First name
Matthew
Middle name
M
Last name
Davis

Title

Who's Willing? Characteristics Associated with Willingness to Participate in Clinical Research.

Year of Publication

2016

Number of Pages

15-9

Date Published

2016 Mar-Apr

ISSN Number

0193-7758

Alternate Title

IRB

PMID

27188032

Title

The factors associated with high-quality communication for critically ill children.

Year of Publication

2013

Number of Pages

S90-5

Date Published

2013 Mar

ISSN Number

1098-4275

Abstract

<p><strong>OBJECTIVE: </strong>Timely, high quality communication with families is essential to family-centered decision-making. Quality communication is represented by widespread documentation of prognostic, goals-of-care conversations (PGOCC) in the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) and should occur without variation by patient characteristics.</p>

<p><strong>METHODS: </strong>Cohort included 645 PICU admissions in the top decile of risk of mortality on admission over six years. Electronic medical records were used to determine PGOCC, diagnosis on admission and complex chronic condition (CCC) status. Multivariate logistic regression and time-to-event analyses were used.</p>

<p><strong>RESULTS: </strong>Overall, 31% had a documented PGOCC. 51% had CCC status. 11% had an oncologic, 13% had a cardiovascular diagnosis on admission. 94% of patients who died in the PICU had PGOCC documented, but among the 200 patients with documented PGOCC, 78% did not die in the PICU. Oncologic diagnosis on admission was associated with a higher likelihood of PGOCC compared to non-CCC patients (ARR=1.86; SE=0.26) whereas no other diagnosis category reached the level of statistical significance. Median time from admission to PGOCC was 2 days. Age, gender and CCC status were not associated with whether a PGOCC was documented or with time from admission to PGOCC documentation. 45% of PGOCC in the cohort and 50% of conversations in patients with CCC were documented by PICU physicians.</p>

<p><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>This study reveals the opportunity for improvement in documentation of PGOCC for critically ill children. It raises the questions of why there is variation of PGOCC across disease categories and whether PGOCC should be considered a quality measure for family-centered care.</p>

DOI

10.1542/peds.2012-1427k

Alternate Title

Pediatrics

PMID

23457155

Title

Pediatric hospital discharge interventions to reduce subsequent utilization: a systematic review.

Year of Publication

2014

Number of Pages

251-60

Date Published

2014 Apr

ISSN Number

1553-5606

Abstract

<p><strong>BACKGROUND: </strong>Reducing avoidable readmission and posthospitalization emergency department (ED) utilization has become a focus of quality-of-care measures and initiatives. For pediatric patients, no systematic efforts have assessed the evidence for interventions to reduce these events.</p>

<p><strong>PURPOSE: </strong>We sought to synthesize existing evidence on pediatric discharge practices and interventions to reduce hospital readmission and posthospitalization ED utilization.</p>

<p><strong>DATA SOURCES: </strong>PubMed and the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature.</p>

<p><strong>STUDY SELECTION: </strong>Studies available in English involving pediatric inpatient discharge interventions with at least 1 outcome of interest were included.</p>

<p><strong>DATA EXTRACTION: </strong>We utilized a modified Cochrane Good Practice data extraction tool and assessed study quality with the Downs and Black tool.</p>

<p><strong>DATA SYNTHESIS: </strong>Our search identified a total of 1296 studies, 14 of which met full inclusion criteria. All included studies examined multifaceted discharge interventions initiated in the inpatient setting. Overall, 2 studies demonstrated statistically significant reductions in both readmissions and subsequent ED visits, 4 studies demonstrated statistically significant reductions in either readmissions or ED visits, and 2 studies found statistically significant increases in subsequent utilization. Several studies were not sufficiently powered to detect changes in either subsequent utilization outcome measure.</p>

<p><strong>CONCLUSIONS: </strong>Interventions that demonstrated reductions in subsequent utilization targeted children with specific chronic conditions, providing enhanced inpatient feedback and education reinforced with postdischarge support. Interventions seeking to reduce subsequent utilization should identify an individual or team to assume responsibility for the inpatient-to-outpatient transition and offer ongoing support to the family via telephone or home visitation following discharge.</p>

DOI

10.1002/jhm.2134

Alternate Title

J Hosp Med

PMID

24357528

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