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1.
Eur J Surg Oncol ; 37(8): 695-702, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21664099

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To analyze longitudinal changes in each subscale of a quality of life (QOL) measure and to explore their relationships to effective QOL predictors in breast cancer surgery patients. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This prospective study analyzed 172 patients at two tertiary academic hospitals. All patients completed the European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) and its supplementary breast cancer measure (QLQ-BR23) at baseline and at 1 and 2 years postoperatively. The 95% confidence intervals for differences in responsiveness estimates were derived by bootstrap estimation. Scores derived by these instruments were interpreted by generalized estimating equation (GEE) before and after surgery. RESULTS: A 2-year follow-up survey of the examined population revealed significant (P < 0.05) improvement in each QOL subscale. In both postoperative surveys, effect size was largest in the QLQ subscales for patients who had received mastectomy with reconstruction and lowest in those who had received modified radical mastectomy. After adjusting for time effects and baseline predictors, GEE approaches revealed the following explanatory variables for QOL: time, type of surgical procedure, age, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, hormone therapy, and preoperative functional status. CONCLUSIONS: When evaluating QOL after breast cancer surgery, several factors other than the surgery itself should be considered. Patients should also be advised that their postoperative QOL might depend not only on the success of their operations, but also on their preoperative functional status.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/surgery , Mammaplasty , Mastectomy, Modified Radical , Mastectomy, Segmental , Quality of Life , Adult , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Surveys and Questionnaires , Taiwan , Time Factors , Treatment Outcome
2.
Acad Med ; 76(2): 113-24, 2001 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11158829

ABSTRACT

Changes in the organization, financing, and delivery of health care services have prompted medical school leaders to search for new organizational models for linking medical schools, faculty practice groups, affiliated hospitals, and insurers-models that better meet the contemporary challenges of governance and decision making in academic medicine. However, medical school leaders have relatively little information about the range of organizational models that could be adopted, the extent to which particular organizational models are actually used, the conditions under which different organizational models are appropriate, and the ramifications of different organizational models for the academic mission. In this article, the authors offer a typology of eight organizational models that medical school leaders might use to understand and manage their relationships with physicians, hospitals, and other components of clinical delivery systems needed to support and fulfill the academic mission. In addition to illustrating the models with specific examples from the field, the authors speculate about their prevalence, the conditions that favor one over another, and the benefits and drawbacks of each for medical schools. To conclude, they discuss how medical school and clinical enterprise leaders could use the organizational typology to help them develop strategy and manage relationships with each other and their other partners.


Subject(s)
Health Services , Models, Organizational , Schools, Medical , Delivery of Health Care , Hospitals , Insurance, Health , Interprofessional Relations , Physicians , United States
3.
J Health Adm Educ ; 19(3): 341-58, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11764844

ABSTRACT

Doctoral education in health administration has been heavily influenced by the model of the traditional academic research Doctor of Philosophy. This powerful traditional template has been appropriate for the advancement of research and scholarship in health systems administration, but not necessarily for the advancement of the field of practice. With the advent of executive doctoral programs that feature larger student cohorts, routinized curricula, and student bodies comprised of experienced professionals, the expectations for doctoral study in health systems administration are being tested as new models evolve. Faculty are reluctant to depart from the traditional doctoral forum, but will do so based upon demonstrated advantages in the area of publication opportunities, student responsiveness, and financial inducements. This paper examines the program in an executive format conforming to the existing degree offerings of the School of Public Health, and the process of balancing the traditional academic expectations with the executive format of content delivery.


Subject(s)
Education, Graduate/organization & administration , Health Services Administration , Models, Educational , Education, Graduate/trends , Humans , Louisiana , Motivation , Organizational Innovation , Research , Schools, Public Health
4.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 27(5): 269-86, 2000 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10943014

ABSTRACT

Leadership theory has identified leadership as a process or skill of transformation of organizations and society. Managerial theorists have seen leadership as a role within management, and have argued from a distinctly organizational perspective. During the last decade, mental health executives have gravitated from the leadership is policy emphasis to one of management accommodation to major changes in the health environment. The most noteworthy of these changes has been the dominance of private markets in health and the introduction throughout the mental health services sector of management techniques of managed care. Leadership is once again ascendant as a result of the failure of several of these initiatives, notably prior authorization of care, and a renewed public policy emphasis on needs of persons who are mentally ill. Major opportunities confronting the contemporary leader/manager include advocacy, diversity, and information management.


