick, Erin, Mumford, Virginia, Raban, Magdalena Z., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2024
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5. A Longitudinal Study of the Use and Effects of Fall-Risk-Increasing Drugs in Residential Aged Care
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Wabe, Nasir, Huang, Guogui, Silva, Sandun M., Nguyen, Amy D., Seaman, Karla, Raban, Magdalena Z., Gates, Peter, Day, Ric, Close, Jacqueline C.T., Lord, Stephen R., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2024
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6. Opioid prescribing among aged care residents during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic: an analysis using general practice health records in Australia
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Dai, Zhaoli, Raban, Magdalena Z., Sezgin, Gorkem, McGuire, Precious, Datta, Shirmilla, Wabe, Nasir, Pearce, Christopher, Woodman, Richard, and Georgiou, Andrew
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- 2023
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7. The relationship between fall incidents and place of birth in residential aged care facilities: a retrospective longitudinal cohort study
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Huang, Guogui, Wabe, Nasir, Raban, Magdalena Z., Seaman, Karla L., Silva, Sandun Malpriya, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2023
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8. Consumer perspectives on antibiotic use in residential aged care: A mixed-methods systematic review
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Gyawali, Rajendra, Gamboa, Sarah, Rolfe, Kathleen, Westbrook, Johanna I., and Raban, Magdalena Z.
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- 2024
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9. Therapy-based allied health delivery in residential aged care, trends, factors, and outcomes: a systematic review
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Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Raban, Magdalena Z., Seaman, Karla, and Westbrook, Johanna
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- 2022
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10. The use and predictive performance of the Peninsula Health Falls Risk Assessment Tool (PH-FRAT) in 25 residential aged care facilities: a retrospective cohort study using routinely collected data
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Wabe, Nasir, Siette, Joyce, Seaman, Karla L., Nguyen, Amy D., Raban, Magdalena Z., Close, Jacqueline C. T., Lord, Stephen R., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2022
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11. Short- and long-term effects of an electronic medication management system on paediatric prescribing errors
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Westbrook, Johanna I., Li, Ling, Raban, Magdalena Z., Mumford, Virginia, Badgery-Parker, Tim, Gates, Peter, Fitzpatrick, Erin, Merchant, Alison, Woods, Amanda, Baysari, Melissa, McCullagh, Cheryl, Day, Ric, Gazarian, Madlen, Dickinson, Michael, Seaman, Karla, Dalla-Pozza, Lucciano, Ambler, Geoffrey, Barclay, Peter, Gardo, Alan, O’Brien, Tracey, Barbaric, Draga, and White, Les
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- 2022
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12. Developing a process to measure actual harm from medication errors in paediatric inpatients: From design to implementation.
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Mumford, Virginia, Raban, Magdalena Z., Li, Ling, Fitzpatrick, Erin, Woods, Amanda, Merchant, Alison, Badgery‐Parker, Tim, Gates, Peter, Baysari, Melissa, Day, Ric O., Ambler, Geoffrey, Dalla‐Pozza, Luciano, Gazarian, Madlen, Gardo, Alan, Barclay, Peter, White, Les, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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MEDICATION errors , *INPATIENT care , *DRUG interactions , *PEDIATRICS - Abstract
Aims: The potential harm associated with medication errors is widely reported, but data on actual harm are limited. When actual harm has been measured, assessment processes are often poorly described, limiting their ability to be reproduced by other studies. Our aim was to design and implement a new process to assess actual harm resulting from medication errors in paediatric inpatient care. Methods: Prescribing errors were identified through retrospective medical record reviews (n = 26 369 orders) and medication administration errors through direct observation (n = 5137 administrations) in a tertiary paediatric hospital. All errors were assigned potential harm severity ratings on a 5‐point scale. Multidisciplinary panels reviewed case studies for patients assigned the highest three potential severity ratings and determined the following: actual harm occurrence and severity level, plausibility of a link between the error(s) and identified harm(s) and a confidence rating if no harm had occurred. Results: Multidisciplinary harm panels (n = 28) reviewed 566 case studies (173 prescribing related and 393 administration related) and found evidence of actual harm in 89 (prescribing = 22, administration = 67). Eight cases of serious harm cases were found (prescribing = 1, administration = 7) and no cases of severe harm. The panels were very confident in 65% of cases (n = 302) where no harm was found. Potential and actual harm ratings varied. Conclusions: This harm assessment process provides a systematic method for determining actual harm from medication errors. The multidisciplinary nature of the panels was critical in evaluating specific clinical, therapeutic and contextual considerations including care delivery pathways, therapeutic dose ranges and drug–drug and drug–disease interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. The General Practice and Residential Aged Care Facility Concordance of Medication (GRACEMED) study
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Makeham, Meredith, Pont, Lisa, Verdult, Carlijn, Hardie, Rae-Anne, Raban, Magdalena Z., Mitchell, Rebecca, Purdy, Helen, Teichert, Martina, Ingersoll, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2020
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14. The relationship between participation in leisure activities and incidence of falls in residential aged care.
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Huang, Guogui, Wabe, Nasir, Raban, Magdalena Z., Silva, S. Sandun Malpriya, Seaman, Karla, Nguyen, Amy D., Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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ELDER care ,LEISURE ,RESIDENTIAL care ,ACCIDENTAL fall prevention ,PARTICIPATION ,OLDER people - Abstract
Background: Active engagement in leisure activities has positive effects on individuals' health outcomes and social functioning; however, there is limited understanding of the link between participation in leisure activities, particularly non-exercise activities, and falls in older adults. This study aimed to determine the relationship between participation in leisure activities and the incidence of falls, and the variation of this relationship by dementia status in residential aged care facilities (RACFs). Methods: A retrospective longitudinal cohort study utilising routinely collected data (January 2021-August 2022) from 25 RACFs in Sydney, Australia, was conducted. The cohort included 3,024 older permanent residents (1,493 with dementia and 1,531 without) aged ≥65 and with a stay of ≥1 week. The level of participation in leisure activities was measured using the number of leisure activities per 1,000 resident days and divided into quartiles. Outcome measures were the incidence rate of all falls and injurious falls (i.e., number of falls per 1,000 resident days). We used multilevel negative binary regression to examine the relationship between leisure participation and fall incidence. Results: For the whole sample, leisure participation was significantly inversely associated with the incidence rate of all falls and injurious falls. For example, residents in the high leisure participation group were 26% less likely to experience a fall compared to those in the low leisure participation group after controlling for confounders (incidence rate ratio = 0.74, 95% confidence interval = 0.60, 0.91). Such inverse relationship was observed in both exercise and non-exercise activities and was stronger among residents without dementia. Conclusions: Leisure participation is associated with a lower rate of falls, a key quality indicator by which RACFs are benchmarked and funded in Australia and many other countries. More recognition and attention are needed for the currently underfunded leisure activities in RACFs in future funding arrangement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Visualising clinical work in the emergency department: Understanding interleaved patient management
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Walter, Scott R., Raban, Magdalena Z., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2019
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16. Standardising the Classification of Harm Associated with Medication Errors: The Harm Associated with Medication Error Classification (HAMEC)
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Gates, Peter J., Baysari, Melissa T., Mumford, Virginia, Raban, Magdalena Z., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2019
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17. Measuring the prevalence of 60 health conditions in older Australians in residential aged care with electronic health records: a retrospective dynamic cohort study
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Lind, Kimberly E., Raban, Magdalena Z., Brett, Lindsey, Jorgensen, Mikaela L., Georgiou, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2020
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18. Improving our understanding of multi-tasking in healthcare: Drawing together the cognitive psychology and healthcare literature
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Douglas, Heather E., Raban, Magdalena Z., Walter, Scott R., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2017
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19. Emergency doctors' strategies to manage competing workload demands in an interruptive environment: An observational workflow time study
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Walter, Scott R., Raban, Magdalena Z., Dunsmuir, William T.M., Douglas, Heather E., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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- 2017
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20. Rural and urban differences in health system performance among older Chinese adults: cross-sectional analysis of a national sample
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Qin, Vicky Mengqi, McPake, Barbara, Raban, Magdalena Z., Cowling, Thomas E., Alshamsan, Riyadh, Chia, Kee Seng, Smith, Peter C., Atun, Rifat, and Lee, John Tayu
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- 2020
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21. Allied health service delivery in residential aged care and the impact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic: a survey of the allied health workforce.
