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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Subspecialty Surveillance Of Long-Term Course Of Small And Moderate Muscular Ventricular Septal Defect: Heterogenous Practices, Low Yield., Erik L. Frandsen, Aswathy V. House, Yunbin Xiao, David A. Danford, Shelby Kutty Nov 2014

Subspecialty Surveillance Of Long-Term Course Of Small And Moderate Muscular Ventricular Septal Defect: Heterogenous Practices, Low Yield., Erik L. Frandsen, Aswathy V. House, Yunbin Xiao, David A. Danford, Shelby Kutty

Journal Articles: Pediatrics

BACKGROUND: No expert consensus guides practice for intensity of ongoing pediatric cardiology surveillance of hemodynamically insignificant small and moderate muscular ventricular septal defect (mVSD). Therefore, despite the well-established benign natural history of mVSD, there is potential for widely divergent follow up practices. The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate (1) variations in follow up of mVSD within an academic children's hospital based pediatric cardiology practice, and (2) the frequency of active medical or surgical management resulting from follow up of mVSD.

METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed records of 600 patients with isolated mVSD echocardiographically diagnosed between 2006 and 2012. Large …


Paradoxes Of Us Psychopharmacology Practice In 2013: Undertreatment Of Severe Mental Illness And Overtreatment Of Minor Psychiatric Problems, Jose De Leon Oct 2014

Paradoxes Of Us Psychopharmacology Practice In 2013: Undertreatment Of Severe Mental Illness And Overtreatment Of Minor Psychiatric Problems, Jose De Leon

Psychiatry Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Can Utilizing A Computerized Provider Order Entry (Cpoe) System Prevent Hospital Medical Errors And Adverse Drug Events?, Krista Charles Ms, Margaret Cannon Ms, Robert Hall Ms, Alberto Coustasse Drph, Md, Mba, Mph Oct 2014

Can Utilizing A Computerized Provider Order Entry (Cpoe) System Prevent Hospital Medical Errors And Adverse Drug Events?, Krista Charles Ms, Margaret Cannon Ms, Robert Hall Ms, Alberto Coustasse Drph, Md, Mba, Mph

Management Faculty Research

Computerized provider order entry (CPOE) systems allow physicians to prescribe patient services electronically. In hospitals, CPOE essentially eliminates the need for handwritten paper orders and achieves cost savings through increased efficiency. The purpose of this research study was to examine the benefits of and barriers to CPOE adoption in hospitals to determine the effects on medical errors and adverse drug events (ADEs) and examine cost and savings associated with the implementation of this newly mandated technology. This study followed a methodology using the basic principles of a systematic review and referenced 50 sources. CPOE systems in hospitals were found to …


Health System Characteristics And Rates Of Readmission After Acute Myocardial Infarction In The United States, Jeremiah R. Brown, Chiang-Hua Chang, Weiping Zhou, Todd A. Mackenzie, David J. Malenka, David C. Goodman May 2014

Health System Characteristics And Rates Of Readmission After Acute Myocardial Infarction In The United States, Jeremiah R. Brown, Chiang-Hua Chang, Weiping Zhou, Todd A. Mackenzie, David J. Malenka, David C. Goodman

Dartmouth Scholarship

Background:

Interventions to reduce early readmissions have focused on patient characteristics and the importance of early follow‐up; however, less is known about the characteristics of health systems, including quality, capacity, and intensity, and their influence on readmission rates in the United States. Therefore, we examined the association of hospital patterns of medical care with rates of 30‐day readmission.

Methods and Results:

Medicare beneficiaries hospitalized for an AMI (n=188 611) between 2008 and 2009 in 1088 hospitals in the United States were included in our cohort. We tested the association between hospital patterns of medical care quality (discharge planning care quality), …


Factors That Promote Perceived Usefulness Of And Clinical Outcomes From Sign-Outs At The National University Hospital, Soo-Hoon Lee, Wei-Ping Goh, Dale A. Fisher, Phillip H. Phan Jan 2014

Factors That Promote Perceived Usefulness Of And Clinical Outcomes From Sign-Outs At The National University Hospital, Soo-Hoon Lee, Wei-Ping Goh, Dale A. Fisher, Phillip H. Phan

Management Faculty Publications

IMPORTANCE OF THE STUDY. Currently, there is a paucity of evidence in the literature to show that handoff strategies improve the quality of handoff outcomes. Studies that show the usefulness and outcomes obtained from sign-outs may motivate junior clinicians, who have limited time to perform their clinical responsibilities, to support sign-out improvement efforts.

OBJECTIVE. To test a research model that embeds the Technology Acceptance Model and the Theory of Planned Behavior to explore factors that enhance the perceived (a) usefulness of and (b) clinical outcomes from sign-outs among junior medical officers.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS.

A retrospective study was conducted …


A Pilot Study On Nurse-Led Rounds: Preliminary Data On Patient Contact Time, Soo-Hoon Lee, Alice Lee, Siang-Ngim Lim, Mei-Jiao Koh, Benjamin Tan, Phillip H. Phan, Reshma A. Merchant, Aisha Lateef, Dale A. Fisher Jan 2014

A Pilot Study On Nurse-Led Rounds: Preliminary Data On Patient Contact Time, Soo-Hoon Lee, Alice Lee, Siang-Ngim Lim, Mei-Jiao Koh, Benjamin Tan, Phillip H. Phan, Reshma A. Merchant, Aisha Lateef, Dale A. Fisher

Management Faculty Publications

IMPORTANCE OF THE STUDY. Ward rounding has been a historical clinical method of inter-professional collaboration to support inpatient care through the sharing of mental models by exchanging information and discussing plans of care, treatment goals, and discharge plans for the patient. The extant literature reports that rounds are frequently led by doctors with infrequent nurse-physician collaboration and patients’ interactions with doctors during ward rounds tend to be brief.

OBJECTIVE. To explore the effects of nurse-led morning ward rounds on patient contact time.

DESIGN. An ethnographic prospective observational study comparing nurse-led and physician-led rounds. SETTING. A General Medicine ward at the …