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Active Beat, December 03, 2014: Deadly Hospital Infections On the Decline, Report Shows
Hospital infections are finally on the decline - a result of a long and exhaustive campaign starting in 2010 to raise awareness about the dangers posed by hospital-acquired conditions, says the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
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The Boston Globe, December 26, 2014: Can We Talk About Death?
This article discusses end-of-life conversations and references Ellen Goodman and her work wtih The Conversation Project.
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EHR Intelligence, December 22, 2014: Debating Viability of Universal Electronic Health Record
This article debates the viability of using universal electronic health records. IHI's Kedar Mate comments, “The lack of a single health record for each patient that clinicians from all specialties can access in both inpatient and outpatient settings is an obstacle to integrating care. In addition, patient privacy protections inhibit the sharing of health information, creating both perceived and real hurdles.”
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90.9 WBUR, December 18, 2014: Make Massachusetts’ Criminal Justice System A Model For The Nation
Massachusetts has many achievements to be proud of, but our criminal justice system is not among them. We are, at best, average among states. Often, we are worse than average on such metrics as rates of incarceration, racial inequities, recidivism, alternatives to prison, rehabilitation, re-entry programs and mandatory sentencing. Let’s end this embarrassment now.
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WCVB Boston, December 17, 2014: Rethinking Care at the End of Life
A pioneer member of the Conversation Ready project, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center is developing new ways to reach out to patients, and record, retrieve and respect their wishes about care in their last days.
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Harvard Business Review, December 15, 2014: Antidote to Fragmented Health Care
Over 200,000 students have taken over two million courses on the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Open School, a virtual online school for these improvement methods.
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FierceHealthcare, December 17, 2014: 6 Must-Know Strategies to Build a Safer Hospital
There's no room for doubt that the healthcare industry needs to improve patient safety, Robert Wachter, M.D., told the audience at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's recent forum on the issue--and he has a few ideas about how to go about it.
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Healthcare IT News, December 15, 2014: Q&A: Triple Aim Drives IHI Quality Guru
Quality care is top of mind for Maureen Bisognano, RN. It has been, ever since she was a young nurse, and developed into a true mission not long later when she worked side by side with Donald Berwick, MD, at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Mass. Today, she is president and CEO of the organization and Berwick serves as president emeritus and senior fellow. Both delivered keynotes at IHI's 26th Annual National forum last week in Orlando, Fla. The centerpiece of the organization's work on improving care has been its focus on the Triple Aim, the IHI initiative that focuses on improving the patient experience of care (including quality and satisfaction), improving the health of populations and reducing the per capita cost of healthcare.
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Modern Healthcare, December 09, 2014: The Hotel Business Can Teach Hospitals How to Put the Customer First
A behind-the-scenes tour of the Marriott was offered Monday to a group of nearly 50 healthcare professionals attending an excursion at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement conference.
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Modern Healthcare, December 06, 2014: Safety Leaders to Focus on Measurement Overload
Emphasis will be placed on providing consistent care in every hospital department, as well as across the continuum of care, and sustaining those gains as new safety measurements are evaluated, said Dr. Don Goldmann, chief medical and science officer for the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, whose annual conference is Dec 7-10 in Orlando.
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AAFP, December 10, 2014: Integrating Mental Health, Primary Care is Focus of IHI Webcast
"We're past the point of making a case that integration needs to happen," said Mara Laderman, M.S.P.H., senior research associate at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI).
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Tampa Bay Times, December 11, 2014: ‘Shadowing’ Focuses on Patients and Families, Identifies Inefficiencies
Charlotte Sutton discusses how she met Dr. Anthony DiGioia at the 26th Annual National Forum in Orlando.
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Hospitals & Health Networks, December 11, 2014: Berwick Pushes Hospitals to Cut Costs for Society's Sake
In between, the health care quality guru and Institute of Healthcare Improvement fellow had a moment on the mountain in which he came to believe that the healing power of the mind might be the missing element in solving health care's quality problem.
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Hospitals & Health Networks, December 10, 2014: From the IHI Forum Floor: Health Care Innovation on the Rise
Health care officials discussed ways to advance equal care and methods to formalize the innovation process during the first day of this year's Institute for Healthcare Improvement forum.
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Behavioral Healthcare Magazine, December 10, 2014: IHI Leaders Look for Integration Opportunities
Structural changes are needed to help bridge the gap between behavioral healthcare and physical healthcare, said Maureen Bisognano, president and CEO of The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), speaking at its 26th Annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care in Orlando, Fla.
