Healthcare Design: Designing Healthier And Happier Environments For Patient Care,
2011
Olivet Nazarene University
Healthcare Design: Designing Healthier And Happier Environments For Patient Care, Caitlin E. Charles
Honors Program Projects
This paper will discuss research regarding the best practices in developing a healthy environment in a medical facility in order to better aid the recovery of patients and help facilitate a more efficient work environment for the nursing staff. Medical facility design will be discussed in terms of safety and infection control; the psychological effects of certain design elements on patients; and appropriate accommodations for patients, staff, and family.
The research discussed has been used to develop an updated and healthy environment for the Olivet Nazarene University Virtual Learning Center (VLC) housed in Wisner Hall of Nursing Education. This paper …
Adoption Of Electronic Health Records By Admitting Physicians: A Heuristic Model,
2011
Old Dominion University
Adoption Of Electronic Health Records By Admitting Physicians: A Heuristic Model, John Sharon Hudson
Health Services Research Dissertations
Background: Although hospital electronic health records (EHRs) are generally perceived to improve care, physician resistance may hinder EHR adoption.
Purpose: This study uses constructs from diffusion of innovations and resource dependence theories to predict adoption and rate of adoption of an EHR by admitting physicians from three of ten hospitals in a highly integrated health system in Virginia. Functions evaluated: computerized physician order entry (CPOE), electronic history and physical (EH&P) and electronic discharge summary (EDS). The study tested hypotheses that adoption would be associated with: working at larger, academic hospitals; financial alignment; larger physician groups; office EHR; youth; males; medical …
Assessing The Needs And Guiding The Future: Findings From The Health Needs Assessment In 13 Asian American Communities Of Maryland In The United States,
2011
University of Maryland - College Park
Assessing The Needs And Guiding The Future: Findings From The Health Needs Assessment In 13 Asian American Communities Of Maryland In The United States, Sunmin Lee, Chiehwen Ed Hsu
Chiehwen Ed Hsu
There is lack of in depth data on health needs of diverse Asian American communities. We conducted 19 focus groups in 13 Asian American communities in Maryland in 2007. We developed a moderator’s guide to collect qualitative data on health needs from 174 participants, and used MAX QDA to analyze data and code emergent themes. Cardiovascular disease related conditions, diabetes, and mental health were the top three health concerns. Weight concerns, cancer, arthritis, smoking, osteoporosis, and hepatitis B followed next. Many participants were not receiving preventive health service such as cancer screening due to a lack of access to health …
The Hospitalist: Better Value In Inpatient Care?,
2011
George Washington University
The Hospitalist: Better Value In Inpatient Care?, Lisa Sprague
National Health Policy Forum
From perhaps a few hundred practitioners in 1996 to an estimated 30,000 today, the discipline called hospital medicine has shown remarkably rapid growth. It represents a fundamental separation of the inpatient and outpatient components of internal and family medicine. The split has implications for the quality and efficiency of care delivery, the outlook for the physician workforce, and the development of new models such as accountable care organizations (ACOs).
Medicare's Bundling Pilot: Including Post-Acute Care Services,
2011
George Washington University
Medicare's Bundling Pilot: Including Post-Acute Care Services, Laura A. Dummit
National Health Policy Forum
Fee-for-service Medicare, in which a separate payment is made for each service, rewards health care providers for delivering more services, but not necessarily coordinating those services over time or across settings. To help address these concerns, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 requires Medicare to experiment with making a bundled payment for a hospitalization plus post-acute care, that is, the recuperative or rehabilitative care following a hospital discharge. This bundled payment approach is intended to promote more efficient care across the acute/post-acute episode because the entity that receives the payment has financial incentives to keep episode costs …
Quality Improvement Quick Strike Research Projects In Public Health Pbrns,
2011
University of Kentucky
Quality Improvement Quick Strike Research Projects In Public Health Pbrns, Glen P. Mays
Glen Mays
The Quality Improvement Quick Strike (QIQS) research program provides research networks participating in the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Public Health PBRN Program with supplemental funding and technical assistance to conduct rapid turn-around, time-sensitive research studies that produce evidence about the effectiveness and impact of quality improvement (QI) strategies, public reporting initiatives, and accreditation activities in public health settings. Specifically, the program supports research studies that investigate the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and/or impact of three related types strategies designed to drive quality in public health practice: (1) QI tools and processes implemented in public health settings; (2) accreditation programs and performance standards …
A Primary Care Workload Production Model For Estimating Relative Value Unit Output,
2011
Air Force Institute of Technology
A Primary Care Workload Production Model For Estimating Relative Value Unit Output, Rachel G. Murphy
Theses and Dissertations
Health care costs have grown to unsustainable levels nationally and within the Department of Defense. Military health care costs have historically been difficult to isolate, causing budget cuts to be the vehicle for cost control. Maximum efficiency, therefore, is the goal in order to show improvement. With the Air Force’s new preventive health plan, they aim to drive a long-term posture for cost reduction through prevention. This research effort aimed to develop a tool to assist in future efforts to understand and improve efficiency in workload output, and whether a relationship exists between patient workload demand and the per-encounter variables …
Keep Your Friends Close…And Your Critics Closer,
2011
University of Kentucky
Keep Your Friends Close…And Your Critics Closer, Philip Bernard Md, Janice Marks, Tara Crane, Louis Bezold Md, Erich C. Maul Do, Mph
Erich C. Maul DO MPH
No abstract provided.
