2020
Cardiac Enhanced Recovery After Surgery: A Guide to Team Building and Successful Implementation
Salenger R, Morton-Bailey V, Grant M, Gregory A, Williams J, Engelman D. Cardiac Enhanced Recovery After Surgery: A Guide to Team Building and Successful Implementation. Seminars In Thoracic And Cardiovascular Surgery 2020, 32: 187-196. PMID: 32120008, DOI: 10.1053/j.semtcvs.2020.02.029.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCardiac Surgical ProceduresClinical CompetenceCooperative BehaviorDelivery of Health Care, IntegratedEnhanced Recovery After SurgeryHumansInterdisciplinary CommunicationOrganizational InnovationPatient Care TeamPatient-Centered CareProgram DevelopmentRecovery of FunctionTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeConceptsEnhanced recoveryCardiac programApplication of ERASEffect of ERASNormal functional statusLength of stayCompleteness of recoveryPostoperative complicationsColorectal surgeryERAS programCardiac surgeryPerioperative careFunctional statusSurgeryPatientsPhysiologic stressSurgical subspecialtiesERASStaff satisfactionMultiple studiesPatient-centered systemCareComplicationsStay
2019
Article Commentary: Beyond the 12 Steps: Integrating Chaplaincy Services into Veteran Affairs Substance use Specialty Care
Earl BSW, Klee A, Cooke JD, Edens EL. Article Commentary: Beyond the 12 Steps: Integrating Chaplaincy Services into Veteran Affairs Substance use Specialty Care. Substance Abuse 2019, 40: 444-452. PMID: 31206342, DOI: 10.1080/08897077.2019.1621243.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsVeterans Affairs Connecticut Healthcare SystemAddiction treatmentSpecialty care settingsMultiple health care disciplinesVeterans Health AdministrationNew clinical serviceSubstance use treatmentOutpatient addiction treatmentNew treatment settingsSUD clinicsHealth care disciplinesOutpatient settingPatient satisfactionSpecialty careCare settingsTreatment settingsHealth AdministrationClinical servicesUse treatmentCare disciplinesStaff satisfactionHealthcare systemChaplaincy servicesIndividual treatmentInterprofessional training
2016
Multidisciplinary process improvement to optimize oral chemotherapy safety.
Amport S, Adelson K, Fradkin M, Havriliak R, Harrison M, Abdelghany O, Kregling S, Wright J, Morrow B, Sterling R, Smith M, Esposito F, Stutsky M, Miller L, Lilenbaum R, Lyons C, Chiang A, Cohen H. Multidisciplinary process improvement to optimize oral chemotherapy safety. Journal Of Clinical Oncology 2016, 34: 134-134. DOI: 10.1200/jco.2016.34.7_suppl.134.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMedication assistance programsPatient educationOral chemotherapy agentsPatient phone callsMultidisciplinary care modelStandardized patient educationMultidisciplinary task forceAddress patients' concernsTherapy delayChemotherapy safetyAdherence monitoringParenteral chemotherapyPatient outcomesPatient concernsChemotherapy agentsCare modelProvider trainingSpecialty pharmacyClinical careClinical teamClinical supportDay 5PatientsDrug accessStaff satisfaction
2014
Implementation of the WHO Surgical Safety Checklist in an Ethiopian Referral Hospital
Bashford T, Reshamwalla S, McAuley J, Allen NH, McNatt Z, Gebremedhen YD. Implementation of the WHO Surgical Safety Checklist in an Ethiopian Referral Hospital. Patient Safety In Surgery 2014, 8: 16. PMID: 24678854, PMCID: PMC4022152, DOI: 10.1186/1754-9493-8-16.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSurgical Safety ChecklistWHO Surgical Safety ChecklistSafety checklistLow-resource settingsReferral hospitalCompliance rateHigh staff satisfactionEthiopian referral hospitalPublic referral hospitalStaff satisfactionOverall compliance rateCompletion ratesPerioperative safetyHigher completion ratesChecklist complianceGeneral anestheticsVolunteer cliniciansSupportive supervisionSubsequent auditPatient safetyEvidence baseSatisfaction questionnaireMaximal benefitStudy periodTeam introduction
2013
Development of a Brief Instrument for Assessing Healthcare Employee Satisfaction in a Low-Income Setting
Alpern R, Canavan ME, Thompson JT, McNatt Z, Tatek D, Lindfield T, Bradley EH. Development of a Brief Instrument for Assessing Healthcare Employee Satisfaction in a Low-Income Setting. PLOS ONE 2013, 8: e79053. PMID: 24223878, PMCID: PMC3818514, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079053.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHealth centersCronbach's alpha coefficientSummary scoresAlpha coefficientStaff satisfactionInternal consistencyHealth care workersSatisfaction of employeesEmployee retention ratesHealth care professionalsWorld Health Report 2006Content validityHealth Care SurveyOverall satisfaction itemLow-income settingsEthiopian Federal MinistryExcellent internal consistencyStaff satisfaction surveyCare SurveyEmployee satisfactionCare professionalsCognitive interviewsCare workersJob contentConvergent validity
2005
Primary Intensive Care: Pilot Study of a Primary CareBased Intervention for High-Utilizing Patients
Brown KE, Levine JM, Fiellin DA, O'connor P, Sledge WH. Primary Intensive Care: Pilot Study of a Primary CareBased Intervention for High-Utilizing Patients. Population Health Management 2005, 8: 169-177. PMID: 15966782, DOI: 10.1089/dis.2005.8.169.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPilot studyHospital cost differencesWeekly multidisciplinary clinicHigher healthcare utilizationPrimary care patientsEmergency department usePrimary care centersPresence of psychopathologyManagement patientsCare patientsHealthcare utilizationMultidisciplinary clinicIntensive careDepartment useCare centerInpatient servicesPatientsPsychiatric diagnosisSpecial interventionStaff satisfactionStatistical significanceInterventionClinicCost differencesDiagnosis
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