Proximity as a factor in the selection of health care providers: Emergency room visits compared to obstetric admissions and abortions

1979 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus J. Roghmann ◽  
Thomas R. Zastowny
2003 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald E. McAlpine ◽  
Karla Schroder ◽  
V. Shane Pankratz ◽  
Megan Maurer

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 72 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-438
Author(s):  
DONALD J. BALABAN ◽  
NEIL I. GOLDFARB

To the Editor.— Rosenberg et al1 report on a prospective, "random" study of 476 patients up to 2 years of age seen in an emergency room. The paper is concerned with a problem of importance to health care providers and of great interest to parents and society. The paper reports statistically significant differences in rates of observed or reported child abuse between children grouped according to the presence of certain abnormal features. Our concern is that the reported results may be easily misinterpreted and, therefore, may be misleading.


Author(s):  
Tahseen Ahmed ◽  
Altaf Ali Mangi ◽  
Waqar Ahmed ◽  
Jabbar Abbas ◽  
Bilawal Shaikh ◽  
...  

The main theme of the study was to evaluate the usage of medicine other than their use. This is actually a problem, which was observed worldwide. It is direct associated with the patients that were using medicine to cure themselves from minor ailment without discussing with any health care professional as selection of proper medicine for any disease is the prime responsibility of health care providers. The significance of the research was to evaluate the self-medication pattern over the prescribed medicines among the local population of Karachi. So the descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted for the period of six months and participants were guided for the completion of questionnaire. Specified sample technique was used for the proper selection of participants. The average age of participants was 38.5±11.8 with minimum age of 16 and 53 was the maximum age of participant of the study. The frequent habit was taking medicines was observed mostly with age group of 24 to 36 years and mostly arts related person and businessman were taking self medication without knowing any accurate knowledge of medicines. From the prescribed medicines Steroids, antibiotics and Cetrizine were very common taken by the participants. Females participants were taking more medicines for minor ailments as compare to males. Education level and marital status were most common factors that prejudiced the risk factors awareness along with self medication among the participants. Frequency of self-medication with or without prescription was very common among the females than males. Females were using oral corticosteroids and cyprohepadine without any therapeutic need. Professional life along with marital status was considered as main pillar for the attentiveness of significant side effects associated with mal practice of taking medicine without any medical advice.


2016 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
John R. Bowblis ◽  
Christopher S. Brunt ◽  
David C. Grabowski

Abstract Typically, research on the effect of ownership has considered health care providers in isolation of competitive interaction from other firms. This analysis considers how the selection of Medicare reimbursement codes for skilled nursing facilities varies by ownership and is influenced by the competitive spillovers from market dominance of for-profit institutions. We find evidence that not-for-profits are less likely to code patients into the highest reimbursement categories. Further, as the market becomes dominated by for-profits, both for-profit and not-for-profits increase the share of patients in these high reimbursement categories.


2000 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 91 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. L. Seldon ◽  
J. Siemienowic z ◽  
M. Hawso n ◽  
P. Steel e ◽  
M. Ibrahi m

Most of the technological attention in health care communications has been given to hospital systems. We perceive a gap in communications between different layers of the health care hierarchy, which often means that relevant information does not accompany patients as they move into or out of hospitals. In this paper we first review some systems, such as HealthLink in New Zealand and Health.On.Net in South Australia, which have been or are being established to rectify this situation. We review systems being developed and installed in our own regions. Planning has involved local hospitals, general practitioners, government, and allied health professionals. Funding has been a major problem, partly due to a lack of defined responsibility for this area. On the technical side, we have opted for the World Wide Web (WWW) communications protocols as the most general and widely accepted; also, the standards for text-based messages (HL7) and for images (DICOM 3.0) are lagging the WWW in capabilities. The communications medium must include normal telephone lines (PSTN or POTS), as these are the connections which most private healthcare providers have. Various forms of security, encryption and access control have been employed. Possibly least important nowadays is the selection of a 'hardware or operating platform'.


2001 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 337-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor Marchessault

In the 1960s, managing croup was simple - put the child in the bathroom and run a hot shower. In most cases, the child's symptoms would be controlled. When the mist from the shower failed to control the croup, the parents would take the child to an emergency room. Often, the child would get better on the way to the hospital, thanks to the cool, outside air. At the hospital, a 'croupette' would be available for some children, and the health care providers hoped that the children would remain quiet in the strange tent filled with cold mist. Some hospitals even had special croup rooms where steam was piped in, and the whole room was filled with cold mist. Needless to say, nursing staff were not eager to work in these rooms. The last resort of treatment was a tracheotomy because the art of intubation had not yet been mastered. Two randomized studies failed to show the benefit of cool mist, and, today, it is rarely used (1,2).


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. S20-S21
Author(s):  
Ana Mendieta ◽  
Ligia Rios ◽  
Walter Delgadillo ◽  
Maria Vargas ◽  
Carlos Rueda ◽  
...  

Abstract Background/Aims Severe infections are the most important causes of morbidity and mortality in children with cancer. In Peru, a major limitation for an optimal treatment of children with fever and neutropenia due to chemotherapy is the delay in the administration of the first dose of antibiotics. We performed an intervention aimed to decrease the time to antibiotics (TTA) in pediatric patients presenting to the emergency room (ER) with fever and neutropenia: We increased the perception risk of neutropenic fever to the ER medical staff by explaining the importance of a timely administration of antibiotics as part of the initial approach of children with fever and neutropenia. This study forms part of a larger project (DoTT project) that is being implemented in Peru, and is aligned to the WHO Global Initiative of Childhood Cancer in Peru. Methods This study was performed at Hospital Nacional Edgardo Rebagliati, which is a tertiary care National Hospital located in Lima. We included patients younger than 14 years with hemato-oncological conditions who arrived at the Pediatric Emergency Room. The DoTT project consists in an quality improvement educational intervention for health care providers in the Pediatric ED and the Oncology and Hematology Departments, based on the Kern’s six-steps (i) Problem identification and general needs assessment, (ii) targeted needs assessment, (iii) goals and objectives, (iv) educational strategies, (v) implementation and (vi) evaluation. We defined time-to-antibiotic (TTA) by measuring the time elapsed between patient′s arrival to the ER and the administration of the fist dose of an antibiotic. We compared the TTA between thirteen patients admitted from July to December 2020 with fever and neutropenia (after intervention), and historical data from 2017–2018. Results Median age was 7 years. 9/13 patients had leukemia and 4 patients had malignant solid tumors receiving oncological treatment. Mean pre-hospital delay was 176 minutes (range, 14–906 minutes) and TTA was 133 minutes (range, 34–400 minutes). One patient died of sepsis. Age, sex, source and timing of antibiotics did not significantly affect hospital stay, antifungal use and/or antibiotic turnover. Based on our historical data, mean TTA was 206 minutes (range, 137–390). Early results indicate a decrease in the TTA, although not statistically significant, likely due to the sample size. General and targeted needs assessment was performed by the DoTT project team and administrators at Rebagliati hospital, which lead to develop a curriculum based on a 5-lectures mini-course for health care providers. Conclusions The TTA exceeds the recommended time at international level, causing the evitable morbimortality. It is necessary to perform a multidisciplinary intervention to improve antibiotic start time. Ongoing educational intervention refinement and testing of the instruments are planned.


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