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Articles 1 - 30 of 118
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Post-Acute Care And Vertical Integration After The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act, Patrick Shay, Stephen Mick
Post-Acute Care And Vertical Integration After The Patient Protection And Affordable Care Act, Patrick Shay, Stephen Mick
Patrick Shay
The anticipated changes resulting from the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act—including the proposed adoption of bundled payment systems and the promotion of accountable care organizations—have generated considerable controversy as U.S. healthcare industry observers debate whether such changes will motivate vertical integration activity. Using examples of accountable care organizations and bundled payment systems in the American post-acute healthcare sector, this article applies economic and sociological perspectives from organization theory to predict that as acute care organizations vary in the degree to which they experience environmental uncertainty, asset specificity, and network embeddedness, their motivation to integrate post-acute care …
Advances In Health Care Organization Theory, 2nd Edition, Stephen Mick, Patrick Shay
Advances In Health Care Organization Theory, 2nd Edition, Stephen Mick, Patrick Shay
Patrick Shay
Advances in Health Care Organization Theory, 2nd Edition, introduces students in health administration to the fields of organization theory and organizational behavior and their application to the management of health care organizations. The book explores the major health care developments over the past decade and demonstrates the contribution of organization theory to a deeper understanding of the changes in the delivery system, including the historic passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010. Taking both a micro and macro view, editors Stephen S. Mick and Patrick D. Shay, collaborate with a roster of contributing experts to compile …
America Without Violence By Michael Nagler, Philip Novak
America Without Violence By Michael Nagler, Philip Novak
Philip Novak
"Everyone one of us, by deciding and willing to do something within our own personal spheres, can begin to rid America, and the planet, of violence. Nagler's whole book is a gentle, yet uncompromising, prod to awaken us to this fact. Arguing against the social forces, collective illusions and individual myopia that blind us to the real possibility of zero violence, he argues for certain points of view, attitudes and even our effectiveness. He is convincing throughout; hopeful, but never unrealistically so." ~ from the article
America Without Violence By Michael Nagler, Philip Novak
America Without Violence By Michael Nagler, Philip Novak
Philip Novak
"Everyone one of us, by deciding and willing to do something within our own personal spheres, can begin to rid America, and the planet, of violence. Nagler's whole book is a gentle, yet uncompromising, prod to awaken us to this fact. Arguing against the social forces, collective illusions and individual myopia that blind us to the real possibility of zero violence, he argues for certain points of view, attitudes and even our effectiveness. He is convincing throughout; hopeful, but never unrealistically so." ~ from the article
Associate Justice William O. Douglas, John Hermann
Osteopathic Evaluation And Manipulative Treatment In Reducing The Morbidity Of Otitis Media: A Pilot Study, Brian Degenhardt, Michael Kuchera
Osteopathic Evaluation And Manipulative Treatment In Reducing The Morbidity Of Otitis Media: A Pilot Study, Brian Degenhardt, Michael Kuchera
Michael Kuchera
OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of osteopathic manipulative treatment in routine pediatric care for children with recurrent acute otitis media. STUDY DESIGN: Pilot cohort study with 1-year posttreatment follow-up. At follow-up, subjects' parents or legal guardians and their referring and/or family physicians were contacted to determine recurrence of otitis media since intervention. Subjects: A referred and volunteer sample of pediatric patients ranging in age from 7 months to 35 months with a history of recurrent otitis media (N=8). INTERVENTION: For 3 weeks, all subjects received weekly osteopathic structural examinations and osteopathic manipulative treatment. This intervention was performed concurrently with traditional …
Chicle: The Chewing Gum Of The Americas, From The Ancient Maya To William Wrigley, Jennifer Mathews, Gillian Schultz
Chicle: The Chewing Gum Of The Americas, From The Ancient Maya To William Wrigley, Jennifer Mathews, Gillian Schultz
Jennifer P Mathews
Although Juicy Fruit® gum was introduced to North Americans in 1893, Native Americans in Mesoamerica were chewing gum thousands of years earlier. And although in the last decade “biographies” have been devoted to salt, spices, chocolate, coffee, and other staples of modern life, until now there has never been a full history of chewing gum. Chicle is a history in four acts, all of them focused on the sticky white substance that seeps from the sapodilla tree when its bark is cut. First, Jennifer Mathews recounts the story of chicle and its earliest-known adherents, the Maya and Aztecs. Second, with …
Contemporary Issues In Water Resources: U.S. Mexico Water, Food And Energy Nexus, Gina Warren
Contemporary Issues In Water Resources: U.S. Mexico Water, Food And Energy Nexus, Gina Warren
Gina Warren
No abstract provided.
