Inpatient Services (inpatient + services)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Factors Related to Missed Diagnosis of Incidental Scabies Infestations in Patients Admitted Through the Emergency Department to Inpatient Services

ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 9 2010
Ming-Yuan Hong MD
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:958,964 © 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine Abstract Objectives:, Scabies is highly contagious and requires prompt diagnosis and implementation of infection control measures to prevent transmission and outbreaks. This study investigated the clinical and administrative correlates associated with missed diagnosis of scabies in an emergency department (ED). Methods:, This was a retrospective study of patients with incidental scabies infestations who were admitted to a university hospital via the ED during a 4-year period. Results:, A total of 135 inpatients were identified as having scabies; among them, 111 patients (82%) had visited the ED. Scabies were diagnosed during the ED stay in 39 of 111 patients (35%), while the diagnosis was missed in the ED in 72 patients (65%). Although no geographic clusters suggestive of nosocomial scabies transmission were registered, 160 medical workers and one hospitalized patient received prophylactic treatment due to direct skin-to-skin contact with inpatient scabies cases during the study period. Overcrowding (odds ratio [OR] = 8.4; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.9 to 38.0) and time constraints (OR = 8.2; 95% CI = 1.9 to 34.7) in the ED were associated with a missed diagnosis of scabies during ED stay. Patients with lower illness severity scores were at higher risk for failure to diagnose and to treat scabies prior to hospital admission (OR = 5.7; 95% CI = 1.6 to 20.9). Conclusions:, Missed diagnoses of scabies during ED stay may result in nosocomial spread and increase the unnecessary use of prophylactic treatments. ED overcrowding, time constraints, and less severe illness compromise ED recognition of scabies. Health care workers should be especially alert for signs of scabies infestations under these conditions. [source]


Redesigning acute mental health services: an audit into the quality of inpatient care before and after service redesign in Grampian

JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC & MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, Issue 6 2005
M. MELVIN rnm dip cog psych
As part of the redesign of adult mental health services in Grampian and in line with the Scottish Framework for Mental Health (1997), the decision was made to close one of the five acute mental health admission wards within Royal Cornhill Hospital. Inpatient services were to be provided within the remaining four admission wards by increasing their bed compliment from 25 to 28 and by increasing the staffing compliment of the community mental health teams serving Aberdeen city and Aberdeenshire. The adult mental health directorate commissioned an audit to measure certain key items in the 6 months leading up to the redesign and in the 6 months post redesign. This audit focused on the number of admissions, the bed occupancy, the number of incidents, the number of days the ward doors were locked, observation levels, sickness levels and the number of bank hours used. These factors were felt to be important indicators in the monitoring of the quality of patient care as any increase in the instance of these factors could be seen as detrimental to patient care. Therefore, a comparison of these factors, pre- and post-ward closure, was seen as a useful method of assessing the effect of the ward closure and the subsequent loss of seven acute inpatient beds. As the results of the audit showed that the rate of these factors had not increased, it was assumed the quality of care in the inpatient service was as at least as good following the redesign as it was before it. Two issues arose from the audit that merit further discussion, that is, the differences in the numbers of observations and in the numbers of times the ward doors were locked. Two G grade community psychiatric nurses were employed on a 0.5 session per week basis to collect and collate the data. [source]


The development of the Recovery and Prevention of Psychosis Service in Melbourne, Australia

EARLY INTERVENTION IN PSYCHIATRY, Issue 2 2009
Brendan P. Murphy
Abstract Aim: To describe the establishment of a multicomponent, phase-specific, early intervention service for young people experiencing psychosis. Methods: The Recovery and Prevention of Psychosis Service commenced streamed clinical service delivery in November 2004, providing comprehensive case management for up to 3 years within Victoria's largest metropolitan health service. It delivers phase-oriented treatment focusing on early detection, recovery and relapse prevention, and minimizing disability and secondary comorbidity. The combined programme covers training and professional development, data collection and evaluation, specialist intervention services, group programme work and community development. Results: Of the first 151 clients, 70.2% were male, the average age at first presentation was 20.9 years, 15% were under 18 at first contact and 67% required inpatient admission at least once. Mean age at first contact was 20.84 years for those requiring inpatient services and 70% admitted were male. The average length of stay was 25.69 days and 23% were secluded, with an average of 2.1 seclusions. A large percentage of Recovery and Prevention of Psychosis Service clients (81%) required involuntary treatment, a significantly greater proportion of admitted patients were on Community Treatment Orders compared to those never admitted (22.5% cf. 4.1%; P = 0.04) and 92% of those admitted subsequently relapsed compared to 8% of those not admitted (P = 0.02). Conclusions: Recovery and Prevention of Psychosis Service is successfully developing a fully integrated first episode service. Recent developments include expanding the period of care up to 5 years for selected patients, the recruitment of a health promotions officer and planning for the development of a youth inpatient unit. [source]


