107 results on '"Jack Needleman"'
Search Results
2. Frequency of maternal and newborn birth outcomes, Lima, Peru, 2013.
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Adriane Wynn, Jeanne Cabeza, Kristina Adachi, Jack Needleman, Patricia J Garcia, and Jeffrey D Klausner
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
This study describes the pregnancy and birth outcomes at two hospitals in Lima, Peru. The data collection and analysis is intended to inform patients, providers, and policy makers on Peru's progress toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals and to help set priorities for action and further research.Data were collected retrospectively from a sample of 237 women who delivered between December 2012 and September 2013 at the Instituto Nacional Materno Perinatal or the Hospital Nacional Arzobispo Loayza. The outcomes were recorded by a trained mid-wife through telephone interviews with patients and by review of hospital records. Associations between participant demographic characteristics and pregnancy outcomes were tested with Chi-squared, Fisher's exact, or Student's t-test.Over 37% of women experienced at least one maternal or perinatal complication, and the most frequent were hypertension/preeclampsia and macrosomia. The women in our sample had a cesarean section rate of 50.2%.Maternal and perinatal complications are not uncommon among women in the lower socioeconomic strata of Lima. Also, the high cesarean rate underpins the need for a more comprehensive understanding of the indications for cesarean section deliveries, which could help reduce the number of unnecessary procedures and preventable complications.
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- 2015
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3. Examining the Relative Contributions of Methamphetamine Use, Depression, and Sexual Risk Behavior on Rectal Gonorrhea/Chlamydia Among a Cohort of Men Who Have Sex With Men in Los Angeles, California
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Cheríe S Blair, Steven Shoptaw, Robert K. Bolan, Marjan Javanbakht, W. Scott Comulada, Pamina M. Gorbach, Jack Needleman, and Amy Ragsdale
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Microbiology (medical) ,Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Sexual Behavior ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,HIV Infections ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Dermatology ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Article ,Men who have sex with men ,Methamphetamine ,Gonorrhea ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Risk-Taking ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Medicine ,Humans ,Chlamydia ,Homosexuality, Male ,Sexual risk ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Pediatric ,business.industry ,Depression ,Prevention ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Homosexuality ,Biological Sciences ,Chlamydia Infections ,medicine.disease ,Los Angeles ,Stimulant ,Mental Health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual Partners ,Methamphetamine use ,Cohort ,Rectal gonorrhea ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Public Health ,Infection ,business ,Demography - Abstract
BackgroundMethamphetamine use, sexual risk behaviors, and depression contribute to ongoing human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sexually transmitted infection (STI) disparities among men who have sex with men (MSM). The relative contributions of these effects longitudinally are not well understood.MethodsThis analysis used visit-level data from a longitudinal cohort of MSM, half with HIV, in Los Angeles, CA. From August 2014 to March 2020, participants completed follow-up visits every 6 months and underwent testing for rectal gonorrhea/chlamydia (GC/CT) and completed questionnaires including depressive symptoms, number of receptive anal intercourse (RAI) partners, and methamphetamine use. Path analysis with structural equation modeling using concurrent and lagged covariates was used to identify relative contributions of methamphetamine use and depression on number of RAI partners and rectal GC/CT across time.ResultsFive hundred fifty-seven MSM with up to 6 visits (3 years) were included for a total of 2437 observations. Methamphetamine use and depressive symptoms were positively associated with number of RAI partners (β = 0.28, P < 0.001; β = 0.33, P = 0.018, respectively), which was positively associated with rectal GC/CT (β = 0.02, P < 0.001). When stratified by HIV status, depressive symptoms were positively associated with RAI partners for HIV-negative MSM (β = 0.50, P = 0.007) but were not associated for MSM living with HIV (β = 0.12, P = 0.57). Methamphetamine use was positively associated with RAI partners in both strata.ConclusionsFactors and patterns, which contribute to risk behaviors associated with rectal GC/CT, may differ by HIV status. Our findings demonstrate the importance of combined treatment and prevention efforts that link screening and treatment of stimulant use and depression with STI prevention and treatment.
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- 2023
4. The effect of data aggregation on estimations of nurse staffing and patient outcomes
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Susan K. Schmitt, Ciaran S. Phibbs, Ann P. Bartel, Shira G. Winter, Pamela B. de Cordova, Patricia W. Stone, and Jack Needleman
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Male ,Research design ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Methods Corner ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Severity of Illness Index ,Data Aggregation ,Intensive care ,Acute care ,Health care ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Veterans Affairs ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Data collection ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Length of Stay ,United States ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Family medicine ,Female ,business ,Administrative Claims, Healthcare ,Panel data - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine how estimates of the association between nurse staffing and patient length of stay (LOS) change with data aggregation over varying time periods and settings, and statistical controls for unobserved heterogeneity. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Longitudinal secondary data from October 2002 to September 2006 for 215 intensive care units and 438 general acute care units at 143 facilities in the Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system. RESEARCH DESIGN: This retrospective observational study used unit‐level panel data to analyze the association between nurse staffing and LOS. This association was measured over both a month‐long and a year‐long period, with and without fixed effects. DATA COLLECTION: We used VA administrative data to obtain patient data on the severity of illness and LOS, as well as labor hours and wages for each unit by month. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Overall, shorter LOS was associated with higher nurse staffing hours and lower proportions of hours provided by licensed professional nurses (LPNs), unlicensed personnel, and contract staff. Estimates of the association between nurse staffing and LOS changed in magnitude when aggregating data over years instead of months, in different settings, and when controlling for unobserved heterogeneity. CONCLUSIONS: Estimating the association between nurse staffing and LOS is contingent on the time period of analysis and specific methodology. In future studies, researchers should be aware of these differences when exploring nurse staffing and patient outcomes.
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- 2021
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5. How Do Clinicians of Different Specialties Perceive and Use Opioid Risk Mitigation Strategies? A Qualitative Study
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Jack Needleman, Teryl K. Nuckols, Alma Jusufagic, MarySue V. Heilemann, and Michelle S. Keller
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,Pain medicine ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Primary care ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Article ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Substance Abuse Detection ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Opioid ,Family medicine ,Humans ,Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs ,Medicine ,business ,Qualitative Research ,Risk management ,medicine.drug ,Healthcare system ,Qualitative research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: In response to the opioid crisis, states and health systems are encouraging clinicians to use risk mitigation strategies aimed at assessing a patient’s risk for opioid misuse or abuse: opioid agreements, prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs), and urine drug tests (UDT). OBJECTIVE: The objective of this qualitative study was to understand how clinicians perceived and used risk mitigation strategies for opioid abuse/misuse and identify barriers to implementation. METHODS: We interviewed clinicians who prescribe opioid medications in the outpatient setting from 2016-2018 and analyzed the data using Constructivist Grounded Theory methodology. RESULTS: We interviewed 21 primary care clinicians and 12 specialists. Nearly all clinicians reported using the PDMP. Some clinicians (adopters) found the opioid agreement and UDTs to be valuable, but most (non-adopters) did not. Adopters found the agreements and UDTs helpful in treating patients equitably, setting limits, and having objective evidence of misuse; protocols and workflows facilitated the use of the strategies. Non-adopters perceived the strategies as awkward, disruptive to the clinician-patient relationship, and introducing a power differential; they also cited lack of time and resources as barriers to use. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrates that clinicians in certain settings have found effective ways to implement and use the PDMP, opioid agreements, and UDT but that other clinicians are less comfortable with their use. Administrators and policymakers should ensure that the strategies are designed in a way that strengthens the clinician-patient relationship while maximizing safety for patients and that clinicians are adequately trained and supported when introducing the strategies.
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- 2021
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6. How do contraindications to non-opioid analgesics and opioids affect the likelihood that patients with back pain diagnoses in the primary care setting receive an opioid prescription? An observational cross-sectional study
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Teryl K. Nuckols, Michelle S. Keller, Lyna Truong, Allison M. Mays, Jack Needleman, and MarySue V. Heilemann
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medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,Benzodiazepines ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Back pain ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Adverse effect ,Contraindication ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Probability ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Contraindications ,Analgesics, Non-Narcotic ,medicine.disease ,Low back pain ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Opioids ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Prescriptions ,Opioid ,medicine.symptom ,Family Practice ,business ,lcsh:Medicine (General) ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article ,Kidney disease ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Given the risks of opioids, clinicians are under growing pressure to treat pain with non-opioid medications. Yet non-opioid analgesics such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have their own risks: patients with kidney disease or gastrointestinal diseases can experience serious adverse events. We examined the likelihood that patients with back pain diagnoses and contraindications to NSAIDs and opioids received an opioid prescription in primary care. Methods We identified office visits for back pain from 2012 to 2017 and sampled the first office visit per patient per year (N = 24,543 visits). We created indicators reflecting contraindications for NSAIDs (kidney, liver, cardiovascular/cerebrovascular, and gastrointestinal diseases; concurrent or chronic use of anticoagulants/antiplatelets, chronic corticosteroid use) and opioids (depression, anxiety, substance use (SUD) and bipolar disorders, and concurrent benzodiazepines) and estimated four logistic regression models, with the one model including all patient visits and models 2–4 stratifying for previous opioid use. We estimated the population attributable risk for each contraindication. Results In our model with all patients-visits, patients received an opioid prescription at 4% of visits. The predicted probability (PP) of receiving an opioid was 4% without kidney disease vs. 7% with kidney disease; marginal effect (ME): 3%; 95%CI: 1–4%). For chronic or concurrent anticoagulant/antiplatelet prescriptions, the PPs were 4% vs. 6% (ME: 2%; 95%CI: 1–3%). For concurrent benzodiazepines, the PPs were 4% vs. 11% (ME: 7%, 95%CI: 5–9%) and for SUD, the PPs were 4% vs. 5% (ME: 1%, 95%CI: 0–3%). For the model including patients with previous long-term opioid use, the PPs for concurrent benzodiazepines were 25% vs. 24% (ME: -1%; 95%CI: − 18-16%). The population attributable risk (PAR) for NSAID and opioid contraindications was small. For kidney disease, the PAR was 0.16% (95%CI: 0.08–0.23%), 0.44% (95%CI: 0.30–0.58%) for anticoagulants and antiplatelets, 0.13% for substance use (95%CI: 0.03–0.22%) and 0.20% for concurrent benzodiazepine use (95%CI: 0.13–0.26%). Conclusions Patients with diagnoses of kidney disease and concurrent use of anticoagulants/antiplatelet medications had a higher probability of receiving an opioid prescription at a primary care visit for low back pain, but these conditions do not explain a large proportion of the opioid prescriptions.
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- 2021
7. The NQF Scientific Methods Panel
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Karen C. Johnson, Lacy Fabian, Samuel E. Simon, John Bott, David Cella, Eugene Nuccio, J. Matt Austin, Jack Needleman, and David R. Nerenz
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business.industry ,Process (engineering) ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,02 engineering and technology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Engineering management ,020210 optoelectronics & photonics ,0302 clinical medicine ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Medicine ,Quality (business) ,business ,media_common - Abstract
In the summer of 2017, the National Quality Forum (NQF) announced the formation of a Scientific Methods Panel (hereafter referred to as "the Panel") as part of a redesign of its endorsement process. NQF created the Panel in response to stakeholder request during a Kaizen improvement event held in May 2017. Given the Panel's role in the endorsement of performance measures used in national payment programs, the objective of this article is to describe the work of the Panel, and to describe its function in the larger context of the NQF measure endorsement process and in the measurement enterprise writ large. This article also serves as an introduction to a series of planned white papers being authored by the panel on specific technical issues in the area of health care performance measurement.
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- 2020
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8. Is it time to peek under the hood of system-level approaches to quality and safety?