Avatar: Racism And Prejudice On Pandora, Damian Cox
Avatar: Racism And Prejudice On Pandora, Damian Cox
Damian Cox
Wouldn't it be nice if Orson Welles was right? More on this later. Science fiction is a promising way to explore the nature of various prejudices. It seems that by distancing oneself from the prejudices as found in "real life," or one's own backyard, a useful perspective might be obtained. In science fiction, one tends to explore familiar themes in unfamiliar settings; the distant future, strange imagined environments, societies in the grip of imagined technologies. The point of much science fiction is not merely to gape at the strangeness of an imagined future but to use this strangeness to look …
The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications, Kathy Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison Cahill, Peter Cram
The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications, Kathy Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison Cahill, Peter Cram
Stephen K. Hunter
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between delivery volume and maternal complications. STUDY DESIGN: We used administrative data to identify women who had been admitted for childbirth in 2006. Hospitals were stratified into deciles that were based on delivery volume. We compared composite complication rates across deciles. RESULTS: We evaluated 1,683,754 childbirths in 1045 hospitals. Decile 1 and 2 hospitals had significantly higher rates of composite complications than decile 10 (11.8% and 10.1% vs 8.5%, respectively; P < .0001). Decile 9 and 10 hospitals had modestly higher composite complications as compared with decile 6 (8.8% and …
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
Amy E.T. Sparks
OBJECTIVE: To reduce the twin rate in our IVF program. DESIGN: A prospective educational study of infertile couples; a retrospective review of IVF outcomes before vs. after mandatory single embryo transfer (mSBT) policy change. SETTING: University-based infertility center. PATIENT(S): One hundred ten of 120 consecutive new infertile couples completed the educational study. Outcomes of all embryo transfers (n = 693) performed 17 months before and 17 months after mSBT were evaluated. INTERVENTION(S): A 1-page educational summary of comparative risks of twins vs. singletons to maternal and child health. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Knowledge of twin risks and desired number of embryos …
Predictive Value Of The Hemizona Assay For Pregnancy Outcome In Patients Undergoing Controlled Ovarian Hyperstimulation With Intrauterine Insemination., Murat Arslan, Mahmood Morshedi, Ebru Arslan, Steve Taylor, Arzu Kanik, E. Duran, Sergio Oehninger
Predictive Value Of The Hemizona Assay For Pregnancy Outcome In Patients Undergoing Controlled Ovarian Hyperstimulation With Intrauterine Insemination., Murat Arslan, Mahmood Morshedi, Ebru Arslan, Steve Taylor, Arzu Kanik, E. Duran, Sergio Oehninger
Eyup Hakan Duran
OBJECTIVE: The hemizona assay (HZA) is an established functional test that examines in vitro sperm-zona pellucida binding capacity with high predictive power for fertilization outcome in IVF. The objective of this study was to evaluate the value of the HZA as a predictor of pregnancy in patients undergoing controlled ovarian hyperstimulation (COH) and intrauterine insemination (IUI). DESIGN: Prospective clinical study. SETTING: Academic center. PATIENT(S): Eighty-two couples with unexplained or male factor infertility that underwent 313 IUI cycles. INTERVENTION(S): Basic semen analysis and HZA were performed within three months of starting COH/IUI therapy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Hemizona index (HZI) and clinical …
Aium Practice Guideline For Ultrasonography In Reproductive Medicine., Bradley Van Voorhis
Aium Practice Guideline For Ultrasonography In Reproductive Medicine., Bradley Van Voorhis
Bradley J Van Voorhis
No abstract provided.
