Articles Tagged With:
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Remote Facilities Can Avoid Unnecessary Pediatric Transfers by Leveraging Telemedicine
When critically ill children present to EDs in rural or community hospitals that lack access to specialty pediatric care, the solution often is to transfer them to a regional pediatric facility, which could be hours away from a patient’s home. This creates travel burdens and added expense for families and payors. But new research suggests that at least some of these interfacility transfers can be safely avoided by incorporating telemedicine consultations with pediatric specialists.
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Care Collaboration Helps Patients with At-Risk Heart Failure Illness
Researchers found social support and care affordability are important to obtain better outcomes among patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction.
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A Guide to Training Nurses on Transitional Care
It is challenging to find a tailor-made educational and training program for registered nurses to learn transitional care. A VA hospital created its own program, called the Transitions Nurse Training Program.
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Care Coordination Training Works Well for VA Hospitals
One of the challenges facing health systems as patients are moved from the hospital to another healthcare facility is how to make these transitions as safe as possible — especially in rural and underserved areas. A Veterans Affairs hospital has found a possible solution through its Transitions Nurse Training Program.
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Communication in Care Transition Process Needs Improvement
The care transition process is challenging, especially for patients with multiple complex conditions. To provide the best care to high-risk patients, case managers, community providers, and clinicians need to optimize communication. Case managers can improve the process through quality improvement efforts that focus on overcoming dialogue challenges and identifying providers’ communication preferences.
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How Case Managers Can Help Patients Reduce Heat Risk
Extreme heat events can become cluster death events. Case managers and health systems can help their patients — especially older patients with heart and/or lung disease — to prevent heat illness.
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Climate Change Could Be Newest Social Determinant of Health
Extreme heat events cause tens of thousands of hospitalizations and ED visits each year. Heat is particularly dangerous for older adults and patients with heart and lung illnesses. Case managers and hospitals can help prevent heat exhaustion by educating at-risk clients about how to stay cool and recognize symptoms.
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Early Communication Can Establish Goals of Care Boundaries
When clinicians initiate the conversation, there can be a better understanding about the wishes of seriously ill patients.
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Involvement of the Peripheral Nervous System in Neurolymphomatosis
Lymphoma that presents with peripheral neuropathy is a challenging diagnosis. Diagnosis and treatment often are delayed, but they can be facilitated by early consideration and imaging with fluorodeoxyglucose-positron emission tomography. Early diagnosis and hematologic treatment may be effective.
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Somatic Variants in Ras/Raf/MAPK Pathway Play a Role in Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy
Eleven somatic variants enriched in the hippocampus were detected in a group of patients with drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). Most somatic variants are mutations in the Ras/Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Overactivation of the Ras/Raf/MAPK pathway was detected in MTLE with somatic variants.