Subject(s)
Health Facility Administrators , Leadership , Mental Health Services/organization & administration , Health Care Sector , Health Services Research , Humans , Public Health , Role , United States
5.
J Health Hum Serv Adm ; 21(3): 346-63, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10538671

ABSTRACT

Urban trauma centers have been shown in the medical literature to be effective resources for dealing with traumatic injury in a manner which results in demonstrated increases in survival rates. Given that much debate exists over the relative efficacy of various technological medical interventions, the acceptance and diffusion of a "proven" technology, such as trauma centers, should be assured. Yet, the significant investment of resources required to staff, equip, and maintain a trauma center, coupled with a perceived fiscal deterioration of the provision of these services, has resulted in a retreat from the concept through closure of the services.


Subject(s)
Health Care Rationing , Social Values , Trauma Centers/supply & distribution , Diffusion of Innovation , Efficiency, Organizational , Ethics, Institutional , Health Facility Closure , Health Policy , Humans , Los Angeles , Managed Care Programs/economics , Managed Care Programs/organization & administration , Organizational Case Studies , Trauma Centers/economics , Trauma Centers/trends , Wounds and Injuries/economics , Wounds and Injuries/therapy
7.
J Health Polit Policy Law ; 22(6): 1359-83, 1997 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9459132

ABSTRACT

This study compares the perspectives of eighteen managed care executives and twenty-four faculty practice executives on critical policy issues related to the managed care marketplace. Market sites studied in 1994 included four major metropolitan areas: Minneapolis-St. Paul, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, and Atlanta. These markets were selected as being representative of communities with descending degrees of managed care involvement, but with significant market activity. Study participants from both managed care systems and faculty practices examined five policy issues: (1) the importance of including academic medical centers in current and future health care plans for marketing purposes; (2) the provision of clinical services that are unique to the academic medical center, that is, unavailable elsewhere in the community; (3) the degree of financial supplement that employers might pay for including an academic medical center; (4) future restructuring of organizations to sustain the educational mission of academic faculty within a viable delivery system; (5) satisfaction of managed care providers with graduates of academic medical centers, as measured by the clinical skills of graduate physicians. The study findings showed little support among managed care plans for paying supplements to include faculty practices in a health care network. Most study participants from managed care systems and academic faculty practices identified limited competencies that are unique to academic centers. Moreover, managed care organizations were only willing to undertake limited restructuring at best to include faculty practices within their networks. General concern about the preparation of resident physicians (especially those in primary care disciplines) for practice within contemporary managed care organizations existed among managed care informants. The results of the study indicate that as traditional funding sources for medical education are reduced, schools require greater integration with managed care plans to enable academic medical centers and their faculties to continue promoting clinical enterprise.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Administrative Personnel/psychology , Attitude of Health Personnel , Faculty, Medical , Managed Competition/organization & administration , Professional Practice/organization & administration , Administrative Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Delivery of Health Care, Integrated , Humans , Marketing of Health Services , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States
9.
Acad Med ; 71(11): 1258-74, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9217518

ABSTRACT

The authors analyzed existing relationships between medical schools and clinical enterprises in order to develop models of these relationships. The conceptual framework for the models uses three variables to assess the nature of the relationships: (1) high academic control-high clinical enterprise control; (2) high academic influence-low academic influence; and (3) self-contained system-open system (i.e., the extent to which the resources needed for clinical education are provided by the relationship between the clinical enterprise and the medical school). The authors present four conceptual models of the relationship between the medical school and the clinical enterprise: (1) The "single ownership; owned integrated system" is characterized by a closed clinical delivery system owned or controlled by the academic institution. (2) The "general partner" organization emphasizes an open clinical environment in which the medical school forms alliances with clinical entities, and the school is a dominant partner. (3) The "limited partner" organization operates with an open clinical delivery system that the school relates to through affiliations and contractual relationships, and the school is a less dominant partner. (4) The "wholly owned, subsidiary" organization operates in a controlled clinical environment in which the medical school is a subsidiary of the larger integrated delivery system. Each model is presented in its pure organizational form, then augmented with descriptions of the different ways that the medical school and other components may relate to each other. Also, the advantages and disadvantages of each model for the medical school are discussed. The authors emphasize that no model is superior to the others; instead, the best choice for a medical school depends on the history, local circumstances, and leadership of the school and other organizations. The authors' intent is to assist the leaders of medical schools as they design strategies for the future relationships of their institutions.


