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

Guided care provides better quality of care for chronically ill older adults

2013-01-17
(Press-News.org) Patients who received Guided Care, a comprehensive form of primary care for older adults with chronic health problems, rated the quality of their care much higher than patients in regular primary care, and used less home care, according to a study by researchers at Johns Hopkins University. In an article published online by the Journal of General Internal Medicine, researchers found that in a 32-month randomized controlled trial, Guided Care patients rated the quality of their care significantly higher than those in normal care, and were 66 percent more likely to rate their access to telephone advice as excellent or very good. Patients also had 29 percent fewer home health care visits.

"As more practices move to a comprehensive care model, Guided Care's team care approach can help ensure better quality care and more satisfied patients," said Bruce Leff, MD, co-investigator of the study and professor with the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. "In addition, the nearly one-third reduction in home care use highlights how providing comprehensive care for high-risk patients can reduce health service utilization."

According to the study, Guided Care patients also experienced, on average, 13 percent fewer hospital re-admissions and 26 percent fewer days in skilled nursing facilities. However, only the difference in home health care episodes is statistically significant. In earlier reports, physician satisfaction was higher and family caregiver strain was lower with Guided Care.

Guided Care is a model of proactive, comprehensive health care that can help primary care practices transform into patient-centered medical homes. Guided Care focuses on improving care for patients with multiple chronic health conditions. Guided Care teams include a registered nurse, two to five physicians, and other members of the office staff who work together to perform home-based assessments, create an evidence-based care guide and action plan, monitor and coach the patient monthly, coordinate the efforts of all the patient's healthcare providers, smooth transitions between sites of care, promote patient self-management, educate and support family caregivers, and facilitate access to community resources.

### The multi-site, randomized controlled trial of Guided Care involving 49 physicians, 904 older patients and 319 family members recently concluded in eight locations in the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. area. The three-year study was funded by a public-private partnership of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the National Institute on Aging, the John A. Hartford Foundation, the Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation, Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic States, Johns Hopkins HealthCare, and the Roger C. Lipitz Center for Integrated Health Care.

Authors of "A Matched-Pair Cluster-Randomized Trial of Guided Care for High-Risk Older Patients " include Chad Boult, MD, MPH, MBA, Bruce Leff, MD, Lisa Reider, MHS; Kevin D. Frick, PhD; Cynthia M. Boyd, MD, MPH; Jennifer Wolff, PhD; Katherine Frey, MPH; Lya Karm, MD; Stephen T. Wegener, PhD, Tracy Mroz, MS, OTR/L; Daniel D. Scharfstein, ScD; and Jill A. Marsteller, PhD, MPP.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New key to organism complexity identified

New key to organism complexity identified
2013-01-17
The enormously diverse complexity seen amongst individual species within the animal kingdom evolved from a surprisingly small gene pool. For example, mice effectively serve as medical research models because humans and mice share 80-percent of the same protein-coding genes. The key to morphological and behavioral complexity, a growing body of scientific evidence suggests, is the regulation of gene expression by a family of DNA-binding proteins called "transcription factors." Now, a team of researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ...

Hearing-loss-prevention drugs closer to reality thanks to new UF test

Hearing-loss-prevention drugs closer to reality thanks to new UF test
2013-01-17
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — A new way to test anti-hearing-loss drugs in people could help land those medicines on pharmacy shelves sooner. University of Florida researchers have figured out the longstanding problem of how to safely create temporary, reversible hearing loss in order to see how well the drugs work. The findings are described in the November/December 2012 issue of the journal Ear & Hearing. "There's a real need for drug solutions to hearing loss," said lead investigator Colleen Le Prell, Ph.D., an associate professor in the department of speech, language, and hearing ...

The new age of proteomics: An integrative vision of the cellular world

2013-01-17
The enormous complexity of biological processes requires the use of high­performance technologies —also known as '­omics'—, that are capable of carrying out complete integrated analyses of the thousands of molecules that cells are made up of, and of studying their role in illnesses. In the post-genomic age we find ourselves in, the comprehensive study of cellular proteins —prote-omics— acquires a new dimension, as proteins are the molecular executors of genes and, therefore, the most important pieces of the puzzle if we wish to understand more completely how cells work. The ...

Implicit race bias increases the differences in the neural representations of black and white faces

2013-01-17
Racial stereotypes have been shown to have subtle and unintended consequences on how we treat members of different race groups. According to new research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, race bias also increases differences in the brain's representations of faces. Psychological scientists Tobias Brosch of the University of Geneva in Switzerland and Eyal Bar-David and Elizabeth Phelps of New York University examined activity in the brain while participants looked at pictures of White and Black faces. Afterwards, ...

New insights into the 'borderline personality' brain

New insights into the borderline personality brain
2013-01-17
New work by University of Toronto Scarborough researchers gives the best description yet of the neural circuits that underlie a severe mental illness called Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), and could lead to better treatments and diagnosis. The work shows that brain regions that process negative emotions (for example, anger and sadness) are overactive in people with BPD, while brain regions that would normally help damp down negative emotions are underactive. People with BPD tend to have unstable and turbulent emotions which can lead to chaotic relationships with ...

