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American Journal Of Medical Quality[JOURNAL]

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Capturing the Patient Voice for Diabetes Eye Exams.

Du S, Lambrechts S, Han M

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713602 · Publisher ↗

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When Good Was Not Enough.

Kolade VO

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713601 · Publisher ↗

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Improving Maternal Health Care Quality and Outcomes: Evaluation of a Pregnancy Medical Home.

Schilling LM, Fraumeni BR, Nacht AS … +6 more , Abraham AG, Bauguess HD, Matesi G, Fringuello ME, Rashidyan L, Billups SJ

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713600 · Publisher ↗

Current maternal care recommendations in the United States focus on monitoring fetal development, management of pregnancy complications, and screening for behavioral health concerns. Often missing from these recommendati... Current maternal care recommendations in the United States focus on monitoring fetal development, management of pregnancy complications, and screening for behavioral health concerns. Often missing from these recommendations is support for patients experiencing socioeconomic or behavioral health challenges during pregnancy. A Pregnancy Medical Home (PMH) is a multidisciplinary maternal health care team with nurse navigators serving as patient advocates to improve the quality of care a patient receives and health outcomes for both mother and infant. Using bivariate comparisons between PMH patients and reference groups, as well as interviews with project team members and PMH graduates, this evaluation assessed the impact of a PMH at an academic medical university on patient care and birth outcomes. This PMH increased depression screenings during pregnancy and increased referrals to behavioral health care. This evaluation did not find improvements in maternal or infant birth outcomes. Interviews found notable successes and areas for program enhancement.

The Use of a Checklist to Optimize Electrolyte Replacement in the ICU.

DePriest J, Nixon J

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713599 · Publisher ↗

Electrolyte replacement protocols are routinely used in intensive care units (ICU) to guide magnesium replacement. Guided by serum levels, these protocols include no patient-specific factors despite a literature showing... Electrolyte replacement protocols are routinely used in intensive care units (ICU) to guide magnesium replacement. Guided by serum levels, these protocols include no patient-specific factors despite a literature showing ICU patients routinely have significant deficits despite normal serum levels. The authors developed a checklist to help identify patients requiring more aggressive magnesium replacement than the electrolyte replacement protocol would provide. The checklist included risk factors for having significant magnesium deficits and for developing arrhythmias. The checklist was retrospectively applied to 364 medical ICU patients. Diabetic patients prescribed outpatient diuretics were defined as the highest-risk population. A total of 88% of patients in this subgroup had normal magnesium levels. Despite averaging 3.4 risk factors per patient, only 3 of 32 patients received magnesium. Applying the checklist would have suggested additional repletion for at least 85% of patients. A checklist can help identify ICU patients who may require more aggressive magnesium supplementation than protocols will provide.

Improving Barriers to Timely Colonoscopies: A New Approach to Overcoming Gaps in Medical Care.

Borgen A, Regan H, Strelow B

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713598 · Publisher ↗

This study investigates delays in transitioning from positive noninvasive multitarget stool DNA test results to scheduled diagnostic colonoscopies and identifies strategies aimed at improving patient care. A retrospectiv... This study investigates delays in transitioning from positive noninvasive multitarget stool DNA test results to scheduled diagnostic colonoscopies and identifies strategies aimed at improving patient care. A retrospective review revealed a 53% reduction in the average time from positive multitarget stool DNA test results to ordering colonoscopies postintervention. The findings demonstrate the significance of implementing a new communication system to expedite transitions in health care processes, showcasing its potential to significantly improve efficiency in patient care and health care provider workflows across various clinical testing scenarios. The findings emphasize the transformative impact of this communication system, shedding light on its ability to streamline processes and enhance patient care and staff experience.

Improving the Pipeline of Trainee Projects and Publications.

Cooper MR

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38713597 · Publisher ↗

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Bypassing the Brick-and-Mortar Hospital: Increasing Direct Admissions from the Emergency Department to Inpatient Hospital-at-Home.

Webster LW, Cox MD, Fazio JR … +5 more , Felix HM, Greenwell HR, Botella RM, Maniaci MJ, Grek AA

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38683730 · Publisher ↗

Home hospital programs continue to grow across the United States. There are limited studies around the process of patient selection and successful acquisition from the emergency department. The article describes how an i... Home hospital programs continue to grow across the United States. There are limited studies around the process of patient selection and successful acquisition from the emergency department. The article describes how an interdisciplinary team used quality improvement methodology to significantly increase the number of admissions directly from the emergency department to the Advanced Care at Home program.

Improving Parental Knowledge of Medically Complex Neonates Through Scheduled Conferences.