Subject(s)
Models, Organizational , Schools, Medical/organization & administration , Interinstitutional Relations
10.
Acad Med ; 71(8): 858-70, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9125962

ABSTRACT

The author investigated the range of competitive options available for academic faculty practices and their associated academic medical centers located in health care markets with relatively limited development of managed care plans. Using personal and telephone interviews, he studied two such markets in 1994, one in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and one in Atlanta, Georgia. Representatives of faculty practices in these cities were asked to assess whether their practices would be attractive or unattractive for contracting with managed care providers; eight attributes of faculty practices (e.g., specialist physicians' availability within the group; prices of services offered by the group) were used as criteria. Similarly, representatives of local managed care plans were asked to use the same criteria to indicate what they would consider attractive or not in their local faculty practices when considering a physician services contract with such a practice. In both markets, the image of the academic medical center was generally considered to be a strong asset to the faculty practices. But all sectors also agreed that the nature of practices' utilization management and what was seen as their excessive use of resources in the academic environment were causes for concern. Also, the difference between the practice patterns of managed care physicians and academic faculty physicians was regarded as a cultural one in which traditional patterns of academic training are considered inimical to fostering the prudent management of patients. The findings strongly suggest that opportunities for faculty practices to negotiate with managed care plans and help shape their areas' future health care environments still exist in developing markets throughout the United States. But even those practices with such opportunities cannot succeed without significant internal restructuring to transform themselves to successfully deal with the new world of managed care.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Economic Competition/trends , Faculty, Medical , Managed Care Programs/organization & administration , Georgia , Health Care Reform , Interprofessional Relations , Philadelphia , Practice Patterns, Physicians'
11.
J Am Anim Hosp Assoc ; 31(1): 29-33, 1995.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7820761

ABSTRACT

Concurrent renal adenocarcinoma and polycythemia were diagnosed in a 19-month-old, female Rhodesian ridgeback. An unusually early presentation for this neoplasm, it is the second reported case of renal adenocarcinoma in a dog less than two years of age. Concurrent renal adenocarcinoma and polycythemia have been reported previously in four older dogs. In the dog of this report, clinical signs included brick-red mucous membranes, lethargy, a periodic systolic heart murmur, and engorged retinal vessels. A large retroperitoneal mass and pulmonary metastatic nodules were present at the time of diagnosis. Red blood cell count, packed cell volume, and hemoglobin concentration were greatly increased (12,940,000 red blood cells/microliter; 73.2%; and 26.6 g/dl, respectively). Histopathological diagnosis was renal adenocarcinoma. Polycythemia was the result of excessive erythropoietin production by the neoplasm.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Renal Cell/veterinary , Dog Diseases , Kidney Neoplasms/veterinary , Polycythemia/veterinary , Animals , Biopsy, Needle/veterinary , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/complications , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/pathology , Carcinoma, Renal Cell/secondary , Dog Diseases/etiology , Dog Diseases/pathology , Dogs , Female , Kidney Neoplasms/complications , Kidney Neoplasms/pathology , Lung Neoplasms/secondary , Lung Neoplasms/veterinary , Polycythemia/etiology
19.
Int J Aging Hum Dev ; 35(1): 49-65, 1992.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1506117

ABSTRACT

This article presents a framework for the analysis of the development of gerontology since 1945. Three distinct historical periods and several forces that have shaped the field are examined. These forces reside in the political, economic, sociocultural, technological, and knowledge realms of society. An analysis of the continuities and discontinuities over time provides a contrast between the historical periods identified. Despite the ideology of a continuous linear disciplinary progression, we find that discontinuities have been increasingly significant in shaping the experience of aging. Yet the field of gerontology lags in reflecting many of these changes. This incongruity calls the field to reassess its paradigmatic foundations and the empirical and theoretical work conducted within them. The implications for the disciplines and practice of gerontology are explored through a review of C. Wright Mills' contribution to a revival of the "gerontological imagination."


Subject(s)
Aging/psychology , Geriatrics/trends , Imagination , Social Conditions , Aged , Forecasting , Humans , United States
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