Economic disruption and health care reforms have led to access problems and out-of-pocket financing strategies that include reliance on personal savings, selling personal items, and borrowing money. Future reforms should consider an appropriate system for health care insurance risk pooling for the population of Tbilisi, Georgia.
There are challenges in identifying and defining spiritual distress and there is complexity in the provision of spiritual care. However, for the nurses in this study, focusing on the individual patient and developing a relationship that enabled the patient's unique spiritual needs to be met was highly valued. Creating a culture where nurses, and other health professionals involved in the patient's care, share their experiences of spiritual care provision and discussion about how this can be documented is needed.
Problem lists are tools to improve patient management. In the medical record, they connect diagnoses to therapy, prognosis, and psychosocial issues. Computer-based problem lists enhance paper-based approaches by enabling cost-containment and quality assurance applications, but they require clinically expressive controlled vocabularies. Because existing controlled vocabularies do not represent problem statements at a clinically useful level, we derived a new canonical problem statement vocabulary through semi-automated analysis and distillation of provider-entered problem lists collected over 6 years from 74,696 patients. We combined automated and manual methods to condense 891,770 problem statements entered by 1961 care providers at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, to 15,534 Canonical Clinical Problem Statement System (CCPSS) terms. The nature and frequency of problem statements were characterized, interrelations among them were enumerated, and a database capturing the epidemiology of problems was created. The authors identified 23,503 problem relations (co-occurrences, sign-symptom complexes, and differential diagnoses) and 22,690 modifier words that further categorized "canonical" problems. To assess completeness, CCPSS content was compared with that of the 1997 Unified Medical Language System Metathesaurus (containing terms from 44 clinical vocabularies). Unified Medical Language System terms expressed 25% of individual CCPSS terms exactly (71% of problems by frequency), 27% partially, and 48% poorly or not at all. Clinicians judged that CCPSS terms completely captured their clinical intent for 84% of 686 randomly selected free-text problem statements. The CCPSS represents clinical concepts at a level exceeding that of previous approaches. A similar national approach could create a standardized, useful, shared resource for clinical practice.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.