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Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Raban, Magdalena Z., Seaman, Karla, Wabe, Nasir, and Westbrook, Johanna
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HEALTH facilities , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *REGRESSION analysis , *SURVEYS , *RESIDENTIAL care , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CHI-squared test , *RESEARCH funding , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *CONTENT analysis , *DATA analysis software , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Objectives. Industry reports suggest that routine and essential care in Australian residential aged care (RAC), including allied health (AH) services, were disrupted during the coronavirus diseas 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This study aimed to explore whether AH services in RAC were paused during the pandemic, factors associated with a pause in care delivery, and qualitative details on how COVID-19 impacted AH service delivery. Methods. A 26-question survey was distributed via social media, health service providers, and AH networks between February and April 2022. Participation was restricted to AH professionals and assistants with experience in RAC during the pandemic. A mix of closed and open-ended response questions was used to collect demographic data and experiences of delivering care during the pandemic. Quantitative responses were analysed with descriptive statistics and a probit model. Content analysis was performed on open-ended questions. Results. One hundred and four AH professionals and assistants responded to the survey. Fifty-five percent of participants (n = 51) were contractually or casually employed. AH services were negatively impacted by the pandemic with 52% of respondents experiencing a pause in service delivery and 78% reporting poorer AH care quality. In a probit model, contracted/casually employed respondents were more likely to experience a pause in care delivery (1.03, P < 0.05) compared to permanently employed AH professionals. Conclusion. Insecure work arrangements may have exacerbated inconsistent care during the pandemic (impacting residents) and may have negative implications on the RAC AH workforce. In the future, an AH inclusive workforce policy including data collection and research is required to monitor and plan the RAC workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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22. Just visiting: A qualitative study of Australian allied health professionals' experiences working in residential aged care facilities during the COVID‐19 pandemic.
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Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Seaman, Karla, Raban, Magdalena Z., Wabe, Nasir, and Westbrook, Johanna
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EVALUATION of medical care ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,WORK ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,LABOR turnover ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,RESIDENTIAL care ,SOUND recordings ,HEALTH care teams ,RESEARCH funding ,THEMATIC analysis ,ALLIED health personnel ,ELDER care ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICAL coding - Abstract
Objectives: Internationally, the COVID‐19 pandemic has negatively impacted health professionals' experiences of delivering effective care. The experiences of health professionals are important: poor experience has been associated with poorer patient outcomes and high staff turnover. This study aimed to narratively explore the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic on the experience of delivering allied health (AH) care in Australian residential aged care (RAC). Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted in February–May 2022 with AH professionals who had experience working in RAC during the pandemic. Interviews were audio‐recorded, transcribed verbatim and thematically analysed in NVivo 20. Twenty‐five per cent of interview transcripts were independently analysed by three researchers to create a coding structure. Results: Three themes were identified from interviews with 15 AH professionals to describe experiences delivering care pre‐COVID‐19, during COVID‐19, and perceptions of care delivery in future. Prepandemic AH in RAC was believed to be under‐resourced, delivering low‐quality and reactive care. During the pandemic, pauses in, and the slow resumption of, AH services exacerbated professionals' feelings of being undervalued in resident care and in the workforce. Participants were optimistic about the impact AH could have in RAC in future if practice was embedded, multidisciplinary and funded appropriately. Conclusions: AH professionals' experiences of delivering care in RAC are often poor, regardless of the pandemic. Further research on multidisciplinary practice and health professional experience in RAC is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Designing an Informatics Infrastructure for a National Aged Care Medication Roundtable.
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Westbrook, Johanna I., Seaman, Karla, Wabe, Nasir, Raban, Magdalena Z., Urwin, Rachel, Badgery-Parker, Tim, Mecardo, Crisostomo, Mumford, Virginia, Nguyen, Amy D., Root, Jo, Balmer, Sarah, Waugh, Karen, Pinto, Sonali, Burge, Birgit, Aldeguer, Eric, Dunstan, Travis, Jorgensen, Mikaela, Gray, Len, Bucknall, Tracey, and Etherton-Beer, Christopher
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In the residential aged care sector medication management has been identified as a major area of concern contributing to poor outcomes and quality of life for residents. Monitoring medication management in residential aged care in Australia has been highly reliant on small, internal audits. The introduction of electronic medication administration systems provides new opportunities to establish improved methods for ongoing, timely and efficient monitoring of a range of medication indicators, made more meaningful by linking medication data with resident characteristics and outcomes. Benchmarking contemporary medication indicators provides a further opportunity for improvement and is most effective when indicator data are adjusted to take account of confounding factors, such as residents' characteristics and health conditions. Roundtables provide a structure for sharing and discussing indicator data in a trusted and supportive environment and encourage the identification of strategies which may be effective in improving medication management. This paper describes a new project to establish, implement and evaluate a National Aged Care Medication Roundtable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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24. Stepped-Wedge Cluster RCT to Assess the Effects of an Electronic Medication System on Medication Administration Errors.
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WESTBROOK, Johanna I., Ling LI, WOODS, Amanda, BADGERY-PARKER, Tim, MUMFORD, Virginia, and RABAN, Magdalena Z.
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Medication errors are a leading cause of preventable harm in hospitals. Electronic medication systems (EMS) have shown success in reducing the risk of prescribing errors, but considerable less evidence is available about whether these systems support a reduction in medication administration errors in paediatrics. Using a stepped wedge cluster randomized controlled trial we investigated changes in medication administration error rates following the introduction of an EMS in a paediatric referral hospital in Sydney, Australia. Direct observations of 284 nurses as they prepared and administered 4555 medication doses was undertaken and observational data compared against patient records to identify administration errors. We found no significant change in administration errors post EMS (adjusted Odds Ratio [aOR] 1.09; 95% CI 0.89-1.32) and no change in rates of potentially serious administration errors (aOR 1.18; 95%CI 0.9-1.56), or those resulting in actual harm (aOR 0.92; 95%CI 0.34-2.46). Errors in administration of medications by some routes increased post EMS. In the first 70 days of EMS use medication administration error rates were largely unchanged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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25. The Health Innovation Series: Translating Research Evidence into Practice.
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RABAN, Magdalena Z., MERCHANT, Alison, CLAY, Chrissy, FITZPATRICK, Erin, and WESTBROOK, Johanna I.
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Electronic medication systems (EMS) improve medication safety in hospitals; however require modifications to optimize their performance. Drawing on a five-year program of research, we developed the Health Innovation Series to disseminate recommendations arising from our research to a wide audience. Each issue contains EMS optimization tips that can be actioned by EMS managers and system vendors, as well as user tips for health professionals including nurses, doctors and pharmacists. Five issues were released by 30 Nov 2022, via two email campaigns, with further issues planned. The five issues had 2,035 downloads by March 2023. The most recent email campaign open and click rates indicate very good audience engagement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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26. Effectiveness of non-interruptive nudge interventions in electronic health records to improve the delivery of care in hospitals: a systematic review.
