22 resultados para vibro-impact system
Resumo:
The purpose of this study was to examine and describe the changes in physician provider workforce, before and after two regulatory changes were implemented by the Texas Workers' Compensation Commission (TWCC) in August and September of 2003: Fee schedules and the Approved Doctor's List (ADL). The number and type of physicians who participated in the program after the changes went into effect were measured and compared to projections based on natural attrition. In addition, interviews with key stakeholders were conducted regarding the program changes. ^ Collectively, this evidence suggests that physician response followed the same patterns as shown in previous research. The number of physicians who continued to participate and bill the Texas workers' compensation program decreased significantly as a result of the regulatory changes. The consequences of these changes on access and quality of care need to be documented with empirical research. The availability of physicians in the workforce is linked to access to care. The type and location of physicians who remained in the system also have impact on quality and access to care. ^
Resumo:
Malaria poses a significant public health problem worldwide. The World Health Organization indicates that approximately 40% of the world's population and almost 85% of the population from the South–East Asian region is at risk of contracting malaria. India being the most populous country in the region, contributes the highest number of malaria cases and deaths attributed to malaria. Orissa is the state that has the highest number of malaria cases and deaths attributable to malaria. A secondary data analysis was carried out to evaluate the effectiveness of the World bank-assisted Malaria Action Program in the state of Orissa under the health sector reforms of 1995-96. The secondary analysis utilized the government of India's National Anti Malaria Management Information System's (NAMMIS) surveillance data and the National Family Health Survey (NFHS–I and NFHS–II) datasets to compare the malaria mortality and morbidity in the state between 1992-93 and 1998-99. Results revealed no effect of the intervention and indicated an increase of 2.18 times in malaria mortality between 1992-1999 and an increase of 1.53 times in malaria morbidity between 1992-93 and 1998-99 in the state. The difference in the age-adjusted malaria morbidity in the state between the time periods of 1992-93 and 1998-99 proved to be highly significant (t = 4.29 df=16, p<. 0005) whereas the difference between the increase of age-adjusted malaria morbidity during 1992-93 and 1998-99 between Orissa (with intervention) and Bihar (no intervention) proved to be non significant (t=.0471 df=16, p<.50). Factors such as underutilization of World Bank funds for the malaria control program, inadequate health care infrastructure, structural adjustment problems, poor management, poor financial management, parasite resistance to anti-malarial drugs, inadequate supply of drugs and staff shortages may have contributed to the failure of the program in the state.^
Resumo:
New reimbursement policies developed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) are revolutionizing the health care landscape in America. The policies focus on clinical quality and patient outcomes. As part of the new policies, certain hospital acquired conditions have been identified by Medicare as "reasonably preventable". Beginning October 1, 2008, Medicare will no longer reimburse hospitals for these conditions developed after admission, pressure ulcers are among the most common of these conditions.^ In this practice-based culminating experience the objective was to provide a practical account of the process of program development, implementation and evaluation in a public health setting. In order to decrease the incidence of pressure ulcers, the program development team of the hospital system developed a comprehensive pressure ulcer prevention program using a "bundled" approach. The pressure ulcer prevention bundle was based on research supported by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and addressed key areas of clinical vulnerability for pressure ulcer development. The bundle consisted of clinical processes, policies, forms, and resources designed to proactively identify patients at risk for pressure ulcer development. Each element of the bundle was evaluated to ensure ease of integration into the workflow of nurses and clinical ancillary staff. Continued monitoring of pressure ulcer incidence rates will provide statistical validation of the impact of the prevention bundle. ^
Resumo:
Introduction: The Texas Occupational Safety & Health Surveillance System (TOSHSS) was created to collect, analyze and interpret occupational injury and illness data in order to decrease the impact of occupational injuries within the state of Texas. This process evaluation was performed midway through the 4-year grant to assess the efficiency and effectiveness of the surveillance system’s planning and implementation activities1. ^ Methods: Two evaluation guidelines published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) were used as the theoretical models for this process evaluation. The Framework for Program Evaluation in Public Health was used to examine the planning and design of TOSHSS using logic models. The Framework for Evaluating Public Health Surveillance Systems was used to examine the implementation of approximately 60 surveillance activities, including uses of the data obtained from the surveillance system. ^ Results/Discussion: TOSHSS planning activities omitted the creation of a scientific advisory committee and specific activities designed to maintain contacts with stakeholders; and proposed activities should be reassessed and aligned with ongoing performance measurement criteria, including the role of collaborators in helping the surveillance system achieve each proposed activity. TOSHSS implementation activities are substantially meeting expectations and received an overall score of 61% for all activities being performed. TOSHSS is considered a surveillance system that is simple, flexible, acceptable, fairly stable, timely, moderately useful, with good data quality and a PVP of 86%. ^ Conclusions: Through the third year of TOSHSS implementation, the surveillance system is has made a considerable contribution to the collection of occupational injury and illness information within the state of Texas. Implementation of the nine recommendations provided under this process evaluation is expected to increase the overall usefulness of the surveillance system and assist TDSHS in reducing occupational fatalities, injuries, and diseases within the state of Texas. ^ 1 Disclaimer: The Texas Occupational Safety and Health Surveillance System is supported by Grant/Cooperative Agreement Number (U60 OH008473-01A1). The content of the current evaluation are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.^
Resumo:
Information technology (IT) in the hospital organization is fast becoming a key asset, particularly in light of recent reform legislation in the United States calling for expanding the role of IT in our health care system. Future payment reductions to hospitals included in current health reform are based on expected improvements in hospital operating efficiency. Since over half of hospital expenses are for labor, improved efficiency in use of labor resources can be critical in meeting this challenge. Policy makers have touted the value of IT investments to improve efficiency in response to payment reductions. ^ This study was the first to directly examine the relationship between electronic health record (EHR) technology and staffing efficiency in hospitals. As the hospital has a myriad of outputs for inpatient and outpatient care, efficiency was measured using an industry standard performance metric – full time equivalent employees per adjusted occupied bed (FTE/AOB). Three hypotheses were tested in this study.^ To operationalize EHR technology adoption, we developed three constructs to model adoption, each of which was tested by separate hypotheses. The first hypothesis that a larger number of EHR applications used by a hospital would be associated with greater staffing efficiency (or lower values of FTE/AOB) was not accepted. Association between staffing efficiency and specific EHR applications was the second hypothesis tested and accepted with some applications showing significant impacts on observed values for FTE/AOB. Finally, the hypothesis that the longer an EHR application was used in a hospital would be associated with greater labor efficiency was not accepted as the model showed few statistically significant relationships to FTE/AOB performance. Generally, there does not appear a strong relationship between EHR usage and improved labor efficiency in hospitals.^ While returns on investment from EHR usage may not come from labor efficiencies, they may be better sought using measures of quality, contribution to an efficient and effective local health care system, and improved customer satisfaction through greater patient throughput.^
Resumo:
Each year, 150 million people sustain a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI). TBI results in life-long cognitive impairments for many survivors. One observed pathological alteration following TBI are changes in glucose metabolism. Altered glucose uptake occurs in the periphery as well as in the nervous system, with an acute increase in glucose uptake, followed by a prolonged metabolic suppression. Chronic, persistent suppression of brain glucose uptake occurs in TBI patients experiencing memory loss. Abberant post-injury activation of energy-sensing signaling cascades could result in perturbed cellular metabolism. AMP-activated kinase (AMPK) is a kinase that senses low ATP levels, and promotes efficient cell energy usage. AMPK promotes energy production through increasing glucose uptake via glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4). When AMPK is activated, it phosphorylates Akt Substrate of 160 kDa (AS160), a Rab GTPase activating protein that controls Glut4 translocation. Additionally, AMPK negatively regulates energy-consumption by inhibiting protein synthesis via the mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Given that metabolic suppression has been observed post-injury, we hypothesized that activity of the AMPK pathway is transiently decreased. As AMPK activation increases energy efficiency of the cell, we proposed that increasing AMPK activity to combat the post-injury energy crisis would improve cognitive outcome. Additionally, we expected that inhibiting AMPK targets would be detrimental. We first investigated the role of an existing state of hyperglycemia on TBI outcome, as hyperglycemia correlates with increased mortality and decreased cognitive outcome in clinical studies. Inducing hyperglycemia had no effect on outcome; however, we discovered that AMPK and AS160 phosphorylation were altered post-injury. We conducted vii work to characterize this period of AMPK suppression and found that AMPK phosphorylation was significantly decreased in the hippocampus and cortex between 24 hours and 3 days post-injury, and phosphorylation of its downstream targets was consistently altered. Based on this period of observed decreased AMPK activity, we administered an AMPK activator post-injury, and this improved cognitive outcome. Finally, to examine whether AMPK-regulated target Glut4 is involved in post-injury glucose metabolism, we applied an inhibitor and found this treatment impaired post-injury cognitive function. This work is significant, as AMPK activation may represent a new TBI therapeutic target.
Resumo:
Vitamin C (ascorbic acid--AA) can have a substantial impact on human health by reducing the incidence and/or severity of coryza. Studies also suggest it has immunomodulatory functions in humans. Immune function is controlled by cytokines, such as type-1 cytokines (IFNγ) that promote antiviral immunity and type-2 cytokines (IL-4, IL-10) that promote humoral immunity. Knowing the mechanisms responsible for both antiviral immunity and type-1/type-2 cytokine balance, we sought to identify AA-induced alterations of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in vivo and in vitro . We hypothesized that AA modulates the immune system, altering both number and function of PBMC. We first described the effect of 14 days of oral (1 gram) AA in healthy subjects. AA increased circulating natural killer (NK) cells, CD25+ and HLA-DR+ T cells, and PMA/ionomycin-stimulated intracellular IFNγ. We subsequently developed models for in vitro use. We determined that AA was toxic in vitro to T cells when used at doses found intracellularly but doses found in plasma from individuals taking 1gm/day AA were nontoxic. The model that most fully reproduced our in vivo intracellular cytokine findings used dehydroascorbic acid and buffers to deliver AA intracellularly. This model generated the largest increase in IFNγ at physiologic plasma concentrations. Previous studies demonstrate that chronic psychological stress is associated with a type-2 cytokine response. We hypothesized that vitamin C could prevent the type-2 cytokine shift associated with stress. In a study of medical students taking 1 g AA or placebo, a significant increase in IFNγ was seen intracellularly in CD4+ and CD8+ cells and in tetanus-stimulated cultures in the AA group only. We also observed increases in IFNγ/IL-4 and IFNγ/IL-10 ratios with AA supplementation, indicating a type-1 shift. Furthermore, we noted increased numbers of NK cells and activated T cells in the peripheral blood in the AA treated group only. Lastly, we investigated the role of the CD40L/CD40 and CD28/B7 costimulatory pathway in these cytokine alterations. AA did not have any effect on either pathway studied. Thus costimulatory pathways are not contributing to AA induced modulation of the type-1/type-2 immune balance. ^