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Peter I. Buerhaus, Olga Yakusheva, Jack Needleman, and Amanda P Bettencourt
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Adult ,Male ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Guidelines as Topic ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Reliability engineering ,System level ,Peek ,Humans ,Organizational Objectives ,Medicine ,Female ,Nursing Care ,Quality (business) ,Patient Safety ,business ,General Nursing ,Quality of Health Care ,media_common - Published
- 2020
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9. Adherence to the SEP-1 Sepsis Bundle in Hospital-Onset v. Community-Onset Sepsis: a Multicenter Retrospective Cohort Study
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Mitchell D. Wong, Russell B. Kerbel, Jonathan Baghdadi, Douglas S. Bell, Robert H. Brook, William E. Cunningham, Daniel Z. Uslan, and Jack Needleman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Medicare ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,law.invention ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,law ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Health services research ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,Hospitals ,United States ,Confidence interval ,Hospital medicine ,Relative risk ,Guideline Adherence ,Diagnosis code ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis is the leading cause of in-hospital death. The SEP-1 sepsis bundle is a protocol for early sepsis care that requires providers to diagnose and treat sepsis quickly. Limited evidence suggests that adherence to the sepsis bundle is lower in cases of hospital-onset sepsis. OBJECTIVE: To compare sepsis bundle adherence in hospital-onset vs. community-onset sepsis. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study using multivariable analysis of clinical data. PARTICIPANTS: A total of 4658 inpatients age 18 or older were identified by diagnosis codes consistent with sepsis or disseminated infection. SETTING: Four university hospitals in California between 2014 and 2016. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome was adherence to key components of the sepsis bundle defined by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services in their core measure, SEP-1. Covariates included clinical characteristics related to the patient, infection, and pathogen. KEY RESULTS: Compared with community-onset, cases of hospital-onset sepsis were less likely to receive SEP-1 adherent care (relative risk 0.33, 95% confidence interval 0.29–0.38, p
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- 2020
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10. Association of registered nurse and nursing support staffing with inpatient hospital mortality
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Jianfang Liu, Elaine Larson, Jinjing Shang, Patricia W. Stone, and Jack Needleman
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Staffing ,Nursing support ,Cumulative Exposure ,Comorbidity ,Hospital mortality ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Aged, 80 and over ,Academic Medical Centers ,Inpatient mortality ,030504 nursing ,Registered nurse ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Age Factors ,Health services research ,Middle Aged ,Patient Discharge ,United States ,Hospital medicine ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
BackgroundThe association of nursing staffing with patient outcomes has primarily been studied by comparing high to low staffed hospitals, raising concern other factors may account for observed differences. We examine the association of inpatient mortality with patients’ cumulative exposure to shifts with low registered nurse (RN) staffing, low nursing support staffing and high patient turnover.MethodsCumulative counts of exposure to shifts with low staffing and high patient turnover were used as time-varying covariates in survival analysis of data from a three-campus US academic medical centre for 2007–2012. Staffing below 75% of annual median unit staffing for each staff category and shift type was characterised as low. High patient turnover per day was defined as admissions, discharges and transfers 1 SD above unit annual daily averages.ResultsModels included cumulative counts of patient exposure to shifts with low RN staffing, low nursing support staffing, both concurrently and high patient turnover. The HR for exposure to shifts with low RN staffing only was 1.027 (95% CI 1.002 to 1.053, pConclusionLow RN and nursing support staffing were associated with increased mortality. The results should encourage hospital leadership to assure both adequate RN and nursing support staffing.
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- 2019
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11. Injury-specific variables improve risk adjustment and hospital quality assessment in severe traumatic brain injury
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Clifford Y. Ko, Robert H. Brook, Brian S. Mittman, Jack Needleman, H. Gill Cryer, Aaron J. Dawes, and Greg D. Sacks
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Traumatic brain injury ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,Injury Severity Score ,0302 clinical medicine ,Brain Injuries, Traumatic ,medicine ,Humans ,Models, Statistical ,Abbreviated Injury Scale ,business.industry ,Glasgow Coma Scale ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Trauma quality improvement program ,Middle Aged ,Stepwise regression ,medicine.disease ,Hospitals ,Benchmarking ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Risk Adjustment ,Surgery ,business ,Algorithms - Abstract
Background Hospital benchmarking is essential to quality improvement, but its usefulness depends on the ability of statistical models to adequately control for inter-hospital differences in patient mix. We explored whether the addition of injury-specific clinical variables to the current American College of Surgeons-Trauma Quality Improvement Program (TQIP) algorithm would improve model fit. Methods We analyzed a prospective registry containing all adult patients who presented to a regional consortium of 14 trauma centers between 2010 and 2011 with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). We used hierarchical logistic regression and stepwise forward selection to develop two novel risk-adjustment models. We then tested our novel models against the current TQIP model and ranked hospitals by their risk-adjusted mortality rates under each model to determine how model selection affects quality benchmarking. Results Seven hundred thirty-four patients met inclusion criteria. Stepwise selection resulted in two distinct models: one that added three TBI-specific variables (pupil reactivity, cerebral edema, loss of basal cisterns) to the model specification currently used by TQIP and another that combined two TBI-specific variables (pupil reactivity, cerebral edema) with a three-variable subset of TQIP (age, Abbreviated Injury Scale score for the head region, Glasgow Coma Scale motor score). Both novel models outperformed TQIP. Although rankings remained largely unchanged across model configurations, several hospitals moved across quality terciles. Conclusion The inclusion of injury-specific variables improves risk adjustment for patients with severe TBI. Trauma Quality Improvement Program should consider replacing several of its general patient characteristics with injury-specific clinical predictors to increase efficiency, reduce the risk of overfitting, and improve the accuracy of hospital benchmarking. Level of evidence Prognostic and epidemiological, level II.
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- 2019
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12. A sequence analysis of hospitalization patterns and service utilization in patients with major psychiatric disorders in China
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Chen Yao, Yuanli Liu, Jack Needleman, Yi-Lang Tang, Huixuan Zhou, Yin Chen, Feng Jiang, Xueyan Han, and Moning Guo
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medicine.medical_specialty ,China ,Psychological intervention ,RC435-571 ,Psychiatric service ,Service use ,Hospitalization pattern ,Service utilization ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Psychiatry ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Research ,Psychiatric readmission ,Sequence analysis ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Short stay ,Schizophrenia ,Beijing ,business - Abstract
Background Understanding the long-term inpatient service cost and utilization of psychiatric patients may provide insight into service demand for these patients and guide the design of targeted mental health programs. This study assesses 3-year hospitalization patterns and quantifies service utilization intensity of psychiatric patients in Beijing, China. Methods We identified patients admitted for one of three major psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar and depressive disorders) between January 1 and December 31, 2013 in Beijing, China. Inpatient admissions during the following 3 years were extracted and analyzed using sequence analysis. Clinical characteristics, psychiatric and non-psychiatric service use of included patients were analyzed. Results The study included 3443 patients (7657 hospitalizations). The patient hospitalization sequences were grouped into 4 clusters: short stay (N = 2741 (79.61% of patients), who had 126,911 or 26.82% of the hospital days within the sample), repeated long stay (N = 404 (11.73%), 76,915 (16.26%) days), long-term stay (N = 101 (2.93%), 59,909 (12.66%) days) and permanent stay (N = 197 (5.72%), 209,402 (44.26%) days). Length and frequency of hospitalization, as well as readmission rates were significantly different across the 4 clusters. Over the 3-year period, hospitalization days per year decreased for patients in the short stay and repeated long stay clusters. Patients with schizophrenia (1705 (49.52%)) had 78.4% of cumulative psychiatric stays, with 11.14% of them in the permanent stay cluster. Among patients with depression, 23.11% had non-psychiatric hospitalizations, and on average 46.65% of their total inpatient expenses were for non-psychiatric care, the highest among three diagnostic groups. Conclusion Hospitalization patterns varied significantly among psychiatric patients and across diagnostic categories. The high psychiatric care service use of the long-term and permanent stay patients underlines the need for evidence-based interventions to reduce cost and improve care quality.
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- 2021
13. Evaluating inpatient adverse outcomes under California's Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment Program
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Xiao Chen, Jamie Godwin, Nadereh Pourat, Michelle S. Keller, and Jack Needleman
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Capacity Building ,Outcome Assessment ,Adverse outcomes ,Economics ,State Health Plans ,Policy and Administration ,Pay for performance ,Incentive payment ,California ,Treatment and control groups ,sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,Hospital ,pressure ulcers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Economics, Hospital ,Reimbursement, Incentive ,Sensitivity analyses ,hospital-acquired infections ,Hospitals, Public ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,pay for performance ,Hematology ,Public ,Quality Improvement ,Hospitals ,Reimbursement ,United States ,Health Care ,Good Health and Well Being ,Propensity score matching ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Delivery system ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Incentive ,State Health Policy ,Demography - Abstract
Author(s): Keller, Michelle S; Chen, Xiao; Godwin, Jamie; Needleman, Jack; Pourat, Nadereh | Abstract: ObjectiveThe California Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment Program (DSRIP) provided incentive payments to Designated Public Hospitals (DPHs) to improve quality of care. We assessed the program's impact on reductions in sepsis mortality, central line-associated bloodstream infections (CLABSIs), venous thromboembolisms (VTEs), and hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (HAPUs).Data sourcesWe used 2009-2014 discharge data from California hospitals.Study designWe used a pre-post study design with a comparison group. We constructed propensity scores and used them to assign inverse probability weights according to their similarity to DPH discharges. Interaction term coefficients of time trends and treatment group provided significance testing.Data extractionWe used Patient Safety Indicators for CLABSI, HAPU, and VTE, and constructed a sepsis mortality measure.Principal findingsDischarges from DPHs and non-DPHs both saw decreases in the four outcomes over the DSRIP period (2010-2014). The difference-in-difference estimator (DD) for sepsis was only significant during two time periods, comparing 2010 with 2012 (DD: -2.90 percent, 95% CI: -5.08, -0.72 percent) and 2010 with 2014 (DD: -5.74, 95% CI: -8.76 percent, -2.72 percent); the DD estimator was not significant comparing 2010 with 2012 (DD: -1.30, 95% CI: -3.18 percent, 0.58 percent) or comparing 2010 with 2013 (DD: -3.05 percent, 95% CI: -6.50 percent, 0.40 percent). For CLABSI, we did not find any meaningful differences between DPHs and non-DPHs across the four time periods. For HAPU and VTE, the only significant DD estimator compared 2014 with 2010.ConclusionsWe did not find that DPHs participating in DSRIP outperformed non-DPHs during the DSRIP program. Our results were robust to multiple sensitivity analyses. Given multiple concurrent inpatient safety initiatives, it was challenging to assign improvements over time periods to DSRIP.
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- 2021
14. Primary Care Physicians' Conceptualization of Quality in Medicare's Merit-Based Incentive Payment System
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Jack Needleman, Teryl K. Nuckols, Molly C. Easterlin, Gery W. Ryan, and Carl T. Berdahl
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Quality management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Concept Formation ,Pay for performance ,Medicare ,01 natural sciences ,Physicians, Primary Care ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Medical diagnosis ,Reimbursement, Incentive ,Health policy ,media_common ,Aged ,Medical education ,Motivation ,Conceptualization ,business.industry ,010102 general mathematics ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,United States ,Family Practice ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Background: While administrators of pay-for-performance may have good intentions, physicians may be reluctant to participate for various reasons, including poor program alignment with realities of clinical practice. In this study, we sought to characterize how primary care physicians (PCPs) participating in Medicare9s Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS) conceptualize the quality of health care to help inform future measurement strategies that physicians would understand and appreciate. Methods: We performed semi-structured qualitative interviews with a nationwide sample of 20 PCPs in MIPS. We asked PCPs how they would characterize quality and what distinguished exceptional, good, and poor quality. Interviews were transcribed and 2 coders independently read transcripts, allowing data to emerge from the interviews and developing theories about the data. The coders met intermittently to discuss findings, harmonize the coding scheme, develop a final list of themes and subthemes, and aggregate a list of representative quotations. Results: Participants described quality as consisting of 2 components: (1) evidence-based care that is safe, which included health maintenance and chronic disease control, accurate diagnoses, and guideline adherence, and (2) patient-centered care, which included spending enough time with patients, responding to patient concerns, and establishing long-term relationships founded on trust. Conclusions: PCPs consider patient-centered care necessary for the provision of exceptional quality. Program administrators for quality measurement and pay-for-performance programs should explore new ways to reward PCPs for providing outstanding patient-centered care. Future research should be undertaken to determine whether patient-centered activities such as forging long-term, favorable patient-physician relationships, are associated with improved health outcomes.