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Raban, Magdalena Z, Gates, Peter J, Gamboa, Sarah, Gonzalez, Gabriela, and Westbrook, Johanna I
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Objectives To describe the application of nudges within electronic health records (EHRs) and their effects on inpatient care delivery, and identify design features that support effective decision-making without the use of interruptive alerts. Materials and methods We searched Medline, Embase, and PsychInfo (in January 2022) for randomized controlled trials, interrupted time-series and before–after studies reporting effects of nudge interventions embedded in hospital EHRs to improve care. Nudge interventions were identified at full-text review, using a pre-existing classification. Interventions using interruptive alerts were excluded. Risk of bias was assessed using the ROBINS-I tool (Risk of Bias in Non-randomized Studies of Interventions) for non-randomized studies or the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organization of Care Group methodology for randomized trials. Study results were summarized narratively. Results We included 18 studies evaluating 24 EHR nudges. An improvement in care delivery was reported for 79.2% (n = 19; 95% CI, 59.5–90.8) of nudges. Nudges applied were from 5 of 9 possible nudge categories: change choice defaults (n = 9), make information visible (n = 6), change range or composition of options (n = 5), provide reminders (n = 2), and change option-related effort (n = 2). Only one study had a low risk of bias. Nudges targeted ordering of medications, laboratory tests, imaging, and appropriateness of care. Few studies evaluated long-term effects. Discussion Nudges in EHRs can improve care delivery. Future work could explore a wider range of nudges and evaluate long-term effects. Conclusion Nudges can be implemented in EHRs to improve care delivery within current system capabilities; however, as with all digital interventions, careful consideration of the sociotechnical system is crucial to enhance their effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Do electronic discharge summaries contain more complete medication information?: A retrospective analysis of paper versus electronic discharge summaries
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Lehnbom, Elin C, Raban, Magdalena Z, Walter, Scott R, Richardson, Katrina, and Westbrook, Johanna I
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- 2014
28. Allied health in residential aged care: Using routinely collected data to improve funding opportunities.
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Meulenbroeks, Isabelle, Seaman, Karla, Raban, Magdalena Z., and Westbrook, Johanna
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HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL care ,ECONOMICS ,DATABASE management ,RESIDENTIAL care ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ENDOWMENTS ,ELDER care ,ALLIED health personnel - Abstract
Consumers and providers have long been advocating for increased access to and delivery of allied health services in Australian residential aged care (RAC). There is significant evidence that allied health interventions are effective; however, there is limited evidence on the benefit of routine day‐to‐day allied health service delivery in RAC. This information is critical to effectively inform funders and policy advisors of the necessity of allied health in RAC. To improve arguments for future funding opportunities, providers, facilities and consumers need to partner together to use routinely collected, yet disparate, data, in electronic health and billing records, to improve data collection practices and evidence generation on allied health in aged care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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29. Variations in catastrophic health expenditure estimates from household surveys in India/ Estimation des variations des depenses de sante catastrophiques a partir d'enquetes menees aupres des menages en Inde/Variaciones en las estimaciones de los gastos sanitarios catastroficos en la India
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Raban, Magdalena Z., Dandona, Rakhi, and Dandona, Lalit
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Medical care, Cost of -- Surveys ,Consumer spending -- Surveys ,Health surveys -- Surveys ,Health ,World Health Organization -- Surveys - Abstract
Objective To assess the comparability of out-of-pocket (OOP) payment and catastrophic health expenditure (CHE) estimates from different household surveys in India. Methods Data on CHE, outpatient and inpatient OOP payments and other expenditure from all major national or multi-state surveys since 2000 were compared. These included two consumer expenditure surveys (the National Sample Survey for 2004-05 [NSS 2004- 05] and 2009-10 [NSS 2009-10]) and three health-focused surveys (the World Health Survey 2003 [WHS 2003]; the National Sample Survey on Morbidity, Health Care and the Condition of the Aged 2004 [NSS 2004]; and the Study on Global Ageing and Adult Health 2007-08 [SAGE 2007-08]). All but the NSS 2004-05 and the NSS 2009-10 used different questionnaires. Findings CHE estimates from WHS 2003 and SAGE 2007-08 were twice as high as those from NSS 2004-05, NSS 2009-10 and NSS 2004. Inpatient OOP payment estimates were twice as high in WHS 2003 and SAGE 2007-08 because in these surveys a much higher proportion of households reported such payments. However, estimates of expenditures on other items were half as high in WHS 2003 as in the other surveys because a very small number of items was used to capture these expenditures. Conclusion The wide variations observed in CHE and OOP payment estimates resulted from methodological differences. Survey methods used to assess CHE in India need to be standardized and validated to accurately track CHE and assess the impact of recent policies to reduce it. Objectif Evaluer la comparabilite des paiements directs (PD) et estimer les depenses de sante catastrophiques (DSC) a partir de differentes enquetes menees aupres des menages en Inde. Methocles Les donnees recueillies dans toutes les grandes enquetes nationales ou multi-regionales depuis 2000 et portant sur les DSC, les paiements directs pour hospitalisation interne et externe et autres depenses, ont ete comparees. Parmi ces etudes, figurent notamment deux enquetes portant sur les depenses des consommateurs (l'enquete nationale pour 2004-2005 [NSS 2004-05] et pour 20092010 [NSS 2009-10]), et trois enquetes axees sur la sante (l'enquete sur la sante dans le monde 2003 [WHS 2003]; l'enquete nationale sur la morbidite, les soins de sante et la condition des personnes agees 2004 [NSS 2004]; et l'etude sur le vieillissement et la sante des adultes 2007-2008 [SAGE 2007-08]).Toutes ces enquetes, a l'exception de la NSS 2004-05 et de la NSS 2009-10, ont utilise des questionnaires differents. Resultats Dans les enquetes WHS 2003 et SAGE 2007-08, les DSC etaient deux fois plus elevees que celles relevees dans les enquetes NSS 2004-05, NSS 2009-10 et NSS 2004. Les paiements directs pour une hospitalisation interne etaient deux fois plus eleves dans les enquetes WHS 2003 et SAGE 2007-08, car, dans ces enquetes, une proportion beaucoup plus elevee de menages ont declare ces paiements. Cependant, d'autres depenses estimees etaient deux fois moins elevees dans l'enquete WHS 2003 que dans les autres enquetes, car un tres petit nombre de questions ont ete utilisees pour rendre compte de ces depenses. Conclusion Les grandes variations observees dans les DSC et les estimations de paiements directs resultent de differences methodologiques. Les methodes d'enquete utilisees pour evaluer les DSC en Inde doivent etre standardisees et validees pour evaluer les DCS avec precision et mesurer l'impact des politiques recentes pour les reduire. Objetivo Evaluar la comparabilidad de las estimaciones del pago por el propio paciente (OOP) y los gastos sanitarios catastroficos (CHE) a partir de distintas encuestas a hogares de la India. Metodos Se compararon los datos sobre los gastos sanitarios catastroficos (CHE), los pagos por el propio paciente (OOP) por el cuidado sanitario ambulatorio y hospitalario, asi como otros gastos de las principales encuestas nacionales o plurinacionales desde 2000. Estos incluyen dos encuestas sobre los gastos de consumo (la Encuesta Nacional por Muestreo de 2004-05 [ENM 2004-05] y 2009-10 [ENM 2009-10]) y tres encuestas sobre salud (la Encuesta Mundial de Salud de 2003 [EMS 2003], la Encuesta Nacional por Muestreo de morbilidad, cuidado sanitario y de las condiciones de la tercera edad de 2004 [ENM 2004], y el Estudio sobre el Envejecimiento mundial de la poblacion y la salud de los adultos de 2007-08 [SAGE 2007-08]). Se emplearon cuestionarios diferentes en cada una de ellas, excepto para la ENM 2004-05 y la ENM 2009-10. Resultados Las estimaciones de los gastos sanitarios catastroficos (CHE) de la EMS 2003 y del Estudio sobre el Envejecimiento mundial de la poblacion y la salud de los adultos (SAGE) de 2007-08 fueron dos veces mas altas que las de la ENM 2004-05, ENM 2009-10 y ENM 2004. Las estimaciones del pago por el propio paciente (OOP) fueron dos veces mas altas en la EMS 2003 y el SAGE 2007-08 debido a que en estos estudios una proporcion mucho mayor de los hogares informo acerca de dichos pagos. Sin embargo, otros gastos estimados fueron la mitad en la EMS 2003 y en las otras encuestas porque se utilizo un numero muy pequeno de elementos para captar dichos gastos. Conclusion Las grandes variaciones observadas en las estimaciones de los gastos sanitarios catastroficos (CHE) y los pagos por el propio paciente (OOP) se debieron a diferencias metodologicas. Es necesario estandarizar y validar los metodos de encuesta utilizados para evaluar los gastos sanitarios catastroficos (CHE) en la India a fin de realizar un seguimiento preciso sobre dichos gastos y evaluar el impacto de las politicas recientes para reducirlos., Introduction Out-of-pocket (OOP) payments are the primary source of health-care financing in many countries. (1) In 2004-05, OOP payments in India were estimated to account for approximately two thirds of [...]
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- 2013
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30. Measuring quality of gout management in residential aged care facilities.