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
Bradley J Van Voorhis
OBJECTIVE: To reduce the twin rate in our IVF program. DESIGN: A prospective educational study of infertile couples; a retrospective review of IVF outcomes before vs. after mandatory single embryo transfer (mSBT) policy change. SETTING: University-based infertility center. PATIENT(S): One hundred ten of 120 consecutive new infertile couples completed the educational study. Outcomes of all embryo transfers (n = 693) performed 17 months before and 17 months after mSBT were evaluated. INTERVENTION(S): A 1-page educational summary of comparative risks of twins vs. singletons to maternal and child health. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Knowledge of twin risks and desired number of embryos …
Outcomes From Assisted Reproductive Technology, Bradley Van Voorhis
Outcomes From Assisted Reproductive Technology, Bradley Van Voorhis
Bradley J Van Voorhis
The use of assisted reproductive technology (ART) for treating the infertile couple is increasing in the United States. The purpose of this paper is to review the short-term outcomes after ART. Pregnancy rates after ART have shown nearly continuous improvement in the years since its inception. A number of factors affect the pregnancy rate, with the most important being a woman's age. Certain clinical diagnoses are associated with a poorer outcome from ART, including the presence of hydrosalpinges, uterine leiomyomata that distort the endometrial cavity, and decreased ovarian reserve. Multiple gestations are the major complication after ART. New laboratory techniques, …
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
A Mandatory Single Blastocyst Transfer Policy With Educational Campaign In A United States Ivf Program Reduces Multiple Gestation Rates Without Sacrificing Pregnancy Rates, Ginny Ryan, Amy Sparks, C. Sipe, Craig Syrop, A. Dokras, Bradley Van Voorhis
Ginny L. Ryan
OBJECTIVE: To reduce the twin rate in our IVF program. DESIGN: A prospective educational study of infertile couples; a retrospective review of IVF outcomes before vs. after mandatory single embryo transfer (mSBT) policy change. SETTING: University-based infertility center. PATIENT(S): One hundred ten of 120 consecutive new infertile couples completed the educational study. Outcomes of all embryo transfers (n = 693) performed 17 months before and 17 months after mSBT were evaluated. INTERVENTION(S): A 1-page educational summary of comparative risks of twins vs. singletons to maternal and child health. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Knowledge of twin risks and desired number of embryos …
Embryo Transfer Practices In The United States: A Survey Of Clinics Registered With The Society For Assisted Reproductive Technology, E. Jungheim, Ginny Ryan, E. Levens, A. Cunningham, G. Macones, K. Carson, A. Beltsos, R. Odem
Embryo Transfer Practices In The United States: A Survey Of Clinics Registered With The Society For Assisted Reproductive Technology, E. Jungheim, Ginny Ryan, E. Levens, A. Cunningham, G. Macones, K. Carson, A. Beltsos, R. Odem
Ginny L. Ryan
OBJECTIVE: To gain a better understanding of factors influencing clinicians' embryo transfer practices. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: Web-based survey conducted in December 2008 of individuals practicing IVF in centers registered with the Society for Assisted Reproductive Technology (SART). PATIENT(S): None. INTERVENTION(S): None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Prevalence of clinicians reporting following embryo transfer guidelines recommended by the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), prevalence among these clinicians to deviate from ASRM guidelines in commonly encountered clinical scenarios, and practice patterns related to single embryo transfer. RESULT(S): Six percent of respondents reported following their own, independent guidelines for the number of embryos …
Perinatal Management Of Women With Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura: Survey Of United States Perinatologists, D. Peleg, Stephen Hunter
Perinatal Management Of Women With Immune Thrombocytopenic Purpura: Survey Of United States Perinatologists, D. Peleg, Stephen Hunter
Stephen K. Hunter
OBJECTIVE: The aim of the study was to determine how perinatologists in the United States manage the care of women with immune thrombocytopenic purpura with respect to mode of delivery. Study Design: US members of the Society of Perinatal Obstetricians were surveyed with a 4-question questionnaire. Two mailings were sent. Questions 1 and 2 asked for a response regarding the perinatal management of delivery for women with chronic immune thrombocytopenic purpura and new-onset disease. The options were cordocentesis or fetal scalp blood sampling and cesarean delivery if the platelet count was <50,000 cells/microL, cesarean delivery if the maternal platelet count …
The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications., Kathy L Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison G Cahill, Peter Cram
The Association Between Hospital Obstetrical Volume And Maternal Postpartum Complications., Kathy L Kyser, Xin Lu, Donna Santillan, Mark Santillan, Stephen Hunter, Alison G Cahill, Peter Cram
Stephen K. Hunter
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between delivery volume and maternal complications.