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WMFE.org, December 09, 2014: Former Scottish NHS Director Touts Health Service Integration
Derek Feeley, speaking at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s national forum on quality improvement, said the U.S. should blur the lines between health care and social services.
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Not Running a Hospital, December 08, 2014: Behind the Scenes at the World Center Marriott
Starting with the end of the day first, you see here Melissa Hayes, Regional Director of New York's HELP/PSI Inc. summarizing observations from day-long excursion at the IHI National Forum in which a group of us had a chance to go behind the scenes of the Orlando World Center Marriott.
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Boston Globe, December 02, 2014: Medical Errors in Massachusetts Still Common, Study Finds
A survey commissioned by Betsy Lehman Center for Patient Safety and Medical Error Reduction finds that nearly one-quarter of Massachusetts residents say they, or someone close to them, experienced a mistake in their medical care during the past five years.
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FierceHealthIT, November 25, 2014: Institute for Healthcare Improvement's Frank Federico: Technology Can't Dictate Care
If implemented well, technology can do great things for healthcare, but providers can't let it dictate how to do their work, says Institute for Healthcare Improvement Executive Director Frank Federico.
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Youth Health Magazine, November 19, 2014: Orlando, FL to hold 26th Annual IHI National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care
The 26th Annual IHI National Forum on quality Improvement in Health Care will be held on December 7 to 10, 2014 in Orlando, Florida, USA. Over 5,000 health care professionals are expected to attend this prestigious event by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), an independent non-profit organization in Cambridge, Massachusetts. IHI is a leading partner, innovator, convener, and driver of results in health and health care development worldwide.
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HealthCanal, November 17, 2014: Doing Things Better Without Adding Hours to the Day
Change is all around us! Thousands of passionate people at St. Michael’s Hospital are working right now on countless projects and initiatives to improve the way they do what they do, while at the same time actually doing their work.
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Human Capital Blog, November 18, 2014: The Stuff That Is Killing Us
Ronald M. Wyatt, MD, MHA, is medical director in the Division of Healthcare Improvement at The Joint Commission. In this role, he promotes quality improvement and patient safety to internal and external audiences, works to influence public policy and legislation for patient safety improvements, and serves as the lead patient safety information and education resource within The Joint Commission. On December 5, RWJF will explore this topic further at its first Scholars Forum: Disparities, Resilience, and Building a Culture of Health. Learn more about it.
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The Cambridge Chronicle, November 14, 2014: Cambridge’s Conversation Project Sparks Talks About End of Life Choices
Physicians are traditionally trained to save lives, so they can struggle with letting go when patients are at the end of their lives, and the Conversation Project is an opportunity to get physicians and patients on the same level, according to Trissa Torres, senior vice president of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) in Cambridge.
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Bangor Daily News, November 13, 2014: Teamwork Can Help Maine Achieve Health Care’s Triple Aim
Developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, the initiative outlines an approach to optimizing health care delivery through three parallel tracks: improving the patient experience of care, including quality and satisfaction, improving the health of populations, and reducing the per-capita cost of health care.
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Medscape Medical News, November 10, 2014: New Smart Watch May Improve Hand Hygiene in Hospitals
The Intermountain smart watch "is one of a half dozen devices that have come to my attention from venture capitalists and people working in hospitals that are designed to serve as devices and even data collection portals for hand hygiene adherence," said Donald A. Goldmann, MD, chief medical and scientific officer for the Cambridge, Massachusetts–based Institute for Healthcare Improvement, in an interview with Medscape Medical News.
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Becker's Hospital Review, November 01, 2014: Hospital ratings: What the Shift From Inpatient to Outpatient Means for Performance Measurement
The hospital is starting to be thought of as a cost center rather than the center for everything in healthcare, according to Kathy Luther, RN, a vice president at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement.
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Region Jaelland, November 05, 2014: US Experts Believe Bridge to Better Health
Health experts from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Boston, USA have achieved very good experience with improving public health in different environments around the world, for example in urban ghettos and among children throughout Scotland.
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Skipr, October 30, 2014: Soft Signs Earn Spot in Security
This method of executive walk rounds was developed in the late nineties by the US Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI). By deliberately visiting the workplace, executives have accessible, informal, yet structured contact with professionals and patients.