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Nguyen, Amy D, Lind, Kimberly E, Day, Richard O, Ross, Daniel, Raban, Magdalena Z, Georgiou, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I
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GOUT treatment ,ELDER care ,LONG-term health care - Abstract
Objective Gout, a common form of arthritis, can be controlled successfully with pharmacotherapy and is thus an ideal model for examining chronic disease management. Our aim was to examine treatment of gout evaluated in accordance with general management guidelines for gout as applied to Australian residential aged care facilities. Methods Electronic health record data linked with aged care clinical notes and electronic medication administration information (11 548 residents in 68 residential aged care facilities, >65 years of age) were interrogated to identify people with gout, other chronic conditions and gout medication use. The outcomes examined were the proportion receiving urate-lowering therapy (ULT; preventative medication) and/or colchicine/non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) (to treat gout flares), the number of ULT and colchicine/NSAID treatment episodes (periods of continuous days of medication use) and the duration of these treatment episodes. Results The cohort included 1179 residents with gout, of whom 62% used a ULT, with a median of one episode of use for a very short duration [median = 4 days, median of use in total (i.e. repeated use) = 52 days]. Among residents with gout, 9% also used colchicine or an NSAID. Female residents were less likely to receive ULT and for shorter periods. Conclusion Nearly one-third of residents with gout did not receive ULT. In those receiving ULT, recurrent short courses were common. Overall, management of gout in aged care residents appears to be suboptimal, largely owing to intermittent and short exposure to ULT, and with female residents at greater risk of poor gout management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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31. Availability of data for monitoring noncommunicable disease risk factors in India/Disponibilite des donnees pour la surveillance des facteurs de risque des maladies non transmissibles en Inde/Disponibilidad de datos para la supervision de los factores de riesgo de enfermedades no transmisibles en India
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Raban, Magdalena Z., Dandona, Rakhi, and Dandona, Lalit
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Cholesterol -- Surveys -- Research ,Blood cholesterol -- Surveys -- Research ,Dextrose -- Surveys -- Research ,Health surveys -- Surveys -- Research ,Blood sugar -- Surveys -- Research ,Glucose -- Surveys -- Research ,Public health -- Surveys -- Research ,Information management -- Surveys -- Research ,Information accessibility ,Health ,World Health Organization -- Surveys - Abstract
Objective To examine the availability of data measuring noncommunicable disease (NCD) risk factor indicators from household surveys conducted in India from 2000 to 2009. Methods Questionnaires and publications used in household surveys were identified through internet and PubMed searches and examined to determine which core NCD risk factor indicators recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO) for NCD monitoring were being measured. Surveys with a sample size of 5000 or more were included to ensure a certain level of precision. The completeness of core indicator measurement and the geographical representativeness of the surveys were assessed. Findings Twenty six surveys met the inclusion criteria. Among the WHO-recommended core behavioural risk factor indicators, those monitoring tobacco use were measured completely in national and subnational surveys; those assessing dietary intake and physical inactivity were measured only in subnational surveys, and those assessing alcohol use were not measured at all, Among WHO-recommended core biological risk factors, only body mass index was measured in national and subnational surveys, whereas blood pressure, fasting blood glucose and blood cholesterol were measured only in subnational surveys. Due to the use of non-standard indicator definitions, measurement of core indicators in some of the national and subnational surveys was incomplete. Conclusion The availability of data on core risk factor indicators to monitor the increasing burden of NCDs is inadequate in India. These indicators using standardized definitions should be included in the periodic national household health surveys to provide data at the national and disaggregated levels. [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII.] Disponibilite des donnees pour la surveillance des facteurs de risque des maladies non transmissibles en Inde Objectif Examiner la disponibilite des donnees mesurant les indicateurs de facteurs de risque des maladies non transmissibles (MNT) a partir d'enquetes aupres des menages realisees en Inde de 2000 a 2009. Methodes Les publications et questionnaires utilises dans les enquetes aupres des menages ont ete recenses par des recherches sur Internet et PubMed. Ils ont ensuite ete etudies afin de determiner quels indicateurs principaux de facteurs de risque de MNT recommandes par l'Organisation mondiale de la Sante (OMS) pour la surveillance des MNT ils mesuraient. Les enquetes ayant eu un echantillon superieur ou egal a 5 000 ont ete incluses afin d'assurer un certain niveau de precision. L'exhaustivite de la mesure des principaux indicateurs et la representativite geographique des enquetes ont ete evaluees. Resultats Vingt-six enquetes repondaient aux criteres d'inclusion. Parmi les indicateurs de facteurs de risque comportemental principaux recommandes par l'OMS, ceux verifiant la consommation de tabac etaient integralement mesures par les enquetes nationales et infranationales, ceux evaluant les apports alimentaires et le manque d'activite physique etaient uniquement mesures dans les enquetes infranationales, enfin, ceux evaluant la consommation d'alcool n'etaient aucunement mesures. Parmi les principaux facteurs de risque biologique recommandes par l'OMS, seul l'indice de masse corporelle etait mesure dans les enquetes nationales et infranationales, alors que la tension arterielle, la glycemie ajeun et le cholesterol sanguin n'etaient mesures que dans les enquetes infranationales. En raison de l'utilisation de definitions d'indicateurs non standardisees, la mesure des indicateurs principaux etait incomplete dans certaines enquetes nationales et infranationales. Conclusion La disponibilite de donnees sur les indicateurs des principaux facteurs de risque permettant de surveiller la charge croissante des MNT est insuffisante en Inde. Ces indicateurs, utilisant des definitions standardisees, devraient etre inclus dans les enquetes nationales periodiques sur la sante des menages pour fournir des donnees nationales et ventilees. [TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII.] Disponibilidad de datos para la supervision de los factores de riesgo de enfermedades no transmisibles en India objetivo Examinar la disponibilidad de datos que miden los indicadores de factores de riesgo para enfermedades no transmisibles (ENT) a partir de las encuestas domesticas realizadas entre los anos 2000 y 2009 en India. Metodos A traves de busquedas en Internet y en PubMed se identificaron los cuestionarios y publicaciones empleados en las encuestas domesticas. A continuacion, se examinaron para determinar que indicadores fundamentales de factores de riesgo se habian medido para las ENT siguiendo las recomendaciones de la Organizacion Mundial de la Salud (OMS) para la supervision de enfermedades no transmisibles. Se incluyeron encuestas con un tamano de muestra de 5000 personas o mas para garantizar un nivel de precision adecuado. Se evaluaron la integridad de la medicion del indicador principal y la representatividad geografica de las encuestas. Resultados Veintiseis encuestas cumplieron los criterios de inclusion. De los principales indicadores de factores de riesgo conductuales recomendados por la OMS, los que controlaban el consumo de tabaco se midieron en su totalidad en encuestas nacionales y regionales; los que evaluaban la dieta y el sedentarismo se midieron unicamente en encuestas regionales y los que evaluaban el consumo de alcohol no se midieron en absoluto. De los principales factores de riesgo biologicos recomendados por la OMS, solo se midio el indice de masa corporal en las encuestas nacionales y regionales, mientras que la presion arterial, los niveles de glucosa en sangre en ayunas y los de colesterol en sangre se midieron unicamente en encuestas regionales. Debido al uso de definiciones de indicadores no estandarizadas, la medicion de los indicadores principales en algunas de las encuestas nacionales y regionales fue incompleta. Conclusion La disponibilidad de datos en India sobre los principales indicadores de factores de riesgo para controlar la creciente carga de enfermedades no transmisibles es insuficiente. Estos indicadores que emplean definiciones estandarizadas se deben incluir en las encuestas domesticas que se realizan periodicamente en el pais para proporcionar datos a nivel nacional y desagregado., Introduction Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) were estimated to account for over 50% of the deaths and 43% of the disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) lost in India in 2004 (1) and they [...]
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32. Are interventions to reduce interruptions and errors during medication administration effective?: a systematic review
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Raban, Magdalena Z and Westbrook, Johanna I
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- 2014
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33. Epidemiology of falls in 25 Australian residential aged care facilities: a retrospective longitudinal cohort study using routinely collected data.
