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

Transforming safety net practices into patient-centered medical homes -- progress report

Special issue of Medical Care Presents Updates from Safety Net Medical Home Initiative

2014-10-15
(Press-News.org) October 15, 2014 – A recently concluded demonstration project made meaningful progress toward introducing a "patient-centered medical home" approach at "safety net" practices serving vulnerable and underserved populations. Lessons learned in the course of developing and implementing the Safety Net Medical Home Initiative (SNMHI) are featured in a special November supplement to Medical Care. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.

The supplement presents nine original papers sharing "experience and learning" from the SNMHI, which sought to "develop and demonstrate a replicable and sustainable implementation model to transform primary care safety net practices into patient-centered medical homes." The project was carried out at 65 health centers, homeless clinics, private practices, residency training centers, and other safety net practices in Colorado, Idaho, Massachusetts, Oregon, and Pennsylvania.

Lessons from Implementing the Safety Net Medical Home Approach The goal of the SNMHI was to extend the benefits of the medical home approach—including improved quality and efficiency of health care delivery—to safety net practices serving uninsured, minority, and other underserved populations. More information on the SNMHI and its framework for implementing the medical home approach can be found at the project website: http://www.safetynetmedicalhome.org/

Through support and coaching, the 65 project centers made significant advances toward becoming patient-centered medical homes, reports an evaluation by Dr Jonathan R. Sugarman of Qualis Health, Seattle, and colleagues. Dr Sugarman is one of the guest editors of the Medical Care supplement.

The evaluation found that all study practices introduced at least some features of the medical home approach. Nearly half of practices achieved "substantial implementation" of key features—although in most cases, this milestone wasn't reached until three or four years of SNMHI participation.

By the end of the project, more than 80 percent of sites "achieved external recognition as medical homes," Dr Sugarman and coauthors conclude, "Despite resource constraints and high-need populations, safety net clinics made considerable progress toward medical home implementation when provided with robust, multimodal support over a four-year period."

Other topics addressed in the SNMHI supplement include: Experience in providing technical assistance to support practices in becoming patient-centered medical homes.

Cultural and other factors at safety net practices that have successfully transformed to medical homes.

Experience and lessons from practices on the "frontlines" of medical home implementation.

Development of a web-based, publicly available curriculum to support the medical home transformation.

Initial evaluation showing that the medical home approach can improve coordination of care for safety net patients.

Special challenges in providing integrated care for patients at safety net clinics in rural areas.

Initial evidence that the medical home approach can help safety net patients take an active role in maintaining their health and managing disease.

An evaluation showing how the medical home approach affects the experience of care for children at safety net practices.

So far, the achievements of the SNMHI are a critical first step toward making the benefits of the patient-centered medical home approach to safety net practices and the vulnerable patient populations they serve. Dr Sugarman and co-editors note that an independent evaluation of the SNMHI's effects on the quality and efficiency of care is underway, with findings expected over the next two years.

Click here to read "Transforming Care for Vulnerable Populations: Lessons from the Safety Net Medical Home Initiative."

INFORMATION:

About Medical Care Rated as one of the top ten journals in health care administration, Medical Care is devoted to all aspects of the administration and delivery of health care. This scholarly journal publishes original, peer-reviewed papers documenting the most current developments in the rapidly changing field of health care. Medical Care provides timely reports on the findings of original investigations into issues related to the research, planning, organization, financing, provision, and evaluation of health services. In addition, numerous special supplementary issues that focus on specialized topics are produced with each volume. Medical Care is the official journal of the Medical Care Section of the American Public Health Association

About Wolters Kluwer Health Wolters Kluwer Health is a leading global provider of information, business intelligence and point-of-care solutions for the healthcare industry. Serving more than 150 countries worldwide, clinicians rely on Wolters Kluwer Health's market leading information-enabled tools and software solutions throughout their professional careers from training to research to practice. Major brands include Health Language®, Lexicomp®, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Medicom®, Medknow, Ovid®, Pharmacy OneSource®, ProVation® Medical and UpToDate®.