Mooney S, Devagiri S, Puuri A … +3 more , Naylor M, Bear K, Akpan US

Am J Med Qual · 2024 May-Jun 01 · PMID 38683697 · Publisher ↗

Reports of parental dissatisfaction from incomplete or inconsistent information led to a quality improvement (QI) project to establish planned family conferences at 10 days and 1 month of life, for 50% of the medically c... Reports of parental dissatisfaction from incomplete or inconsistent information led to a quality improvement (QI) project to establish planned family conferences at 10 days and 1 month of life, for 50% of the medically complex neonates admitted to a neonatal intensive care unit within 1 year. A QI team instituted a system in which social workers scheduled family conferences and a neonatologist conducted the conferences. Team members tracked measures using statistical process control charts over 21 months. The QI team scheduled conferences for greater than 80% of eligible families, with an 86% completion rate on days 10 and 30, exceeding project goals of 50%. The majority of the families surveyed were satisfied with the meetings. Only 2% of parents surveyed found meetings burdensome, compared to 14% of physicians. A sustainable method for scheduling meetings and preparation for conferences, including the use of a template led to success.

Integration of Automated Office Blood Pressure Measurement Into a General Internal Medicine Residency Clinic.

Seifer BJ, Kieffer KA

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38424712 · Publisher ↗

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Improving Equity and Accuracy in Admission Medication Reconciliation.

Diaz-Barbe A, He E, Tran MC … +1 more , Cerasale MT

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38424711 · Publisher ↗

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The Real-World Foundation of Adapting Clinical Guidelines for the Digital Age.

Michaels M, Jakhmola P, Lubin IM … +7 more , Fochtmann LJ, Casey DE, Opelka FG, Skapik J, Larsen K, Tailor A, Matson-Koffman D

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38424709 · Publisher ↗

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Reflections on 3 Years of Innovation: Recognizing the Need for Innovation Beyond the Clinical Care Pathway.

Bardach SH, Perry AN, Cavanaugh ET … +1 more , Mulley AG

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38403968 · Publisher ↗

The Susan and Richard Levy Healthcare Delivery Incubator is designed to bring about rapid, sustainable, scalable, and transformational health care redesign. All 10 projects in the initial 3 cohorts of teams embraced the... The Susan and Richard Levy Healthcare Delivery Incubator is designed to bring about rapid, sustainable, scalable, and transformational health care redesign. All 10 projects in the initial 3 cohorts of teams embraced the Incubator process-forming diverse teams and following a design-thinking informed curriculum-and each successfully implemented improvements or innovations by the end of their project. The purpose of this article is to identify the key features of teams' work that may help account for projects' success. For the 10 projects completed, findings from debrief interviews and staff observations were examined to identify processes key to project's success. Analysis highlighted cross-project learnings that indicate nonclinical aspects of care delivery that play a critical role in project innovation success. Innovating health care delivery requires considering social and political determinants of health. The Incubator's process and structures enable teams to identify and respond to a broad range of health determinants.

The Evolving Landscape of Emergency Department Patient Transfers: Challenges and Opportunities.

Shaw DL, Chiu DT, Sanchez LD

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38403967 · Publisher ↗

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The Impact of Text Messaging to Promote Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) Completion in Orthopedic Practice: Findings From a Randomized Controlled Study.

Ziegenfuss JY, Asche SE, Dehmer SP … +3 more , Reams M, Grossman ES, Solberg LI

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38403961 · Full text

It is difficult to achieve high response rates to Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) surveys collected as part of clinical care. However, they are operationally and clinically important. To understand the impact o... It is difficult to achieve high response rates to Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) surveys collected as part of clinical care. However, they are operationally and clinically important. To understand the impact of text message reminders on response rates to PROMs collected via email as part of routine care for hip or knee replacement surgery, initial nonresponders were randomized to receive a text reminder or not at 7 and 12 days, if needed. At day 7, the overall survey response rate was 63%. Model-derived estimates for survey return after this point were 51.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 48.0%-54.2%) in the text arm compared to 34.5% (95% CI, 31.6%-37.6%) in the no text arm. The effect of text messages on response rates did not vary by subpopulations considered nor were there differences in rates of key outcomes between the 2 groups, suggesting that it did not impact any underlying response bias. Given the relative low cost of text messages, they can be an efficient means to increase response rates.

Improving Compliance with Preoperative Nasal Povidone-Iodine to Prevent Surgical Site Infection in Vascular and Neurosurgery Services in a Community Teaching Hospital.

Ugwummadu C, Schmidt E, Hoeprich M … +6 more , Bonta A, Ridgway K, Walker L, Witkowski J, Weinstein J, Cooper MR

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38403957 · Publisher ↗

Surgical site infections (SSI) remain a cause of morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, surgical readmission, and death. Nasal colonization with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcal aureus is a frequent cause of device-re... Surgical site infections (SSI) remain a cause of morbidity, prolonged hospitalization, surgical readmission, and death. Nasal colonization with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcal aureus is a frequent cause of device-related SSI and nasal mupirocin has been used for prevention. More recently, povidone-iodine nasal swabs have become an alternative. It is cheaper, ensures compliance and there are no concerns regarding antimicrobial resistance. However, its adoption was suboptimal in a community hospital system in southwestern Ohio, especially in neurosurgery and vascular surgery. Quality improvement techniques, including solicitation of stakeholder input, surgeons and perioperative nurses' education, and the use of reminders to order and administer the povidone-iodine nasal swabs improved physician ordering and nurse administration compliance, leading to fewer infections. The interventions continued after the project was completed, sustaining decreases in neurosurgery and vascular surgery, and fewer SSI through the first years of the pandemic. Despite the complexity of these surgeries, simple interventions were effective in addressing the problem.