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Wabe, Nasir, Seaman, Karla L, Nguyen, Amy D, Siette, Joyce, Raban, Magdalena Z, Hibbert, Peter, Close, Jacqueline C T, Lord, Stephen R, and Westbrook, Johanna I
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Background Falls are frequent among older adults and have significant health and economic consequences. There have been few studies on the epidemiology of falls in residential aged care facilities (RACFs). Objective To determine the incidence of falls in RACFs using longitudinal routinely collected incident data over 5 years (July 2014–December 2019). Methods A retrospective cohort study is conducted using fall incident data from 25 RACFs in Sydney, NSW, Australia. Incidents relating to a population of 6163 aged care residents aged ≥65 years were included. Outcome measures were incidents of all falls, injurious falls and falls requiring hospitalization. The risk-adjusted incidence rate (IR) for each outcome indicator for each of the 25 facilities was calculated. Results A total of 27 878 falls were reported over 3 906 772 resident days (a crude rate of 7.14 incidents per 1000 resident days; 95% confidence interval (CI) 6.81–7.48). Of these, 10 365 (37.2%) were injurious and 2733 (9.8%) required hospitalization. The crude IRs were 2.65 incidents per 1000 resident days (95% CI 2.53–2.78) for injurious falls and 0.70 incidents per 1000 resident days (95% CI 0.66–0.74) for falls requiring hospitalization. The incidence of falls was significantly higher in respite compared to permanent residents for all falls (adjusted IR ratio (aIRR) 1.33; 95% CI 1.18–1.51) and injurious falls (aIRR 1.30; 95% CI 1.14–1.48) and for men compared to women for all outcomes (all falls aIRR 1.69; 95% CI 1.54–1.86; injurious falls aIRR 1.87; 95% CI 1.71–2.04 and falls requiring hospitalization aIRR 1.29; 95% CI 1.12–1.48). The risk-adjusted IRs per 1000 resident days between facilities varied substantially (all falls 0.57–12.93 falls; injurious falls 0.25–4.47 and falls requiring hospitalization 0.10–1.70). Conclusion Falls are frequent in RACFs, often resulting in injury and hospitalization. The study provides robust and comprehensive information that may help inform future initiatives to minimize the incidence of falls in RACFs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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34. Impact of Electronic Medication Management on the Physical Location of Work in a Paediatric Setting.
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VAN DORT, Bethany A., BAYSARI, Melissa T., PRGOMET, Mirela, Wu Yi ZHENG, RABAN, Magdalena Z., DALLA-POZZA, Luciano, MCCULLAGH, Cheryl, and WESTBROOK, Johanna
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Electronic medication management (eMM) systems can have a significant impact on efficiency and safety. There is limited evidence on the effects of eMM implementation on the physical location of work. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of eMM and associated hardware implementation on the location of tasks performed by doctors and nurses. 41.5 hours of observation were conducted in the oncology ward of a paediatric hospital. Tasks, locations and resources used were recorded pre and post eMM implementation. Results showed that a wider variety of locations were used to conduct tasks following eMM implementation. Post-eMM, more tasks were performed in the hallway, where medication trolleys with attached laptops were situated, and in patient rooms where additional computers were installed, providing more opportunities for patient/carer and clinician interaction. The findings from this study reveal the impact that computer placement has on the location of work for doctors and nurses, and the importance of planning hardware placement for eMM implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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35. Transforming routinely collected residential aged care provider data into timely information: Current and future directions.
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Seaman, Karla L., Jorgensen, Mikaela L., Raban, Magdalena Z., Lind, Kimberly E., Bell, J Simon, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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MEDICAL quality control ,DATA quality ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,CLINICAL governance ,MEDICAL care ,DATABASE management ,RESIDENTIAL care ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,POLICY sciences ,ELDER care - Abstract
Electronic information systems are becoming increasingly common in residential aged care in Australia. These systems contain valuable data generated during day‐to‐day care delivery for older adults. These data (termed 'routinely collected residential aged care provider data') are currently underutilised, however have potential significant benefits for both care delivery and research purposes. Routinely collected residential aged care provider data are more readily accessible, contain up‐to‐date information and can be linked to existing national or state‐based administrative data sets, while providing more granular details about care delivered at the coalface. The aim of this paper is to provide clinicians, researchers, policymakers and providers with an understanding of the strengths of these types of data, as well as identifying areas that require future development to maximise their potential to drive improvements in resident care and outcomes. These considerations include data quality, data standardisation and models for data governance, consent and consumer involvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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36. Temporal and regional trends of antibiotic use in long-term aged care facilities across 39 countries, 1985-2019: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Raban, Magdalena Z., Gates, Peter J., Gasparini, Claudia, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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LONG-term care facilities , *ANTIBIOTICS , *PERCENTILES , *RANDOM effects model , *DRUG resistance in microorganisms - Abstract
Background: Antibiotic misuse is a key contributor to antimicrobial resistance and a concern in long-term aged care facilities (LTCFs). Our objectives were to: i) summarise key indicators of systemic antibiotic use and appropriateness of use, and ii) examine temporal and regional variations in antibiotic use, in LTCFs (PROSPERO registration CRD42018107125). Methods & findings: Medline and EMBASE were searched for studies published between 1990–2021 reporting antibiotic use rates in LTCFs. Random effects meta-analysis provided pooled estimates of antibiotic use rates (percentage of residents on an antibiotic on a single day [point prevalence] and over 12 months [period prevalence]; percentage of appropriate prescriptions). Meta-regression examined associations between antibiotic use, year of measurement and region. A total of 90 articles representing 78 studies from 39 countries with data between 1985–2019 were included. Pooled estimates of point prevalence and 12-month period prevalence were 5.2% (95% CI: 3.3–7.9; n = 523,171) and 62.0% (95% CI: 54.0–69.3; n = 946,127), respectively. Point prevalence varied significantly between regions (Q = 224.1, df = 7, p<0.001), and ranged from 2.4% (95% CI: 1.9–2.7) in Eastern Europe to 9.0% in the British Isles (95% CI: 7.6–10.5) and Northern Europe (95% CI: 7.7–10.5). Twelve-month period prevalence varied significantly between regions (Q = 15.1, df = 3, p = 0.002) and ranged from 53.9% (95% CI: 48.3–59.4) in the British Isles to 68.3% (95% CI: 63.6–72.7) in Australia. Meta-regression found no association between year of measurement and antibiotic use prevalence. The pooled estimate of the percentage of appropriate antibiotic prescriptions was 28.5% (95% CI: 10.3–58.0; n = 17,245) as assessed by the McGeer criteria. Year of measurement was associated with decreasing appropriateness of antibiotic use over time (OR:0.78, 95% CI: 0.67–0.91). The most frequently used antibiotic classes were penicillins (n = 44 studies), cephalosporins (n = 36), sulphonamides/trimethoprim (n = 31), and quinolones (n = 28). Conclusions: Coordinated efforts focusing on LTCFs are required to address antibiotic misuse in LTCFs. Our analysis provides overall baseline and regional estimates for future monitoring of antibiotic use in LTCFs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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37. Associations between double-checking and medication administration errors: a direct observational study of paediatric inpatients.
