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Author(s):  
Julia-Marie Zimmer ◽  
David Fauser ◽  
André Golla ◽  
Andreas Wienke ◽  
Nadine Schmitt ◽  
...  

Objective: Longitudinal studies on barriers to applying for rehabilitation in Germany are lacking in light of the suspected underutilization of rehabilitation services. The aim of this study was to examine application behaviour in persons with disabling back pain and to identify relevant predictors for making an application. Design: A prospective cohort study with randomized sampling of insurants in the German Pension Insurance, using a questionnaire at baseline and follow-up with linked administrative data for 1.5 years. Subjects/patients: Employed persons (age range 45–59 years) with a high degree of limitations due to back pain and a self-reported risk of permanent work disability (not applied for disability pension, no medical rehabilitation within the last 4 years). Methods: Multivariable Cox regression was used to examine the influence of pre-selected variables on making an application in the follow-up period. Results: Of 690 persons, only 12% applied for rehabilitation. Predictors for making an application were: support from physicians (hazard ratio (HR)=2.24; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.32–3.80), family, and friends (HR=1.67; 95% CI 1.02–2.73), more pain-related disability days (HR=1.02; 95% CI 1.01–1.03), and worse work ability (HR=0.86; 95% CI 0.75–0.97). An intention to apply at baseline mediated the effect of family and physician support on the application. Conclusion: The low number of applications for rehabilitation despite disabling back pain indicates access barriers to, and underuse of, medical rehabilitation.


Author(s):  
Ningrong Lei ◽  
Murtadha Kareem ◽  
Seung Ki Moon ◽  
Edward J. Ciaccio ◽  
U Rajendra Acharya ◽  
...  

In this paper, we discuss hybrid decision support to monitor atrial fibrillation for stroke prevention. Hybrid decision support takes the form of human experts and machine algorithms working cooperatively on a diagnosis. The link to stroke prevention comes from the fact that patients with Atrial Fibrillation (AF) have a fivefold increased stroke risk. Early diagnosis, which leads to adequate AF treatment, can decrease the stroke risk by 66% and thereby prevent stroke. The monitoring service is based on Heart Rate (HR) measurements. The resulting signals are communicated and stored with Internet of Things (IoT) technology. A Deep Learning (DL) algorithm automatically estimates the AF probability. Based on this technology, we can offer four distinct services to healthcare providers: (1) universal access to patient data; (2) automated AF detection and alarm; (3) physician support; and (4) feedback channels. These four services create an environment where physicians can work symbiotically with machine algorithms to establish and communicate a high quality AF diagnosis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 30 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Maria Pimenta Lopes Ribeiro ◽  
Maria Manuela Ferreira Pereira da Silva Martins ◽  
Lara Vandresen ◽  
João Miguel Almeida Ventura da Silva ◽  
Maria Filomena Passos Teixeira de Cardoso

ABSTRACT Objective to identify nurses’ perception on the usefulness of information and communication technologies in their professional practice, as well as in communication among the multidisciplinary team. Method this is a quantitative, descriptive study, of exploratory character, carried through with 3.451 nurses from 36 hospital institutions of Portugal. A questionnaire was used as a data collection instrument. In data analysis, using SPSS® resorted to descriptive statistics. Results of the nine technologies under study, we found that regarding their usefulness in professional practice, nurses qualified as useful or very useful: Intranet (84.3%), email (79.5%), SClínico® (74.8%), Nursing Practice Support System (70.9%), Physician Support System (63.2%), newsletter (62.9), ALERT® (59.4%), Health Data Platform (42.8%) and SONHO® (31.8). Regarding its usefulness in communication among the multidisciplinary team, nurses qualified as useful or very useful: email (75.2%), Intranet (74.2%), SClínico (72.5%), Nursing Practice Support System (67.1%), Physician Support System (63.6%), ALERT® (58.9%), newsletter (57.2), Health Data Platform (40.1%) and SONHO® (29.4%). Conclusion despite the usefulness of technologies presenting relevant percentages, it is pertinent to analyze why nurses’ perceived usefulness is superior to Intranet and email when compared with specific technologies of care data used in the hospital context.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 239920262110059
Author(s):  
Carolyn Riley Chapman ◽  
Hayley M Belli ◽  
Danielle Leach ◽  
Lesha D Shah ◽  
Alison Bateman-House

Introduction: Physicians in the United States play an essential role guiding patients through single patient pre-approval access (PAA) to investigational medical products via either the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)’s Expanded Access (EA) or the federal Right To Try (RTT) pathways. In this study, we sought to better understand pediatric hematologist/oncologists’ attitudes about seeking PAA, on behalf of single patients, to investigational drugs outside of clinical trials. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was developed and sent to pediatric hematologist/oncologists via St. Baldrick’s Foundation’s email distribution list. Results: Of 73 respondents (10.1% of those who received the survey), 56 met eligibility criteria and are included in the analysis. Over 80% ( n = 46) had prior experience with single patient PAA. Respondents were most concerned about the unknown risks and benefits of investigational drugs and financial implications of PAA for patients. One hundred percent and 91.1% of respondents indicated a willingness to support patients through EA and RTT pathways, respectively. When asked about their most recent experience with PAA, 40 out of 46 indicated that they used the FDA’s EA pathway to seek PAA and 4 out of 46 indicated that they used the RTT pathway. Of 44 respondents who had used the EA or RTT pathway, 43 indicated that the biotechnology or pharmaceutical company they solicited granted access to the requested product. Conclusion: Survey results support other findings suggesting a need for additional physician support and education about PAA and that physicians may have unequal access to information about investigational drugs and concerns about financial implications of PAA for their patients.