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- 2020
15. End-of-Life Cost Trajectories in Cancer Patients Treated by Medicare versus the Veterans Health Administration
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Steven M. Asch, Karl A. Lorenz, Gary Hsin, Derek B. Boothroyd, Manali I. Patel, Todd H. Wagner, Risha Gidwani, Samantha Illarmo, Katherine E. Faricy-Anderson, Jack Needleman, and Kavitha Ramchandran
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,Total cost ,Hospitals, Veterans ,Medicare ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Generalized estimating equation ,health care economics and organizations ,Aged ,Terminal Care ,Inpatient care ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Drug cost ,Cancer ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,medicine.disease ,Veterans health ,Quality Improvement ,United States ,Hospitalization ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Emergency medicine ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,0305 other medical science ,business ,End-of-life care ,Needs Assessment - Abstract
Background/objectives To evaluate differences in end-of-life cost trajectories for cancer patients treated through Medicare versus by the Veterans Health Administration (VA). Design A retrospective analysis of VA and Medicare administrative data from FY 2010 to 2014. We employed three-level generalized estimating equations to evaluate monthly cost trajectories experienced by patients in their last year of life, with patients nested within hospital referral region. Setting Care received at VA facilities or by Medicare-reimbursed providers nationwide. Participants A total of 36,401 patients dying from cancer and dually enrolled in VA and Medicare. Measurements We evaluated trajectories for total, inpatient, outpatient, and drug costs, using the last 12 months of life. Cost trajectories were prioritized as costs are not directly comparable across Medicare and VA. Patients were assigned to be VA-reliant, Medicare-reliant or Mixed-reliant based on their healthcare utilization in the last year of life. Results All three groups experienced significantly different cost trajectories for total costs in the last year of life. Inpatient cost trajectories were significantly different between Medicare-reliant and VA-reliant patients, but did not differ between VA-reliant and Mixed-reliant patients. Outpatient and drug cost trajectories exhibited the inverse pattern: they were significantly different between VA-reliant and Mixed-reliant patients, but not between VA-reliant and Medicare-reliant patients. However, visual examination of cost trajectories revealed similar cost patterns in the last year of life among all three groups; there was a sharp rise in costs as patients approach death, largely due to inpatient care. Conclusion Despite substantially different financial incentives and organization, VA- and Medicare-treated patients exhibit similar patterns of increasing end-of-life costs, largely driven by inpatient costs. Both systems require improvement to ensure quality of end-of-life care is aligned with recommended practice.
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- 2020
16. Do Primary Care Clinicians Incorporate Comorbidities and Concurrent Medications When Prescribing Opioids for Low Back Pain? A Retrospective Cross-Sectional Analysis
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Teryl K. Nuckols, Lyna Truong, MarySue V. Heilemann, Michelle S. Keller, Jack Needleman, and Allison M. Mays
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Cross-sectional study ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Primary care ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Low back pain - Abstract
Background Given the risks of opioid therapy, clinicians are under growing pressure to treat pain with non-opioid medications. Yet non-opioid analgesics such as non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have their own risks; patients with kidney disease or gastrointestinal diseases can experience serious adverse events. We examined how primary care clinicians balance patient comorbidities and concurrent medications when prescribing opioids. Methods We used a retrospective cross-sectional study design and data from one health system. We identified office visits for low back pain from 2012-2017 and sampled the first visit per patient per year (N= 24,543 visits). We created indicators reflecting contraindications for NSAIDs (kidney, liver, cardiovascular/cerebrovascular, and gastrointestinal diseases; concurrent use of anticoagulants/antiplatelets) and opioids (depression, anxiety, substance use and bipolar disorders, chronic corticosteroid use, and concurrent benzodiazepines) and estimated four logistic regression models, with the first model including all patient visits and then stratifying for previous opioid use. Results Patients received an opioid prescription at 4% of visits. Among all patients, kidney disease (marginal effect [ME]: 3%; 95%CI: 1%-4%) or chronic/concurrent anticoagulant/antiplatelet prescriptions (ME: 2%, 95%CI: 1%-3%) were associated with a higher probability of receiving an opioid prescription. Concurrent benzodiazepines (ME: 7%, 95%CI: 5%-9%) and substance use diagnoses (ME: 1%, 95%CI: 0%-3%) were also associated with a higher probability of opioid prescription receipt. Among patients with long-term opioid use, contraindications for NSAIDs were not associated with a higher probability of opioid prescription receipt, while the probability of opioid receipt among those with concurrent benzodiazepines was substantially higher (ME: 10%, 95%CI: 14%-53%).Conclusions Among our entire sample, patients with kidney disease were 75% more likely to receive an opioid prescription for low back pain. Among patients with long-term opioid use, we did not find the same association. Patients with long-term use were likely started on opioids when opioid prescribing was more liberal; discussions regarding non-opioid options would be worthwhile for this population. Patients with concurrent benzodiazepines were 175% more likely to receive an opioid prescription; among patients with long-term opioid use, they were 250% more likely to receive opioids. These findings are troubling, as this combination is dangerous and can lead to overdose.
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- 2020
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17. WOMEN'S HEALTH: Provider Gender Sensitivity Is Associated with Trauma‐Sensitive Communication Among Women Veterans
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B. Yano, Emmeline Chuang, Donna L. Washington, Danielle E. Rose, C. Than, Ismelda Canelo, and Jack Needleman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Gender sensitivity ,business ,Special Issue Abstracts ,Healthcare providers ,humanities ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
RESEARCH OBJECTIVE: Research suggests that about 80% of women veterans receiving care at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) have experienced at least one trauma in their lifetimes, including military sexual trauma or combat‐related trauma. Trauma‐sensitive communication reflects an understanding of the impact of trauma and the needs of trauma survivors during health care encounters. We explored whether provider gender sensitivity is associated with positive ratings of trauma‐sensitive communication among women veteran patients. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted cross‐sectional surveys of providers to measure provider gender sensitivity using 10 survey items adapted from the Gender Awareness Inventory‐VA. Example items included “Sometimes I wish VA primary care clinics had only male patients.” We averaged responses in 5‐point Likert scales to create a composite score, with a higher score indicating higher sensitivity. We used cross‐sectional surveys of patients to measure women veterans' perspectives of trauma‐sensitive communication: providers (1) asked about any serious problems or stresses in life (yes vs no), (2) made sure they were comfortable before any treatments or examinations (always vs otherwise), and (3) made them feel comfortable talking about emotional issues (very comfortable vs otherwise). We linked survey responses of providers to women veterans via VA primary care visit information in 2014. We used logistic regression to predict each measure of trauma‐sensitive communication, controlling for women veterans' age, race, and ethnicity, a service‐connected disability, military sexual trauma, physical and mental comorbidities, and primary care and mental health visits in 2014. All analyses were weighted for survey nonresponses. POPULATION STUDIED: A total of 94 primary care providers (PCPs) (33% response rate) and 1395 women veterans (45% response rate) from 12 VA medical centers (VAMCs) completed the surveys between 2014 and 2015. After linking women veterans to PCPs, they had visited for primary care or women's health at the same 12 VAMCs in 2014, and the analyses included 804 women veterans and 58 PCPs who responded to the surveys. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Overall, 80.3% of women veterans reported that their PCPs asked about any serious problems or stresses in life, 79.3% reported that PCPs always made sure they were comfortable before any treatments or examinations, and 55.6% felt very comfortable talking with PCPs about emotional issues. After adjusting for covariates, higher provider gender sensitivity score was associated with more women veterans reporting that (1) PCPs asked about any serious problems or stresses in life (AOR: 1.33, 95% CI: 1.08‐1.63), (2) PCPs always made sure they were comfortable before any treatments or examinations (AOR: 1.10, 95% CI: 0.91‐1.34), and (3) they felt very comfortable talking with PCPs about emotional issues (AOR: 1.11, 95% CI: 0.93‐1.30). CONCLUSIONS: Overall, women veterans' ratings of trauma‐sensitive communication were positive. Higher provider sensitivity was associated with greater trauma‐sensitive communication. IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY OR PRACTICE: Strategies to improve provider readiness to care for women veterans and their gender sensitivity can improve trauma‐sensitive communication with women veterans. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Department of Veterans Affairs.
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- 2020
18. Comorbidity Assessment Is Uneven Across Veterans Health Administration and Medicare for the Same Patient: Implications for Risk Adjustment
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Derek B. Boothroyd, Jack Needleman, Samantha Illarmo, Steven M. Asch, and Risha Gidwani-Marszowski
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coding algorithm ,MEDLINE ,Eligibility Determination ,Comorbidity ,Medicare ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Retrospective analysis ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Retrospective cohort study ,Risk adjustment ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Veterans health ,Privatization ,United States ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Data extraction ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Risk Adjustment ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Objective Compare comorbidity identification in Medicare and Veterans Health Administration (VA) data for the purposes of risk adjustment. Data sources Analysis of Medicare and VA datasets for dually-enrolled Veterans receiving care in both settings, fiscal years 2010-2014. Study design A retrospective analysis of administrative data for a national sample of cancer decedents. Data extraction methods Comorbidities were evaluated using Elixhauser and Charlson coding algorithms. Principal findings Clinical comorbidities were more likely to be recorded in Medicare than in VA datasets. Of 42 comorbidities, 36 (86%) were recorded at a different frequency. For example, congestive heart failure was recorded for 22.0% of patients in Medicare data and for 11.3% of patients in VA data (P Conclusion There are large differences in comorbidity assessment across VA and Medicare administrative data for the same patient, posing challenges for risk adjustment.
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- 2020
19. Understanding Clinicians' Decisions to Assume Prescriptions for Inherited Patients on Long-term Opioid Therapy: A Qualitative Study
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Jack Needleman, Teryl K. Nuckols, Alma Jusufagic, MarySue V. Heilemann, and Michelle S. Keller
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Pain medicine ,Coding (therapy) ,Primary care ,Drug Prescriptions ,Pain & Substance Use Disorders ,Physicians, Primary Care ,Constructivist grounded theory ,Medicine ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Medical prescription ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,business.industry ,Chronic pain ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Prescriptions ,Opioid ,Family medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Chronic Pain ,business ,medicine.drug ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Objective Given the changing political and social climate around opioids, we examined how clinicians in the outpatient setting made decisions about managing opioid prescriptions for new patients already on long-term opioid therapy. Methods We conducted in-depth interviews with 32 clinicians in Southern California who prescribed opioid medications in the outpatient setting for chronic pain. The study design, interview guides, and coding for this qualitative study were guided by constructivist grounded theory methodology. Results We identified three approaches to assuming a new patient’s opioid prescriptions. Staunch Opposers, mostly clinicians with specialized training in pain medicine, were averse to continuing opioid prescriptions for new patients and often screened outpatients seeking opioids. Cautious and Conflicted Prescribers were wary about prescribing opioids but were willing to refill prescriptions if they perceived the patient as trustworthy and the medication fell within their comfort zone. Clinicians in the first two groups felt resentful about other clinicians “dumping” patients on opioids on them. Rapport Builders, mostly primary care physicians, were the most willing to assume opioid prescriptions and were strategic in their approach to transitioning patients to safer doses. Conclusions Clinicians with the most training in pain management were the least willing to assume responsibility for opioid prescriptions for patients already on long-term opioid therapy. In contrast, primary care clinicians were the most willing to assume this responsibility. However, primary care clinicians face barriers to providing high-quality care for patients with complex pain conditions, such as short visit times and less specialized training.