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Westbrook, Johanna I., Ling Li, Raban, Magdalena Z., Woods, Amanda, Koyama, Alain K., Baysari, Melissa Therese, Day, Richard O., McCullagh, Cheryl, Prgomet, Mirela, Mumford, Virginia, Dalla-Pozza, Luciano, Gazarian, Madlen, Gates, Peter J., Lichtner, Valentina, Barclay, Peter, Gardo, Alan, Wiggins, Mark, and White, Leslie
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SCIENTIFIC observation ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,MEDICATION errors ,TERTIARY care ,DRUG administration ,RISK assessment ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,ODDS ratio ,HOSPITAL care of children ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Background Double-checking the administration of medications has been standard practice in paediatric hospitals around the world for decades. While the practice is widespread, evidence of its effectiveness in reducing errors or harm is scarce. Objectives To measure the association between double-checking, and the occurrence and potential severity of medication administration errors (MAEs); check duration; and factors associated with doublechecking adherence. Methods Direct observational study of 298 nurses, administering 5140 medication doses to 1523 patients, across nine wards, in a paediatric hospital. Independent observers recorded details of administrations and double-checking (independent; primed--one nurse shares information which may influence the checking nurse; incomplete; or none) in real time during weekdays and weekends between 07:00 and 22:00. Observational medication data were compared with patients' medical records by a reviewer (blinded to checking-status), to identify MAEs. MAEs were rated for potential severity. Observations included administrations where double-checking was mandated, or optional. Multivariable regression examined the association between doublechecking, MAEs and potential severity; and factors associated with policy adherence. Results For 3563 administrations double-checking was mandated. Of these, 36 (1.0%) received independent double-checks, 3296 (92.5%) primed and 231 (6.5%) no/incomplete double-checks. For 1577 administrations double-checking was not mandatory, but in 26.3% (n=416) nurses chose to double-check. Where double-checking was mandated there was no significant association between double-checking and MAEs (OR 0.89 (0.65-1.21); p=0.44), or potential MAE severity (OR 0.86 (0.65-1.15); p=0.31). Where double-checking was not mandated, but performed, MAEs were less likely to occur (OR 0.71 (0.54-0.95); p=0.02) and had lower potential severity (OR 0.75 (0.57-0.99); p=0.04). Each double-check took an average of 6.4 min (107 hours/1000 administrations). Conclusions Compliance with mandated double-checking was very high, but rarely independent. Primed double-checking was highly prevalent but compared with single-checking conferred no benefit in terms of reduced errors or severity. Our findings raise questions about if, when and how double-checking policies deliver safety benefits and warrant the considerable resource investments required in modern clinical settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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38. Trends of public health research output from India during 2001-2008
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Dandona Lalit, Raban Magdalena Z, Guggilla Rama K, Bhatnagar Aarushi, and Dandona Rakhi
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background An understanding of how public health research output from India is changing in relation to the disease burden and public health priorities is required in order to inform relevant research development. We therefore studied the trends in the public health research output from India during 2001-2008 that was readily available in the public domain. Methods The scope and type of the published research from India in 2007 that was included in the PubMed database was assessed and compared with a previous similar assessment for 2002. Papers were classified based on the review of abstracts and original public health research papers were assessed in detail. Impact factors for the journals were used to compute quality-adjusted research output. The websites of governmental organizations, academic and research institutions and international organizations were searched in order to identify and review reports on original public health research produced in India from 2001 to 2008. The reports were classified based on the topics covered and quality and their trends over time were assessed. Results The number of original health research papers from India in PubMed doubled from 4494 in 2002 to 9066 in 2007. This included a 3.1-fold increase in public health research papers, but these comprised only 5% of the total papers in 2007. Within public health, the increase was lowest for the health system and policy category. Several major causes of disease burden in India continued to be underrepresented in the quality-adjusted public health research output in 2007. The number of papers evaluating population health interventions increased from 2002 to 2007, but there were none on the leading non-communicable causes of disease burden or on road traffic injuries. The number of identified original public health research reports increased by 64.7% from 204 in 2001-2004 to 336 in 2005-2008. The proportion of reports on reproductive and child health was very high but decreased slightly from 38.7% of the total in 2001-2004 to 31.5% in 2005-2008 (P = 0.09); those on the leading chronic non-communicable conditions and injuries increased from 6.4% to 13.4% (P = 0.01) but this was still much lower than their contribution to the disease burden. Health system/policy issues were the topic in 27.4% reports but health information issues were covered in a miniscule 0.6% reports. The proportion of reports that were evaluations increased slightly from 26% in 2001-2004 to 31.5% in 2005-2008, with this proportion being higher among the reports commissioned by international organizations (P < 0.001). The proportion of reports commissioned by Indian governmental organizations alone, or in collaboration with international organizations, doubled from 2001-2004 to 2005-2008 (P < 0.001). Only 25% of the total 540 reports had a quality score of adequate or better. The quality of reports produced by collaborations between Indian and international organizations was higher than those produced by Indian or international organizations alone (P < 0.001). Conclusion This is the first analysis from India that includes research reports in addition to published papers. It provides the most up-to-date understanding of public health research output from India. The increase in available public health research output and the increase in commissioning of this research by Indian governmental organizations are encouraging. However, the distribution of research topics and the quality of research reports continue to be unsatisfactory. It is necessary for health policy to address these continuing deficits in public health research in order to reduce the very large disease burden in India.
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- 2009
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39. Essential health information available for India in the public domain on the internet
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Dandona Rakhi, Raban Magdalena Z, and Dandona Lalit
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Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Health information and statistics are important for planning, monitoring and improvement of the health of populations. However, the availability of health information in developing countries is often inadequate. This paper reviews the essential health information available readily in the public domain on the internet for India in order to broadly assess its adequacy and inform further development. Methods The essential sources of health-related information for India were reviewed. An extensive search of relevant websites and the PubMed literature database was conducted to identify the sources. For each essential source the periodicity of the data collection, the information it generates, the geographical level at which information is reported, and its availability in the public domain on the internet were assessed. Results The available information related to non-communicable diseases and injuries was poor. This is a significant gap as India is undergoing an epidemiological transition with these diseases/conditions accounting for a major proportion of disease burden. Information on infrastructure and human resources was primarily available for the public health sector, with almost none for the private sector which provides a large proportion of the health services in India. Majority of the information was available at the state level with almost negligible at the district level, which is a limitation for the practical implementation of health programmes at the district level under the proposed decentralisation of health services in India. Conclusion This broad review of the essential health information readily available in the public domain on the internet for India highlights that the significant gaps related to non-communicable diseases and injuries, private health sector and district level information need to be addressed to further develop an effective health information system in India.
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- 2009
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40. How effective are electronic medication systems in reducing medication error rates and associated harm among hospital inpatients? A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Gates, Peter J, Hardie, Rae-Anne, Raban, Magdalena Z, Li, Ling, and Westbrook, Johanna I
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Objective: To conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis to assess: 1) changes in medication error rates and associated patient harm following electronic medication system (EMS) implementation; and 2) evidence of system-related medication errors facilitated by the use of an EMS.Materials and Methods: We searched Medline, Scopus, Embase, and CINAHL for studies published between January 2005 and March 2019, comparing medication errors rates with or without assessments of related harm (actual or potential) before and after EMS implementation. EMS was defined as a computer-based system enabling the prescribing, supply, and/or administration of medicines. Study quality was assessed.Results: There was substantial heterogeneity in outcomes of the 18 included studies. Only 2 were strong quality. Meta-analysis of 5 studies reporting change in actual harm post-EMS showed no reduced risk (RR: 1.22, 95% CI: 0.18-8.38, P = .8) and meta-analysis of 3 studies reporting change in administration errors found a significant reduction in error rates (RR: 0.77, 95% CI: 0.72-0.83, P = .004). Of 10 studies of prescribing error rates, 9 reported a reduction but variable denominators precluded meta-analysis. Twelve studies provided specific examples of system-related medication errors; 5 quantified their occurrence.Discussion and Conclusion: Despite the wide-scale adoption of EMS in hospitals around the world, the quality of evidence about their effectiveness in medication error and associated harm reduction is variable. Some confidence can be placed in the ability of systems to reduce prescribing error rates. However, much is still unknown about mechanisms which may be most effective in improving medication safety and design features which facilitate new error risks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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41. The Economics of Medication Safety: A Cost-Benefits Analysis Framework for Evaluating an Electronic Medication System.
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MUMFORD, Virginia, RABAN, Magdalena Z., Ling LI, MERCHANT, Alison, FITZPATRICK, Erin, BADGERY-PARKER, Tim, and WESTBROOK, Johanna I.
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Medication prescribing in paediatrics is complex and compounded by the need to provide age and weight related doses, and errors continue to be problematic. Electronic medication systems (EMS) can reduce errors through dosing calculators and computerised decision support. However, evidence on costs and benefits of these systems is limited, particularly in paediatric hospitals. This paper presents the development of a cost-benefit analysis (CBA) framework to assess the impact of an EMS implementation in a paediatric tertiary hospital. An innovative component of the framework is the incorporation of the impact of the effects of the EMS for both the health system as well as for patients and their wider family networks, allowing a net social benefit assessment. We describe the impact of non-clinical out-of-pocket costs of admission and use discrete choice experiments to measure both medication related harm and the importance of medication safety to families and members of the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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42. The efficiency-thoroughness trade-off after implementation of electronic medication management: a qualitative study in paediatric oncology.