Wolters Kluwer Health is part of Wolters Kluwer, a market-leading global information services company. Wolters Kluwer had 2013 annual revenues of €3.6 billion ($4.7 billion), employs approximately 19,000 people worldwide, and maintains operations in over 40 countries across Europe, North America, Asia Pacific, and Latin America.maintains operations in over 40 countries across Europe, North America, Asia Pacific, and Latin America. Wolters Kluwer is headquartered in Alphen aan den Rijn, the Netherlands. Its shares are quoted on Euronext Amsterdam (WKL) and are included in the AEX and Euronext 100 indices. Wolters Kluwer has a sponsored Level 1 American Depositary Receipt program. The ADRs are traded on the over-the-counter market in the U.S. (WTKWY).

Follow our official Twitter handle: @WKHealth.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Bullies in the workplace

Bullies in the workplace
2014-10-15
AMES, Iowa – The stories are shocking and heartbreaking, but they are often disjointed and hard to follow. In severe cases, the narratives are even more chaotic. This is reality for victims of workplace bullying and a major reason why they stay silent, said Stacy Tye-Williams, an assistant professor of communications studies and English at Iowa State University. No one expects to go to work and feel as though they are back on the school playground, but bullying is all too common for many workers. Approximately 54 million workers, or 35 percent of U.S. employees, ...

Sharks that hide in coral reefs may be safe from acidifying oceans

Sharks that hide in coral reefs may be safe from acidifying oceans
2014-10-15
A study published online today in the journal Conservation Physiology has shown that the epaulette shark (Hemiscyllium ocellatum) displays physiological tolerance to elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) in its environment after being exposed to CO2 levels equivalent to those that are predicted for their natural habitats in the near future. Atmospheric CO2 levels have increased by almost 40% in the last 250 years, and the world's oceans have absorbed more than 30% of the additional CO2. The resulting rise in seawater CO2 and associated reduction in pH – known as ocean ...

Sheltering habits help sharks cope with acid oceans

Sheltering habits help sharks cope with acid oceans
2014-10-15
A shark's habitat can reduce its sensitivity to rising CO2 levels, according to Australian scientists. Globally, ocean acidification - linked to emissions of greenhouse gases - remains a major concern and scientists say it will harm many marine species over the next century. Researchers from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (Coral CoE) at James Cook University have found that the epaulette shark, a species that shelters within reefs and copes with low oxygen levels, is able to tolerate increased carbon dioxide in the water without any obvious physical ...

Subsidies help breast cancer patients adhere to hormone therapy

Subsidies help breast cancer patients adhere to hormone therapy
2014-10-15
A federal prescription-subsidy program for low-income women on Medicare significantly improved their adherence to hormone therapy to prevent the recurrence of breast cancer after surgery. "Our findings suggest that out-of-pocket costs are a significant barrier" to women complying with hormone therapy, said Dr. Alana Biggers, assistant professor of clinical medicine at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, and lead investigator on the study. Programs that lower these costs can "improve adherence -- and, hopefully, breast cancer outcomes -- for low-income ...

Dolphin 'breathalyzer' could help diagnose animal and ocean health

2014-10-15
Alcohol consumption isn't the only thing a breath analysis can reveal. Scientists have been studying its possible use for diagnosing a wide range of conditions in humans — and now in the beloved bottlenose dolphin. In a report in the ACS journal Analytical Chemistry, one team describes a new instrument that can analyze the metabolites in breath from dolphins, which have been dying in alarming numbers along the Atlantic coast this year. Cristina E. Davis and colleagues note that studying dolphins' health is about more than preserving their populations — the ...

Discarded cigarette ashes could go to good use -- removing arsenic from water

2014-10-15
Arsenic, a well-known poison, can be taken out of drinking water using sophisticated treatment methods. But in places that lack the equipment or technical know-how required to remove it, it still laces drinking water and makes people sick. To tackle this problem, scientists have come up with a new low-cost, simple way to remove arsenic using leftovers from another known health threat — cigarettes. They report their method in ACS' journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research. Jiaxing Li and colleagues explain that naturally occurring and industry-related arsenic ...

