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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of a data-driven method for selecting candidates for case management intervention in a community's medically indigent population

Leslie, Ryan Christopher 28 April 2014 (has links)
The Indigent Care Collaboration (ICC), a partnership of Austin, Texas, safety net providers, gathers encounter data and manages initiatives for the community's medically indigent patients. One such initiative is the establishment of a care management program designed to reduce avoidable hospitalizations. This study developed predictive models designed to take year-one encounter data and predict inpatient utilization in the following two years. The models were calibrated using 2003 through 2005 data for the 41,260 patients with encounters with ICC partner providers in all three years. Predictor variables included prior inpatient admissions, age, sex, and a summary measure of overall health status: the relative risk score produced by the Diagnostic Cost Groups prospective Medicaid risk-adjustment model. Using the 44,738 patients with encounter data in each of years 2004 through 2006 data, the performance of the predictive models was cross-validated and compared against the performance of the "common sense" method of choosing candidate patients based on prior year chronic disease diagnoses and high utilization, referred to herein as the Utilization Method (UM). The 620 patients with three or more 2005 through 2006 inpatient admissions were considered the actual high use patient subset. Each model's highest-risk 620 patients comprised its high-risk subset. Only 344 high-risk patients met the UM’s criteria. Prediction accuracy was described in terms of positive predictive value (PPV), i.e., the proportion of identified high-risk patients who were high-use patients. Three of the predictive models had a PPV of near 25% or greater, with the highest, the linear model using the DCG relative risk score, at 26.8%. The PPV of the UM was 17.1%, lower than that of all predictive models. When all high-risk subsets were limited to 344 patients (the number identified by the UM), the performance of the UM and the predictive models was similar. This study demonstrated that “common sense” targets for case management can be identified via simple filter as effectively as through empirically-based predictive models. However, once the supply of easily identifiable targets is exhausted, predictive models using a measure of health status identify high-risk patients who could not be easily identified by other means. / text
2

High-risk Patient Identification: Patient Similarity, Missing Data Analysis, and Pattern Visualization

Yaddanapudi, Suryanarayana 24 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
3

Verhältnis von Nutzen und Risiko der kathetergestützten Aortenklappenimplantation (TAVI) in verschiedenen Subgruppen einer unizentrischen Kohorte mit chirurgischen Hochrisikopatienten / The risk-to-benefit ratio of transcatheter aortic valve implantation in specific patient cohorts in a single-centre with high-risk patients

Viel, Tanja 08 August 2017 (has links)
No description available.
4

Enhancing the professional dignity of midwives in an academic tertiary hospital

Froneman, Christelle January 2017 (has links)
Introduction and background: The professional dignity of midwives is determined by their own perspectives of the contribution that they make to the optimal care of patients, the respect that they get from other members of the health team and the support that hospital management gives them. When midwives are not treated with respect and their professional competencies are not recognised, their professional dignity is violated. Aim of the study: The study aims to explore and describe how the professional dignity of midwives in the selected hospital can be enhanced. Methodology: A descriptive phenomenological research design was used. In-depth interviews were conducted once informed consent was obtained with purposively selected participants until data saturation occurred. At least 15 midwives from the antenatal, postnatal and delivery rooms of the selected hospital were interviewed. The interviews were audio-recorded with the permission of the participants and analysed through the method of Giorgi (1997:247). The essence of the phenomenon and the supporting constituents (themes) were identified. The essence and constituents will be described and thereafter the constituents will be discussed. Applicable literature was used to integrate the findings in the knowledge base of the phenomenon. Findings: The purpose of the research study was to explore how the professional dignity of midwives in the selected hospital can be enhanced. The essence (meaning) of the participants’ experiences was disclosed as: To dignify midwives in an academic tertiary hospital. The essence is supported by the following constituents (meaning units): ‘to acknowledge the capabilities of midwives’, ‘to appreciate interventions of midwives’, ‘to perceive midwives as equal health team members’, ‘to invest in midwives’, ‘to enhance collegiality’, ‘to be cared for by management’ and ‘to create conducive environments’. / Dissertation (MCur)--University of Pretoria, 2017. / Nursing Science / MCur / Unrestricted
5

Community INVADE - Eine Community als Intervention

Dannecker, Achim, Radzuweit, Martin, Stupp, Carolin, Wenke, Birgit, Lechner, Ulrike 30 May 2014 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
6

Community INVADE - Eine Community als Intervention

Dannecker, Achim, Radzuweit, Martin, Stupp, Carolin, Wenke, Birgit, Lechner, Ulrike January 2011 (has links)
No description available.

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