Approaching Proactivity armed with Evidence from Reactivity

Author(s):  
Michael Alexander ◽  
Tandi Bagian ◽  
Linda C. Williams

In a large healthcare organization, individual medical facilities have the opportunity to learn from each other, correcting process vulnerabilities proactively without actually experiencing the error. The work represented here is an effort to capitalize on the size of the VA healthcare system to inform proactive process improvement efforts at VA facilities with reactive event report data from the entire VA system. We seek to do this by mapping event reports to the steps of a process, and examining the parts of sub-processes prone to failure in order to understand how and why it failed. This allows an individual medical facility to learn from previous process failures and make corrections.

2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. e104-e105
Author(s):  
Jessica L Howe ◽  
A Zachary Hettinger ◽  
Raj M Ratwani

2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 193-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harshal Kirane, MD ◽  
Elina Drits, DO ◽  
Seungjun Ahn, MS ◽  
Sandeep Kapoor, MD ◽  
Jonathan Morgenstern, PhD ◽  
...  

Objective: To assess provider practices and attitudes toward addiction care and pain management within a large healthcare system, as well as to determine the impact of prior training and perceived effectiveness of organizational implementation strategies. Design: A cross-sectional study.Setting: Large healthcare organization comprising 21 hospitals.Participants: Three hundred and thirteen healthcare providers within a large healthcare organization.Main outcome measures: Training, practices, and attitudes toward opioid-related care.Methods: One thousand providers including physicians (MD/DO) and physician extenders (NP/PA) were contacted via email request. The Mann-Whitney test or Fisher’s exact test, as appropriate, was used for comparisons of continuous and categorical variables, respectively.Results: Providers lacked prior pain management (36 percent), addiction (38 percent), or buprenorphine training (92 percent). Few providers were confident in treating opioid use disorders (OUD) (19 percent) and opioid tapering (24 percent) but interested in safe prescribing practices (81 percent). While most providers preferred to refer patients for OUD (89 percent), only a small portion felt appropriate services were readily available (22 percent). Trained providers appear significantly more engaged in checking Prescription Drug Monitoring Program database [median = 1 (Q1 = 1, Q3 = 2) vs 2(1, 3); p 0.001], comfortable obtaining urine drug screens [2(2, 3) vs 3(2, 4); p 0.002], and willing to treat OUD with additional support [3(2, 4) vs 4(3, 4); p 0.022] compared to non-trained providers. Primary care providers were more likely to view OUDs in their scope of practice [4(2, 5) vs 4(3, 5); p 0.016] and willing to treat OUD with additional support [3(2, 3) vs 3(2, 4); p 0.0007] compared to specialists. Buprenorphine providers appear to have more confidence in skills for OUD [2(1, 3) vs 4(3, 4); p 0.0001] and tapering [2(1, 2) vs 4(3, 5); p 0.0001], and diminished preference to refer [2(1, 5) vs 1(1, 2); p 0.0009] compared to non-buprenorphine providers.Conclusions: Providers within a large healthcare system lack training and confidence in management of opioid-related care. Buprenorphine training positively modified key attitudes toward addiction care, yet engagement in medication-assisted treatment remains limited. Providers are concerned about opioid risks, and view guideline implementation and direct input from addiction specialists as effective organizational strategies. Further research is needed to clarify the efficacy of such approaches.


Author(s):  
Lin Shen ◽  
Alexandra Levie ◽  
Hardeep Singh ◽  
Kristen Murray ◽  
Sonali Desai

2020 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Rostkowski ◽  
Damian Banat

The healthcare system today faces numerous challenges due to lack of visibility of resources and low utilisation, excessive rental as well as purchase of medical equipment. The article attempts to identify the possibilities of implementing a system of identification and location of assets in healthcare system institutions. This research presents market analysis in the context of available technological solutions. The implementation of real-time location system (RTLS) would enable not only tracking of equipment and inventory in medical facilities, but also increase visibility of inventory and manage the entire supply chain. Presentation of the proposed solution made it possible to assess costs, potential savings and the implementation process. This article is a starting point for a discussion on the cost-effectiveness of using RTLS in the healthcare system.


