PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study examines readmission after colorectal cancer surgery as quality measure

2014-10-22
(Press-News.org) No significant variation was found in hospital readmission rates after colorectal cancer surgery when the data was adjusted to account for patient characteristics, coexisting illnesses and operation types, which may prompt questions about the use of readmission rates as a measure of hospital quality.

Hospital readmission after surgery can be common and it results in an increased cost of care. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has focused on reducing unplanned hospital readmissions and hospitals are penalized in reimbursement if there are excess readmissions for certain diagnoses.

The authors examined whether readmission rates vary among hospitals. They used data from 44,822 patients who underwent colorectal cancer surgery at 1,401 U.S. hospitals from 1997 through 2002.

The overall 30-day readmission rate was 12.3 percent. In hospitals that performed at least five operations annually, there was marked variation in raw readmission rates with a range from 0 percent to 41.2 percent. But when the data was adjusted to account for patient characteristics, coexisting illnesses and operation types, no significant variability remained in readmission rates with a range from 11.3 percent to 13.2 percent.

"These data have important implications because they strongly suggest that minimal risk-adjusted variation exists in hospital readmission rates after colorectal surgery."

INFORMATION:

(JAMA Surgery. Published online October 22, 2014. doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2014.988. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)

Author: Donald J. Lucas, M.D., M.P.H., of the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Md., and colleagues.

Editor's Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.

Media Advisory: To contact corresponding author Timothy M. Pawlik, M.D., call Vanessa Wasta at 410-614-2916 or email wasta@jhmi.edu. An invited commentary by Frank G. Opelka, M.D., of Louisiana State University is also available. To contact Dr. Opelka email fopelk@lsuhsc.edu.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Online dermatologic follow-up for atopic dermatitis earns equivalent results

2014-10-22
An online model for follow-up care of atopic dermatitis (eczema) that gave patients direct access to dermatologists resulted in equivalent clinical improvement compared to patients who received traditional in-person care writes author April W. Armstrong, M.D., M.P.H., of the University of Colorado, Denver, and colleagues. There are not enough dermatologists in the United States to meet the demand for services. Teledermatology is a chance to improve access to care. The authors conducted a one-year randomized controlled equivalency trial that included adults and children ...

Exposure therapy appears helpful in treating patients with prolonged grief

2014-10-22
Cognitive behavioral therapy with exposure therapy (CBT/exposure), where patients relive the experience of a death of a loved one, resulted in greater reductions in measures of prolonged grief disorder (PGD) than CBT alone. PGD involves persistent yearning for the deceased and the associated emotional pain, difficulty in accepting the death, a sense of meaninglessness, bitterness about the death and difficulty in engaging in new activities. To diagnose PGD, the symptoms need to last at least six months. PGD is distinct from depression because of a person's preoccupation ...

NIST offers electronics industry 2 ways to snoop on self-organizing molecules

NIST offers electronics industry 2 ways to snoop on self-organizing molecules
2014-10-22
A few short years ago, the idea of a practical manufacturing process based on getting molecules to organize themselves in useful nanoscale shapes seemed ... well, cool, sure, but also a little fantastic. Now the day isn't far off when your cell phone may depend on it. Two recent papers emphasize the point by demonstrating complementary approaches to fine-tuning the key step: depositing thin films of a uniquely designed polymer on a template so that it self-assembles into neat, precise, even rows of alternating composition just 10 or so nanometers wide. The work by researchers ...

Organic molecules in Titan's atmosphere are intriguingly skewed

Organic molecules in Titans atmosphere are intriguingly skewed
2014-10-22
While studying the atmosphere on Saturn's moon Titan, scientists discovered intriguing zones of organic molecules unexpectedly shifted away from its north and south poles. These misaligned features seem to defy conventional thinking about Titan's windy atmosphere, which should quickly smear out such off-axis concentrations. "This is an unexpected and potentially groundbreaking discovery," said Martin Cordiner, an astrochemist working at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the lead author of a study published online today in the Astrophysical ...

If you're over 60, drink up: Alcohol associated with better memory

2014-10-22
Researchers from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, University of Kentucky, and University of Maryland found that for people 60 and older who do not have dementia, light alcohol consumption during late life is associated with higher episodic memory — the ability to recall memories of events. Moderate alcohol consumption was also linked with a larger volume in the hippocampus, a brain region critical for episodic memory. The relationship between light alcohol consumption and episodic memory goes away if hippocampal volume is factored in, providing ...

Third substantial solar flare in 2 days

Third substantial solar flare in 2 days
2014-10-22
The sun erupted with another significant flare today, peaking at 10:28 a.m. EDT on Oct. 22, 2014. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured images of the event, which occurred in the lower half of the sun. This flare is classified as an X1.6 class flare. X-class flares denote the most extreme flares. This is the third substantial flare from the same region of the sun since Oct. 19. INFORMATION: To see how this event may affect Earth, please visit NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center at http://spaceweather.gov, the U.S. government's official source for space weather ...