STUDY DESIGN: We used administrative data to identify women who had been admitted for childbirth in 2006. Hospitals were stratified into deciles that were based on delivery volume. We compared composite complication rates across deciles.
RESULTS: We evaluated 1,683,754 childbirths in 1045 hospitals. Decile 1 and 2 hospitals had significantly higher rates of composite complications than decile 10 (11.8% and 10.1% vs 8.5%, respectively; P < .0001). Decile 9 and 10 hospitals had modestly higher composite complications as compared with decile 6 (8.8% and 8.5% vs 7.6%, respectively; P < .0001). Sixty percent of decile 1 and 2 hospitals were located within 25 miles of the nearest greater volume hospital.
CONCLUSION: Women who deliver at very low-volume hospitals have higher complication rates, as do women who deliver at …
Group B Streptococci Causing Neonatal Bloodstream Infection: Antimicrobial Susceptibility And Serotyping Results From Sentry Centers In The Western Hemisphere, J. Andrews, D. Diekema, Stephen Hunter, P. Rhomberg, M. Pfaller, R. Jones, G. Doern
Group B Streptococci Causing Neonatal Bloodstream Infection: Antimicrobial Susceptibility And Serotyping Results From Sentry Centers In The Western Hemisphere, J. Andrews, D. Diekema, Stephen Hunter, P. Rhomberg, M. Pfaller, R. Jones, G. Doern
Stephen K. Hunter
OBJECTIVE: Group B streptococcal infection is a common cause of neonatal sepsis. Surveillance of antimicrobial susceptibility and serotype frequencies of invasive group B streptococci is important to ensure the effectiveness of therapeutic regimens and to guide vaccine development. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective surveillance of neonatal bloodstream infection was performed at all Western Hemisphere sites participating in the SENTRY Program. From January 1997 through December 1999, a total of 122 isolates of bloodstream infections with group B streptococci were collected and sent to the University of Iowa for antimicrobial susceptibility testing and serotyping. RESULTS: No isolates were resistant to penicillin. More than …
A Single-Institution Evaluation Of Factors Important In Fallopian Tube Carcinoma Recurrence And Survival., Alireza Shamshirsaz, Thomas Buekers, Koen De Geest, David Bender, Gideon Zamba, Michael Goodheart
A Single-Institution Evaluation Of Factors Important In Fallopian Tube Carcinoma Recurrence And Survival., Alireza Shamshirsaz, Thomas Buekers, Koen De Geest, David Bender, Gideon Zamba, Michael Goodheart
Koen De Geest
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to identify prognostic factors and markers that influence clinical outcomes in patients with primary fallopian tube carcinoma at a single tertiary health care center. These prognostic factors may be of clinical importance and can subsequently be included in future clinical trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective review of our Tumor Registry and Gynecologic Oncology database was conducted to include any patients with a diagnosis of fallopian tube carcinoma between the years 1994 and 2005. We identified clinicopathological data to evaluate factors important in recurrence, disease-specific and overall survival. Kaplan-Meier curves were generated, and …
The Sensitivity And Specificity Of A Simple Test To Distinguish Between Urge And Stress Urinary Incontinence., Jeanette Brown, Catherine Bradley, Leslee Subak, Holly Richter, Stephen Kraus, Linda Brubaker, Feng Lin, Eric Vittinghoff, Deborah Grady
The Sensitivity And Specificity Of A Simple Test To Distinguish Between Urge And Stress Urinary Incontinence., Jeanette Brown, Catherine Bradley, Leslee Subak, Holly Richter, Stephen Kraus, Linda Brubaker, Feng Lin, Eric Vittinghoff, Deborah Grady
Catherine S. Bradley
BACKGROUND: Urinary incontinence is common in women. Because treatments differ, urge incontinence should be distinguished from stress incontinence. To make this distinction, current guidelines recommend an extensive evaluation that is too time-consuming for primary care practice. OBJECTIVE: To test the accuracy of a simple questionnaire to categorize type of urinary incontinence in women. DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective study of the accuracy of the 3 Incontinence Questions (3IQ) compared with an extended evaluation to distinguish between urge incontinence and stress incontinence. SETTING: 5 academic medical centers in the United States. PARTICIPANTS: 301 women enrolled from April to December 2004 who were older …