2021 ◽  
pp. 159101992110358
Author(s):  
Michihiro Tanaka

The Japan healthcare system is considered as one of the world's finest. However, medical facilities across Japan are struggling to cope with the recent surge in novel coronavirus infections, leaving the medical care system in many areas on the brink of collapse. Physician burnout was already a growing problem, and the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has only made it worse. The personal impact of coronavirus disease 2019 in Japan is reported.


Author(s):  
Hiroaki Eto ◽  
Sena Shimomoto ◽  
Sachio Togawa ◽  
Morikazu Yamamoto ◽  
Shintaro Miyasawa ◽  
...  

Abstract The Great East Japan Earthquake that occurred in Japan in 2011, an innumerable number of buildings in the coastal part of the east side of Japan suffered catastrophic damage, and medical facilities in coastal areas have become dysfunctional because of the significant damage incurred due to the tsunami. And land routes are not passable, but there are records of support activities utilizing water areas such as sea and river networks being extremely effective in such disaster conditions. Therefore, as one of the effective methods of medical support in the affected area immediately after the disaster, a Floating Medical Support System (hereafter Medi-float) on big disaster that can be accessed from the water area was proposed. In the near future, the area along the Arakawa River is expected to be seriously damaged by the earthquake directly under the Tokyo metropolitan area. Therefore, by installing a Medi-float that can perform medical support activities from the water area to the land without being damaged by an earthquake, since Medi-float performs medical support activities in cooperation with medical facilities on land area, preventable death is reduced. In previous studies, a procedure to estimate the facilities scale and select a suitable site for Medi-float practically based on GIS data such as the number of collapsed buildings in the target area, distribution of injured people due to the earthquake were presented. However, even if Medi-float is installed in the target area, it cannot be denied that there is a shortage of medical facilities. In consideration of smooth transportation outside the region and cooperation with surrounding medical facilities, it is hoped that a concrete and realistic medical support system by Medi-float will be established. Therefore, in this study, in order to grasp the time it takes for the injured to be transported to the medical facility and the congestion status of the medical facility, the target area was divided into 250m meshes and a time-series simulation was performed. Specifically, the distribution of injured people during a disaster was calculated on a mesh basis from the number of buildings collapsed and the number of fires. And the transport time of the injured people is calculated from the distance between each mesh and the medical facility, the movement of the injured people in consideration of the congestion status of the medical facility was simulated, necessity of cooperation between medical facilities and wide area transportation was clarified, the effect of Medi-float, which is active in the disaster area, was also evaluated.


2021 ◽  
Vol Publish Ahead of Print ◽  
Author(s):  
Min-Jeoung Kang ◽  
Sarah Collins Rossetti ◽  
Christopher Knaplund ◽  
Frank Y. Chang ◽  
Kumiko O. Schnock ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yulan Zheng

Abstract: After entering the 21st century, the economic and scientific and technological levels of China show a tendency of rapid rise. On account of it, medical level is also developing, and the requirements for medical institutes and equipments have become stricter. In recent years, the medical facility market in China is facing a complicated environment, and many traditional medical facilities have been gradually replaced. Medical marketing plays a crucial role in improving the position of Chinese medical facilities in the industry. In the perspective of the current new environment, this study investigated the marketing strategies of Chinese medical facilities, aiming to provide a reference for their positive development in the new environment.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Somyajit Chakraborty ◽  
Avijit Gayen

Medical Trust-Network is one of the most promising fields of study in network science. Establishment of trust within medical entities ensures better treatment and increases better medical facilities. The word 'Trust' signifies a very important behavioral aspect between any human entities, especially among doctors and patients. To represent such relationships Trust Network Models are built to express the interactions between human entities within such networks. Though the idea of a Trust-Network has traditionally been one of the major areas of research, yet the concept of a medical trust network model is relatively a new domain. In this paper, we introduce an overall multilayered Trust Network to represent the entire healthcare architecture. More specifically our model is based on an evolutionary graph system with a discrete relationship between the three most important entities of any healthcare system, namely -- Doctors, Departments, and Hospitals. Observations indicate that based on our model, the medical healthcare system is a multilayered model unlike a feed-forward model as indicated by previous studies.


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