Seaweed engineers build crustacean homes; old forests store new nitrogen

2014-10-22
Invasive seaweed shelters native crustacean On the tidal mudflats of Georgia and South Carolina, the red Japanese seaweed Gracilaria vermiculophylla is gaining a foothold where no native seaweeds live. Only debris and straggles of dead marsh grass used to break the expanse of mud at low tide. Crabs, shrimp, and small crustaceans mob the seaweed in abundance. What makes it so popular? Not its food value. On mudflats near Savannah, Ga., Wright and colleagues found that the tiny native crustacean Gammarus mucronatus (one of the 9,500 species of amphipod, which includes sand ...

NASA-led study sees Titan glowing at dusk and dawn

NASA-led study sees Titan glowing at dusk and dawn
2014-10-22
New maps of Saturn's moon Titan reveal large patches of trace gases shining brightly near the north and south poles. These regions are curiously shifted off the poles, to the east or west, so that dawn is breaking over the southern region while dusk is falling over the northern one. The pair of patches was spotted by a NASA-led international team of researchers investigating the chemical make-up of Titan's atmosphere. "This is an unexpected and potentially groundbreaking discovery," said Martin Cordiner, an astrochemist working at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center ...

UTMB researchers uncover powerful new class of weapons in the war on cancer

2014-10-22
An interdisciplinary team of researchers from the University of Texas Medical Branch, and Winship Cancer Institute of Emory University have identified small molecules that can represent a new class of anticancer drugs with a novel target for the treatment of lung cancer. These findings are detailed in Nature Communications. A PCT patent (WO 2013028543 A1) was jointly documented by these two Institutes for the invention. Survival outcomes remain poor for lung cancer patients in large part because of lung cancer's resistance to conventional therapies. Programmed cell death, ...

NASA-NOAA Suomi NPP Satellite team ward off recent space debris threat

NASA-NOAA Suomi NPP Satellite team ward off recent space debris threat
2014-10-22
While space debris was the uncontrolled adversary in the award-winning space thriller film "Gravity," space debris, also known as "space junk," is an ongoing real-life concern for teams managing satellites orbiting Earth, including NOAA-NASA's Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership, or Suomi NPP, satellite. It is not unusual for satellites that have the capability of maneuvering to be repositioned to avoid debris or to maintain the proper orbit. On an otherwise quiet Sunday on September 28, the Suomi NPP mission team was monitoring a possible close approach of a debris ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Women with heart disease are less likely to receive life-saving drugs than men

How electric vehicle drivers can escape range anxiety

How do birds flock? Researchers do the math to reveal previously unknown aerodynamic phenomenon

Experts call for global genetic warning system to combat the next pandemic and antimicrobial resistance

Genetic variations may predispose people to Parkinson’s disease following long-term pesticide exposure, study finds

Deer are expanding north, and that’s not good for caribou

Puzzling link between depression and cardiovascular disease explained at last: they partly develop from the same gene module

Synthetic droplets cause a stir in the primordial soup

Future parents more likely to get RSV vaccine when pregnant if aware that RSV can be a serious illness in infants

Microbiota enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis-secreted BFT-1 promotes breast cancer cell stemness and chemoresistance through its functional receptor NOD1

The Lundquist Institute receives $2.6 million grant from U.S. Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity to develop wearable biosensors

Understanding the cellular mechanisms of obesity-induced inflammation and metabolic dysfunction

Study highlights increased risk of second cancers among breast cancer survivors

International DNA Day launch for Hong Kong’s Moonshot for Biology

New scientific resources map food components to improve human and environmental health

Mass General Brigham research identifies pitfalls and opportunities for generative artificial intelligence in patient messaging systems

Opioids during pregnancy not linked to substantially increased risk of psychiatric disorders in children

Universities and schools urged to ban alcohol industry-backed health advice

From Uber ratings to credit scores: What’s lost in a society that counts and sorts everything?

Political ‘color’ affects pollution control spending in the US

Managing meandering waterways in a changing world

Expert sounds alarm as mosquito-borne diseases becoming a global phenomenon in a warmer more populated world

Climate change is multiplying the threat caused by antimicrobial resistance

UK/German study - COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness and fewer common side-effects most important factors in whether adults choose to get vaccinated

New ultraviolet light air disinfection technology could help protect against healthcare infections and even the next pandemic

Major genetic meta-analysis reveals how antibiotic resistance in babies varies according to mode of birth, prematurity, and where they live

Q&A: How TikTok’s ‘black box’ algorithm and design shape user behavior

American Academy of Arts and Sciences elects three NYU faculty as 2024 fellows

A closed-loop drug-delivery system could improve chemotherapy

MIT scientists tune the entanglement structure in an array of qubits

[Press-News.org] Study examines readmission after colorectal cancer surgery as quality measure