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The BMJ, October 30, 2014: A Flipped Forward View for Healthcare
The recent publication of the NHS’s Five Year Forward View by NHS England’s chief executive, Simon Stevens, has been described as “radical” by some reports. One proposal is that general practices would offer many of the services currently confined to hospitals. It is generally agreed that it will be a “huge challenge” to deliver what has been outlined in the five year time scale.
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Acritica, October 24, 2014: Acordo Pode Reduzir Cesarianas Em Hospitais Particulares
"Agreement Can Reduce Caesareans in Private Hospitals"
The technical cooperation agreement providing for the use of the methodology developed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) in the United States.
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Kaiser Health News, October 21, 2014: Hospitals’ Struggles To Beat Back Familiar Infections Began Before Ebola Arrived
While Ebola stokes public anxiety, more than one in six hospitals — including some top medical centers — are having trouble stamping out less exotic but sometimes deadly infections, federal records show.
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California Healthline, October 22, 2014: 28% of Calif. Hospitals Had Worse-Than-Expected Infection Rates
About one in 25 hospital patients in the U.S. have a health care-associated infection on any given day, and 75,000 U.S. residents die from hospital-related infections annually, according to KHN. The federal government since 2012 has been publishing hospital-related infection rate analyses on Medicare's Hospital Compare website. In addition, Medicare in the fall will begin factoring hospital-related infection rates into reimbursement payments.
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Politico Magazine, October 21, 2014: Are Hospitals More Deadly Than Ebola?
These types of hospital mistakes—caused by knowledge gaps, carelessness, unpreparedness or a combination of all—by my estimate kill between 210,000 and 440,000 people in the United States every year. The numbers indicate that preventable medical errors—from infections to botched surgeries to administration of the wrong medicine—are the third leading cause of death in the country, behind only heart disease and cancer. It is gratifying and heartbreaking at the same time to know that my research has been endorsed by leading experts in this field.
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Kaiser Health News, October 21, 2014: Hospitals’ Struggles To Beat Back Familiar Infections Began Before Ebola Arrived
While Ebola stokes public anxiety, more than one in six hospitals — including some top medical centers — are having trouble stamping out less exotic but sometimes deadly infections, federal records show.
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Foreign Affairs, October 15, 2014: Governo Anuncia Medidas Para Reduzir Cesarianas Desnecessárias
(Note: In Portuguese) Government Announces Measures to Reduce Unnecessary Cesareans . The ANS also proposes changing the care delivery with the pilot project based on the best scientific evidence model. The project is a partnership with the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, Institute for Healthcare Improvement and the Baby Friendly Hospital.
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Healthcare Finance News, October 14, 2014: Acute Case Managers in Today's World Should Be Viewed as Leaders in the Organization
The IHI Triple Aim (improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations and reducing per capita costs of healthcare) is great news for assertive, proactive case managers who have long yearned for teamwork, and have historically spent the majority of their day trying to figure out the patient’s plan and get team members on the same page – all while engaging the patient at the same time.
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FlaglerLive.com, October 07, 2014: Florida Hospital Flagler To See Medicare Payments Reduced 0.37% Per Patient, One of 148 Penalized in State
Medicare is fining a record number of hospitals – including more than 140 in Florida, among them Florida Hospital Flagler – for having too many patients return within a month for additional treatments, newly released federal records show.
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Medscape, October 08, 2014: No EHR Flaw After All in Ebola Case, Says Hospital
Ideally, physicians should read nursing notes, "but in a busy place, that doesn't always happen," said Donald Goldmann, MD, chief medical and scientific officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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Becker's Healthcare, October 07, 2014: 20 Patient Safety Tools
To supplement the material and analysis provided by Becker's Clinical Quality and Infection Control, Becker's Healthcare offers an online database of free and low-cost downloadable patient safety tools and resources, putting them all in one place for user convenience. The database contains tools for patients and providers on all quality-related matters, including general and specific infection prevention and control, patient safety culture, change management, adverse event prevention and quality reporting.
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Politico, October 07, 2014: Communication Glitches All Too Common in Hospitals
Don Goldmann, chief medical and scientific officer at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, says that blaming computer records is a red herring. Mistakes happen when health care systems don’t work, electronic or otherwise. But protecting patients isn’t just an engineering feat; at some point, where there’s a complex or crucial or unusual piece of information, people have to speak up and speak to each other.