Lack of key enzyme in the metabolism of folic acid leads to birth defects

2013-01-17
AUSTIN, Texas — Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have discovered that the lack of a critical enzyme in the folic acid metabolic pathway leads to neural tube birth defects in developing embryos. It has been known for several decades that folic acid supplementation dramatically reduces the incidence of neural tube defects, such as spina bifida and anencephaly, which are among the most common birth defects. In some populations, folic acid supplementation has decreased neural tube defects by as much as 70 percent. However, scientists still do not fully ...

New UAlberta research shows commonly prescribed medications could have adverse effects

2013-01-17
A research team with the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry at the University of Alberta reported findings that significantly improve understanding of how widely used drugs in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) affect the heart health of treated patients. The research shows that medications often prescribed for PAH could block the function of an important hormone in the heart, decreasing the strength of contraction of the right heart chambers, a potentially important and yet unrecognized adverse effect. PAH is a disease that affects the blood vessels of the lungs, causing ...

Novel technique reveals dynamics of telomere DNA structure

2013-01-17
Biomedical researchers studying aging and cancer are intensely interested in telomeres, the protective caps on the ends of chromosomes. In a new study, scientists at UC Santa Cruz used a novel technique to reveal structural and mechanical properties of telomeres that could help guide the development of new anti-cancer drugs. Telomeres are long, repetitive DNA sequences at the ends of chromosomes that serve a protective function analogous to that of the plastic tips on shoelaces. As cells divide, their telomeres get progressively shorter, until eventually the cells stop ...

Diabetic fruit flies support buzz about dietary sugar dangers

Diabetic fruit flies support buzz about dietary sugar dangers
2013-01-17
LA JOLLA, Calif., January 15, 2013 – Regularly consuming sucrose—the type of sugar found in many sweetened beverages—increases a person's risk of heart disease. In a study published January 10 in the journal PLOS Genetics, researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute and Mount Sinai School of Medicine used fruit flies, a well-established model for human health and disease, to determine exactly how sucrose affects heart function. In addition, the researchers discovered that blocking this cellular mechanism prevents sucrose-related heart problems. "Our study ...

NFL players may be at higher risk for depression as they age

2013-01-17
SAN DIEGO – National Football League (NFL) players may be at increased risk of depression as they age due to brain damage resulting from concussions, according to two studies released today that will be presented at the American Academy of Neurology's 65th Annual Meeting in San Diego, March 16 to 23, 2013. "The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that about 1.6 to 3.8 million sports concussions occur each year. While it is known that sports concussions can cause immediate disturbances in mood and thinking, few studies have investigated the long-term ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Barcodes uncover early blueprints of our cellular origins

Stanford Medicine-led phase 3 trial shows gene therapy skin grafts help epidermolysis bullosa

‘Pill-on-a-thread’ could replace endoscopies for half of all patients being monitored for esophageal cancer risk

Study casts doubt on ‘incestuous royalty’ in Neolithic Ireland

Heart valve developed at UC Irvine shines in early-stage preclinical testing

In diseases due to exposure to toxic particles like gout, macrophages elicit separate pathways for inflammation and lysosomal function

Zoning out could be beneficial—and may actually help us learn faster

Weekly semaglutide improves blood sugar and weight in adults with Type 1 diabetes

Concerned father, statistician develops software to improve skills therapy

Your smartwatch might know you’re sick before you do — and it might help stop pandemics

ImmunoPET tracer enhances early detection of liver cancer

AI-based brain-mapping software receives FDA market authorization

New PET tracer identifies diverse invasive mold infections behind life-threatening illnesses in cancer and transplant patients

Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) achieves notable impact factor growth in latest journal citation reports

AI chatbot safeguards fail to prevent spread of health disinformation

UTIA researcher to receive award from the Soil and Water Conservation Society

HSE linguists study how bilinguals use phrases with numerals in Russian

Cold winters halt the northward spread of species in a warming climate

Study finds early signs of widespread coastal marsh decline

Massive burps of carbon dioxide led to oxygen-less ocean environments in the deep past

US muslims’ attitudes toward psychedelic therapy

HSE scientists reveal how staying at alma mater can affect early-career researchers

Durham University scientists reveal new cosmic insights as first Rubin Observatory images released

Emotional and directional enabled programmable flexible haptic interface for enhanced cognition in disabled community

Music on the brain: exploring how songs boost memory

Non-contact and nanometer-scale measurement of shallow PN junction depth buried in Si wafers

A unified approach to first principles calculations of Parton physics in hadrons

Killer whales groom each other using tools made from kelp

Killer whales make seaweed ‘tools’ to scratch each other’s backs

New drug for diabetes and obesity shows promising results

[Press-News.org] Guided care provides better quality of care for chronically ill older adults