Browsing by Subject "Patient Care Planning"
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Item Open Access Assessing Key Stakeholders' Knowledge, Needs, and Preferences for Head and Neck Cancer Survivorship Care Plans.(Journal of cancer education : the official journal of the American Association for Cancer Education, 2019-06) Zullig, Leah L; Ramos, Katherine; Berkowitz, Callie; Miller, Julie J; Dolor, Rowena J; Koontz, Bridget F; Yousuf Zafar, S; Hutch Allen, D; Tenhover, Jennifer A; Bosworth, Hayden BCancer survivorship care plans (SCPs) are endorsed to support quality care for cancer survivors, but uptake is slow. We assessed knowledge, needs, and preferences for SCP content and delivery from a wide variety of stakeholders. We focused SCP content for head and neck cancer as it is a disease prone to long-term side effects requiring management from multiple providers. We conducted telephone-based, qualitative interviews. We purposively sampled head and neck cancer survivors (n = 4), primary care physicians in the community (n = 5), and providers affiliated with a large academic medical center (n = 5) who treat head and neck cancer, cancer specialists (n = 6), and nurse practitioners/supportive care staff (n = 5). Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using direct content analysis. Few participants reported personal experience with SCPs, but most supported the concept. Several key themes emerged: (1) perceived ambiguity regarding roles and responsibilities for SCPs, (2) a need to tailor the content and language based on the intended recipient, (3) documentation process should be as automated and streamlined as possible, (4) concerns about using the SCP to coordinate with outside providers, and (5) that SCPs would have added value as a "living document." We also report SCP-related issues that are unique to serving patients diagnosed with head and neck cancer. Effort is needed to tailor SCPs for different recipients and optimize their potential for successful implementation, impact on care outcomes, and sustainability. Many cancer survivors may not receive a SCP as part of routine care. Survivors could engage their health care team by requesting a SCP.Item Open Access Assessment of Impact of Long-Cassette Standing X-Rays on Surgical Planning for Cervical Pathology: An International Survey of Spine Surgeons.(Neurosurgery, 2016-05) Ramchandran, Subaraman; Smith, Justin S; Ailon, Tamir; Klineberg, Eric; Shaffrey, Christopher; Lafage, Virginie; Schwab, Frank; Bess, Shay; Daniels, Alan; Scheer, Justin K; Protopsaltis, Themi S; Arnold, Paul; Haid, Regis W; Chapman, Jens; Fehlings, Michael G; Ames, Christopher P; AOSpine North America, International Spine Study GroupBackground
Understanding the role of regional segments of the spine in maintaining global balance has garnered significant attention recently. Long-cassette radiographs (LCR) are necessary to evaluate global spinopelvic alignment. However, it is unclear how LCRs impact operative decision-making for cervical spine pathology.Objective
To evaluate whether the addition of LCRs results in changes to respondents' operative plans compared to standard imaging of the involved cervical spine in an international survey of spine surgeons.Methods
Fifteen cases (5 control cases with normal and 10 test cases with abnormal global alignment) of cervical pathology were presented online with a vignette and cervical imaging. Surgeons were asked to select a surgical plan from 6 options, ranging from the least (1 point) to most (6 points) extensive. Cases were then reordered and presented again with LCRs and the same surgical plan question.Results
One hundred fifty-seven surgeons completed the survey, of which 79% were spine fellowship trained. The mean response scores for surgical plan increased from 3.28 to 4.0 (P = .003) for test cases with the addition of LCRs. However, no significant changes (P = .10) were identified for the control cases. In 4 of the test cases with significant mid thoracic kyphosis, 29% of participants opted for the more extensive surgical options of extension to the mid and lower thoracic spine when they were provided with cervical imaging only, which significantly increased to 58.3% upon addition of LCRs.Conclusion
In planning for cervical spine surgery, surgeons should maintain a low threshold for obtaining LCRs to assess global spinopelvic alignment.Item Open Access Improving the Efficiency of Care for Pediatric Patients Hospitalized With Asthma.(Hospital pediatrics, 2017-01) Bartlett, Kathleen W; Parente, Victoria M; Morales, Vanessa; Hauser, Jillian; McLean, Heather SAsthma exacerbations are a leading cause of hospitalization among children. Despite the existence of national pediatric asthma guidelines, significant variation in care persists. At Duke Children's Hospital, we determined that our average length of stay (ALOS) and cost for pediatric asthma admissions exceeded that of our peers. Our aim was to reduce the ALOS of pediatric patients hospitalized with asthma from 2.9 days to 2.6 days within 12 months by implementing an asthma pathway within our new electronic health record.We convened a multidisciplinary committee charged with reducing variability in practice, ALOS, and cost of inpatient pediatric asthma care, while adhering to evidence-based guidelines. Interventions were tested through multiple "plan-do-study-act" cycles. Control charts of the ALOS were constructed and annotated with interventions, including testing of an asthma score, implementation of order sets, use of a respiratory therapy-driven albuterol treatment protocol, and provision of targeted education. Order set usage was audited as a process measure. Readmission rates were monitored as a balancing measure.The ALOS of pediatric patients hospitalized with asthma decreased significantly from 2.9 days to 2.3 days. Comparing baseline with intervention variable direct cost data revealed a savings of $1543 per case. Improvements occurred in the context of high compliance with the asthma pathway order sets. Readmission rates remained stable throughout the study period.Implementation of an asthma care pathway based on the electronic health record improved the efficiency and variable direct costs of hospital care, reduced variability in practice, and ensured adherence to high-quality national guidelines.Item Open Access Patient-centered priorities for improving medication management and adherence.