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

New assessment tool designed to improve care provided at hospitals

2014-02-04
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Evelyn Martinez
sciencenewsroom@wiley.com
201-748-6358
Wiley
New assessment tool designed to improve care provided at hospitals A new assessment tool published today in the Journal of Hospital Medicine can help hospital medicine groups across the country improve their patient care and make their operations more effective.

Published as "The Key Principles and Characteristics of an Effective HMG," the self-assessment tool is comprised of 47 different characteristics of effective hospital medicine groups (HMGs) sorted into ten different principles. It outlines characteristics like the development of an annual budget, care coordination across care settings and "care that respects and responds to patient and family preferences, needs and values."

There is continuing growth in the specialty of hospital medicine, which concerns the medical care of acutely ill hospitalized patients. There are now more than 40,000 hospitalists—or doctors specialized in the care of patients in the hospital—across the United States. The Society of Hospital Medicine, which facilitated the creation of the characteristics, estimates that hospitalists are currently caring for patients in more than 3,200 hospitals.

The capabilities and performance of HMGs vary significantly, and there are few guidelines that HMGs can use as tools to help them improve. To address this deficiency, the Society of Hospital Medicine (SHM) and a panel of experts identified the key principles and characteristics of an effective HMG.

"Just seven years ago, SHM's Core Competencies outlined what it meant to be a hospitalist. Today, we propose a framework that defines what it means to be an effective hospitalist group," said SHM president Eric Howell, MD, SFHM. "It's our hope that hospitalists, hospital executives and anyone involved in the care of hospitalized patients will use the framework to assess their hospitalist programs and improve them as appropriate."

Over a 2-year period, the principles and characteristics were developed based on expert opinion supplemented by feedback from more than 200 stakeholders representing a diverse group of hospitals and hospitalists. The result is a framework, which consists of 47 key characteristics organized under 10 principles, that defines the central role of hospitalists in coordinating team-based, patient-centered care in the acute care setting. The framework can be used to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and challenges. The 10 principles include ways to encourage:

Effective leadership Engaged hospitalists Adequate resources Effective planning and management infrastructure Alignment of HMGs with hospitals and/or health systems Care coordination Consideration of key clinical issues, such as teaching, quality, safety, efficiency, and the patient/family experience A thoughtful and rational approach to clinical activities A practice model that is patient- and family-centered, team-based, and emphasizes effective communication and care coordination Recruitment and retention of qualified clinicians

"The framework is designed to be aspirational, helping to 'raise the bar' for the specialty of hospital medicine," said co-author Patrick Cawley, MD, MHM, chief executive officer at the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Medical Center in Charleston, South Carolina.

Cawley sees the principles as a longstanding reference document for all hospitalists and their groups.

"In the long-term, SHM envisions that hospitals and HMGs everywhere will use it to conduct self-assessments and develop pathways for improvement, resulting in better healthcare and patient care."

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

For athletes, there's no place like home

2014-02-04
The pomp. The pageantry. The exciting wins and devastating losses. Unbelievable feats of athleticism and sheer determination. That's right – it's time for the winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Everyone ...

Gummy material addresses safety concerns of lithium ion batteries

2014-02-04
PULLMAN, Wash. – A group of Washington State University researchers have developed a chewing gum-like battery material that could dramatically ...

Osteoporosis screening recommendations may miss two-thirds of women aged 50 to 64

2014-02-03
FINDINGS: Women who are 65 and older routinely undergo bone-density testing to screen for osteoporosis. But for those between the ages of ...

Greenhouse 'time machine' sheds light on corn domestication

2014-02-03
By simulating the environment when corn was first exploited by people and then domesticated, Smithsonian scientists discovered that corn's ancestor; a wild grass called teosinte, may have looked ...

Two papers unraveled the mystery of sex determination and benthic adaptation of the flatfish

2014-02-03
February 2, 2014, Shenzhen, China - Researchers from Yellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fisheries Sciences, BGI-Shenzhen and other institutes have successfully decoded the first ...

Capturing ultrasharp images of multiple cell components at once

2014-02-03
BOSTON -- A new microscopy method could ...

Nature can, selectively, buffer human-caused global warming

2014-02-03
Jerusalem, February 2, 2014 – Can naturally occurring processes selectively buffer the full brunt of global warming caused by greenhouse gas emissions resulting ...

JCI early table of contents for Feb. 3, 2014

2014-02-03
Methylation signature correlates with acute myeloid leukemia survival Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is characterized by the inappropriate replacement of normal bone marrow with white blood cells due to dysfunctional ...

Can a protein controlling blood pressure enhance immune responses and prevent Alzheimer's?

2014-02-03
LOS ANGELES (EMBARGOED UNTIL 12 ...

NSAIDs do not increase risk of miscarriages: Study

2014-02-03
Women who take nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) during pregnancy are not at increased risk of miscarriages, confirms a new study published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Devastation of island land snails, especially in the Pacific

Microwaves help turn sugar industry waste into high-performance biochar

From craft dust to green gold: Turning palm handicraft waste into high value bio based chemicals

New roadmap shows how to turn farm nitrogen models into real world water quality gains

Heart damage is common after an operation and often goes unnoticed, but patients who see a cardiologist may be less likely to die or suffer heart disease as a result

New tool exposes scale of fake research flooding cancer science

Researchers identify new blood markers that may detect early pancreatic cancer

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease

The Lancet: AI-supported mammography screening results in fewer aggressive and advanced breast cancers, finds full results from first randomized controlled trial

New AI tool improves treatment of cancer patients after heart attack

Kandahar University highlights global disparities in neurosurgical workforce and access to care

Research spotlight: Discovering risk factors for long-term relapse in alcohol use disorder

As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse

Scientists identify the antibody's hinge as a structural "control hub"

Late-breaking study establishes new risk model for surgery after TAVR

To reduce CO2 emissions, policy on carbon pricing, taxation and investment in renewable energy is key

Kissing the sun: Unraveling mysteries of the solar wind

Breathing new life into nanotubes for a cooler planet

Machine learning reveals how to maximize biochar yield from algae

Inconsistent standards may be undermining global tracking of antibiotic resistance

Helping hands: UBCO research team develops brace to reduce tremors

MXene nanomaterials enter a new dimension

Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

New light-based nanotechnology could enable more precise, less harmful cancer treatment

The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed

Tracking Finland’s ice fishers reveals how social information guides foraging decisions

DNA-protein crosslinks promote inflammation-linked premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice

Accounting for fossil energy’s “minimum viable scale” is central to decarbonization

Immunotherapy reduces plaque in arteries of mice

Using AI to retrace the evolution of genetic control elements in the brain

[Press-News.org] New assessment tool designed to improve care provided at hospitals