Academies call for consequences from the Ebola virus epidemic

2014-10-15
The Ebola virus is spreading rapidly and to an unexpected extent. The outbreak does not follow the patterns experienced in the past and the virus shows a new disease dynamic in regions, where it has never been recorded before. For this reason, the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, acatech – the German Academy of Science and Engineering, and the Union of the German Academies of Sciences and Humanities have presented a statement on the Ebola epidemic today. In the statement the academies call for the following consequences to be taken: To combat the ...

Researchers turn to 3-D technology to examine the formation of cliffband landscapes

Researchers turn to 3-D technology to examine the formation of cliffband landscapes
2014-10-15
A blend of photos and technology takes a new twist on studying cliff landscapes and how they were formed. Dylan Ward, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of geology, will present a case study on this unique technology application at The Geological Society of America's Annual Meeting & Exposition. The meeting takes place Oct. 19-22, in Vancouver. Ward is using a method called Structure-From-Motion Photogrammetry – computational photo image processing techniques – to study the formation of cliff landscapes in Colorado and Utah and to understand how ...

Researchers look to exploit females' natural resistance to infection

2014-10-15
Researchers have linked increased resistance to bacterial pneumonia in female mice to an enzyme activated by the female sex hormone estrogen. Females are naturally more resistant to respiratory infections than males. Now, an international team of scientists has shown that increased resistance to bacterial pneumonia in female mice is linked to the enzyme nitric oxide synthase 3 (NOS3). They also show that this enzyme is ultimately activated by the release of the female sex hormone estrogen. The team, lead by Professor Lester Kobzik at the Harvard University School of ...

Climate change not responsible for altering forest tree composition

Climate change not responsible for altering forest tree composition
2014-10-15
Change in disturbance regimes -- rather than a change in climate -- is largely responsible for altering the composition of Eastern forests, according to a researcher in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences. Forests in the Eastern United States remain in a state of "disequilibrium" stemming from the clear-cutting and large-scale burning that occurred in the late 1800s and early 1900s, contends Marc Abrams, professor of forest ecology and physiology. Moreover, Abrams noted, since about 1930 -- during the Smokey Bear era -- aggressive forest-fire suppression has ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Emory-led Lancet review highlights racial disparities in sudden cardiac arrest and death among athletes

A new approach to predicting malaria drug resistance

Coral adaptation unlikely to keep pace with global warming

Bioinspired droplet-based systems herald a new era in biocompatible devices

A fossil first: Scientists find 1.5-million-year-old footprints of two different species of human ancestors at same spot

The key to “climate smart” agriculture might be through its value chain

These hibernating squirrels could use a drink—but don’t feel the thirst

New footprints offer evidence of co-existing hominid species 1.5 million years ago

Moral outrage helps misinformation spread through social media

U-M, multinational team of scientists reveal structural link for initiation of protein synthesis in bacteria

New paper calls for harnessing agrifood value chains to help farmers be climate-smart

Preschool education: A key to supporting allophone children

CNIC scientists discover a key mechanism in fat cells that protects the body against energetic excess

Chemical replacement of TNT explosive more harmful to plants, study shows

Scientists reveal possible role of iron sulfides in creating life in terrestrial hot springs

Hormone therapy affects the metabolic health of transgender individuals

Survey of 12 European countries reveals the best and worst for smoke-free homes

First new treatment for asthma attacks in 50 years

Certain HRT tablets linked to increased heart disease and blood clot risk

Talking therapy and rehabilitation probably improve long covid symptoms, but effects modest

Ban medical research with links to the fossil fuel industry, say experts

Different menopausal hormone treatments pose different risks

Novel CAR T cell therapy obe-cel demonstrates high response rates in adult patients with advanced B-cell ALL

Clinical trial at Emory University reveals twice-yearly injection to be 96% effective in HIV prevention

Discovering the traits of extinct birds

Are health care disparities tied to worse outcomes for kids with MS?

For those with CTE, family history of mental illness tied to aggression in middle age

The sound of traffic increases stress and anxiety

Global food yields have grown steadily during last six decades

Children who grow up with pets or on farms may develop allergies at lower rates because their gut microbiome develops with more anaerobic commensals, per fecal analysis in small cohort study

[Press-News.org] Transforming safety net practices into patient-centered medical homes -- progress report
Special issue of Medical Care Presents Updates from Safety Net Medical Home Initiative