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Kaiser Health News, October 02, 2014: Medicare Fines 2,610 Hospitals In Third Round Of Readmission Penalties
Medicare is fining a record number of hospitals – 2,610 – for having too many patients return within a month for additional treatments, federal records released Wednesday show. Even though the nation’s readmission rate is dropping, Medicare’s average fines will be higher, with 39 hospitals receiving the largest penalty allowed, including the nation’s oldest hospital, Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia.
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PLOS ONE, September 30, 2014: High Uptake of Systematic HIV Counseling and Testing and TB Symptom Screening at a Primary Care Clinic in South Africa
Timely diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis (TB) and HIV is important to reduce morbidity and mortality, and break the cycle of ongoing transmission.
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Becker's Hospital CFO, September 29, 2014: Hospital Ratings: What the Shift From Inpatient to Outpatient Means for Performance Measurement
Administrators today are challenged with the need to identify the most appropriate setting for care, while working to improve quality (outcomes) and service (the patient experience) in the most cost effective manner. This may mean moving certain services that were traditionally provided in the hospital into the community.
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The Peninsula, September 24, 2014: HMC marks World Sepsis Day
Hamad Medical Corporation (HMC) is raising awareness of sepsis – a complication commonly triggered by an infection - and helping the public understand how to prevent the potentially life-threatening condition as part of activities to mark World Sepsis Day.
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Degrees, September 19, 2014: Perspectives on How Implementation Science Can Improve Global Health
What is implementation science, and what can it do for the field of global health? Earlier this month, FHI 360 brought together over 150 public health specialists, researchers, scholars and donors in Washington, DC, for a day-long symposium to wrestle with these questions.
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GreenBiz.com, September 15, 2014: Kaiser Exec: Can Hospitals Heal Patients and the Planet?
"This study turns on its head the belief that introducing environmental sustainability measures increases operating costs," says Blair L. Sadler, senior fellow at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, one of the study authors and former CEO of Rady Children's Hospital in San Diego. "In fact, just the opposite is true."
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FierceHealthIT, September 15, 2014: Industry Experts: Expand Patient Access, Education to Personal Health Info
Gilbert Salinas, who spoke of his dual role as a patient with chronic illnesses and a fellow at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, said it is important to "pull away from asking the question 'What is the matter with you' to 'what matters to you.'"
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The Salt Lake Tribune, September 12, 2014: Op- Ed: S. L. Meeting Shows Utah's Leadership in Health Care Efficiency
On Sept. 16-17 the Board of Directors of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) will be in Salt Lake City for meetings at Intermountain Healthcare.
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Modern Healthcare, September 15, 2014: Ambulatory Surgery Centers Can Be Risky for Older Patients
In the wake of comedian Joan Rivers’ death following an ambulatory surgery procedure, patient-safety leaders and some physicians are calling on outpatient surgery centers to more carefully select elderly patients for surgery and are urging patients to scrutinize the qualifications of physicians in these centers.
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Associations Now, September 08, 2014: A Big Course From a Small Association
One executive at a state association has taken the lead on educating healthcare workers on a pressing national issue via a MOOC.
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Infection Control Today, September 02, 2014: Study Shows Nationwide Declines in Central Line Infections and Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia
Hospitals across the country have seen sharp declines in rates of central line-associated blood stream infections (CLABSIs) and ventilator-associated pneumonias (VAPs) among critically ill neonates and children, according to a new study in the journal Pediatrics.
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Forbes, August 31, 2014: How Will Millennials Face Their Parents' Aging? With Wearable Tech and Human Touch
Generation X is entering that phase when the parents who cared for us need the favor partially returned. The process likely looks similar to what Baby Boomers have experienced, but how will it be for millennials? By the time their parents become seniors, will technology have radically changed the way both parent and child face the questions of health and independence?
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The Seattle Times, September 03, 2014: Cars, TVs come with warranties: Why not hips and knees?
Seattle’s Virginia Mason is one of the first hospitals in the country to offer a warranty on its joint-replacement surgeries.
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FierceHealthIT, August 27, 2014: Telemedicine a 'Cornerstone' Solution to Triple Aim Efforts
There are not many options for improving care while also decreasing costs, Wang says, but telemedicine is an area where health systems, hospitals and physician practices should work more aggressively.
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Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare, August 11, 2014: Looking to the Future of Patient Safety
Where is the patient safety movement headed? What new issues will emerge? Among the current hot topics—hospital-associated infections, readmissions, unprofessional behavior, diagnostic errors, and others—which do think will be under control (or not) five years from now?