The Sensitivity And Specificity Of A Simple Test To Distinguish Between Urge And Stress Urinary Incontinence, J. S. Brown, Catherine Bradley, L. L. Subak, H. E. Richter, S. R. Kraus, L. Brubaker, F. Lin, E. Vittinghoff, D. Grady
The Sensitivity And Specificity Of A Simple Test To Distinguish Between Urge And Stress Urinary Incontinence, J. S. Brown, Catherine Bradley, L. L. Subak, H. E. Richter, S. R. Kraus, L. Brubaker, F. Lin, E. Vittinghoff, D. Grady
Catherine S. Bradley
BACKGROUND: Urinary incontinence is common in women. Because treatments differ, urge incontinence should be distinguished from stress incontinence. To make this distinction, current guidelines recommend an extensive evaluation that is too time-consuming for primary care practice. OBJECTIVE: To test the accuracy of a simple questionnaire to categorize type of urinary incontinence in women. DESIGN: Multicenter, prospective study of the accuracy of the 3 Incontinence Questions (3IQ) compared with an extended evaluation to distinguish between urge incontinence and stress incontinence. SETTING: 5 academic medical centers in the United States. PARTICIPANTS: 301 women enrolled from April to December 2004 who were older …
A Single-Institution Evaluation Of Factors Important In Fallopian Tube Carcinoma Recurrence And Survival., Alireza Shamshirsaz, Thomas Buekers, Koen De Geest, David Bender, Gideon Zamba, Michael Goodheart
A Single-Institution Evaluation Of Factors Important In Fallopian Tube Carcinoma Recurrence And Survival., Alireza Shamshirsaz, Thomas Buekers, Koen De Geest, David Bender, Gideon Zamba, Michael Goodheart
David P Bender
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to identify prognostic factors and markers that influence clinical outcomes in patients with primary fallopian tube carcinoma at a single tertiary health care center. These prognostic factors may be of clinical importance and can subsequently be included in future clinical trials. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective review of our Tumor Registry and Gynecologic Oncology database was conducted to include any patients with a diagnosis of fallopian tube carcinoma between the years 1994 and 2005. We identified clinicopathological data to evaluate factors important in recurrence, disease-specific and overall survival. Kaplan-Meier curves were generated, and …
Stew Of Discontent:“Middle Class” Americans' Economic Populism In The 1990s And Beyond, Jonathan Martin
Stew Of Discontent:“Middle Class” Americans' Economic Populism In The 1990s And Beyond, Jonathan Martin
Jonathan Martin
This article highlights the hidden subtlety of ordinary Americans' economic populist sentiment, a longstanding and politically pivotal form of popular resentment concerning class inequalities. Based on my research in the late 1990s, I describe how economic populist attitudes in the United States can be much more complex than suggested in the relevant literature. I use data from interviews with a small number of “ordinary middle class” Americans to illustrate little known nuances in these attitudes and to highlight how such subtleties are overlooked in prevailing characterizations of public opinion. I suggest that the oversight is the result of the fragmentary …
Homesafe: Supportive Assistance For Elderly Individuals Through A Nurse-Managed Plan, Deborah Schoenfelder, Meridean Maas, Janet Specht
Homesafe: Supportive Assistance For Elderly Individuals Through A Nurse-Managed Plan, Deborah Schoenfelder, Meridean Maas, Janet Specht
Deborah P. Schoenfelder
A lack of quality, cost-effective alternatives to nursing home care for community-dwelling older adults exists. The evidence suggests that case management provides quality care in a cost-efficient manner to help older adults remain at home safely and as independently as possible. This article describes HomeSafe, a nurse-managed membership plan that assists older individuals to enhance their health and quality of life, and to age in place in their homes and communities. HomeSafe serves as an innovative model of care and a teaching site for undergraduate and graduate nursing students and nursing faculty at The University of Iowa.