Incorporating Acute Conditions into Risk-Adjustment for Provider Profiling: The Case of the US News and World Report Best Hospitals Rankings Methodology.

Hammill BG, Hoffman MN, Clark AG … +3 more , Bae JG, Shannon RP, Curtis LH

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Mar-Apr 01 · PMID 38386971 · Full text

Several years ago, the US News and World Report changed their risk-adjustment methodology, now relying almost exclusively on chronic conditions for risk adjustment. The impacts of adding selected acute conditions like pn... Several years ago, the US News and World Report changed their risk-adjustment methodology, now relying almost exclusively on chronic conditions for risk adjustment. The impacts of adding selected acute conditions like pneumonia, sepsis, and electrolyte disorders ("augmented") to their current risk models ("base") for 4 specialties-cardiology, neurology, oncology, and pulmonology-on estimates of hospital performance are reported here. In the augmented models, many acute conditions were associated with substantial risks of mortality. Compared to the base models, the discrimination and calibration of the augmented models for all specialties were improved. While estimated hospital performance was highly correlated between the 2 models, the inclusion of acute conditions in risk-adjustment models meaningfully improved the predictive ability of those models and had noticeable effects on hospital performance estimates. Measures or conditions that address disease severity should always be included when risk-adjusting hospitalization outcomes, especially if the goal is provider profiling.

Standardizing Sepsis Patient Education: A Quality Improvement Process.

Koschel B, Leonard C, Sanders SS

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Jan-Feb 01 · PMID 38151813 · Publisher ↗

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The Impact of Earplugs and Eye Masks on Sleep Quality in Hospital Patients.

Wang T, Al-Khafaji J, Solomon G

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Jan-Feb 01 · PMID 38151812 · Full text

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The Clinical Learning Environment: Past, Present, and Future.

Casey DE

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Jan-Feb 01 · PMID 38151811 · Publisher ↗

In this issue of AJMQ, Graduate Medical Education leaders from a large nationally renowned academic medical center describe in detail the "Residents and Fellows Leading Interprofessional Continuous Improvement Teams" pro... In this issue of AJMQ, Graduate Medical Education leaders from a large nationally renowned academic medical center describe in detail the "Residents and Fellows Leading Interprofessional Continuous Improvement Teams" program with a focus on the collaboration within their health system in alignment with Clinical Learning Environment review since its inception. In addition, the authors share key outcomes of the program using the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, maintenance framework, additional structural (eg, timeline) and outcome (eg, scholarship) measures for further context within Graduate Medical Education and Undergraduate Medical Education, and describe elements which supported the program's success and lessons learned.

Prospective Study of the Multisite Spread of a Medication Safety Intervention: Factors Common to Hospitals With Improved Outcomes.

Kaplan HC, Goldstein SL, Rubinson C … +13 more , Daraiseh N, Zhang F, Rodgers IM, Dahale DS, Askenazi DJ, Somers MJG, Zaritsky JJ, Misurac J, Chadha V, Yonekawa KE, Sutherland SM, Weng PL, Walsh KE

Am J Med Qual · 2024 Jan-Feb 01 · PMID 38127682 · Publisher ↗

Context and implementation approaches can impede the spread of patient safety interventions. The objective of this article is to characterize factors associated with improved outcomes among 9 hospitals implementing a med... Context and implementation approaches can impede the spread of patient safety interventions. The objective of this article is to characterize factors associated with improved outcomes among 9 hospitals implementing a medication safety intervention. Nephrotoxic Injury Negated by Just-in-Time Action (NINJA) is a pharmacist-driven intervention that led to a sustained reduction in nephrotoxic medication-associated acute kidney injury (NTMx-AKI) at 1 hospital. Using qualitative comparative analysis, the team prospectively assessed the association between context and implementation factors and NTMx-AKI reduction during NINJA spread to 9 hospitals. Five hospitals reduced NTMx-AKI. These 5 had either (1) a pharmacist champion and >2 pharmacists working on NINJA (Scon 1.0, Scov 0.8) or (2) a nephrologist-implementing NINJA with minimal competing organizational priorities (Scon 1.0, Scov 0.2). Interviews identified ways NINJA team leaders obtained pharmacist support or successfully implemented without that support. In conclusion, these findings have implications for future spread of NINJA and suggest an approach to study spread of safety interventions more broadly.
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