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FierceHealthFinance, August 21, 2014: Clinicians Must Address Cost, Quality of Care to Reduce Spending
As patients gain more control over their healthcare and demand more of a role in the decision-making process, hospitals, doctors and front-line workers must engage them in conversations about cost and quality care matters.
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9-1-1 Magazine, August 20, 2014: EMS Podcast Online: From Prehospital to In-Hospital: The Continuum for Time-Sensitive Care
On July 24th, The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) hosted an audio program on the topic, “From Prehospital to In-Hospital — The Continuum for Time-Sensitive Care,” featuring a panel of four national and international experts.
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Becker's ASC Review, August 15, 2014: 10 Patient Safety Tools for the ASC Setting
The following 10 tools are for ASCs to employ in pursuit of improving and reinforcing patient safety, published on Becker's Infection Control and Clinical Quality.
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City Of Cape Town, August 15, 2014: City’s ARV Clubs Change Lives
The ARV clubs are a World Design Capital 2014 project, showcasing an innovation which reduces the time patients spend waiting for ARV medication, eases the pressure on congested facilities, and enables staff to focus on sick patients.
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Healthcare Traveler, August 13, 2014: Hospitals Resolve to Increase Nurses’ Time at the Bedside
An influx of newly insured patients and additional administrative tasks are taking nurses away from the bedside, but some hospitals are finding creative ways to increase the amount of direct-care time patients receive.
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The Hospitalist, August 01, 2014: Hospital Patient Safety, Quality Movement Helped Propel Hospitalists
Early hospitalists well positioned to improve inpatient care, expand specialty.
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Journal News, August 03, 2014: Interest in Shared Medical Visits Increasing in Region
Studies and published findings show group medical visits prove effective in helping people manage a chronic condition or new diagnosis while increasing a patient’s access to their physician and freeing up more of the physician’s time to treat other patients.
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NBC News, August 03, 2014: What is Perfect Human Health? Google Wants to Map It
Google Baseline, announced last week, will collect molecular and genetic information from an initial 175 volunteers and later thousands more. The philosophy is to focus on the genetics of health itself, rather than focus on disease.
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Akron Beacon Journal , July 11, 2014: Children’s Hospital Tackles Potential Errors by Improving Patient Handoffs
According to new national research led by a critical care doctor at Akron Children’s Hospital, establishing standardized ways to transfer patient care during shift changes or between units can reduce “handoff-related care failures” by nearly 70 percent.
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Wall Street Journal, July 21, 2014: Nurses Shift, Aiming for More Time With Patients
The Wall Street Journal explores the need for hospitals to increase the time nurses spend at the patient bedside; includes remarks from Pat Rutherford and an overview of the IHI/RWJF program, Transforming Care at the Bedside.
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Yahoo News, July 21, 2014: How a Team of Doctors at One Hospital Boosted Hand Washing, Cut Infections and Created a Culture of Safety
Washing hands is one of the single most effective ways to prevent the spread of dangerous infections — ranging from pneumonia to MRSA, a life-threatening staph infection — in US hospitals. One in 25 patients will battle at least one infection picked up in the hospital, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2011, there were approximately 722,000 of these health care-associated infections nationwide and about 75,000 patients died. Still, hospital workers wash their hands only about 40 to 50 percent of the time, often because it’s inconvenient or they are overwhelmed by other tasks.
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Center for Health Reporting, August 07, 2014: E-Record Push Dividing Doctors
“A lot of primary care physicians are pretty burned out. There are older physicians who are saying, ‘I’ve had enough.’ Then, if you sit down with someone trying to provide care in the midst of a major electronic medical record install, they may tell you that it’s a major distraction and an enormous time commitment over a long period of time.” IHI's Don Goldmann
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mHealth Insight, May 21, 2014: Flipping the Clinic: Listen to your Patients They’ll Tell You How They Want You to Care for Them
Maureen Bisognano, President and CEO at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), Instructor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Research Associate at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital Division
of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities, shares insights from Trevor Torres, Type 1 Diabetic and Diabetes Evangelist, on the opportunity we have to flip the clinic.
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NursingTimes.net, May 16, 2014: Do Your Staff Feel Safe to Speak Out?
When did you last fly? Wasn’t it reassuring to know the crew went through a checklist to make sure all was in order before take off? In healthcare we have adapted this concept to make surgery safer.