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Baysari, Melissa T, Dort, Bethany A van, Prgomet, Mirela, Zheng, Wu Yi, Raban, Magdalena Z, Dalla-Pozza, Luciano, Mccullagh, Cheryl, Westbrook, Johanna, and Van Dort, Bethany A
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MEDICATION therapy management ,QUALITATIVE research ,ONCOLOGY ,TEACHING hospitals ,SEMI-structured interviews ,ONCOLOGY nursing ,PEDIATRIC nursing - Abstract
Objective: The efficiency-thoroughness trade-off (ETTO) principle proposes that people and organizations are often required to make a trade-off between being efficient and being thorough, as it is difficult to be both efficient and thorough at the same time. This study aimed to compare pre- electronic medication management system (EMMS) expectation of how an EMMS is likely to impact on efficiency and thoroughness to post-EMM experiences of an EMMS and the ETTO.Design: Qualitative interview study.Setting: A paediatric oncology cancer centre in a large paediatric tertiary teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia.Participants: Forty-four semi-structured interviews with doctors, nurses and pharmacists six months prior to and two years following implementation of an EMMS.Results: Prior to EMM implementation, staff identified a number of areas of work where both efficiency and thoroughness were expected to improve with EMM. These included ease of accessibility of the medication record, and organization and legibility of medication information. Following EMMS implementation, staff reported improvements in these areas. However, the EMMS was perceived to drive thoroughness (safety) benefits at the expense of efficiency (time). Measures to improve safety in the EMMS enforced processes that required time, such as medication double-checking procedures.Conclusions: Overall, staff were aware of the competitive interplay between thoroughness and efficiency and reported that introduction of an EMMS had imposed processes that favoured improvements in thoroughness at the expense of efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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43. Effectiveness of interventions targeting antibiotic use in long-term aged care facilities: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Raban, Magdalena Z., Gasparini, Claudia, Ling Li, Baysari, Melissa T., and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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Objectives: There are high levels of inappropriate antibiotic use in long-term care facilities (LTCFs). Our objective was to examine evidence of the effectiveness of interventions designed to reduce antibiotic use and/or inappropriate use in LTCFs. Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Data sources: MEDLINE, Embase and CINAHL from 1997 until November 2018. Eligibility criteria: Controlled and uncontrolled studies in LTCFs measuring intervention effects on rates of overall antibiotic use and/or appropriateness of use were included. Secondary outcomes were intervention implementation barriers from process evaluations. Data extraction and synthesis: Two reviewers independently applied the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care group’s resources to classify interventions and assess risk of bias. Meta-analyses used random effects models to pool results. Results: Of include studies (n=19), 10 had a control group and 17 had a high risk of bias. All interventions had multiple components. Eight studies (with high risk of bias) showed positive impacts on outcomes and included one of the following interventions: audit and feedback, introduction of care pathways or an infectious disease team. Meta-analyses on change in the percentage of residents on antibiotics (pooled relative risk (RR) (three studies, 6862 residents): 0.85, 95% CI: 0.61 to 1.18), appropriateness of decision to treat with antibiotics (pooled RR (three studies, 993 antibiotic orders): 1.10, 95% CI: 0.64 to 1.91) and appropriateness of antibiotic selection for respiratory tract infections (pooled RR (three studies, 292 orders): 1.15, 95% CI: 0.95 to 1.40), showed no significant intervention effects. However, meta-analyses only included results from intervention groups since most studies lacked a control group. Insufficient data prevented meta-analysis on other outcomes. Process evaluations (n=7) noted poor intervention adoption, low physician engagement and high staff turnover as barriers. Conclusions: There is insufficient evidence that interventions employed to date are effective at improving antibiotic use in LTCFs. Future studies should use rigorous study designs and tailor intervention implementation to the setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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44. NSAID use among residents in 68 residential aged care facilities 2014 to 2017: An analysis of duration, concomitant medication use, and high‐risk conditions.
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Lind, Kimberly E., Raban, Magdalena Z., Georgiou, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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Purpose People in residential aged care are at increased risk of adverse events from nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) due to their age and health status, but little is known about use of NSAIDs in this setting. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of NSAID use by route, differences by high‐risk conditions, prevalence of concurrent proton pump inhibitor (PPI) use, and prevalence of the "triple whammy" combination (oral NSAID, diuretic, and angiotensin‐converting‐enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor antagonist). Methods: We conducted a dynamic cohort study using medication administration data from 68 residential aged care facilities (RACFs) during 2014 to 2017. Descriptive statistics and regression were used to estimate the proportion of residents who used NSAIDs, NSAIDs long term, NSAIDs with PPIs, and the triple whammy combination. Results: Ten thousand three hundred sixty‐seven residents were included. Two thousand four hundred fourteen (23.3%) used at least one NSAID: 756 (7.3%) used only oral, 1326 (12.8%) used only topical, and 332 (3.2%) used both topical and oral NSAIDs. One thousand five hundred forty two (14.8%) used an NSAID long term, a majority of which only used topical NSAIDs 933/1542 (60.5%). Age, sex, and health status were associated with greater variation in long‐term topical use relative to oral NSAID use. A majority of oral NSAID users concomitantly used a PPI, which varied according to age, sex, and health status. Among residents with any oral NSAID use, 182/1088 (16.7%) had triple whammy medication use. Conclusions: Targeted interventions to reduce NSAID use among RACF residents, to reduce triple whammy medication use, and increase PPI use for long‐term oral NSAID users are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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45. Prevalence of Medication Errors Among Paediatric Inpatients: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Gates, Peter J., Baysari, Melissa T., Gazarian, Madlen, Raban, Magdalena Z., Meyerson, Sophie, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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DISEASE prevalence ,MEDICATION errors ,PEDIATRICS ,META-analysis ,MEDICAL databases - Abstract
Introduction: The risk of medication errors is high in paediatric inpatient settings. However, estimates of the prevalence of medication errors have not accounted for heterogeneity across studies in error identification methods and definitions, nor contextual differences across wards and the use of electronic or paper medication charts.Objective: Our aim was to conduct a systematic review and meta-analysis to provide separate estimates of the prevalence of medication errors among paediatric inpatients, depending on hospital ward and the use of electronic or paper medication charts, that address differences in error identification methods and definitions.Methods: We systematically searched five databases to identify studies published between January 2000 and December 2018 that assessed medication error rates by medication chart audit, direct observation or a combination of methods.Results: We identified 71 studies, 19 involved paediatric wards using electronic charts. Most studies assessed prescribing errors with few studies assessing administration errors. Estimates varied by ward type. Studies of paediatric wards using electronic charts generally reported a reduced error prevalence compared to those using paper, although there were some inconsistencies. Error detection methods impacted the rate of administration errors in studies of multiple wards, however, no other difference was found. Definition of medication error did not have a consistent impact on reported error rates.Conclusions: Medication errors are a frequent occurrence in paediatric inpatient settings, particularly in intensive care wards and emergency departments. Hospitals using electronic charts tended to have a lower rate of medication errors compared to those using paper charts. Future research employing controlled designs is needed to determine the true impact of electronic charts and other interventions on medication errors and associated harm among hospitalized children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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46. Duration of Antipsychotic Medication Use by Aged Care Facility Residents With Dementia.
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Lind, Kimberly E., Raban, Magdalena Z., Georgiou, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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Introduction: Guidelines recommend short-term targeted use of antipsychotic medications for behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia only when other strategies have failed. Antipsychotic prescribing in dementia is common internationally, but data on duration of use are limited. Our objectives were to determine duration, time to initiation, and prevalence of antipsychotic use among people with dementia.Methods: This work was a retrospective dynamic cohort study of people aged 65 years or above with dementia in 68 residential aged facilities during the period spanning from 2014 to 2017. Medication administration records were used to identify antipsychotic medication use. Medication outcomes (prevalence, duration, and time to initiation) were estimated using regression. Covariates included comorbidities and sociodemographic and facility characteristics.Results: A total of 5825 residents with dementia were identified. The annual prevalence of antipsychotic use ranged from 27.6% to 32.6%. Mean time to initiation after admission was 308.4 days (for female individuals) and 173.2 days (for male individuals). An overall 65% of people who used antipsychotics did so for >3 months even without psychiatric comorbidities; mean durations were 212.74 (95% confidence interval: 170.24, 255.25) days (for female individuals) and 216.10 (95% confidence interval: 165.31, 266.89) days (for male individuals) at median ages.Discussion: Antipsychotics are often used longer than recommended. Current guidelines and restrictions may be insufficient to limit antipsychotic medication use. Further efforts are needed to ensure that antipsychotic medications are used as recommended in dementia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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47. Antidementia medication use by aged care facility residents with dementia.