Economics And The Education Of Nurse Anesthetists: Part 2, Cormac O'Sullivan, E. Thompson
Economics And The Education Of Nurse Anesthetists: Part 2, Cormac O'Sullivan, E. Thompson
Cormac T. O'Sullivan
Economic assumptions and other factors affecting the economics of nurse anesthesia education are presented in Part 2 of this 2-part column. In Part 1, published in the October 2004 issue of the AANA Journal, general economic principles and healthcare economic principles in particular were described, explained, and related to the current US healthcare system.
Evidence-Based Management Assessment Of Return On Investment From Anesthesia Information Management Systems, Cormac O'Sullivan, F. Dexter, D. Lubarsky, M. Vigoda
Evidence-Based Management Assessment Of Return On Investment From Anesthesia Information Management Systems, Cormac O'Sullivan, F. Dexter, D. Lubarsky, M. Vigoda
Cormac T. O'Sullivan
A systematic and comprehensive review of the scientific literature revealed 4 evidence-based methods that contribute to a positive return on investment from anesthesia information management systems (AIMS): reducing anesthetic-related drug costs, improving staff scheduling and reducing staffing costs, increasing anesthesia billing and capture of anesthesia-related charges, and increased hospital reimbursement through improved hospital coding. There were common features to these interventions. Whereas an AIMS may be the ideal choice to achieve these cost reductions and revenue increases, alternative existing systems may be satisfactory for the studied applications (i.e., the incremental advantage to the AIMS may be less than predicted from …
An Examination Of The Sustainable Adoption Of Whole-Person Care (Wpc), Maria Joseph, D. Laughon, Richard Bogue
An Examination Of The Sustainable Adoption Of Whole-Person Care (Wpc), Maria Joseph, D. Laughon, Richard Bogue
Maria (Lindell) Joseph
AIM: This study illustrates how King's theory of goal attainment was used to focus an examination of whole-person care (WPC) and to extend the range of knowledge needed for WPC and nursing practice. BACKGROUND: Leadership implemented a faith-based innovation using continuing education for patient care that incorporates body-mind-spirit and eight principles called CREATION. Three questions arose: (1) Is there an evidence-based framework to determine whether the philosophy supports the discipline of nursing? (2) How extensive is the adoption and application of WPC? (3) Does the model make a difference in the context of nurse-patient interactions and outcomes in support of …
Work Environment Characteristics Of High-Quality Home Health Agencies, S. Tullai-Mcguinness, J. Riggs, Amany Farag
Work Environment Characteristics Of High-Quality Home Health Agencies, S. Tullai-Mcguinness, J. Riggs, Amany Farag
Amany A. Farag
This concurrent mixed-method study examines the nurse work environment of high-quality Medicare-certified home health agencies. High-quality (n=6) and low-quality (n=6) home health agencies were recruited using agency-level publicly reported patient outcomes. Direct care registered nurses (RNs) from each agency participated in a focus group and completed the Practice Environment Scale of the Nurse Work Index (PES-NWI). No significant differences were found in the PES-NWI results between nurses working in high- and low-quality agencies, though nurses in high-quality agencies scored higher on all subscales. Nurses working in all the high-quality agencies identified themes of adequate staffing, supportive managers, and team work. …