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Academic Medicine, July 01, 2014: Harvard Medical School Academic Innovations Collaborative: Transforming Primary Care Practice and Education
In 2012, the Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care, in partnership with with local AMCs, established an Academic Innovations Collaborative (AIC) with the goal of transforming primary care education and practice. This novel two-year learning collaborative consisted of hospital- and community-based primary care teaching practices, committed to building highly functional teams, managing populations, and engaging patients.
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Forbes, July 06, 2014: Doctors May Soon Be Paid For Not Making You Wait
More doctor pay is being tied to patient satisfaction metrics, another sign health care may be coming more consumer-friendly, according to a new national analysis of physician compensation.
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Advance Healthcare Network, June 23, 2014: Meeting the Unfulfilled Promises of EHRs
Though electronic patient records have been around for more 50 years,2 for the past decade, U.S. physicians have been navigating one of the largest health information technology roll-outs in history. Promising increased efficiency, improved access to relevant clinical information, and funded by federal dollars, the recent rise in electronic health records (EHRs) has been met with both fanfare and fear.
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Healthcare Informatics, May 01, 2014: IHI's Goldmann: Where HIT Can Help Quality Improvement
There is a lot of potential for healthcare informatics tools to be used to improve healthcare within the scope of clinical paradigms, but right now a lot of that technology is limited, surmises Don Goldmann, M.D., the chief medical officer of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI).
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Courier Post , April 11, 2014: Midwifery Remains Strong Influence of Delivery of Babies in U.S.
Centering, prenatal care, and the influence of midwife traditions on modern birth, featuring IHI's Sue Gullo.
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Bay State Banner, April 14, 2014: Dr. Nneka Mobisson-Etuk Joins World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2014
Dr. Nneka Mobisson-Etuk, executive director of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, has been named to the World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders class of 2014.
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Huffington Post , March 26, 2014: How To Create Social Impact Through Thoughtful Networks
This is the first in the "Designing Networks For Social Impact" blog series on networks and communities.
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News Star , March 18, 2014: Louisiana Looks to Improve Pre-Term Infant Care
Louisiana and the Institute for Health Care Improvement have launched a new project to improve nursing care for late pre-term infants by sharing resources with all Medicaid-supported birthing hospitals throughout the state.
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Healthcare Infomatics , March 18, 2014: The Triple Aim and Healthcare IT Leaders: Time for Action
As chief medical and scientific officer of the Cambridge, Mass.-based Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), Don Goldmann, M.D. has been advocating passionately for transformational change in healthcare for years. Dr. Goldmann is not only the CMO at IHI; he brings his clinician background and perspective to his work advocating the diffusion of the principles of the Triple Aim (improving the health of populations and enhancing the patient experience, while optimizing costs), the core set of principles that IHI leaders are working to universalize across the U.S. healthcare system.
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CDC Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion Blog, March 06, 2014: The Power of Antiobiotic Stewardship in Patient Care
For the past several years, IHI has been actively engaged in working with a wide variety of acute care hospitals in partnership with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other national experts to advance antibiotic stewardship. Our overarching goal is to reduce adverse drug events related to inappropriate antibiotic utilization, the prevalence of antibiotic resistance, the risk of Clostridium difficile infection, and the cost of care.
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Pittsburg Business Times, February 14, 2014: UPMC's Tony DiGioia Joins National Joint Replacement Study
UPMC orthopedic surgeon Tony DiGioia is among physicians and hospital administrators nationwide who are participating in the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s effort to enhance health outcomes per dollar spent for knee and hip replacements, the most common conditions in the Medicare population.
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The Wall Street Journal , February 17, 2014: The Doctor's Team Will See You Now
An increasing number of practices are scrapping the traditional one-on-one doctor-patient relationship. Instead, patients are receiving care from a group of health professionals who divide up responsibilities that once would have largely been handled by the doctor in charge. While the supervising doctor still directly oversees patient care, other medical professionals—nurse practitioners, physician assistants and clinical pharmacists—are performing more functions.
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Nursing Times, February 10, 2014: Speak Out on the “Small Things”
IHI fellow Erica Reid details a nurse’s need to speak up when a seemingly small incident negatively impacts patient care.
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Nursing Times , January 24, 2014: Early Identification and Treatment of Sepsis
Sepsis is a medical emergency. Early identification and treatment are essential but many health staff are unable to recognize its signs and symptoms.
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Healthcare Finance News, January 31, 2014: Smoothing Patient Flow
Healthcare has been a closed system for years, it is time to bring external processes from the likes of engineering and aviation in to create some predictability to the erratic industry.