Social deprivation and the outcomes of crisis resolution and home treatment for people with mental health problems: a historical cohort study

HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, Issue 5 2010
Richard Kingsford BA (Hons) MA DipSW MSc
Abstract The development of crisis resolution and home treatment (CRHT) teams has been central to the UK Government's objective of reducing reliance on hospital-based care and is supported by a growing body of evidence. However, there has been no research specifically exploring the relationship between social deprivation and CRHT teams, in spite of evidence of an association between social deprivation and increased pressure on inpatient services. This article reports a study which tested the hypothesis that social deprivation is associated with the outcome of CRHT interventions. Using a historical cohort study design, we examined a total of 260 accepted referrals to a CRHT. Social deprivation was measured by the Index of Multiple Deprivation (Office of the Deputy Prime Minister 2004) as a predictor of CRHT interventions outcomes. CRHT outcomes were dichotomised into successful and unsuccessful and were defined with reference to the CRHT operational policy. Univariate analysis found that people who lived in more socially deprived areas had a poorer outcome, as did older people and those referred from the enhanced community mental health team (CMHT). Logistic regression analysis found that age and referral source were independently associated with outcome. Analysis of the demographic data also suggested a non-significant trend towards men having less successful outcomes. Further analysis exploring the characteristics of the different referral sources to the CRHT found that those referred from the enhanced CMHT were significantly more likely to be from the most deprived area. This suggested a relationship between an enhanced level of mental health need, social deprivation and poor outcome of CRHT intervention. [source]


The effects of Taiwan's National Health Insurance on access and health status of the elderly

HEALTH ECONOMICS, Issue 3 2007
Likwang Chen
Abstract The primary objective of this paper is to evaluate the impact of Taiwan's National Health Insurance program (NHI), established in 1995, on improving elderly access to care and health status. Further, we estimate the extent to which NHI reduces gaps in access and health across income groups. Using data from a longitudinal survey, we adopt a difference-in-difference methodology to estimate the causal effect of Taiwan's NHI. Our results show that Taiwan's NHI has significantly increased utilization of both outpatient and inpatient care among the elderly, and such effects were more salient for people in the low- or middle-income groups. Our findings also reveal that although Taiwan's NHI greatly increased the utilization of both outpatient and inpatient services, this increased utilization of health services did not reduce mortality or lead to better self-perceived general health status for Taiwanese elderly. Measures more sensitive than mortality and self-perceived general health may be necessary for discerning the health effects of NHI. Alternatively, the lack of NHI effects on health may reflect other quality and efficiency problems inherent in the system not yet addressed by NHI. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


Trends in Inpatient Treatment Intensity among Medicare Beneficiaries at the End of Life

HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, Issue 2 2004
Amber E. Barnato
Objective. Although an increasing fraction of Medicare beneficiaries die outside the hospital, the proportion of total Medicare expenditures attributable to care in the last year of life has not dropped. We sought to determine whether disproportionate increases in hospital treatment intensity over time among decedents are responsible for the persistent growth in end-of-life expenditures. Data Source. The 1985,1999 Medicare Medical Provider Analysis and Review (MedPAR) and Denominator files. Study Design. We sampled inpatient claims for 20 percent of all elderly fee-for-service Medicare decedents and 5 percent of all survivors between 1985 and 1999 and calculated age-, race-, and gender-adjusted per-capita inpatient expenditures and rates of intensive care unit (ICU) and intensive procedure use. We used the decedent-to-survivor expenditure ratio to determine whether growth rates among decedents outpaced growth relative to survivors, using the growth rate among survivors to control for secular trends in treatment intensity. Data Collection. The data were collected by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Principal Findings. Real inpatient expenditures for the Medicare fee-for-service population increased by 60 percent, from $58 billion in 1985 to $90 billion in 1999, one-quarter of which were accrued by decedents. Between 1985 and 1999 the proportion of beneficiaries with one or more intensive care unit (ICU) admission increased from 30.5 percent to 35.0 percent among decedents and from 5.0 percent to 7.1 percent among survivors; those undergoing one or more intensive procedure increased from 20.9 percent to 31.0 percent among decedents and from 5.8 percent to 8.5 percent among survivors. The majority of intensive procedures in the United States were performed in the more numerous survivors, although in 1999 50 percent of feeding tube placements, 60 percent of intubations/tracheostomies, and 75 percent of cardiopulmonary resuscitations were in decedents. The proportion of beneficiaries dying in a hospital decreased from 44.4 percent to 39.3 percent, but the likelihood of being admitted to an ICU or undergoing an intensive procedure during the terminal hospitalization increased from 38.0 percent to 39.8 percent and from 17.8 percent to 30.3 percent, respectively. One in five Medicare beneficiaries who died in the hospital in 1999 received mechanical ventilation during their terminal admission. Conclusions. Inpatient treatment intensity for all fee-for-service beneficiaries increased between 1985 and 1999 regardless of survivorship status. Absolute changes in per-capita hospital expenditures, ICU admissions, and intensive inpatient procedure use were much higher among decedents. Relative changes were similar except for ICU admissions, which grew faster among survivors. The secular decline in in-hospital deaths has not resulted in decreased per capita utilization of expensive inpatient services in the last year of life. This could imply that net hospital expenditures for the dying might have been even higher over this time period if the shift toward hospice had not occurred. [source]


Community mental health nursing: Keeping pace with care delivery?

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING, Issue 3 2008
Julie Henderson
ABSTRACT:, The National Mental Health Strategy has been associated with the movement of service delivery into the community, creating greater demand for community services. The literature suggests that the closure of psychiatric beds and earlier discharge from inpatient services, have contributed to an intensification of the workload of community mental health nurses. This paper reports findings from the first stage of an action research project to develop a workload equalization tool for community mental health nurses. The study presents data from focus groups conducted with South Australian community mental health nurses to identify issues that impact upon their workload. Four themes were identified, relating to staffing and workforce issues, clients' characteristics or needs, regional issues, and the impact of the health-care system. The data show that the workload of community mental health nurses is increased by the greater complexity of needs of community mental health clients. Service change has also resulted in poor integration between inpatient and community services and tension between generic case management and specialist roles resulting in nurses undertaking tasks for other case managers. These issues, along with difficulties in recruiting and retaining staff, have led to the intensification of community mental health work and a crisis response to care with less time for targeted interventions. [source]


The Relationship of Indwelling Urinary Catheters to Death, Length of Hospital Stay, Functional Decline, and Nursing Home Admission in Hospitalized Older Medical Patients

JOURNAL OF AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, Issue 2 2007
Jayna M. Holroyd-Leduc MD
OBJECTIVES: To determine the association between indwelling urinary catheterization without a specific medical indication and adverse outcomes. DESIGN: Prospective cohort. SETTING: General medical inpatient services at a teaching hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Five hundred thirty-five patients aged 70 and older admitted without a specific medical indication for urinary catheterization. INTERVENTION: Indwelling urinary catheterization within 48 hours of admission. MEASUREMENTS: Death, length of hospital stay, decline in ability to perform activities of daily living (ADLs), and new admission to a nursing home. RESULTS: Indwelling urinary catheters were placed in 76 of the 535 (14%) patients without a specific medical indication. Catheterized patients were more likely to die in the hospital (6.6% vs 1.5% of those not catheterized, P=.006) and within 90 days of hospital discharge (25% vs 10.5%, P<.001); the greater risk of death with catheterization persisted in a propensity-matched analysis (hazard ratio (HR)=2.42, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.04,5.65). Catheterized patients also had longer lengths of hospital stay (median, 6 days vs 4 days; P=.001); this association persisted in a propensity-matched analysis (HR=1.46, 95% CI=1.03,2.08). Catheterization was not associated (P>.05) with decline in ADL function or with admission to a nursing home. CONCLUSION: In this cohort of older patients, urinary catheterization without a specific medical indication was associated with greater risk of death and longer hospital stay. [source]


Psychiatric inpatient care for adults with intellectual disabilities: generic or specialist units?

