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  • Physicians Can Suffer Moral Injury if Oath to Patients Is Broken

    Long before the pandemic, physicians were suffering from “moral injury” — a violation of one’s values, ethical code, or sworn duty — because too often they had to choose between their patients and the profits and performance measures of corporate medicine, claims the author of a new book.

  • Healthcare Workers Weather Respiratory Onslaught

    In a seemingly interminable viral winter, healthcare workers are facing a rare convergence of a pandemic virus and unusually high levels of seasonal flu and respiratory syncytial virus. Some are tired and sick; others sick of being tired. As EDs stretch capacity to the limits to treat respiratory patients, others with various conditions and critical needs are backed up.

  • Clinicians Are Ethically Obligated to Consider Financial Side of Care

    Clinicians should include the cost of care in discussions, help patients access charity care or financial counseling, and screen patients for social determinants of health.

  • Effectively Intervening with Patients Facing Housing Instability

    The notion that housing is healthcare stems from a growing body of research that links housing instability with higher rates of morbidity and mortality. There is a moral and humanitarian case for healthcare organizations to engage on the housing issue, but there also is a business case. But precisely how healthcare organizations should go about this work is not yet well established. Thus, IHI has partnered with Community Solutions, a nonprofit organization that is working to end homelessness, to examine how healthcare can play an effective role in addressing the problem.

  • Better Care Communication Needed for Home Health

    Researchers wanted to know if there is an association between home health and gaps in care coordination among providers. They found patients receiving home healthcare are sicker, experienced more functional dependencies, and reported more preventable drug-drug interactions. While home health was not associated with a difference in gaps of care coordination, it was associated with twice the risk of a preventable adverse outcome.

  • Integrated Care Teams Should Include Social Workers

    Integrated care teams sometimes lack a social worker, which can undermine the team’s work and success. It is a shortsighted tactic because social workers can help with case management and care coordination in a variety of ways, including intake assessment and behavioral interventions, according to recent research.

  • Study Reveals Positive Benefits of COPD Transition Bundle

    A study of a care transition bundle that included a care coordinator revealed COPD patients in the bundle cohort were less likely to be readmitted to the hospital within seven days and 30 days, but 90-day readmissions were unchanged.

  • Many Safety Net, Rural Hospitals Do Not Properly Address Social Needs

    Safety net hospitals, critical care hospitals, and rural hospitals often do less than needed to address the social determinants of health of their vulnerable populations, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic, new research shows.

  • How Case Managers Can Improve SDOH Assessments

    Case managers can use several different tactics to improve their assessments of social determinants of health. These may require extra time, but they can yield big rewards in terms of patients’ health and preventing readmissions.

  • Concerned About Understaffing, ED Nurse Calls 911 for Help

    Although ill-advised, this extreme move underscores healthcare providers' feelings of desperation amid ongoing staffing problems.