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- 2020
20. Understanding Gender Sensitivity of the Health Care Workforce at the Veterans Health Administration
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Donna L. Washington, Jack Needleman, Lisa S. Meredith, Ismelda Canelo, Claire Than, Elizabeth M. Yano, and Emmeline Chuang
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Male ,Health (social science) ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Gender disparities in health ,Health Workforce ,Veterans ,Response rate (survey) ,030503 health policy & services ,Communication ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Middle Aged ,Health Services ,Gender Equality ,Hospitals ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Scale (social sciences) ,Workforce ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Public Health ,0305 other medical science ,Health and social care services research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hospitals, Veterans ,Health Personnel ,education ,MEDLINE ,Veterans Health ,Article ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Maternity and Midwifery ,medicine ,Humans ,Veterans Affairs ,Quality of Health Care ,Patient Care Team ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Health care workforce ,Work experience ,United States ,Good Health and Well Being ,Family medicine ,Women's Health ,Management of diseases and conditions ,business - Abstract
Background Gender sensitivity of providers and staff has assumed increasing importance in closing historical gender disparities in health care quality and outcomes. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has implemented several initiatives intended to improve gender sensitivity of its health care workforce. The current study examines practice- and individual-level characteristics associated with gender sensitivity of primary care providers (PCPs) and staff. Methods We surveyed PCPs and staff (nurses, medical assistants, and clerks) at 12 VA medical centers (VAMCs) (n = 256 of 649; response rate, 39%). Gender sensitivity was measured using a 10-item scale adapted from the Gender Awareness Inventory-VA. We used weighted multivariate regression with maximum likelihood estimation to identify individual- and practice-level characteristics associated with gender sensitivity of PCPs and staff. Results PCPs and staff had similar gender sensitivity but differed in most characteristics associated with that gender sensitivity. Among PCPs, women's health training and positive communication with others in the clinic were associated with greater gender sensitivity. For staff, prior work experience caring for women, working in Women's Health Patient-Aligned Care Teams, and rural location were associated with greater gender sensitivity, whereas more years of VA service was associated with lower gender sensitivity. Working at VA medical centers with a higher volume of women veteran patients was associated with greater gender sensitivity for both PCPs and staff. Conclusions Women's health training and experience in working with other women's health professionals are strongly correlated with greater gender sensitivity in the clinical workforce.
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- 2020
21. Nurses and nursing support matter: interpreting the evidence
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Patricia W. Stone and Jack Needleman
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Registered nurse ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,education ,Nursing support ,Staffing ,humanities ,Audit and feedback ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Skill mix ,Nursing aides ,Nursing ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Accreditation - Abstract
To the editors, In their editorial commenting on our paper ‘Association of registered nurse and nursing support staffing with inpatient hospital mortality’,1 Aiken and Sloane present our study results, conclusions and implications as if we examined the impact of substituting nursing support staff for professional nurses or registered nurses (RNs). We did not examine substitution of support staff for RNs (commonly called skill mix) in this study and, as Aiken and Sloane acknowledge, we stated our findings should not be interpreted to mean that nursing aides can safely substitute for RNs. Nonetheless, Aiken and Sloane discuss our current paper as though it is about skill …
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- 2020
22. Comorbidity combinations in schizophrenia inpatients and their associations with service utilization: A medical record-based analysis using association rule mining
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Chen Yao, Feng Jiang, Huixuan Zhou, Jack Needleman, Xueyan Han, and Yi-Lang Tang
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Tachycardia ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Constipation ,Psychological intervention ,Comorbidity ,Medical Records ,Internal medicine ,Data Mining ,Humans ,Medicine ,General Psychology ,Retrospective Studies ,Inpatients ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Fatty liver ,Common cold ,General Medicine ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Schizophrenia ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Background Comorbidities are common among patients with schizophrenia yet the prevalence of comorbidity combinations and their associations with inpatient service utilization and readmission have been scarcely explored. Methods Data were extracted from discharge summaries of patients whose primary diagnosis was schizophrenia spectrum disorders (ICD-10: F20-F29). We identified 30 most frequent comorbidities in patients’ secondary diagnoses and then used the association rule mining (ARM) method to derive comorbidity combinations associated with length of stay (LOS), daily expense and one-year readmission. Results The study included data from 8252 patients. The top five most common comorbidities were extrapyramidal syndrome (EPS, 44.58%), constipation (31.63%), common cold (21.80%), hyperlipidemia (20.99%) and tachycardia (19.13%). Most comorbidity combinations identified by ARM were significantly associated with longer LOS (≥70 days), few were associated with higher daily expenses, and fewer with readmission. The 3-way combination of common cold, hyperlipidemia and fatty liver had the strongest association with longer LOS (adjusted OR (aOR): 3.38, 95% CI: 2.12-5.38). The combination of EPS and mild cognitive disorder was associated with higher daily expense (≥700 RMB) (aOR: 1.67, 95% CI: 1.20-2.31). The combination of constipation, tachycardia and fatty liver were associated with higher 1-year readmission (aOR: 2.05, 95% CI: 1.03-4.09). Conclusion EPS, constipation, and tachycardia were among the most commonly reported comorbidities in schizophrenia patients in Beijing, China. Specific groups of comorbidities may contribute to higher inpatient psychiatric service utilization and readmission. The mechanism behind the associations and potential interventions to optimize service use warrant further investigation.
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- 2022
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23. Evaluation of the Present-on-Admission Indicator among Hospitalized Fee-for-Service Medicare Patients with a Pressure Ulcer Diagnosis: Coding Patterns and Impact on Hospital-Acquired Pressure Ulcer Rates
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David A. Ganz, Lee Squitieri, Jack Needleman, Daniel A. Waxman, Clifford Y. Ko, Debra Saliba, and Carol M. Mangione
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Care Quality and Measurement ,Iatrogenic Disease ,Comorbidity ,Present on admission ,Medicare ,Insurance Claim Review ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Medical history ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Fee-for-service ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pressure Ulcer ,Pressure injury ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Age Factors ,Clinical Coding ,Fee-for-Service Plans ,United States ,Hospitalization ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Independent provider ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Extraction methods ,Diagnosis code ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Author(s): Squitieri, Lee; Waxman, Daniel A; Mangione, Carol M; Saliba, Debra; Ko, Clifford Y; Needleman, Jack; Ganz, David A | Abstract: OBJECTIVES:To evaluate national present-on-admission (POA) reporting for hospital-acquired pressure ulcers (HAPUs) and examine the impact of quality measure exclusion criteria on HAPU rates. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING:Medicare inpatient, outpatient, and nursing facility data as well as independent provider claims (2010-2011). STUDY DESIGN:Retrospective cross-sectional study. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS:We evaluated acute inpatient hospital admissions among Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries in 2011. Admissions were categorized as follows: (1) no pressure ulcer diagnosis, (2) new pressure ulcer diagnosis, and (3) previously documented pressure ulcer diagnosis. HAPU rates were calculated by varying patient exclusion criteria. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:Among admissions with a pressure ulcer diagnosis, we observed a large discrepancy in the proportion of admissions with a HAPU based on hospital-reported POA data (5.2 percent) and the proportion with a new pressure ulcer diagnosis based on patient history in billing claims (49.7 percent). Applying quality measure exclusion criteria resulted in removal of 91.2 percent of admissions with a pressure injury diagnosis from HAPU rate calculations. CONCLUSIONS:As payers and health care organizations expand the use of quality measures, it is important to consider how the measures are implemented, coding revisions to improve measure validity, and the impact of patient exclusion criteria on provider performance evaluation.
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- 2018
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24. Quality Of End-Of-Life Care Is Higher In The VA Compared To Care Paid For By Traditional Medicare
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Derek B. Boothroyd, Risha Gidwani-Marszowski, Samantha S. Murrell, Steven M. Asch, Vilija R. Joyce, Manali I. Patel, Karl A. Lorenz, Jack Needleman, Todd H. Wagner, Katherine E. Faricy-Anderson, Kavitha Ramchandran, Vincent Mor, and Gary Hsin
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business.industry ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Intensive care unit ,humanities ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Financial incentives ,law ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Health care ,medicine ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical emergency ,Quality of care ,business ,Veterans Affairs ,End-of-life care ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common - Abstract
Congressional and Veterans Affairs (VA) leaders have recommended the VA become more of a purchaser than a provider of health care. Fee-for-service Medicare provides an example of how purchased care differs from the VA’s directly provided care. Using established indicators of overly intensive end-of-life care, we compared the quality of care provided through the two systems to veterans dying of cancer in fiscal years 2010–14. The Medicare-reliant veterans were significantly more likely to receive high-intensity care, in the form of chemotherapy, hospital stays, admission to the intensive care unit, more days spent in the hospital, and death in the hospital. However, they were significantly less likely than VA-reliant patients to have multiple emergency department visits. Higher-intensity end-of-life care may be driven by financial incentives present in fee-for-service Medicare but not in the VA’s integrated system. To avoid putting VA-reliant veterans at risk of receiving lower-quality care, VA care-purcha...
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- 2018
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25. More ward nursing staff improves inpatient outcomes, but how much is enough?
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Jack Needleman and Paul G. Shekelle
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Research ethics ,Nursing staff ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,MEDLINE ,Staffing ,Retrospective cohort study ,Hazard ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Family medicine ,Workforce ,Medicine ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
The issue of the adequacy of nurse staffing in hospitals and its impact on patient outcomes remains contentious. While there have been a large number of studies demonstrating an association of staffing levels and skills mix on a wide range of outcomes, including mortality, hospital-acquired infections and overall length of stay in patients in hospitals, the vast majority of these studies have been conducted comparing high-staffed hospitals to low-staffed hospitals.1–6 Concerns have been raised that other factors than staffing also differ between high-staffed and low-staffed hospitals that might contribute to the observed differences, and that staffing plays a smaller role than is suggested by these studies. Settling the issue through a study by randomly assigning different staffing levels to hospitals or units seems very unlikely to occur on logistic grounds. And given the existing body of work research ethics committees would probably not approve such a study. What has proven feasible is utilising day-to-day variations in staffing and census across units within hospitals to assess the impact of low staffing on patient outcomes. Prior to the study by Griffiths et al in this issue of BMJ Quality & Safety ,7 two published studies have used this methodology. Needleman et al 8 identified shifts by units with substantial shortfalls in professional nurse staffing from targets established by a large academic medical centre’s staff projection system, and examined the association of cumulative exposure to low-staffed shifts on patient mortality over a 5-year period for 40 units. They found a substantial increase in mortality associated each low-staffed shift to which a patient was exposed. They also found that the hazard of mortality was increased for shifts with substantially higher than average patient turnover, as turnover was not incorporated into the staffing system. Fagerstrom et al 9 used data from 36 units …
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- 2019
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26. Consistency of pressure injury documentation across interfacility transfers
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Lee Squitieri, Debra Saliba, Daniel A. Waxman, Clifford Y. Ko, Jack Needleman, Carol M. Mangione, Patrick S Romano, and David A. Ganz
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Male ,Aging ,Iatrogenic Disease ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Logistic regression ,Severity of Illness Index ,Patient Admission ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cohen's kappa ,Documentation ,80 and over ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Patient transfer ,Aged, 80 and over ,Pressure Ulcer ,Continental Population Groups ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Transitions In Care ,Fee-for-Service Plans ,Quality Measurement ,Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Patient Safety ,Medical emergency ,0305 other medical science ,Patient Transfer ,Clinical Sciences ,and over ,Medicare ,Insurance Claim Review ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,Clinical Research ,Humans ,Aged ,Pressure injury ,business.industry ,Racial Groups ,Clinical Coding ,Reproducibility of Results ,Quality measurement ,Financial Incentives ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Logistic Models ,business ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Kappa - Abstract
BackgroundHospital-acquired pressure injuries (HAPIs) are publicly reported in the USA and used to adjust Medicare payment to acute inpatient facilities. Current methods used to identify HAPIs in administrative claims rely on hospital-reported present-on-admission (POA) data instead of prior patient health information.ObjectiveTo study the reliability of claims data for HAPIs and pressure injury (PI) stage by evaluating diagnostic coding agreement across interfacility transfers.MethodsUsing the 2012 100% Medicare Provider and Analysis Review file, we identified all fee-for-service acute inpatient discharge records with a PI diagnosis among Medicare patients 65 years and older. We then identified additional facility claims (eg, acute inpatient, long-stay inpatient or skilled nursing facility) belonging to the same patient who had either (1) admission within 1day of hospital discharge or (2) discharge within 1day of hospital admission. Multivariable logistic regression and stratified kappa statistics were used to measure coding agreement between transferring and receiving facilities in the presence or absence of a PI diagnosis at the time of patient transfer and PI stage category (early vs advanced).ResultsIn our comparison of claims data between transferring and receiving facilities, we observed poor agreement in the presence or absence of a PI diagnosis at the time of transfer (36.3%, kappa=0.03) and poor agreement in PI stage category (74.3%, kappa=0.17). Among transfers with a POA PI reported by the receiving hospital, only 34.0% had a PI documented at the prior transferring facility.ConclusionsThe observed discordance in PI documentation and staging between transferring and receiving facilities may indicate inaccuracy of HAPI identification in claims data. Future research should evaluate the accuracy of hospital-reported POA data and its impact on PI quality measurement.
