Some Policy Implications of the New York State Civil Commitment Program

1988 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 561-574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles Winick

Some lessons can be learned from an analysis of the experience of New York State's civil commitment program, which was operating from 1966 through 1979, and was the largest and most expensive in the country. Judges need to be carefully selected and trained and assigned to relevant cases: staff must be selected in terms of specific criteria and trained and supervised, clients have to be assigned to particular facilities in accordance with their needs; referral procedures ought to be established in advance of operations; the civil commitment must differ from a court sending someone to a facility; networks with other programs have to be articulated; formal and reliable procedures for absconding clients are necessary; length of stay has to be critically examined; and formal evaluation is a necessity. The New York State program suffered because of problems in all of these areas.

1996 ◽  
Vol 11 (6) ◽  
pp. 335-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Teres ◽  
Keith Boyd ◽  
John Rapoport ◽  
Martin Strosberg ◽  
Robert Baker ◽  
...  

Decisions to place limitations on the care of patients are complex, and they often involve physicians, other medical professionals, patients, or a surrogate decision-maker, family members, and others. In 1988, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health Care Organizations (JCAHO) and the New York State government adopted two different approaches to this complex issue of do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders: one involved professional self-regulation, whereas the other mandated a standardized procedure requiring completion of legal documents. This study examines the impact of these two different approaches to writing of DNR orders for adult intensive care unit (ICU) patients on utilization and resulting length of stay. The study used three data bases. One is from a larger study designed to update the Mortality Probability Model (MPM), a measure of severity of illness for ICU patients. This data base includes consecutive admissions to the adult ICUs of four hospitals in the northeastern United States. The second is a similar data base from the European-North American Study of Severity Systems (ENAS), and it includes 20 hospitals. The third data base, a 1991 national survey of ICUs by the Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM), lists characteristics of patients in ICUs in the United States on a specific day. Logistic regression was used to analyze the first two data bases; the percentage of patients in New York with DNR orders was calculated for each of the three data bases and compared with patients in neighboring states. Length of ICU and hospital stay was measured in the first two data sets. In the MPM data, 14.4% of medical patients in New York had a DNR order written at the time of ICU discharge, compared with 198% of medical patients in Massachusetts; and 4.3% of New York surgical patients had a DNR order written at the time of ICU discharge, compared with 8.3% of surgical patients in Massachusetts. In the ENAS data, 7.4% of New York nonoperative patients has a DNR order in place within 24 hours, compared with 8.4% of such patients in the other states; and 1.0% of New York operative patients had DNR orders, compared with 3–5% of operative patients from other states. Logistic regression revealed that a New York patient was less likely to have a DNR order written than a patient located in one of the other states studied. Data from the SCCM survey demonstrated that the New York percentage of patients with “no CPR” orders was 5.50%, compared with a percentage of 6.87% in other states. With few exceptions, these differences between New York and surrounding states did not have an impact on hospital length of stay. During the period studied following implementation of New York's DNR Law, utilization of DNR orders in New York State was significantly lower than neighboring states. This decreased utilization, however, did not effect hospital utilization as measured through length of stay and ICU admissions.


1973 ◽  
Vol 130 (8) ◽  
pp. 904-909 ◽  
Author(s):  
ABBOTT S. WEINSTEIN ◽  
DIANE DIPASQUALE ◽  
FREDERICK WINSOR

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Milla Arabadjian ◽  
Stephanie Serrato ◽  
Mark V. Sherrid

Background: Use of automated external defibrillators (AEDs) in out-of-hospital cardiac arrests (OHCAs) improve survival. Professional health organizations recommend that AEDs be available in crowded places, including schools but currently only 18 US states require them. Sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) research in the school-age population has largely focused on school sub-groups, leaving out the majority of US students and adults working in schools. New York State (NYS) has one of the largest student populations in the US. Our objective was to gain epidemiologic data on SCA across a variety of school levels and examine the availability and utilization of AEDs in a state that requires them.Methods: This was an observational, cross-sectional study utilizing an electronic survey. We included NYS school nurses and collected electronic surveys in January-March, 2018. We analyzed demographic data of school characteristics, SCA occurrences and AED use and availability.Results: Of 876 respondents (36.1% response rate), 71 (8.2%) reported SCAs, with 41 occurring in adults. AEDs were deployed in 59 of 71 (84.3%) events, 40 individuals had long-term survival. Most SCAs occurred in middle-schools. School size or number of AEDs/school had no bearing on short-term or long-term survival. AEDs were widely available in private schools, though this was not required by state law.Conclusions: Our data suggest a need for more comprehensive examination of SCA in US schools. Research comparing the availability and utilization of school AEDs between states that do and do not require them is needed and may have important clinical and policy implications for SCA emergency preparedness in US schools.


Circulation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 140 (Suppl_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Milla Arabadjian ◽  
Alexandra Stepanovic ◽  
Mark Sherrid

Introduction: AHA recommends that automated external defibrillators (AEDs) be made available in public areas with high likelihood of a sudden cardiac arrest (SCA). Only 18 US states have regulations requiring AEDs in schools and the legislation varies. There is no comprehensive evaluation of the epidemiology of sudden death in schools. School nurses are often the only healthcare providers within a school. New York State (NYS) enrolls almost 3.5 million students with New York City (NYC) being the largest school system in the US; legislation requires AEDs in all public but not in private schools. Purpose: Our aims were threefold: to gain epidemiologic data on SCAs in NYS schools, to evaluate the availability and utilization of AEDs, and to identify factors affecting deployment of AEDs. Methods: Electronic surveys were sent to school nurse members of the NYS Association of School Nurses and NYC school nurses. We also conducted structured interviews with a representative sample of NYS school nurses. Results: Nurses representing 750 public schools and 116 private schools responded, a response rate of 36.4%. There were 71 SCA events, with majority affecting adults on school grounds 41 (58%). AEDs were deployed in 59 (73%). Short term survival occurred in 50 (69%) with 40 (56%) returning to regular activity. While not required to have AEDs available, most private schools had them 69(60%). There were 21 (30%) SCA events in private schools with 8 (11%) occurring in private schools with no AEDs. Of these, 6 (75%) had a negative outcome. Interviews revealed that staff attitude, fear, and training adequacy were factors influencing AED utilization. Conclusions: AEDs in schools improve survival outcomes. There has been no comprehensive evaluation of SCA events in US schools and no uniformity in AED legislation among states. While focus is on students, NYS data suggests that attention should also encompass adult SCAs in schools. Comparisons of AED utilization and SCA outcomes in states with and without AED legislation will be of interest, and may have health policy implications.


2006 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Steven H. Silber, DO, ScM ◽  
Kristine M. Gebbie, DrPH, RN ◽  
Theodore J. Gaeta, DO, MPH

There is no mandatory training for individual physicians with respect to overall emergency preparedness in New York State. This paper explores the policy implications of linking licensure and registration to mandatory competency-based educational programs on emergency preparedness response structure and high-risk biological agents. In this article, we explore the implications of mandatory registration and training with a single emergency response facility or agency, and we propose creative solutions that may make such a policy palatable to all stakeholders.


1953 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 678-684
Author(s):  
Ernest M. Gruenberg ◽  
Raymond G. McCarthy

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