Introduction Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS) data have rarely been analyzed at the subcounty level. The purpose of this study was to explore the feasibility of such analysis and its potential to inform local policy and resource allocation.
Nursing classification may eventually lead to naming and describing the work of nurses. Research findings will continue to provide information leading to a unified nursing language system that describes the practice of nursing in local, regional, national, and international health-care data sets used for research, clinical, education, policy, and administrative purposes.
This article presents data from a five-year evaluation-research case study of a large urban schools district's internal Student Assistance Program (SAP). The district employed specially trained and licensed school-based counselors to implement an internal SAP expanded to include tertiary prevention, and modeled after an employee assistance program established for adults. From the population of more than 10,000 students who received some type of program assistance for at-risk behaviors, a stratified random sample of 2,238 cases, over a five year period, were reviewed. Results indicate a statistically significant decline (p < .05) in students' drug use and a significant improvement in internal locus of control occurred each year. While not statistically significant, the average number of student discipline referrals was less than the year prior to program admission; however, there was no significant change in academic performance. A significant correlation between students' drug use and the amount of time in program, the type of assistance received, and the student's custody status was also found.
Medicare beneficiaries with cognitive impairment are more likely to access home health care than those without such impairment, and an estimated 1 in 3 Medicare home health patients has diagnosed dementia. However, recent changes to the Medicare home health payment system do not adjust for patients’ cognitive impairment. To the extent that cognitive impairment prompts higher intensity care, this could create a financial disincentive for providers serving this patient population. We draw on a nationally representative sample of 1,214 (weighted n=5,856,333) community-living Medicare beneficiaries who received home health care between 2011-2016. We measure care intensity by the number and type of visits received during an index home health care episode. We model care intensity as a function of patient cognitive impairment during the episode, measured via clinician reports in standardized patient assessment data. In propensity score adjusted, multivariable models holding all covariates at their means, home health patients with identified cognitive impairment received a significantly greater number of visits. During the index home health episode, cognitively impaired patients received an additional 2.82 total visits (95% CI: 1.32-4.31; p<0.001), 1.39 nursing visits (95% CI: 0.49-2.29; p=0.003), 0.72 physical therapy visits (95% CI: 0.06-1.39; p=0.03), and 0.60 occupational therapy visits (95% CI: 0.15-1.05; p=0.01). Findings suggest that recent changes to Medicare home health care reimbursement do not reflect the more intensive care needs of patients with cognitive impairment, and may threaten access to care for these individuals.
The effects of a turbulent health care delivery market have impacted the day-to-day reality of acute care hospitals. One effect is that the supply of acute care hospital beds currently exceeds the demand, a trend that is expected to continue to the year 2000 and beyond. Nursing administrators at St. Marys Hospital Medical Center made the decision to close an inpatient unit in order to better match acute care bed supply to existing demand. Decision support for closure, organizational change, and lessons learned from the closure process are discussed.
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