(Patient education and counseling, 2015-01) McMullen, Carmit K; Safford, Monika M; Bosworth, Hayden B; Phansalkar, Shobha; Leong, Amye; Fagan, Maureen B; Trontell, Anne; Rumptz, Maureen; Vandermeer, Meredith L; Centers for Education and Research on Therapeutics Patient-Centered Medication Management Workshop Working Group; Brinkman, William B; Burkholder, Rebecca; Frank, Lori; Hommel, Kevin; Mathews, Robin; Hornbrook, Mark C; Seid, Michael; Fordis, Michael; Lambert, Bruce; McElwee, Newell; Singh, Jasvinder AObjective
The Centers for Education and Research on Therapeutics convened a workshop to examine the scientific evidence on medication adherence interventions from the patient-centered perspective and to explore the potential of patient-centered medication management to improve chronic disease treatment.Methods
Patients, providers, researchers, and other stakeholders (N = 28) identified and prioritized ideas for future research and practice. We analyzed stakeholder voting on priorities and reviewed themes in workshop discussions.Results
Ten priority areas emerged. Three areas were highly rated by all stakeholder groups: creating tools and systems to facilitate and evaluate patient-centered medication management plans; developing training on patient-centered prescribing for providers; and increasing patients' knowledge about medication management. However, priorities differed across stakeholder groups. Notably, patients prioritized using peer support to improve medication management while researchers did not.Conclusion
Engaging multiple stakeholders in setting a patient-centered research agenda and broadening the scope of adherence interventions to include other aspects of medication management resulted in priorities outside the traditional scope of adherence research.Practice implications
Workshop participants recognized the potential benefits of patient-centered medication management but also identified many challenges to implementation that require additional research and innovation.Item Open Access Predicting non-home discharge in epithelial ovarian cancer patients: External validation of a predictive model.(Gynecologic oncology, 2018-10) Connor, Elizabeth V; Newlin, Erica M; Jelovsek, J Eric; AlHilli, Mariam MOBJECTIVE:To externally validate a model predicting non-home discharge in women undergoing primary cytoreductive surgery (CRS) for epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC). METHODS:Women undergoing primary CRS via laparotomy for EOC at three tertiary medical centers in an academic health system from January 2010 to December 2015 were included. Patients were excluded if they received neoadjuvant chemotherapy, had a non-epithelial malignancy, were not undergoing primary cytoreduction, or lacked documented model components. Non-home discharge included skilled nursing facility, acute rehabilitation facility, hospice, or inpatient death. The predicted probability of non-home discharge was calculated using age, pre-operative CA-125, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance status as described in the previously published predictive model. Model discrimination was calculated using a concordance index and calibration curves were plotted to characterize model performance across the cohort. RESULTS:A total of 204 admissions met inclusion criteria. The overall rate of non-home discharge was 12% (95% CI 8-18%). Mean age was 60.8 years (SD 11.0). Median length of stay (LOS) was significantly longer for patients with non-home discharge (8 vs. 5 days, P < 0.001). The predictive model had a concordance index of 0.86 (95% CI 0.76-0.93), which was similar to model performance in the original study (CI 0.88). The model provided accurate predictions across all probabilities (0 to 100%). CONCLUSIONS:Non-home discharge can be accurately predicted using preoperative clinical variables. Use of this validated non-home discharge predictive model may facilitate preoperative patient counseling, early discharge planning, and potentially decrease cost of care.Item Open Access Proximal junctional kyphosis and proximal junctional failure.(Neurosurgery clinics of North America, 2013-04) Hart, Robert A; McCarthy, Ian; Ames, Christopher P; Shaffrey, Christopher I; Hamilton, David Kojo; Hostin, RichardProximal junctional failure (PJF) should be distinguished from proximal junctional kyphosis, which is a recurrent deformity with limited clinical impact. PJF includes mechanical failure, and is a significant complication following adult spinal deformity surgery with potential for neurologic injury and increased need for surgical revision. Risk factors for PJF include age, severity of sagittal plane deformity, and extent of operative sagittal plane realignment. Techniques for avoiding PJF will likely require refinements in both perioperative and surgical strategies.Item Open Access Reframing Hospital to Home Discharge from "Should We?" to "How Can We?": COVID-19 and Beyond.(Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2021-03) Gustavson, Allison M; Toonstra, Amy; Johnson, Joshua K; Ensrud, Kristine E