The Community Health Intensity Rating Scale (CHIRS) has been found to significantly explain variation in resources consumed by both home health care clients and high-risk public health nurse clients. Secondary analysis of CHIRS scores from two earlier retrospective studies provided insights into basic similarities and differences between older adults served by a home care program (n = 208) and those served by a public health nursing program for frail elderly (n = 47). CHIRS scores for both client groups demonstrated a substantial need for care, with a greater range of CHIRS global scores for home health care clients but significantly higher (CHIRS total scores for the public health nurse clients (t = -5.24, p < .001). These findings suggest that the public health nurse clients experienced needs across multiple areas whereas the home health care clients' needs were more narrowly focused and episodic. Representation of needs by an intensity rating such as CHIRS can foster more focused visit planning and more specific outcome assessment, assist in planning staffing and in-service education, and focus nursing education regarding care of older adults.
The implementation of a lower-extremity DVT clinical pathway in our institution has help to reduce hospitalisation costs, due to a decreased length of hospital stay.
Care paths for the maternal and infant populations are used to define immediate and long-term outcomes related to care received in the home. This article describes a care path developed by public health nurses for intervention with an at-risk maternal-child population in a city/county health department. A public health nursing care management model provided the framework for developing this care path to foster cost-effective use of limited resources. It is crucial that public health nurses articulate clearly the services provided in the home both for those who may seek service and for policy makers who determine funding structure. The project demonstrated that care paths for home visitation involving high-risk prenatal clients are useful tools that streamline documentation, foster consistency and continuity of care, facilitate quality improvement efforts, and provide outcome data.
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