The term "burnout" represents a significant perspective on how people respond to their work, but the attention paid to this phenomenon has largely been clinical and often anecdotal. In this article, the authors seek to expand the analysis of burnout in ways that permit comparative analysis, especially in large populations. This study specifically addresses three questions. First, does a paper-and-pencil instrument isolate domains of burnout that are relatively consistent between people-intensive work and the broader range of activities found in a commercial enterprise? Second, can we develop phases of progressive burnout? Third, can we test the efficacy of the burnout phases by searching for regularities in a panel of 22 variables commonly thought to tap the important facets of the work site? The author's analysis shows that we can answer these three central questions affirmatively, though occasionally with complex and potentially significant qualifications. The results of the analysis provide further evidence of the usefulness of a convenient instrument for measuring burnout and also suggest that behavioral scientists will find valuable a phase model that distinguishes regular and robust covariation by using a panel of variables thought to tap the important aspects of organizational life.
In 2003, The John A. Hartford Foundation Institute for Geriatric Nursing, New York University Division of Nursing, convened an expert panel to explore the potential for developing recommendations for the caseloads of advanced practice nurses (APNs) in nursing homes and to provide substantive and detailed strategies to strengthen the use of APNs in nursing homes. The panel, consisting of nationally recognized experts in geriatric practice, education, research, public policy, and long‐term care, developed six recommendations related to caseloads for APNs in nursing homes. The recommendations address educational preparation of APNs; average reimbursable APN visits per day; factors affecting APNs caseload parameters, including provider characteristics, practice models, resident acuity, and facility factors; changes in Medicare reimbursement to acknowledge nonbillable time spent in resident care; and technical assistance to promote a climate conducive to APN practice in nursing homes. Detailed research findings and clinical expertise underpin each recommendation. These recommendations provide practitioners, payers, regulators, and consumers with a rationale and details of current advanced practice nursing models and caseload parameters, preferred geriatric education, reimbursement strategies, and a range of technical assistance necessary to strengthen, enhance, and increase APNs' participation in the care of nursing home residents.
Purpose Knowledge is a key success factor in achieving competitive advantage. The purpose of this paper is to examine how mobile health technology facilitates knowledge management (KM) practices to enhance a public health service in an emerging economies context. Specifically, the acceptance of a knowledge-resource application by community health workers (CHWs) to deliver breast cancer health care in India, where resources are depleted, is explored. Design/methodology/approach Fieldwork activity conducted 20 semi-structured interviews with frontline CHWs, which were analysed using an interpretive inductive approach. Findings The application generates knowledge as a resource that signals quality health care and yields a positive reputation for the public health service. The CHW’s acceptance of technology enables knowledge generation and knowledge capture. The design facilitates knowledge codification and knowledge transfer of breast cancer information to standardise quality patient care. Practical implications KM insights are provided for the implementation of mobile health technology for frontline health-care professionals in an emerging economies context. The knowledge-resource application can deliver breast cancer care, in localised areas with the potential for wider contexts. The outcomes are valuable for policymakers, health service managers and KM practitioners in an emerging economies context. Social implications The legacy of the mobile heath technology is the normalisation of breast cancer discourse and the technical up-skilling of CHWs. Originality/value First, this paper contributes three propositions to KM scholarship, in a public health care, emerging economies context. Second, via an interdisciplinary theoretical lens (signalling theory and technology acceptance model), this paper offers a novel conceptualisation to illustrate how a knowledge-resource application can shape an organisation’s KM to form a resource-based competitive advantage.
Editor's note: This article is by 22 nursing gerontology experts who are all advocates of nursing home reform. They are listed at the end of this article.
In 2003, a panel of nationally recognized experts in geriatric practice, education, research, public policy, and long-term care convened to examine and make recommendations about care quality and safety issues related to advanced practice nurses (APNs) in nursing home practice. This article reports on the panel recommendation that addressed expanding the evidence base of resident and facility outcomes of APN nursing home practice. A review of the small but important body of research related to nursing home APN practice suggests a positive impact on resident care and facility outcomes. Recommendations are made for critically needed research in four key areas: (a) APN nursing home practice, (b) relative value unit coding, (c) outcomes related to geropsychiatric and mental health nursing services, and (d) outcomes related to geriatric specialization. The APN role could be significantly enhanced and executed if its specific contribution to resident and facility outcomes was more clearly delineated through the recommended rigorous research.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are rare progenitor cells present in adult bone marrow that have the capacity to differentiate into a variety of tissue types, including bone, cartilage and fat. The biological activities of MSCs suggest a number of potential clinical applications, where each particular application is related to a specific MSC activity mediated by a different mechanism. Osiris Therapeutics has developed a technology for isolation and expansion of hMSCs from adult bone marrow for clinical use. Data from pre-clinical and clinical studies suggest that the ability of MSCs to migrate to inflammatory sites, modulate immune response, down-regulate inflammation, and accelerate tissue repair in the local environment may have therapeutic effects. Therefore in developing therapeutic applications, the MSCs should be verified to display one or more of above-mentioned functions, calling for the need to develop predictive functional assays. Modulation of the immune response is an apparent in vivo therapeutic property of the MSC necessary for successful Graft versus Host Disease (GVHD) treatment. Based on previous knowledge regarding mechanisms underlying MSC-mediated immunosuppressive effects, several markers for developing an MSC potency assay have been proposed. In the present study a relationship between selected markers and hMSC-mediated immunosuppression was investigated in vitro. Results show that co-culture of hMSCs with anti-CD3/CD28-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (hPBMCs) caused inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation. The hMSC effect on lymphocyte proliferation is dose-dependent, causing > 50% inhibition at approximately 1:10–1:25 MSC: T-lymphocyte ratio. Supernatants of parallel co-cultures taken on days 1, 3, and 5 were analyzed for prostaglandin 2 (PGE2), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and tryptophan. The results showed increased levels of PGE2, decreased levels of TNF-α and increased depletion of tryptophan related to indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) enzyme activity, associated with increasing number of MSCs in each well. The quantity of PGE2 on day 1 and the level of tryptophan on day 5 in the MSC-PBMC co-culture supernatants correlated to the level of inhibition of proliferation, with the PGE2 range from approximately 11,000 to 22,000 pg/mL and 50% tryptophan depletion resulting in a 50% inhibition of the lymphocyte proliferation point. Further studies demonstrated that the addition of TNF-α to MSCs induced PGE2 secretion at a level which was similar to that detected in the co-culture studies of MSCs-PBMC. Thus, a strong correlation between inducible PGE2 secretion/IDO enzyme activity and the inhibition of lymphocyte proliferation by hMSCs in vitro indicates key molecules responsible for hMSC functional activity related to the immunological responses involved with diseases such as GVHD, solid organ transplantation and autoimmune diseases.
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