What's Happening: March-April, 2011,
2011
MaineHealth
What's Happening: March-April, 2011, Maine Medical Center
What's Happening
No abstract provided.
Update - March 2011,
2011
Loma Linda University
Update - March 2011, Loma Linda University Center For Christian Bioethics
Update
In this issue:
-- Quid Pro Quo, Quid Vadis - Conflict of Interest Policy of Loma Linda University School of Medicine
-- San Bernardino - A Case Study in Environmental Justice
-- Editorial
[ Claritás - Clarity in Ethics Essay Contest - Health Care: Business or Service? ]
-- First-place 2009 graduate essay winner, Mark Warren, School of Medicine, Loma Linda University
-- Second-place 2009 undergraduate essay winner, Sidney E. Irving, School of Nursing, Loma Linda University
-- 2009 Contributor's Convocation: A New View
-- 2010 Contributor's Convocation: Ethics in the Inland Empire
-- Ethics Alumni Updates
Linking Ambulance, Emergency Department And Hospital Admissions Data: Understanding The Emergency Journey,
2011
Queensland Health
Linking Ambulance, Emergency Department And Hospital Admissions Data: Understanding The Emergency Journey, Julia Crilly, John O'Dwyer, Marilla O'Dwyer, James Lind, Julia Peters, Vivienne Tippett, Marianne Wallis, Nerolie Bost, Gerben Keijzers
Gerben Keijzers
Objective: To assess the accuracy of data linkage across the spectrum of emergency care in the absence of a unique patient identifier, and to use the linked data to examine service delivery outcomes in an emergency department (ED) setting.
Design: Automated data linkage and manual data linkage were compared to determine their relative accuracy. Data were extracted from three separate health information systems: ambulance, ED and hospital inpatients, then linked to provide information about the emergency journey of each patient. The linking was done manually through physical review of records and automatically using a data linking tool (Health Data Integration) …
Detecting Hospital Quality With Pridit.,
2011
School of Population Health, Thomas Jefferson University
Detecting Hospital Quality With Pridit., Robert D. Lieberthal, Phd
College of Population Health Lectures, Presentations, Workshops
Presented for the Temple University, Fox School of Business Department of Risk, Insurance & Healthcare Management. Robert A. Hedges Research Seminar Series, Philadelphia, PA.
25 PowerPoint slides
Associated papers available at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1475-6773.2007.00821.x/abstract
and the 2008 Proceedings of the Joint Statistical Meeting.
University Reading: How Do We Turn It On?,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
University Reading: How Do We Turn It On?, John-Nathan Trice, Barbara Johnson Wilmes
Administrative Issues Journal
Universities and colleges are experiencing increasing challenges of educating millennial students, individuals who lack motivation and tenacity to engage in the learning process. Ideally, university students have read materials and are prepared to engage in collegial interaction. The purpose of this study was to determine whether university students are preparing for class and whether instructional reading strategies are effective to engage them in meeting course requirements. Results indicated that participants overwhelmingly do not read prior to class, but with research-based interventions, millennial students engaged in reading assignments and obtained content information relevant to the course.
