Bmc Health Serv Res
-
Bmc Health Serv Res · Nov 2018
Can high-cost spending in the community signal admission to hospital? A dynamic modeling study for urgent and elective cardiovascular patients.
Much of the research on high-cost patients in healthcare has taken a static approach to studying what is actually a dynamic process. High-cost patients often utilize services across multiple sectors along care pathways, but due to the cross-sectional nature of many study designs, we lack a clear understanding of the temporal relationship between high-cost spending in community and acute care. Studying care trajectories for high cost patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) can shed light on the dynamic interplay between community-based and acute care along the care continuum, and provide information about signals in community care that may indicate future elective and urgent hospitalizations. ⋯ By studying the dynamic nature of patient care trajectories, we may use community-based spending patterns as signals in the system that can point to future and elective hospitalizations for CVD. These community-based spending signals may be useful for identifying opportunities for intervention along the care trajectory, particularly for urgent CVD patients for whom future hospitalizations are difficult to anticipate.
-
Bmc Health Serv Res · Nov 2018
Primary care utilization in people who experience imprisonment in Ontario, Canada: a retrospective cohort study.
Access to primary care is an important determinant of health, and data are sparse on primary care utilization for people who experience imprisonment. We aimed to describe primary care utilization for persons released from prison, and to compare utilization with the general population. ⋯ Primary care utilization is high in prison and post-release for people who experience imprisonment in Ontario, Canada. Increased use is only partly explained by comorbidity. The majority of people do not access primary care in the month after prison release. Future research should identify reasons for increased use and interventions to improve care access for persons who are not accessing care post-release.
-
Bmc Health Serv Res · Oct 2018
Carers' concerns about their older persons (Carees) at risk of falling - a mixed-methods study protocol.
When dependent older persons (carees) experience a fall at home, their carers worry that they will fall again. This ongoing concern affects the carers' wellbeing, perception of burden and can potentially change care arrangements. Previous research has focused on carers of high fall risk older persons with stroke, dementia or Parkinson's disease. However, little is known about the carers' concerns for carees at risk of falling generally; and there is no validated instrument to measure this concern. This study aims to explore carers' fall concern about carees at risk of falling and the development of an instrument to measure this concern. ⋯ This study aims to provide greater depth of understanding about the psychological concerns and emotional burden related to carees' falls for carers. Quantifying carers' concerns will provide a context for interventions to assist and support carers and in the greater vigilance of monitoring the falling incidence of carees.
-
Bmc Health Serv Res · Oct 2018
Observational StudyRelational autonomy in breast diseases care: a qualitative study of contextual and social conditions of patients' capacity for decision-making.
A relational approach to autonomy refers to the way in which social conditions and relationships shape a person's self-identity and capacity in decision-making. This article provides an empirical account of how treatment choices for women undergoing breast diseases care are fostered within the dynamics of their relationships with clinicians, family members, and other aspects of their social environment. ⋯ Patients' confidence and self-trust can be fostered by opportunities for communicative engagement and self-reflection over the course of treatment in breast disease, and better integration of their self-identity and social values in treatment decisions.
-
Bmc Health Serv Res · Oct 2018
Explaining burnout and the intention to leave the profession among health professionals - a cross-sectional study in a hospital setting in Switzerland.
Burnout and the intention to leave the profession are frequently studied outcomes in healthcare settings that have not been investigated together and across different health professions before. This study aimed to examine work-related explanatory factors or predictors of burnout and the intention to leave the profession among health professionals in general, and nurses and physicians in particular. ⋯ Reducing workload and job stress, and particularly reward frustration at work, as well as the difficulties in combining work and private lives among health professionals, may help to prevent them from developing burnout and/or leaving the profession and consequently also to reduce turnover, early retirement, career endings and understaffing in healthcare settings.