Circulation ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 142 (Suppl_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Nasser Lakkis ◽  
Allison P Capetillo ◽  
Cherie S Boxberger ◽  
Stephanie Chapman

Introduction: Accurate data abstraction is the cornerstone of successful implementation of Get With The Guidelines-Heart Failure, but abstraction costs are the single largest barrier to participation. Objective: The Heart Failure Abstraction Internship was established to test the efficacy of part-time, graduate students as GWTG-HF abstractors in comparison to a registered nurse using an acceptable Data Element Agreement Rate (DEAR). Methods: The selection criteria for the pilot hospital, Ben Taub Hospital, Houston Texas was: not a GWTG-HF participant; serving diverse populations; administrative and physician support and available supervision for interns. Intern abstractors were recruited and paid as American Heart Association (AHA) employees. For the pilot term, the interns were onboarded as volunteers for the pilot hospital. They met the onboarding requirements of AHA and the pilot institution’s requirements for hospital volunteers. The interns; worked on-site at the pilot institution; were given computer access to EPIC electronic medical records and GWTG-HF; were trained by AHA Quality staff and the pilot hospital Cardiology Program Manager; and abstracted all patients with a primary diagnosis of heart failure from October 2017 to December 2018. An AHA nurse auditor virtually re-abstracted 5 records with the pilot, Cardiology Program Manager. The audit was conducted using the July 2018 Clinical Registry Form (CRF) that was also used during the pilot. Results: The intern abstractors matched the re-abstractor at a DEAR of 86.4% with 340 total elements and 46 mismatches. Conclusions: The hypothesis was proven with a DEAR of 86.4%, suggesting hospitals can be successful participants in GWTG utilizing student abstractors for data collection needs. The median payrate for a nurse abstractor is $24.50 per hour, not including benefits*. The rate for part time employment for the abstraction interns was $10.00 per hour. In addition to financial savings for the pilot organization, the interns worked efficiently as they focused on one task allowing the clinical team to focus on process improvement based on the data collected. This PI focus led to other outcome improvements including reduced readmission and increased compliance with GDMT. *Payscale.com


2020 ◽  
pp. medethics-2020-106702
Author(s):  
Jodhi Rutherford

The Australian state of Victoria legalised voluntary assisted dying (VAD) in June 2019. Like most jurisdictions with legalised VAD, the Victorian law constructs physicians as the only legal providers of VAD. Physicians with conscientious objection to VAD are not compelled to participate in the practice, requiring colleagues who are willing to participate to transact the process for eligible applicants. Physicians who provide VAD because of their active, moral and purposeful support for the law are known as conscientious participants. Conscientious participation has received scant attention in the bioethics literature. Patient access to VAD is contingent on the development of a sufficient corpus of conscientious participants in permissive jurisdictions. This article reports the findings of a small empirical study into how some Victorian physicians with no in-principle opposition towards the legalisation of VAD, are ethically orientating themselves towards the law, in the first 8 months of the law’s operation. It finds that in-principle-supportive physicians employ bioethical principles to justify their position but struggle to reconcile that approach with the broader medical profession’s opposition. This study is part of the first tranche of empirical research emerging from Australia since the legalisation of VAD in that country for the first time in over 20 years.


2020 ◽  
Vol 41 (S1) ◽  
pp. s276-s277
Author(s):  
Valeria Fabre ◽  
Alejandra Salinas ◽  
Ashley Pleiss ◽  
Elizabeth Zink ◽  
George Jones ◽  
...  

Background: Bedside nurses have been recognized as potential antibiotic stewards; however, data on effective ways that nurses can contribute to stewardship activities in acute-care hospitals are scarce. Methods: A nurse-driven urine culture intervention to improve urine culture ordering practices was implemented in a medicine and a neurocritical care unit (NCCU) at The Johns Hopkins Hospital. Bedside nurses implemented an algorithm (Fig. 1) developed by the antibiotic stewardship program (ASP) to review the appropriateness of urine culture and to guide discussions with ordering providers regarding unnecessary urine cultures. Nurses received in-person training by an ASP physician champion on how to use the algorithm and education on the definition and indications for evaluation for asymptomatic bacteriuria and urinary tract infections. The ASP physician periodically visited the units to address concerns and questions. In both units, a nurse champion was identified to serve as liaison between the ASP and bedside nurses, and physician support was obtained before the intervention. The pre- and postintervention periods for the medicine unit were September 2017–August 2018 and September 2018–August 2019, respectively. For the NCCU, these periods were September 2018–February 2019 and March 2019–September 2019, respectively. Trends in urine cultures per 100 patient days (PD) were examined with statistical process charts and compared before and after the intervention using a standard incident ratio (IRR) and Poisson regression. Results: In total, 327 urine cultures were collected in the medicine unit and 293 in the NCCU over the study period. Although the intervention led to a significant 34% reduction in the rate of urine cultures on the medicine unit (from 2.3 to 1.5 cultures/100 PD; IRR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.50–0.87; P < .01), the number of urine cultures remained without a significant change in the NCCU (from 4.5 to 3.7 cultures/100 PD; IRR, 0.89; 95% CI, 0.65–1.22; P = .48) (Fig. 2). Conclusions: Algorithm-based, nurse-driven review of urine culture indications reduced urine cultures on a medicine unit but not in a neurosciences ICU. Success on the medicine unit may have been driven by highly engaged nurse and physician champions and by patients being able to respond questions about symptoms. The following factors might have impacted results on NCCU: presence of conflicting protocols (eg, panculturing patients every 48 hours per a hypothermia protocol), unit tradition (eg, obtaining cultures to assess treatment response), perception of greater risk benefit in NCCU patients, and unit dynamics (open unit with other primary services placing orders for patients). Unit and team dynamics can affect effective implementation of antimicrobial stewardship interventions by nurses.Funding: NoneDisclosures: None


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