Administrative Strategies For Preparing
Teaching Candidates To Be Building-Level
Technology Change Agents,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Administrative Strategies For Preparing Teaching Candidates To Be Building-Level Technology Change Agents, Richard Rose
Administrative Issues Journal
Teacher education graduates in their early years of service are ill-prepared to act as building-level change agents who can advocate for the enhanced use of technology in the classroom. In this study, a group of experienced teachers seeking the M.Ed. in Educational Technology suggest that the lack of confidence which new teachers show in relation to technology can be traced back to the absence of rigorous technical skill-building in both their Introduction to Educational Technology class and methods classes. These tech-savvy mid-career teachers then identify obstacles to enhancing pre-service teacher education programs with more effective preparation in teaching with technology …
A Connection Between Moral Imperative
And Women’S Leadership?,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
A Connection Between Moral Imperative And Women’S Leadership?, Sarah W. Nelson, Patricia L. Guerra, B. Genise Henry
Administrative Issues Journal
This paper describes a qualitative study of two school districts’ efforts to support school leaders in developing the knowledge and skills to analyze, understand, and transform system inequities. The results suggest that, despite being armed with knowledge and skills, leaders may be reluctant to act even when doing so is within the scope of their authority. This work draws from Fullan’s (2003) concept of moral imperative and examines the connection between moral imperative and women’s ways of leading. The findings have implications for educational leadership programs that seek to prepare school leaders capable of challenging and changing inequitable systems.
University Technology Transfer Factors As
Predictors Of Entrepreneurial Orientation,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
University Technology Transfer Factors As Predictors Of Entrepreneurial Orientation, Dorothy M. Kirkman
Administrative Issues Journal
University technology transfer is a collaborative effort between academia and industry involving knowledge sharing and learning. Working closely with their university partners affords biotechnology firms the opportunity to successfully develop licensed inventions and gain access to novel scientific and technological discoveries. These factors may enhance a firm’s entrepreneurial orientation by supporting innovative, proactive, and risk-taking behaviors. This study investigates whether university technology transfer characteristics such as the transfer process, transfer modes (formal and informal), and transfer terms influence entrepreneurial orientation. Using survey data from biotechnology firms that develop human health therapies, the findings suggest that the transfer process and informal …
University In Transition: Faculty Sense-Making
And Responses,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
University In Transition: Faculty Sense-Making And Responses, Leslie D. Gonzales, Rodolfo Rincones
Administrative Issues Journal
Across the institutional spectrum, universities are attempting to reposition themselves as more research dominant institutions, a pattern referred to as “mission creep.” Such changes in university missions have several critical implications for faculty members and their work. In this qualitative study, we interviewed ten tenure-track faculty members to explore how they make sense of and respond to Sun University’s creeping university mission. Through qualitative data analysis, we found that faculty use organizational scripts to construct and make sense of their role, yet they do so towards different ends. Some faculty members own the transition and attempt to contribute to its …
Radical Change In Faculty And Student
Evaluation: A Justifiable Heresy?,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Radical Change In Faculty And Student Evaluation: A Justifiable Heresy?, Jeffery Gentry
Administrative Issues Journal
This article addresses the connection between two continuing trends in higher education: semester evaluation of faculty by students (SE’s) and grade inflation. The two phenomena are explored historically; then a two-part plan is proposed to enhance the evaluation of both students and faculty. This solution does not replace current evaluation practices; it merely adds information on each student’s relative performance. Although subject to criticism as radical reform, the plan is offered as a feasible check on grade inflation and diminished student responsibility—one that is consistent with long held higher education values, as well as recent calls for increased educational accountability. …
Innovation In Competency-Based Program
Development: Leveraging The Advisory Board
Faculty Alliance,
2011
Southwestern Oklahoma State University
Innovation In Competency-Based Program Development: Leveraging The Advisory Board Faculty Alliance, Esmeralda De Los Santos, Daniel G. Dominguez, Kevin Lafrance
Administrative Issues Journal
This paper describes the use of advisory boards in the development of two competency-based business programs: one graduate and the other undergraduate. Though the programs varied significantly in structure and content, both used focus group methodology to collect comprehensive and relevant input from advisory board members comprised of local subject matter experts. Analysis of each program’s developmental efforts demonstrates that, while the programs varied significantly in many aspects, both achieved the intended outcome. In both cases, advisory board input contributed to the development of a competency model and associated program curriculum that closely aligned with the program’s specific disciplines.
Final Report: The Practice And Impact Of Shared Decision-Making,
2011
University of Southern Maine
Final Report: The Practice And Impact Of Shared Decision-Making, Shared Decision-Making Study Group For The Dirigo Health Agency’S Maine Quality Forum
Population Health & Health Policy
Several recent developments are likely to address those factors seen as contributing to shared decision-making’s mixed results: the lack of a nationally recognized certification process; insufficient funds to adequately invest in the training and infrastructure to support shared decision-making; and adequate methods for monitoring its effectiveness.