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Study: Chain-owned nursing homes hurt by too much standardization
05-21-2007 · EurekAlert!Standard marketing and strategic planning practices can hurt patient care throughout a nursing home chain, but only if too much emphasis is placed on such administrative standards to the detriment of clinical and facility standards, a new study indicates.
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Keywords: study, chain-owned, nursing, homes, hurt, standardization, chain, owned, home
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- Caregiver support key to improved health, fewer nursing home placements, Jefferson researchers find
11-30-2006 · EurekAlert!
Helping caregivers take care of themselves is key to enabling them to better deal with family members with dementia, a recent study by Thomas Jefferson University researchers shows. In fact, those caregivers who were provided extra, individualized support had less depression and were able to keep family members in adult day services -- and out of nursing homes -- much longer than those who did not get the extra attention.
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- Vitamin D may reduce falls in elderly nursing home residents
02-21-2007 · EurekAlert!
New research suggests that reducing the number of falls suffered by seniors in nursing homes may be helped by taking a vitamin, along with other measures known to decrease falls. According to a study in Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, seniors taking a high daily dose of vitamin D experienced 72 percent fewer falls compared to those taking a placebo.
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- Policy changes have direct effect on nursing home care
05-29-2007 · EurekAlert!
States that set high staffing standards for elder care in nursing homes are the only ones that come close to having enough staff nurses to prevent serious safety violations, according to a new study by a professor in the UCSF School of Nursing.
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- Nursing home or hospital: State policy has big impact on elderly
12-13-2006 · EurekAlert!
In a groundbreaking national study, Brown University researchers have traced the connections between state nursing home policies and resident hospitalization rates. The team found that state policies unwittingly create financial incentives for nursing homes to hospitalize their frail elderly residents, even though hospital stays can be disorienting or dangerous. Results are published in Health Services Research.
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- Counseling for spouses keeps Alzheimer's patients out of nursing homes
11-13-2006 · EurekAlert!
Spouses of Alzheimer's disease patients are less likely to put their loved ones in a nursing home if they receive enhanced caregiver support and counseling. Researchers say their findings could potentially save millions of dollars in nursing home care costs, according to a study published in the Nov. 14, 2006, issue of Neurology, the scientific journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
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- Congestive heart failure leads to greater disability, nursing home admissions
01-07-2008 · EurekAlert!
A University of Michigan Health System study has found that congestive heart failure patients patients were much more likely to be disabled than people without the condition. They were found to be much more likely to require care from nursing homes and family members.
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- RAND study finds vaccination of nursing home staff, residents, key to reducing flu outbreak
11-15-2006 · EurekAlert!
Potentially deadly influenza outbreaks in nursing homes are less likely to occur when large numbers of staff and residents get flu shots, according to a study issued today by the RAND Corporation.The study by the nonprofit research organization found that nursing homes were 60 percent less likely to have a cluster of influenza-like illnesses if more than 55 percent of the staff and more than 89 percent of the residents were vaccinated for influenza.
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- Concentrations of certain toxins in breast milk are low, study finds
02-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
Nursing mothers worried about passing harmful chemicals to their infants through breast milk should be aware that the air inside their home may pose a greater health risk. Researchers from Ohio State and Johns Hopkins universities measured the levels of harmful gases called "volatile organic compounds" (VOCs) in human milk and in the air inside the homes of three lactating mothers in inner-city Baltimore.
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- Selective restraints and reduced medication could reduce nursing home falls says 4-year study
01-14-2008 · EurekAlert!
Analysis of more than 2,300 falls and fractures at 21 Swedish nursing homes quantifies increased fall risks from certain drugs and protective effects of selective restraints.
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- Flu jabs for care home staff prevents deaths
11-30-2006 · EurekAlert!
Vaccinating care home staff against influenza can prevent illness, deaths and health service use during periods of moderate influenza activity, concludes a study published online by the BMJ today.Weak immune systems mean that many care home residents are vulnerable to influenza outbreaks even when they have been vaccinated. Many countries offer influenza vaccine to healthcare workers every year, but in the UK most care homes do not vaccinate their staff.
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