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- 2017
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27. Risk factors for development of aminoglycoside resistance among gram-negative rods
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Douglas S. Bell, Loren G. Miller, Karol E. Watson, Jack Needleman, Stefan Richter, Daniel Z. Uslan, Romney M. Humphries, and James A. McKinnell
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Adult ,Male ,Patient Transfer ,Carbapenem ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Multivariate analysis ,Drug resistance ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antimicrobial Stewardship ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antibiotic resistance ,Sex Factors ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Drug Resistance, Bacterial ,Gram-Negative Bacteria ,Weight Loss ,medicine ,Tobramycin ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Pharmacology ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,Academic Medical Centers ,030306 microbiology ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Clinical Research Report ,Retrospective cohort study ,Middle Aged ,Respiration, Artificial ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Aminoglycosides ,Carbapenems ,Amikacin ,Gentamicin ,Female ,business ,Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections ,Algorithms ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Purpose Development of scoring systems to predict the risk of aminoglycoside resistance and to guide therapy is described. Methods Infections due to aminoglycoside-resistant gram-negative rods (AR-GNRs) are increasingly common and associated with adverse outcomes; selection of effective initial antibiotic therapy is necessary to reduce adverse consequences and shorten length of stay. To determine risk factors for AR-GNR recovery from culture, cases of GNR infection among patients admitted to 2 institutions in a major academic hospital system during the period 2011–2016 were retrospectively analyzed. Gentamicin and tobramycin resistance (GTR-GNR) and amikacin resistance (AmR-GNR) patterns were analyzed separately. A total of 26,154 GNR isolates from 12,516 patients were analyzed, 6,699 of which were GTR, and 2,467 of which were AmR. Results In multivariate analysis, risk factors for GTR-GNR were presence of weight loss, admission from another medical or long-term care facility, a hemoglobin level of Conclusion A scoring system derived from the developed risk prediction models can be applied by providers to guide empirical antimicrobial therapy for treatment of GNR infections.
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- 2019
28. Patient experience of hospital care in China: major findings from the Chinese Patient Experience Questionnaire Survey (2016–2018)
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Linlin Hu, Pengyu Zhao, Li Luo, Jing Guo, Jing Ma, Jack Needleman, Yin Chen, Huixuan Zhou, Guangyu Hu, Jing Sun, Shichao Wu, Zijuan Wang, Yuanli Liu, Ying Mao, Qiannan Liu, and Shiyang Liu
- Subjects
Mainland China ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,China ,Higher education ,quality in healthcare ,Population ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Patient experience ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,Health policy ,Original Research ,Quality of Health Care ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,patient experience ,030503 health policy & services ,Questionnaire ,health policy ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Quality Improvement ,Hospitals ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Patient Satisfaction ,Family medicine ,Female ,Health Services Research ,Self Report ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesChina launched the National Healthcare Improvement Initiative (NHII) in 2015 to improve patient experiences in healthcare. This study aimed to generate evidence of hospital care quality from the patients’ perspective.DesignThis nationwide cross-sectional study interviewed participants from 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions across China.SettingA total of 117 tertiary hospitals in mainland China.Participants48 422 responses from outpatients and 35 957 responses from inpatients were included in this study.Primary outcome measureThe scores of six predefined domains in the Chinese Patient Experience Questionnaire, five of which were designed to reflect specific dimensions of care, and one of which indicated the overall rating.ResultsMore than 80% of the respondents viewed their care experiences as positive. The NHII seems to have had a positive impact, as indicated by the steady, although unremarkable, increase in the patient experience scores over the 2016–2018 period. The Chinese patients generally reported a positive experience with the clinical aspects of care, but reported a less positive experience with the environmental, interpersonal and social services aspects of care. The institutional factors, including region and type of hospital, and personal factors, such as gender, age, education and occupation, were factors affecting the patient experience in China. Humanistic care was the aspect of care with the greatest association with the overall patient experience rating in both the outpatient and inpatient settings.ConclusionsThe national survey indicated an overall positive patient perspective of care in China. Older age, higher education level and formal employment status were found to be correlated with positive care experiences, as were higher levels of economic development of the region, a more generous insurance benefits package and a higher degree of coordinated care. The interpersonal-related initiatives had substantial roles in the improvement of the patient experience. In the regions where farmers and users of traditional Chinese medicine services constitute a greater proportion of the population, improvement of patient experiences for these groups deserves special policy attention.
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- 2019
29. Hospitalization Pattern, Inpatient Service Utilization and Quality of Care in Patients With Alcohol Use Disorder: A Sequence Analysis of Discharge Medical Records
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Xueyan Han, Huixuan Zhou, Yin Chen, Jack Needleman, Yi-Lang Tang, Feng Jiang, Moning Guo, and Yuanli Liu
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Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Alcohol use disorder ,Medical Records ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Service utilization ,Medicine ,Psychiatric hospital ,Humans ,In patient ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Quality of care ,Inpatient service ,Inpatients ,business.industry ,Medical record ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,medicine.disease ,Patient Discharge ,030227 psychiatry ,Hospitalization ,Alcoholism ,Short stay ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,business - Abstract
Aims To identify and group hospitalization trajectory of alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients and its associations with service utilization, healthcare quality and hospital-level variations. Methods Inpatients with AUD as the primary diagnosis from 2012 to 2014 in Beijing, China, were identified. Their discharge medical records were extracted and analyzed using the sequence analysis and the cluster analysis. Results Eight-hundred thirty-one patients were included, and their hospitalization patterns were grouped into four clusters: short stay (n = 565 (67.99%)), mean psychiatric length of stay in 3 years: (32.25 ± 18.69), repeated short stay (n = 211 (25.39%), 137.76 ± 88.8 days), repeated long stay (n = 41 (4.93%), 405.44 ± 146.54 days), permanent stay (n = 14 (1.68%), 818.14 ± 225.22 days). The latter two clusters (6.61% patients) used 37.26% of the total psychiatric hospital days and 33.65% of the total psychiatric hospitalization expenses. All the patients in the permanent stay cluster and 41.77% of the patients in the short stay cluster were readmitted at least once within 3 years. Two-hundred thirty-four patients (28.16%) were admitted at least once for non-psychiatric reasons, primarily for diseases of circulatory and digestive systems. Cluster composition varied significantly among different hospitals. Conclusion Hospitalization pattern of patients with AUD varies greatly, and while most (>2/3) hospitalizations were short stay, those with repeated long stay and permanent stay used more than one third of the hospital days and expenses. Our findings suggest interventions targeting at certain patients may be more effective in reducing resource utilization.
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- 2019
30. Ambulance diversions following public hospital emergency department closures
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Charleen Hsuan, Jack Needleman, Renee Y. Hsia, Ninez A. Ponce, Jill R. Horwitz, and Thomas W. Rice
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Time Factors ,Discharge data ,emergency department ,Policy and Administration ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,ambulance diversion ,California ,Hospitals, Private ,03 medical and health sciences ,Hospital ,0302 clinical medicine ,Residence Characteristics ,Clinical Research ,Medicine ,Ambulance Diversion ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Health planning ,Probability ,Bed Occupancy ,access to care ,Emergency Service ,business.industry ,Hospitals, Public ,030503 health policy & services ,Health Policy ,Emergency department ,respiratory system ,Health Policy and Organizational Behavior ,Public ,medicine.disease ,Hospitals ,Private ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Hospital Bed Capacity ,Public hospital ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Extraction methods ,Medical emergency ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,human activities ,Health and social care services research - Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine whether hospitals are more likely to temporarily close their emergency departments (EDs) to ambulances (through ambulance diversions) if neighboring diverting hospitals are public vs private.Data sources/study settingAmbulance diversion logs for California hospitals, discharge data, and hospital characteristics data from California's Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development and the American Hospital Association (2007).Study designWe match public and private (nonprofit or for-profit) hospitals by distance and size. We use random-effects models examining diversion probability and timing of private hospitals following diversions by neighboring public vs matched private hospitals.Data collection/extraction methodsN/A.Principal findingsHospitals are 3.6 percent more likely to declare diversions if neighboring diverting hospitals are public vs private (P 
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- 2019
31. Factors associated with 30-day and 1-year readmission among psychiatric inpatients in Beijing China: a retrospective, medical record-based analysis
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Yin Chen, Jack Needleman, Huixuan Zhou, Yuanli Liu, Xueyan Han, Feng Jiang, Yi-Lang Tang, and Moning Guo
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,China ,Time Factors ,lcsh:RC435-571 ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Logistic regression ,Lower risk ,Patient Readmission ,Medical Records ,Comorbidities ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Electroconvulsive therapy ,Beijing ,Risk Factors ,lcsh:Psychiatry ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Inpatients ,business.industry ,Psychiatric hospitals ,Medical record ,Psychiatric readmission ,Targeted interventions ,Middle Aged ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Frequent readmissions ,Male patient ,Female ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Psychiatric readmissions negatively impact patients and their families while increasing healthcare costs. This study aimed at investigating factors associated with psychiatric readmissions within 30 days and 1 year of the index admissions and exploring the possibilities of monitoring and improving psychiatric care quality in China. Methods Data on index admission, subsequent admission(s), clinical and hospital-related factors were extracted in the inpatient medical record database covering 10 secondary and tertiary psychiatric hospitals in Beijing, China. Logistic regressions were used to examine the associations between 30-day and 1-year readmissions plus frequent readmissions (≥3 times/year), and clinical variables as well as hospital characteristics. Results The 30-day and 1-year psychiatric readmission rates were 16.69% (1289/7724) and 33.79% (2492/7374) respectively. 746/2492 patients (29.34%) were readmitted 3 times or more within a year (frequent readmissions). Factors significantly associated with the risk of both 30-day and 1-year readmission were residing in an urban area, having medical comorbidities, previous psychiatric admission(s), length of stay > 60 days in the index admission and being treated in tertiary hospitals (p Conclusion More than 30% of the psychiatric inpatients were readmitted within 1 year. Urban residents, those with medical comorbidities and previous psychiatric admission(s) or a longer length of stay were more likely to be readmitted, and men are more likely to be frequently readmitted. ECT treatment may reduce the likelihood of 30-day readmission and frequent admissions. Targeted interventions should be designed and piloted to effectively monitor and reduce psychiatric readmissions.
- Published
- 2019
32. Comparison of Childbirth Delivery Outcomes and Costs of Care Between Women Experiencing vs Not Experiencing Homelessness
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Sitaram Vangala, Atsushi Miyawaki, Ayae Yamamoto, Yusuke Tsugawa, Jack Needleman, Lillian Gelberg, and Gerald F. Kominski
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Adult ,Fetal Membranes, Premature Rupture ,Placenta Diseases ,Pregnancy Complications, Cardiovascular ,Prenatal care ,Fetal Distress ,Young Adult ,Obstetric Labor, Premature ,Pregnancy ,mental disorders ,Health care ,Fetal distress ,Humans ,Childbirth ,Medicine ,Original Investigation ,Fetal Growth Retardation ,Antepartum hemorrhage ,Cesarean Section ,business.industry ,Research ,Postpartum Hemorrhage ,Infant, Newborn ,Parturition ,Absolute risk reduction ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Health Care Costs ,General Medicine ,Stillbirth ,Delivery, Obstetric ,medicine.disease ,Obstetric Labor Complications ,Online Only ,Case-Control Studies ,Ill-Housed Persons ,Community health ,Housing ,Female ,Uterine Hemorrhage ,business ,Demography - Abstract
This cross-sectional study compares childbirth delivery outcomes and costs of care among women experiencing homelessness vs those not experiencing homelessness., Key Points Question Do pregnant women experiencing homelessness have poorer childbirth delivery outcomes and higher costs of care compared with pregnant women not experiencing homelessness? Findings In this multistate population-based cross-sectional study of 15 029 pregnant women experiencing homelessness and 308 242 pregnant women not experiencing homelessness, those experiencing homelessness were more likely to experience preterm labor and had higher delivery-associated costs. Those experiencing homelessness were also more likely to experience placental abnormalities, although this difference was not statistically significant. Meaning These findings suggest that, within the same hospital, housing status is associated with preterm labor and higher delivery costs., Importance Women and families constitute the fastest-growing segments of the homeless population. However, there is limited evidence on whether women experiencing homelessness have poorer childbirth delivery outcomes and higher costs of care compared with women not experiencing homelessness. Objective To compare childbirth delivery outcomes and costs of care between pregnant women experiencing homelessness vs those not experiencing homelessness. Design, Setting, and Participants This cross-sectional study included 15 029 pregnant women experiencing homelessness and 308 242 pregnant women not experiencing homelessness who had a delivery hospitalization in 2014. The study used statewide databases that included all hospital admissions in 3 states (ie, Florida, Massachusetts, and New York). Delivery outcomes and delivery-associated costs were compared between pregnant women experiencing homelessness and those not experiencing homelessness cared for at the same hospital (analyzed using the overlap propensity-score weighting method and multivariable regression models with hospital fixed effects). The Benjamini-Hochberg false discovery rate procedure was used to account for multiple comparisons. Data were analyzed from January 2020 through May 2020. Exposure Housing status at delivery hospitalization. Main Outcomes and Measures Outcome variables included obstetric complications (ie, antepartum hemorrhage, placental abnormalities, premature rupture of the membranes, preterm labor, and postpartum hemorrhage), neonatal complications (ie, fetal distress, fetal growth restriction, and stillbirth), delivery method (ie, cesarean delivery), and delivery-associated costs. Results Among 15 029 pregnant women experiencing homelessness (mean [SD] age, 28.5 [5.9] years) compared with 308 242 pregnant women not experiencing homelessness (mean [SD] age, 29.4 [5.8] years) within the same hospital, those experiencing homelessness were more likely to experience preterm labor (adjusted probability, 10.5% vs 6.7%; adjusted risk difference [aRD], 3.8%; 95% CI, 1.2%-6.5%; adjusted P = .03) and had higher delivery-associated costs (adjusted costs, $6306 vs $5888; aRD, $417; 95% CI, $156-$680; adjusted P = .02) compared with women not experiencing homelessness. Those experiencing homelessness also had a higher probability of placental abnormalities (adjusted probability, 4.0% vs 2.0%; aRD, 1.9%; 95% CI, 0.4%-3.5%; adjusted P = .053), although this difference was not statistically significant. Conclusions and Relevance This study found that women experiencing homelessness, compared with those not experiencing homelessness, who had a delivery and were admitted to the same hospital were more likely to experience preterm labor and incurred higher delivery-associated costs. These findings suggest wide disparities in delivery-associated outcomes between women experiencing homelessness and those not experiencing homelessness in the US. The findings highlight the importance for health care professionals to actively screen pregnant women for homelessness during prenatal care visits and coordinate their care with community health programs and social housing programs to make sure their health care needs are met.
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- 2021
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33. Nursing skill mix and patient outcomes
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Jack Needleman
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District nurse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Surgical nursing ,education ,Personnel Staffing and Scheduling ,Nurses ,Burnout ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nursing care ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Ambulatory care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Nurse education ,Primary nursing ,Original Research ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Patient satisfaction ,Hospitals ,Patient safety ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Skill mix ,Family medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Objectives To determine the association of hospital nursing skill mix with patient mortality, patient ratings of their care and indicators of quality of care. Design Cross-sectional patient discharge data, hospital characteristics and nurse and patient survey data were merged and analysed using generalised estimating equations (GEE) and logistic regression models. Setting Adult acute care hospitals in Belgium, England, Finland, Ireland, Spain and Switzerland. Participants Survey data were collected from 13 077 nurses in 243 hospitals, and 18 828 patients in 182 of the same hospitals in the six countries. Discharge data were obtained for 275 519 surgical patients in 188 of these hospitals. Main outcome measures Patient mortality, patient ratings of care, care quality, patient safety, adverse events and nurse burnout and job dissatisfaction. Results Richer nurse skill mix (eg, every 10-point increase in the percentage of professional nurses among all nursing personnel) was associated with lower odds of mortality (OR=0.89), lower odds of low hospital ratings from patients (OR=0.90) and lower odds of reports of poor quality (OR=0.89), poor safety grades (OR=0.85) and other poor outcomes (0.80
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- 2016
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34. Facilitating Nurses' Engagement in Hospital Quality Improvement: The New Jersey Hospital Association's Implementation of Transforming Care at the Bedside
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Marjorie L. Pearson, Robin L. Beckman, Bing Han, and Jack Needleman
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Program evaluation ,Quality management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Hospitals, General ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Patient experience ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,Teamwork ,New Jersey ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Quality Improvement ,Data science ,Professional association ,Health care reform ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Transforming Care at the Bedside (TCAB) is a program designed by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement to engage frontline staff in change processes to improve the work environment and patient care on nursing units. Originally designed and piloted in a small number of hospitals, TCAB is being disseminated through large-scale quality improvement (QI) collaboratives facilitated by professional organizations, such the New Jersey Hospital Association's Institute for Quality and Patient Safety (NJHA). This article presents the results of an evaluation of the NJHA dissemination effort. The evaluation team used an observational mixed-method evaluation design and multiple data sources to assess implementation of TCAB by nursing units in these facilities. The results show that most of the participating units successfully implemented the TCAB improvement processes. Nursing teamwork and three nursing-sensitive outcomes improved significantly over the course of TCAB, and TCAB unit managers attributed important improvements to their unit's participation. These findings suggest that TCAB is a viable mechanism for engaging frontline nursing staff in valuable QI activities. Other hospitals interested in furthering the culture and capacity for QI among frontline nursing unit staff should consider a TCAB collaborative for achieving these goals.
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- 2016
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35. Is Spending More Time Associated With Less Missed Care?
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Tristan Grogan, Pamela Worobel-Luk, Norma McNair, Jennifer Baird, Jack Needleman, Li-Jung Liang, Teryl K. Nuckols, and Catherine M. Walsh
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Nursing staff ,Leadership and Management ,MEDLINE ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Efficiency, Organizational ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Nursing care ,0302 clinical medicine ,Documentation ,Nursing ,medicine ,Time management ,Nursing unit ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Nursing Process ,Nursing process ,030504 nursing ,Registered nurse ,business.industry ,Time Management ,General Medicine ,United States ,Family medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Hospital Units - Abstract
Objective The aim of this study is to examine the relationship between nursing time use and perceptions of missed care. Background Recent literature has highlighted the problem of missed nursing care, but little is known about how nurses' time use patterns are associated with reports of missed care. Methods In 15 nursing units at 2 hospitals, we assessed registered nurse (RN) perceptions of missed care, observed time use by RNs, and examined the relationship between time spent and degree of missed care at the nursing unit level. Results Patterns of time use were similar across hospitals, with 25% of time spent on documentation. For 6 different categories of nursing tasks, no association was detected between time use, including time spent on documentation, and the degree of missed care at the nursing unit level. Conclusions Nursing time use cannot fully explain variation in missed care across nursing units. Further work is needed to account for patterns of missed care.
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- 2016
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36. HEALTH INSURANCE STATUS AFFECTS ASTHMA OUTCOMES FOR THOSE ELIGIBLE FOR MEDICAID EXPANSION
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Rajat Suri and Jack Needleman
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Health insurance ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,medicine.disease ,business ,Medicaid ,Asthma - Published
- 2020
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37. Association of a Care Bundle for Early Sepsis Management With Mortality Among Patients With Hospital-Onset or Community-Onset Sepsis
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Mitchell D. Wong, Douglas S. Bell, Jonathan Baghdadi, Daniel Z. Uslan, Robert H. Brook, William E. Cunningham, and Jack Needleman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Septic shock ,010102 general mathematics ,Organ dysfunction ,Retrospective cohort study ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,01 natural sciences ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Cohort ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Blood culture ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Survival rate - Abstract
Importance The Early Management Bundle for Severe Sepsis/Septic Shock (SEP-1) is a quality metric based on a care bundle for early sepsis management. Published evidence on the association of SEP-1 with mortality is mixed and largely excludes cases of hospital-onset sepsis. Objective To assess the association of the SEP-1 bundle with mortality and organ dysfunction in cohorts with hospital-onset or community-onset sepsis. Design, Setting, and Participants This retrospective cohort study used data from 4 University of California hospitals from October 1, 2014, to October 1, 2017. Adult inpatients with a diagnosis consistent with sepsis or disseminated infection and laboratory or vital signs meeting the Sepsis-3 (Third International Consensus Definitions for Sepsis and Septic Shock) criteria were divided into community-onset sepsis and hospital-onset sepsis cohorts based on whether time 0 of sepsis occurred after arrival in the emergency department or an inpatient area. Data were analyzed from April to October 2019. Additional analyses were performed from December 2019 to January 2020. Exposures Administration of SEP-1 and 4 individual bundle components (serum lactate level testing, blood culture, broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotic treatment, and intravenous fluid treatment). Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality. The secondary outcome was days requiring vasopressor support, measured as vasopressor days. Results Among the 6404 patient encounters identified (3535 men [55.2%]; mean [SD] age, 64.0 [18.2] years), 2296 patients (35.9%) had hospital-onset sepsis. Among 4108 patients (64.1%) with community-onset sepsis, serum lactate level testing within 3 hours of time 0 was associated with reduced mortality (absolute difference, –7.61%; 95% CI, –14.70% to –0.54%). Blood culture (absolute difference, –1.10 days; 95% CI, –1.85 to –0.34 days) and broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotic treatment (absolute difference, –0.62 days; 95% CI, –1.02 to –0.22 days) were associated with fewer vasopressor days. Among patients with hospital-onset sepsis, broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotic treatment was the only bundle component significantly associated with any improved outcome (mortality difference, –5.20%; 95% CI, –9.84% to –0.56%). Care that was adherent to the complete SEP-1 bundle was associated with increased vasopressor days in patients with community-onset sepsis (absolute difference, 0.31 days; 95% CI, 0.11-0.51 days) but was not significantly associated with reduced mortality in either cohort (absolute difference, –0.07%; 95% CI, –3.02% to 2.88% in community-onset; absolute difference, –0.42%; 95% CI, –6.77% to 5.93% in hospital-onset). Conclusions and Relevance SEP-1–adherent care was not associated with improved outcomes of sepsis. Although multiple components of SEP-1 were associated with reduced mortality or decreased days of vasopressor therapy for patients who presented with sepsis in the emergency department, only broad-spectrum intravenous antibiotic treatment was associated with reduced mortality when time 0 occurred in an inpatient unit. Current sepsis quality metrics may need refinement.
