Effectiveness of wound, ostomy and continence-certified nurses on individual patient outcomes in home health care

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Effectiveness of wound, ostomy and continence-certified nurses on individual patient outcomes in home health care
المؤلفون: Yuefeng Hou, Donna Z. Bliss, Bonnie L. Westra, Kay Savik
المصدر: Home healthcare nurse. 32(1)
سنة النشر: 2013
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Health (social science), Databases, Factual, Urinary incontinence, Certification, Cohort Studies, Health care, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Medicine, Young adult, Specialties, Nursing, Pressure Ulcer, Surgical wound, General Medicine, Middle Aged, Home Care Services, Medical–Surgical Nursing, Treatment Outcome, Urinary Tract Infections, Female, medicine.symptom, Cohort study, Adult, medicine.medical_specialty, Adolescent, Urinary system, Ostomy, Episode of Care, MEDLINE, Bowel incontinence, Nurse's Role, Risk Assessment, Statistics, Nonparametric, Young Adult, Home Health Nursing, Humans, Aged, Quality of Health Care, Retrospective Studies, Community and Home Care, Advanced and Specialized Nursing, business.industry, Retrospective cohort study, United States, Surgery, Logistic Models, Urinary Incontinence, Propensity score matching, Emergency medicine, Wounds and Injuries, business, Nurse-Patient Relations, Fecal Incontinence
الوصف: Purpose To assess whether there was a significant improvement and stabilization (not worse at discharge) in pressure ulcers, lower extremity venous ulcers, surgical wounds, urinary incontinence, bowel incontinence, and urinary tract infections in home health care (HHC) patients cared for by a certified WOC nurse. Subjects and setting There were 449,170 episodes of care from a national convenience sample of 785 HHC agencies with 447,309 nonmaternity, adult patients between October 1, 2008, and December 31, 2009. Design Descriptive and comparative. Instruments and methods Data from the Outcome and Assessment Information Set documented by HHC clinicians were analyzed using mixed-effects logistic regression, propensity score analysis, and appropriate parametric and nonparametric tests. An Internet survey identified whether WOC nurses provided care to patients in an HHC agency. Home health care agencies identified records of patients receiving WOC nurse visits/consults. Results An HHC patient assigned to a WOC nurse had surgical wounds, pressure ulcers, and incontinence problems that were significantly worse than HHC patients not assigned to a WOC nurse. Patients cared for by a WOC nurse showed significant improvement and stabilization of the number of pressure ulcers and surgical wounds and the frequency of urinary and bowel incontinence, despite having problems that were more severe than other patients. Home health care patients not cared for by WOC nurses, with less-severe wound and incontinence problems, also got better. Conclusions WOC nurses are effective in achieving positive health outcomes for pressure ulcers, surgical wounds, and incontinence in HHC patients with severe health problems.
تدمد: 1539-0713
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::865bfee4ac50c550401aa645f0c72e34Test
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24326472Test
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....865bfee4ac50c550401aa645f0c72e34
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE