5 results on '"Kalkut, G."'
Search Results
2. Improving primary percutaneous coronary intervention performance in an urban minority population using a quality improvement approach.
- Author
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Bhalla R, Yongue BG, Currie BP, Greenberg MA, Myrie-Weir J, Defino M, Esses D, Menegus MA, McAllen SJ, Monrad ES, Galhotra S, and Kalkut G
- Subjects
- Health Services Accessibility, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, New York City, Black or African American, Angioplasty, Hispanic or Latino, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Primary Health Care, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Urban Population
- Abstract
It has been well established that there are racial and ethnic disparities in cardiovascular care. Quality improvement initiatives have been recommended to proactively address these disparities. An initiative was implemented to improve timeliness of and access to primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) procedures among myocardial infarction patients at an academic medical center serving a predominantly minority population. The effort was part of a national quality improvement collaborative focused on improving cardiovascular care for Hispanic/Latino and African American/ black populations. The proportion of primary PCI procedures performed within 90 minutes improved significantly from 17% in the first quarter of 2006 to 93% in the fourth quarter of 2008 (P < .001). There were no significant differences in the frequency with which Hispanic/Latino or African American/black patients received primary PCI therapy in comparison to nonmembers of these groups. Quality improvement techniques can improve the quality of and access to acute cardiovascular care for minority populations.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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3. Effects of the August 2003 blackout on the New York City healthcare delivery system: a lesson for disaster preparedness.
- Author
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Prezant DJ, Clair J, Belyaev S, Alleyne D, Banauch GI, Davitt M, Vandervoorts K, Kelly KJ, Currie B, and Kalkut G
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Ambulances supply & distribution, Child, Child, Preschool, Emergency Medical Services supply & distribution, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Equipment Failure, Female, Hospitals, Urban organization & administration, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, New York City, Retrospective Studies, Ventilators, Mechanical, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Electricity
- Abstract
Background: On August 14, 2003, the United States and Canada suffered the largest power failure in history. We report the effects of this blackout on New York City's healthcare system by examining the following: 1) citywide 911 emergency medical service (EMS) calls and ambulance responses; and 2) emergency department (ED) visits and hospital admissions to one of New York City's largest hospitals., Methods: Citywide EMS calls and ambulance responses were categorized by 911 call type. Montefiore Medical Center (MMC) ED visits and hospital admissions were categorized by diagnosis and physician-reviewed for relationship to the blackout. Comparisons were made to the week pre- and postblackout., Results: Citywide EMS calls numbered 5,299 on August 14, 2003, and 5,021 on August 15, 2003, a 58% increase (p < .001). During the blackout, there were increases in "respiratory" (189%; p < .001), "cardiac" (68%; p = .016), and "other" (40%; p < .001) EMS call categories, but when expressed as a percent of daily totals, "cardiac" was no longer significant. The MMC-ED reflected this surge with only "respiratory" visits significantly increased (expressed as percent of daily total visits; p < .001). Respiratory device failure (mechanical ventilators, positive pressure breathing assist devices, nebulizers, and oxygen compressors) was responsible for the greatest burden (65 MMC-ED visits, with 37 admissions) as compared with 0 pre- and postblackout., Conclusions: The blackout dramatically increased EMS and hospital activity, with unexpected increases resulting from respiratory device failures in community-based patients. Our findings suggest that current capacity to respond to public health emergencies could be easily overwhelmed by widespread/prolonged power failure(s). Disaster preparedness planning would be greatly enhanced if fully operational, backup power systems were mandated, not only for acute care facilities, but also for community-based patients dependent on electrically powered lifesaving devices.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Is time-slice analysis superior to total hospital length of stay in demonstrating the effectiveness of a month-long intensive effort on a medicine service?
- Author
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Bellin E and Kalkut G
- Subjects
- Documentation methods, Humans, Inservice Training, Length of Stay trends, New York City, Patient Care Team, Proportional Hazards Models, Severity of Illness Index, Efficiency, Organizational statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, University standards, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Medical Records standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Time and Motion Studies
- Abstract
To control the upward spiral of healthcare costs, hospitals seek to implement efficiency interventions whose benefits are frequently assessed by reductions in average inpatient length of stay (LOS). However, average hospital LOS is a crude metric when trying to assess the utility of an intervention focussed on a particular service or over a specific time window. It cannot isolate the time or place of the intervention from the full duration of a patient's hospital visit, which may include more than 1 hospital service or extend beyond the intervention's time window. At Montefiore Medical Center, a new analytic method was used to describe a month-long effort to improve care efficiency in a hospital teaching service. Using an extension of the Cox proportional hazard model (S-plus), we were able to analyze the contribution of only those patient-days that took place during the time window of interest on the service of interest, eliminating the contamination of the "non intervention days." Having built the appropriate model, we were then able to graph the behavior of the groups with and without the intervention and calculate the model's expected average LOS, controlling for the appropriate variables. By comparing this method with a conventional average LOS analysis, we demonstrate the superiority of using this "time slice" method over the conventional analysis of LOS.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Transmission of tuberculosis in New York City. An analysis by DNA fingerprinting and conventional epidemiologic methods.
- Author
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Alland D, Kalkut GE, Moss AR, McAdam RA, Hahn JA, Bosworth W, Drucker E, and Bloom BR
- Subjects
- AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections epidemiology, Adolescent, Adult, Age Distribution, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Cluster Analysis, DNA, Bacterial analysis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolation & purification, New York City epidemiology, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Risk Factors, Tuberculosis, Multidrug-Resistant epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary microbiology, DNA Fingerprinting, Epidemiologic Methods, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary epidemiology, Tuberculosis, Pulmonary transmission
- Abstract
Background: The incidence of tuberculosis and drug resistance is increasing in the United States, but it is not clear how much of the increase is due to reactivation of latent infection and how much to recent transmission., Methods: We performed DNA fingerprinting using restriction-fragment-length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of at least one isolate from every patient with confirmed tuberculosis at a major hospital in the Bronx, New York, from December 1, 1989, through December 31, 1992. Medical records and census-tract data were reviewed for relevant clinical, social, and demographic data., Results: Of 130 patients with tuberculosis, 104 adults (80 percent) had complete medical records and isolates whose DNA fingerprints could be evaluated. Isolates from 65 patients (62.5 percent) had unique RFLP patterns, whereas isolates from 39 patients (37.5 percent) had RFLP patterns that were identical to those of an isolate from at least 1 other study patient; the isolates in the latter group were classified into 12 clusters. Patients whose isolates were included in one of the clusters were inferred to have recently transmitted disease. Independent risk factors for having a clustered isolate included seropositivity for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (odds ratio for Hispanic patients, 4.31; P = 0.02; for non-Hispanic patients, 3.12; P = 0.07), Hispanic ethnicity combined with HIV seronegativity (odds ratio, 5.13; P = 0.05), infection with drug-resistant tuberculosis (odds ratio, 4.52; P = 0.005), and younger age (odds ratio, 1.59; P = 0.02). Residence in sections of the Bronx with a median household income below $20,000 was also associated with having a clustered isolate (odds ratio, 3.22; P = 0.04)., Conclusions: In the inner-city community we studied, recently transmitted tuberculosis accounts for approximately 40 percent of the incident cases and almost two thirds of drug-resistant cases. Recent transmission of tuberculosis, and not only reactivation of latent disease, contributes substantially to the increase in tuberculosis.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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