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- 2020
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38. Primary Care Physicians in the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS): a Qualitative Investigation of Participants' Experiences, Self-Reported Practice Changes, and Suggestions for Program Administrators
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Teryl K. Nuckols, Gery Ryan, Carl T. Berdahl, Jack Needleman, and Molly C Easterlin
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Quality management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Staffing ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Internal Medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 ,0101 mathematics ,Reimbursement, Incentive ,Health policy ,Qualitative Research ,media_common ,Quality of Health Care ,Medical education ,Data collection ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,010102 general mathematics ,Health services research ,Quality Improvement ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: While both administrators of pay-for-performance programs and practicing physicians strive to improve healthcare quality, they sometimes disagree on the best approach. The Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 mandated the creation of the Merit-Based Incentive Payment System (MIPS), a program that incentivizes more than 700,000 physician participants to report on four domains of care, including healthcare quality. While MIPS performance scores were recently released, little is known about how primary care physicians (PCPs) and their practices are being affected by the program and what actions they are taking in response to MIPS. OBJECTIVES: To (1) describe PCP perspectives and self-reported practice changes related to quality measurement under MIPS and (2) disseminate PCP suggestions for improving the program. DESIGN: Qualitative study employing semi-structured interviews. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty PCPs trained in internal medicine or family medicine who were expected to report under MIPS for calendar year 2017 were interviewed between October 2017 and June 2018. Eight PCPs self-reported to be knowledgeable about MIPS. Seven PCPs worked in small practices. KEY RESULTS: Most PCPs identified advantages of quality measurement under MIPS, including the creation of practice-level systems for quality improvement. However, they also cited disadvantages, including administrative burdens and fears that practices serving vulnerable patients could be penalized. Many participants reported using technology or altering staffing to help with data collection and performance improvement. A few participants were considering selling small practices or joining larger ones to avoid administrative tasks. Suggestions for improving MIPS included simplifying the program to reduce administrative burdens, protecting practices serving vulnerable populations, and improving communication between program administrators and PCPs. CONCLUSIONS: MIPS is succeeding in nudging PCPs to develop quality measurement and improvement systems, but PCPs are concerned that administrative burdens are leading to the diversion of clinical resources away from patient-centered care and negatively impacting patient and clinician satisfaction. Program administrators should improve communication with participants and consider simplifying the program to make it less burdensome. Future work should be done to investigate how technical assistance programs can target PCPs that serve vulnerable patient populations and are having difficulty adapting to MIPS. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1007/s11606-019-05207-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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- 2018
39. Segmentation of High-Cost Adults in an Integrated Healthcare System Based on Empirical Clustering of Acute and Chronic Conditions
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Jack Needleman, Ernest Shen, Michael K. Gould, Ninez A. Ponce, Nirav R. Shah, Beth A. Glenn, Anna C. Davis, and Donatello Telesca
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Psychological intervention ,Disease ,Empirical Research ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Integrated ,Health care ,Cluster Analysis ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Original Research ,education.field_of_study ,Delivery of Health Care, Integrated ,030503 health policy & services ,Diabetes ,Health services research ,Health Care Costs ,Health Services ,Middle Aged ,health services research ,Latent class model ,comorbidity ,Acute Disease ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Cohort study ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,statistical modeling ,Clinical Sciences ,Population ,healthcare costs ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,General & Internal Medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Good Health and Well Being ,Chronic Disease ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-cost patients are a frequent focus of improvement projects based on primary care and other settings. Efforts to characterize high-cost, high-need patients are needed to inform care planning, but such efforts often rely on a priori assumptions, masking underlying complexities of a heterogenous population. OBJECTIVE: To define recognizable subgroups of patients among high-cost adults based on clinical conditions, and describe their survival and future spending. DESIGN: Retrospective observational cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: Within a large integrated delivery system with 2.7 million adult members, we selected the top 1% of continuously enrolled adults with respect to total healthcare expenditures during 2010. MAIN MEASURES: We used latent class analysis to identify clusters of alike patients based on 53 hierarchical condition categories. Prognosis as measured by healthcare spending and survival was assessed through 2014 for the resulting classes of patients. RESULTS: Among 21,183 high-cost adults, seven clinically distinctive subgroups of patients emerged. Classes included end-stage renal disease (12% of high-cost population), cardiopulmonary conditions (17%), diabetes with multiple comorbidities (8%), acute illness superimposed on chronic conditions (11%), conditions requiring highly specialized care (14%), neurologic and catastrophic conditions (5%), and patients with few comorbidities (the largest class, 33%). Over 4 years of follow-up, 6566 (31%) patients died, and survival in the classes ranged from 43 to 88%. Spending regressed to the mean in all classes except the ESRD and diabetes with multiple comorbidities groups. CONCLUSIONS: Data-driven characterization of high-cost adults yielded clinically intuitive classes that were associated with survival and reflected markedly different healthcare needs. Relatively few high-cost patients remain persistently high cost over 4 years. Our results suggest that high-cost patients, while not a monolithic group, can be segmented into few subgroups. These subgroups may be the focus of future work to understand appropriateness of care and design interventions accordingly. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (10.1007/s11606-018-4626-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
- Published
- 2018
40. Risk Factors for Development of Carbapenem Resistance Among Gram-Negative Rods
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Douglas S. Bell, Jack Needleman, Daniel Z. Uslan, Stefan Richter, Loren G. Miller, James A. McKinnell, Karol E. Watson, and Romney M. Humphries
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Carbapenem ,Multivariate analysis ,030106 microbiology ,Gram-negative rods ,predictive scoring ,medicine.disease_cause ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Antibiotic resistance ,Internal medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Major Article ,Antimicrobial stewardship ,030212 general & internal medicine ,antimicrobial resistance ,Receipt ,business.industry ,Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,3. Good health ,antimicrobial stewardship ,Infectious Diseases ,Oncology ,chemistry ,carbapenems ,business ,Ertapenem ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Infections due to carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative rods (CR-GNR) are increasing in frequency and result in high morbidity and mortality. Appropriate initial antibiotic therapy is necessary to reduce adverse consequences and shorten length of stay. Methods To determine risk factors for recovery on culture of CR-GNR, cases were retrospectively analyzed at a major academic hospital system from 2011 to 2016. Ertapenem resistance (ER-GNR) and antipseudomonal (nonertapenem) carbapenem resistance (ACR-GNR) patterns were analyzed separately. A total of 30951 GNR isolates from 12370 patients were analyzed, 563 of which were ER and 1307 of which were ACR. Results In multivariate analysis, risk factors for ER-GNR were renal disease, admission from another health care facility, ventilation at any point before culture during the index hospitalization, receipt of any carbapenem in the prior 30 days, and receipt of any anti-methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (anti-MRSA) agent in the prior 30 days (c-statistic, 0.74). Risk factors for ACR-GNR were male sex, admission from another health care facility, ventilation at any point before culture during the index hospitalization, receipt of any carbapenem in the prior 30 days, and receipt of any anti-MRSA agent in the prior 30 days (c-statistic, 0.76). Conclusions A straightforward scoring system derived from these models can be applied by providers to guide empiric antimicrobial therapy; it outperformed use of a standard hospital antibiogram in predicting infections with ER-GNR and ACR-GNR.
- Published
- 2018
41. Complying with the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA): Challenges and solutions
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Jill R. Horwitz, Jack Needleman, Charleen Hsuan, Ninez A. Ponce, and Renee Y. Hsia
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Patient Transfer ,Referral ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Article ,Interviews as Topic ,03 medical and health sciences ,Patient safety ,Hospital ,0302 clinical medicine ,Clinical Research ,Decent Work and Economic Growth ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Patient transfer ,Qualitative Research ,Medically Uninsured ,Emergency Service ,Medical treatment ,business.industry ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Health Services ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Mediation ,Medical emergency ,Guideline Adherence ,Patient Safety ,Generic health relevance ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Medicaid ,Qualitative research ,Health and social care services research - Abstract
The Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), which requires Medicare-participating hospitals to provide emergency care to patients regardless of their ability to pay, plays an important role in protecting the uninsured. Yet many hospitals do not comply. This study examines the reasons for noncompliance and proposes solutions. We conducted eleven semi-structured key informant interviews with hospitals, hospital associations, and patient safety organizations in the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services region with the highest number of EMTALA complaints filed. Respondents identified five main causes of noncompliance: financial incentives to avoid unprofitable patients, ignorance of EMTALA’s requirements, high referral burden at hospitals receiving EMTALA transfer patients, reluctance to jeopardize relationships with transfer partners by reporting borderline EMTALA violations, and opposing priorities of hospitals and physicians. Respondents suggested five methods to improve compliance, including educating subspecialists about EMTALA, informally educating hospitals about borderline violations, and incorporating EMTALA-compliant processes into hospital operations such as by routing transfer requests through the emergency department. To improve compliance we suggest: 1) more closely aligning Medicaid/Medicare payment policies with EMTALA, 2) amending the Act to permit informal mediation between hospitals about borderline violations, 3) increasing the hospital’s role in ensuring EMTALA compliance, and 4) expanding the role of hospital associations.
- Published
- 2018
42. Defining attributes of patient safety through a concept analysis
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Donna K. McNeese-Smith, Courtney H. Lyder, Linda Kim, Linda Searle Leach, and Jack Needleman
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Medical Errors ,business.industry ,Interprofessional Relations ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nurse's Role ,Nursing Outcomes Classification ,Patient safety ,Alliance ,Harm ,Work (electrical) ,Nursing ,Formal concept analysis ,Conceptual model ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nursing Care ,Patient Safety ,business ,Delivery of Health Care ,General Nursing ,Health policy ,Quality of Health Care ,media_common - Abstract
Aim The aim of this study was to report an analysis of the concept of patient safety. Background Despite recent increase in the number of work being done to clarify the concept and standardize measurement of patient safety, there are still huge variations in how the term is conceptualized and how to measure patient safety data across various healthcare settings and in research. Design Concept analysis. Data sources A literature search was conducted through PubMed and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Plus using the terms ‘patient safety’ in the title and ‘concept analysis,’ ‘attributes’ or ‘definition’ in the title and or abstract. All English language literature published between 2002–2014 were considered for the review. Methods Walker and Avant's method guided this analysis. Results The defining attributes of patient safety include prevention of medical errors and avoidable adverse events, protection of patients from harm or injury and collaborative efforts by individual healthcare providers and a strong, well-integrated healthcare system. The application of Collaborative Alliance of Nursing Outcomes indicators as empirical referents would facilitate the measurement of patient safety. Conclusion With the knowledge gained from this analysis, nurses may improve patient surveillance efforts that identify potential hazards before they become adverse events and have a stronger voice in health policy decision-making that influence implementation efforts aimed at promoting patient safety, worldwide. Further studies are needed on development of a conceptual model and framework that can aid with collection and measurement of standardized patient safety data.
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- 2015
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43. Clinical Effectiveness and Cost of a Hospital-Based Fall Prevention Intervention: The Importance of Time Nurses Spend on the Front Line of Implementation
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Teryl K. Nuckols, Tristan Grogan, Jack Needleman, Linda Czypinski, Laura Anderson, Catherine M. Walsh, Courtney Coles, Li-Jung Liang, and Pamela Worobel-Luk
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Safety Management ,Nursing staff ,Time Factors ,Leadership and Management ,Clinical effectiveness ,Outcome assessment ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,California ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Intervention (counseling) ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business.industry ,030503 health policy & services ,Front line ,General Medicine ,Hospital based ,Evidence-Based Nursing ,medicine.disease ,Models, Economic ,Organizational Case Studies ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Accidental Falls ,Medical emergency ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Monte Carlo Method ,Fall prevention - Abstract
The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical effectiveness and incremental net cost of a fall prevention intervention that involved hourly rounding by RNs at 2 hospitals.Minimizing in-hospital falls is a priority, but little is known about the value of fall prevention interventions.We used an uncontrolled before-after design to evaluate changes in fall rates and time use by RNs. Using decision-analytical models, we estimated incremental net costs per hospital per year.Falls declined at 1 hospital (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 0.47; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.26-0.87; P = .016), but not the other (IRR, 0.83; 95% CI, 0.59-1.17; P = .28). Cost analyses projected a 67.9% to 72.2% probability of net savings at both hospitals due to unexpected declines in the time that RNs spent in fall-related activities.Incorporating fall prevention into hourly rounds might improve value. Time that RNs invest in implementing quality improvement interventions can equate to sizable opportunity costs or savings.
- Published
- 2017
44. Faculty Recruitment and Engagement in Academic-Practice Partnerships
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Aram Dobalian, Candice Bowman, Tamar Wyte-Lake, and Jack Needleman
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Medical education ,business.industry ,education ,Academic practice ,Economic shortage ,General Medicine ,Education ,Nursing ,General partnership ,Health care ,Academic Training ,Curriculum development ,Medicine ,Clinical education ,business ,Veterans Affairs ,General Nursing - Abstract
AIM This study examines how prior teaching experience and academic training are associated with teaching roles, level of desired support, and satisfaction with the VA Nursing Academy (VANA). BACKGROUND In 2007, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) created VANA, funding partnerships between schools of nursing and VA health care facilities, in response to projections for a severe shortage of registered nurses. METHOD We conducted annual surveys with nurse faculty from partnership sites in 2011 (n = 133) and 2012 (n = 74). RESULTS Faculty reporting that VANA provided the right amount of support for curriculum development (p = .03) and teaching (p = .02) were more likely to report being very satisfied with VANA overall than those who did not. CONCLUSION Models of academic-clinical partnerships that expand faculty can be successful. It is important that inexperienced faculty have training and support as they take on new teaching roles.
