| Literature DB >> 19665666 |
Marilyn J Rantz1, Debra Cheshire, Marcia Flesner, Gregory F Petroski, Lanis Hicks, Greg Alexander, Myra A Aud, Carol Siem, Katy Nguyen, Clara Boland, Sharon Thomas.
Abstract
The Quality Improvement Program for Missouri (QIPMO), a state school of nursing project to improve quality of care and resident outcomes in nursing homes, has a special focus to help nursing homes identified as "at risk" for quality concerns. In fiscal year 2006, 92 of 492 Medicaid-certified facilities were identified as "at risk" using quality indicators (QIs) derived from Minimum Data Set (MDS) data. Sixty of the 92 facilities accepted offered on-site clinical consultations by gerontological expert nurses with graduate nursing education. Content of consultations include quality improvement, MDS, care planning, evidence-based practice, and effective teamwork. The 60 "at-risk" facilities improved scores 4%-41% for 5 QIs: pressure ulcers (overall and high risk), weight loss, bedfast residents, and falls; other facilities in the state did not. Estimated cost savings (based on prior cost research) for 444 residents who avoided developing these clinical problems in participating "at-risk" facilities was more than $1.5 million for fiscal year 2006. These are similar to estimated savings of $1.6 million for fiscal year 2005 when 439 residents in "at-risk" facilities avoided clinical problems. Estimated savings exceed the total program cost by more than $1 million annually. QI improvements demonstrate the clinical effectiveness of on-site clinical consultation by gerontological expert nurses with graduate nursing education.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19665666 DOI: 10.1016/j.gerinurse.2008.09.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geriatr Nurs ISSN: 0197-4572 Impact factor: 2.361