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Lind, Kimberly E., Gray, Leonard C., Raban, Magdalena Z., Georgiou, Andrew, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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DRUG utilization ,ELDER care ,DEMENTIA ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,ELECTRONIC health records ,CHOLINESTERASE inhibitors ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,SENIOR housing ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,MEMANTINE ,EXCITATORY amino acid antagonists - Abstract
Objectives: Little is known about the use of antidementia medications in Australia. Other countries have reported sociodemographic disparities in use. Our objective was to estimate prevalence, duration, and time to initiation of antidementia medication (cholinesterase inhibitors or memantine) among Australians with dementia in residential aged care facilities and to evaluate resident and facility factors associated with use.Methods: Dynamic retrospective cohort study of people with dementia in 68 residential aged care facilities during 2014 to 2017 using electronic health record and medication administration data. Regression evaluated relationships between medication use (prevalence, duration, and time to initiation) and resident and facility characteristics.Results: Five thousand three hundred fifty-four residents with dementia were included in the analyses. Annual prevalence of antidementia medication use was less than 10% each year and decreased during the study period by 2-percentage points by 2017 (relative to 2014). Antidementia medication use varied by sociodemographic characteristics (3-points lower for single, 4-points lower for divorced relative to married residents, and 3-points higher for Australian-born). Each point in ADL score was associated with 0.1-point lower medication use. Antidementia medication use was lower in outer regional facilities. Most comorbidities were associated with lower antidementia medication use (myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular disease and heart failure 3-points lower, respiratory disease, and diabetes 2-points lower). Age had a complex relationship with antidementia medication use that varied by sex and if medication was started before or after admission. After admission, males initiated antidementia medication earlier than females.Conclusions: Antidementia medication use in Australian facilities was lower than in other countries and varied by clinical and sociodemographic factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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48. The potential impact of an electronic medication management system on safety‐critical prescribing errors in an emergency department.
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Raban, Magdalena Z., Walter, Scott R., Pont, Lisa G., Cheung, Louis, Strumpman, Dana, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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MEDICATION error prevention , *DRUG delivery systems , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *PATIENT safety , *PUBLIC hospitals - Abstract
Background: Medication errors in hospitals are common. Although electronic medication management systems (eMMS) have the potential to reduce errors during inpatient care, little is known about their effect in emergency departments (ED). Aim: The aims of this study were to report on the types of prescribing errors in an ED prior to implementation of an eMMS, to assess the risk the errors pose to patient safety and to evaluate whether safety‐critical errors were potentially preventable with a newly implemented eMMS. Methods: Medication orders on paper charts were assessed for prescribing errors by a clinical hospital pharmacist. Error severity was rated using a five‐point scale. Errors of moderate or higher severity, and all errors involving defined high‐risk medicines were considered safety‐critical errors. The potential for safety‐critical errors to be prevented by the eMMS was rated (likely, possibly or unlikely). Results: Across 239 medication orders, 208 errors (27 clinical, 181 legal or procedural) were identified. The overall prescribing error rate was 0.87 errors/order. There were 67 safety‐critical errors (53 legal or procedural, 14 clinical). Overall, 82.1% of errors were likely preventable by eMMS. However, of the clinical safety‐critical errors, only 2 (14.3%) were considered likely preventable. Conclusion: Although eMMS has the capacity to prevent a high proportion of safety‐critical legal or procedural errors in the ED, clinical prescribing errors in this category were unlikely to be prevented by using eMMS. Further investigation of these more severe error types could guide the design of eMMS decision support to improve system effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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49. Measuring the financial and productivity burden of paediatric hospitalisation on the wider family network.
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Mumford, Virginia, Baysari, Melissa T., Kalinin, Djala, Raban, Magdalena Z., McCullagh, Cheryl, Karnon, Jonathon, and Westbrook, Johanna I.
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CHILDREN'S health ,PEDIATRICS ,HOSPITAL care ,CHILDREN'S hospitals ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
Aim: To estimate the non-medical out-of-pocket costs for families with a child in hospital.Methods: This study was a survey of 225 parents of paediatric inpatients on nine wards of an Australian public paediatric teaching hospital on two separate days. Our primary outcomes were the costs associated with: (i) time taken off work to care for the child in hospital; (ii) time off work or contributed by family and friends to care for other dependents; and (iii) travel, meals, accommodation and incidental expenses during the child's stay. Demographic data included postcode (to assess distance, socio-economic status and remoteness), child's age, ward and whether this was their child's first admission.Results: Mean patient age was 6.5 years (standard deviation 5.2). On an average per patient day basis, parents took 1.12 days off work and spent 0.61 (standard deviation 0.53) nights away from home, with 83.8% of nights away at the child's bedside. Parents spent Australian dollars (AUD)89 per day on travel and AUD36 on meals and accommodation. Total costs (including productivity costs) were AUD589 per patient day. Higher costs per patient day were correlated with living in a more remote area (0.48) and a greater travel distance to the hospital (0.41). A higher number of days off work was correlated (0.69) with number of school days missed.Conclusion: These results demonstrate the considerable time and financial resources expended by families caring for a child in hospital and are important inputs in evaluating health-care interventions that affect risk of hospitalisation and length of stay in paediatric care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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50. Task errors by emergency physicians are associated with interruptions, multitasking, fatigue and working memory capacity: a prospective, direct observation study.
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Westbrook, Johanna I., Raban, Magdalena Z., Walter, Scott R., and Douglas, Heather
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CONFIDENCE intervals ,EMERGENCY physicians ,EMPLOYEE reviews ,FATIGUE (Physiology) ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL consultants ,MEDICAL errors ,MEMORY ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,INTER-observer reliability ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background Interruptions and multitasking have been demonstrated in experimental studies to reduce individuals' task performance. These behaviours are frequently used by clinicians in high-workload, dynamic clinical environments, yet their effects have rarely been studied. Objective To assess the relative contributions of interruptions and multitasking by emergency physicians to prescribing errors. Methods 36 emergency physicians were shadowed over 120 hours. All tasks, interruptions and instances of multitasking were recorded. Physicians' working memory capacity (WMC) and preference for multitasking were assessed using the Operation Span Task (OSPAN) and Inventory of Polychronic Values. Following observation, physicians were asked about their sleep in the previous 24 hours. Prescribing errors were used as a measure of task performance. We performed multivariate analysis of prescribing error rates to determine associations with interruptions and multitasking, also considering physician seniority, age, psychometric measures, workload and sleep. Results Physicians experienced 7.9 interruptions/hour. 28 clinicians were observed prescribing 239 medication orders which contained 208 prescribing errors. While prescribing, clinicians were interrupted 9.4 times/hour. Error rates increased significantly if physicians were interrupted (rate ratio (RR) 2.82; 95% CI 1.23 to 6.49) or multitasked (RR 1.86; 95% CI 1.35 to 2.56) while prescribing. Having below-average sleep showed a >15-fold increase in clinical error rate (RR 16.44; 95% CI 4.84 to 55.81). WMC was protective against errors; for every 10-point increase on the 75-point OSPAN, a 19% decrease in prescribing errors was observed. There was no effect of polychronicity, workload, physician gender or above-average sleep on error rates. Conclusion Interruptions, multitasking and poor sleep were associated with significantly increased rates of prescribing errors among emergency physicians. WMC mitigated the negative influence of these factors to an extent. These results confirm experimental findings in other fields and raise questions about the acceptability of the high rates of multitasking and interruption in clinical environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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