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- 2014
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45. Early Policy Responses to the Human Papillomavirus Vaccine in the United States, 2006–2010
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Kurt M. Ribisl, Jack Needleman, Kelley A. Carameli, Ritesh Mistry, Roshan Bastani, and Miriam Laugesen
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Male ,Adolescent ,HPV vaccines ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Genital warts ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Human Papillomavirus Recombinant Vaccine Quadrivalent, Types 6, 11, 16, 18 ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,health care economics and organizations ,Health policy ,Retrospective Studies ,Cervical cancer ,Immunization Programs ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Vaccination ,Health Plan Implementation ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,virus diseases ,Legislature ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Viral ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Immunology ,Female ,Public Health ,business ,Adolescent health - Abstract
© 2014 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Conclusions Nationwide, states responded to the new HPV vaccine by introducing policies designed to increase the availability of information about the vaccine, provide funding, and regulate private insurance coverage rather than require vaccination for school entry.Purpose To examine the policies state governments pursued and enacted across the United States in the 5-year period after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration licensed the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine in 2006, including the timing and number of bills introduced, the policies proposed, and the legislative success of HPV vaccine policy proposals.Methods Content abstraction and analysis of state-level HPV vaccine-related bills across the 50 states and the District of Columbia introduced between 2006 and 2010.Results All but five states (Alaska, Delaware, Idaho, New Hampshire, and Wyoming) introduced HPV vaccine bills between 2006 and 2010. Two-thirds of all bills were introduced in 2007. In all, 141 bills were introduced and 23% or 32 bills were enacted. Of the bills that were enacted, 43.8% provided information for parents and schools about the vaccine; 37.5% provided public financing for HPV vaccines; 34.4% were classified as other policies; 25% created awareness campaigns; 25% required private insurance coverage of the HPV vaccination; 12.5% included voluntary vaccination, and 9.4% mandated vaccination for school entry. One bill reversed prior mandatory vaccination policies. Overall, 91% of enacted HPV vaccine bills did not refer to mandated vaccinations but adopted alternate policy strategies in response to the availability of the new HPV vaccine.
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- 2014
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46. Impact of VANA Academic–Practice Partnership Participation on Educational Mobility Decisions and Teaching Aspirations of Nurses
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Diana N. Scarrott, Aram Dobalian, Mary B. Dougherty, Jack Needleman, Tamar Wyte-Lake, and Candice Bowman
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business.industry ,Decision Making ,Schools, Nursing ,Academic practice ,Continuing education ,Pilot Projects ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Bachelor's Degree ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,Nursing ,Faculty, Nursing ,General partnership ,Humans ,bacteria ,Master s ,Medicine ,Cooperative Behavior ,Education, Nursing ,business ,Veterans Affairs ,General Nursing - Abstract
This study reports findings assessing the influence of the Department of Veterans Affairs Nursing Academy (VANA) academic-practice partnership program on nurse decision making regarding educational mobility and teaching aspirations. We conducted national surveys with nursing faculty from VANA partnership sites in 2011 (N = 133) and 2012 (N = 74). Faculty who spent more hours per week in the VANA role and who reported an increase in satisfaction with their participation in VANA were more likely to have been influenced by their VANA experience in choosing to pursue a higher degree (p.05). Sixty-nine percent of VANA faculty reported that they would be very interested in staying on as a VANA faculty member if the program should continue. Six measures were positively associated with VANA's influence on the desire to continue as faculty beyond the VANA pilot; support from VANA colleagues, quality of VANA students, amount of guidance with curriculum development, availability of administrative support, support for improving teaching methods, and overall satisfaction with VANA experience (p.05). As the popularity of academic-practice partnerships grows and their list of benefits is further enumerated, motivating nurses to pursue both higher degrees and faculty roles should be listed among them based on results reported here.
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- 2014
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47. Association between homelessness and opioid overdose and opioid-related hospital admissions/emergency department visits
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Gerald F. Kominski, Ayae Yamamoto, Jack Needleman, Lillian Gelberg, Yusuke Tsugawa, and Steven Shoptaw
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Male ,Health (social science) ,Economics ,Ethnic group ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Patient Admission ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Correlation of Data ,education.field_of_study ,030503 health policy & services ,Absolute risk reduction ,Homelessness ,Homeless Persons ,Middle Aged ,Studies in Human Society ,Massachusetts ,Ill-Housed Persons ,Florida ,Female ,Homeless ,Public Health ,0305 other medical science ,medicine.drug ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,New York ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Clinical Research ,Opioid abuse ,Humans ,education ,Aged ,Maryland ,Emergency department ,business.industry ,Public health ,Opioid overdose ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,medicine.disease ,Good Health and Well Being ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Opioid ,Drug Overdose ,business ,Demography - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough homelessness and opioid overdose are major public health issues in the U.S., evidence is limited as to whether homelessness is associated with an increased risk of opioid overdose.ObjectiveTo compare opioid-related outcomes between homeless versus housed individuals in low-income communities.Design, setting, and participantsCross-sectional analysis of individuals who had at least one ED visit or hospitalization in four states (Florida, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New York) in 2014.MeasurementsRisk of opioid overdose and opioid-related ED visits/hospital admissions were compared between homeless versus low-income housed individuals, adjusting for patient characteristics and hospital-specific fixed effects (effectively comparing homeless versus low-income housed individuals treated at the same hospital). We also examined whether risk of opioid-related outcomes varied by patients' sex and race/ethnicity.ResultsA total of 96,099 homeless and 2,869,230 low-income housed individuals were analyzed. Homeless individuals had significantly higher risk of opioid overdose (adjusted risk, 1.8% for homeless vs. 0.3% for low-income housed individuals; adjusted risk difference [aRD], +1.5%; 95%CI, +1.0% to +2.0%; p 
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- 2019
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48. Health System and Beneficiary Costs Associated With Intensive End-of-Life Medical Services
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Katherine E. Faricy-Anderson, Kavitha Ramchandran, Steven M. Asch, Jack Needleman, Gary Hsin, Todd H. Wagner, Manali I. Patel, Risha Gidwani-Marszowski, Vincent Mor, Samantha Illarmo, and Karl A. Lorenz
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Male ,Financing, Personal ,medicine.medical_specialty ,MEDLINE ,Beneficiary ,Medicare ,law.invention ,Cost of Illness ,law ,Neoplasms ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,health care economics and organizations ,Original Investigation ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Veterans ,Receipt ,Service (business) ,business.industry ,Research ,Fee-for-Service Plans ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,Length of Stay ,Intensive care unit ,United States ,Online Only ,Intensive Care Units ,Hospice Care ,Geriatrics ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Health Expenditures ,business - Abstract
Key Points Question What is the cost associated with National Quality Forum–identified intensive medical services in the last month of life to beneficiaries and to the health care system? Findings In this cohort study of 48 937 patients with cancer enrolled in Medicare and the Veterans Health Administration, those receiving no intensive service had a health system cost of $7660, whereas for the 59% of patients receiving 1 or more intensive services in the last month of life, the cost was $23 612. Expected beneficiary costs in the last month of life were $133 for patients with no intensive service and $1257 for patients with at least 1 intensive service. Meaning Despite recommendations, more than half of patients with cancer receive intensive services at the end of life at a substantial cost to beneficiaries and the heath system., Importance Despite recommendations to reduce intensive medical treatment at the end of life, many patients with cancer continue to receive such services. Objective To quantify expected beneficiary and health system costs incurred in association with receipt of intensive medical services in the last month of life. Design, Setting, and Participants This retrospective cohort study used data collected nationally from Medicare and the Veterans Health Administration for care provided in fiscal years 2010 to 2014. Participants were 48 937 adults aged 66 years or older who died of solid tumor and were continuously enrolled in fee-for-service Medicare and the Veterans Health Administration in the 12 months prior to death. The data were analyzed from February to August 2019. Exposures American Society of Clinical Oncology metrics regarding medically intensive services provided in the last month of life, including hospital stay, intensive care unit stay, chemotherapy, 2 or more emergency department visits, or hospice for 3 or fewer days. Main Outcomes and Measures Costs in the last month of life associated with receipt of intensive medical services were evaluated for both beneficiaries and the health system. Costs were estimated from generalized linear models, adjusting for patient demographics and comorbidities and conditioning on geographic region. Results Of 48 937 veterans who received care through the Veterans Health Administration and Medicare, most were white (90.8%) and male (98.9%). More than half (58.9%) received at least 1 medically intensive service in the last month of life. Patients who received no medically intensive service generated a mean (SD) health system cost of $7660 ($1793), whereas patients who received 1 or more medically intensive services generated a mean (SD) health system cost of $23 612 ($5528); thus, the additional financial consequence to the health care system for medically intensive services was $15 952 (95% CI, $15 676-$16 206; P, To provide physicians with reference cost estimates, this cohort study quantifies beneficiary and health system costs incurred in association with receipt of intensive medical services in the last month of life among patients with advanced cancer.
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- 2019
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49. Healthy Work Environments and Staff Nurse Retention
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Wendy Robbins, Nancy Blake, Nancy A. Pike, Linda Searle Leach, and Jack Needleman
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Leadership and Management ,Physician-Nurse Relations ,Personnel Turnover ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Job Satisfaction ,Occupational safety and health ,law.invention ,Nursing ,law ,Intensive care ,medicine ,Humans ,Nurse Administrators ,Cooperative Behavior ,Child ,Workplace ,Occupational Health ,Aged ,Pediatric intensive care unit ,business.industry ,Communication ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Intensive care unit ,Leadership ,Family medicine ,Scale (social sciences) ,Workforce ,Female ,Job satisfaction ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND A healthy work environment can improve patient outcomes and registered nurse (RN) turnover. Creating cultures of retention and fostering healthy work environments are 2 major challenges facing nurse leaders today. SPECIFIC AIMS Examine the effects of the healthy work environment (communication, collaboration, and leadership) on RN turnover from data collected from a research study. METHODS Descriptive, cross-sectional, correlational design. Pediatric critical care RNs from 10 pediatric intensive care units (PICU) completed the Practice Environment Scale of the Nursing Work Index Revised and a subscale of the Intensive Care Unit Nurse-Physician Communication Questionnaire. These staff nurses were asked whether they intend to leave their current job in the next 6 months. Statistical analysis included correlations, multiple linear regression, t tests (2-tailed), and 1-way analysis of variance. RESULTS A total of 415 RNs completed the survey. There was a statistically significant relationship between leadership and the intent to leave (P < .05). There was also an inverse relationship between years of experience and intent to leave. None of the communication variables between RNs and among RNs and MDs or collaboration were significantly associated with PICU nurses' intention to leave. CONCLUSION Effective leadership in the PICU is important to PICU RNs and significantly influences their decisions about staying in their current job.
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- 2013
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50. Engaging Frontline Staff in Performance Improvement: The American Organization of Nurse Executives Implementation of Transforming Care at the Bedside Collaborative
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Joelle Wolstein, Jack Needleman, Marjorie L. Pearson, Tracy Yee, Valda V. Upenieks, and Melissa Parkerton
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Leadership and Management ,Nurse Executives ,Organizational culture ,Nurse Administrator ,Nursing Staff, Hospital ,Unit (housing) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Health care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Nurse Administrators ,Cooperative Behavior ,030504 nursing ,business.industry ,Process Assessment, Health Care ,Organizational Culture ,Quality Improvement ,United States ,Leadership ,Work (electrical) ,Patient Care ,Performance improvement ,0305 other medical science ,business ,Health care quality - Abstract
Article-at-a-Glance Background Process improvement stresses the importance of engaging frontline staff in implementing new processes and methods. Yet questions remain on how to incorporate these activities into the workday of hospital staff or how to create and maintain its commitment. In a 15-month American Organization of Nurse Executives collaborative involving frontline medical/surgical staff from 67 hospitals, Transforming Care at the Bedside (TCAB) was evaluated to assess whether participating units successfully implemented recommended change processes, engaged staff, implemented innovations, and generated support from hospital leadership and staff. Methods In a mixed-methods analysis, multiple data sources, including leader surveys, unit staff surveys, administrative data, time study data, and collaborative documents were used. Results All units reported establishing unit-based teams, of which > 90% succeeded in conducting tests of change, with unit staff selecting topics and making decisions on adoption. Fifty-five percent of unit staff reported participating in unit meetings, and 64%, in tests of change. Unit managers reported substantial increase in staff support for the initiative. An average 36 tests of change were conducted per unit, with 46% of tested innovations sustained, and 20% spread to other units. Some 95% of managers and 97% of chief nursing officers believed that the program had made unit staff more likely to initiate change. Among staff, 83% would encourage adoption of the initiative. Conclusions Given the strong positive assessment of TCAB, evidence of substantial engagement of staff in the work, and the high volume of innovations tested, implemented, and sustained, TCAB appears to be a productive model for organizing and implementing a program of frontline-led improvement.
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- 2016
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