JOURNAL OF INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY RESEARCH, Issue 1 2004
K. Xenitidis
Abstract Background When adults with intellectual disabilities (ID) require a psychiatric admission, general adult mental health units are often used. Specialist units have emerged recently as a care option but there is only limited evidence of their effectiveness. Thus this study aims to describe and evaluate the effectiveness of a specialist inpatient unit and report on the utilization of generic and specialist inpatient services. Method All patients admitted to a specialist ID psychiatric unit were evaluated on admission and immediately after discharge on a number of outcome measures. In addition, they were compared with those admitted to general adult mental health units covering the same catchment area. Results Significant improvements were demonstrated within the specialist unit cohort on measures including psychopathology, global level of functioning, behavioural impairment and severity of mental illness. The specialist unit patients had a longer length of inpatient stay but were less likely to be discharged to out-of-area residential placement. Conclusions Specialist units are an effective care option for this group of people. [source]


Catastrophic payments for health care among households in urban Tamil Nadu, India

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, Issue 2 2009
Salem Deenadayalan Vaishnavi
Abstract Urban residents in India face important health problems due to unhygienic conditions, excessive crowding and lack of proper sanitation. The private sector has started occupying the centre stage of the health system and households are burdened with increasing levels of health expenditure. This paper aims to study out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) and the extent of catastrophic payments for health care among households in a highly urbanised state, Tamil Nadu. The study used data on morbidity and health care for the year 2004 collected by the National Sample Survey Organization, India. Care was sought for 84 per cent of illness episodes in urban areas, and the majority used private sector providers (67 per cent for inpatients and 78 per cent for outpatients). Mean OOPE for inpatients and outpatients was higher for households with higher income. The average cost burden per visit was higher among those who sought care from private providers for inpatient services (29 per cent of household consumption expenditure) and outpatient services (20% of household consumption expenditure) compared with the burden associated with public health service use (3,4 per cent of consumption expenditure). About 60 per cent of households which used private health services faced catastrophic payments at the 10 per cent threshold level. To avoid catastrophic expenditure, greater use of the public sector which is providing services at an affordable cost is needed. Improving access to public health services, better gate-keeping systems, stronger controls on drug prices and increasing the quality of services are required to reduce the incidence of catastrophic expenditure both on inpatients and outpatients. Greater use of risk pooling mechanisms would encourage the poor to seek health care and also to protect households from all socio-economic groups from catastrophic expenditure. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


11 Dawn Patrol Patient Follow-up Protocol

ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Issue 2008
Justin Williams
Follow-up of patients after their emergency department course provides a rich educational experience for residents, but due to time and logistical constraints, is infrequently performed in a scheduled and rigorous manner. The Dawn Patrol initiative was added to our residency curriculum to facilitate and protocolize patient follow-up for education and feedback on patient care. It also strives to improve communication with inpatient services, and provides a means of collection for morbidity / mortality and risk management cases. Our process functions by charging the clinical senior resident who is going off-shift, with reviewing the admission record for the past 24 hours. Interesting, clinically important, or cryptic case presentations are selected via our electronic medical record for review at the end of Morning Report. Generally, 1-3 new cases are selected for review each weekday morning. These cases are then recorded on a dry erase board in the Morning Report room, and the cases are followed until inpatient discharge, or are no longer of clinical interest. Visits to the inpatient wards are encouraged. Patient callbacks of outpatients are also eligible for inclusion. The cases are updated daily, and generally 5-10 cases are reviewed per day in approximately 10 minutes. The staff member attending Morning Report is responsible for providing bulleted teaching points on each case. The Dawn Patrol patient follow-up initiative seeks to improve emergency medicine resident education by facilitating and protocolizing patient follow-up, and provides real-time feedback on patient care performed in the emergency department. [source]