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1.
J Gen Intern Med ; 38(1): 30-35, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35556213

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Security emergency responses (SERs) are utilized by hospitals to ensure the safety of patients and staff but can cause unintended morbidity. The presence of racial and ethnic inequities in SER utilization has not been clearly elucidated. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether Black and Hispanic patients experience higher rates of SER and physical restraints in a non-psychiatric inpatient setting. DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS: All patients discharged from September 2018 through December 2019. EXPOSURE: Race and ethnicity, as reported by patients at time of registration. MAIN OUTCOMES: The primary outcome was whether a SER was called on a patient. The secondary outcome was the incidence of physical restraints among patients who experienced a SER. KEY RESULTS: Among 24,212 patients, 18,755 (77.5%) patients identified as white, 2,346 (9.7%) as Black, and 2,425 (10.0%) identified with another race. Among all patients, 1,827 (7.6%) identified as Hispanic and 21,554 (89.0%) as non-Hispanic. Sixty-six (2.8%) Black patients had a SER activated during their first admission, compared to 295 (1.6%) white patients. In a Firth logit multivariable model, Black patients had higher adjusted odds of a SER than white patients (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) 1.37 [95% confidence interval: 1.02, 1.81], p = 0.037). Hispanic patients did not have higher odds of having a SER called than non-Hispanic patients. In a Poisson multivariable model among patients who had a SER called, race and ethnicity were not found to be significant predictors of restraint. CONCLUSION: Black patients had higher odds of a SER compared to white patients. No significant differences were found between Hispanic and non-Hispanic patients. Future efforts should focus on assessing the generalizability of these findings, the underlying mechanisms driving these inequities, and effective interventions to address them.


Subject(s)
Ethnicity , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Hospitals , Black People
3.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 28(2): 232-238, 2021 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32909610

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Using the case of barcode medication administration (BCMA), our objective is to describe the challenges nurses face when informatics tools are not designed to accommodate the full complexity of their work. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Autonomy is associated with nurse satisfaction and quality of care. BCMA organizes patient information and verifies medication administration. However, it presents challenges to nurse autonomy. Qualitative fieldwork, including observations of everyday work and interviews, was conducted during the implementation of BCMA in a large academic medical center. Fieldnotes and interview transcripts were coded and analyzed to describe nurses' perspectives on medication safety. RESULTS: Nurses adopt orienting frames to structure work routines and require autonomy to ensure safe task completion. Nurses exerted agency by trusting their own judgment over system information when the system did not consider workload complexity. Our results indicate that the system's rigidity clashed with adaptive needs embodied by nurses' orienting frames. DISCUSSION: Despite the fact that the concept of nurse as knowledge worker is foundational to informatics, nurses may be perceived as doers, rather than knowledge workers. In practice, nurses not only make decisions, but also engage in highly complex task-related work that is not well supported by process-oriented information technology tools. CONCLUSIONS: Information technology developers and healthcare organization managers should engage and better understand nursing work in order to develop technological and social systems to support it.


Subject(s)
Electronic Data Processing , Medication Systems, Hospital , Nursing Process/organization & administration , Nursing Staff, Hospital , Professional Autonomy , Academic Medical Centers , Attitude of Health Personnel , Humans , Medication Systems, Hospital/organization & administration , Nurse's Role , Patient Safety
4.
J Nerv Ment Dis ; 203(4): 269-78, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25784307

ABSTRACT

College/university students are at high risk for psychiatric disorder and suicide secondary to age, campus stressors, and social pressures. We therefore report frequencies of 18 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision disorders and suicidal ideation (SI) acquired anonymously from a Web site receiving 113,181 visits from more than 1,500 predominantly US colleges/universities. Depression was foremost, followed by social phobia and eating disorders. Substance-related disorders were less frequent than expected. SI occurred in 47.1% of students, with women evidencing somewhat stronger findings than men. SI was more associated with substance, bipolar, and panic disorders than depression. Self-reported emotional volatility exceeded thoughts of self-harm for all disorders. The results support two subtypes of suicide risk: dysphoric premeditators and those primarily angry and/or impulsive. Clinicians and researchers should therefore consider suicide as an independent psychopathological phenomenon that includes emotional volatility as a risk factor and thoroughly evaluate psychiatric disorders potentially conferring greater suicidal propensity than depression.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/epidemiology , Students/statistics & numerical data , Suicidal Ideation , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Internet , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Self Report , Sex Factors , Students/psychology , Universities/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
5.
Int J Med Inform ; 82(12): e331-44, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23562140

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: When barcode medication administration (BCMA) is implemented nurses are required to integrate not only a new set of procedures or artifacts into everyday work, but also an orientation to medication safety itself that is sometimes at odds with their own. This paper describes how the nurses' orientation (the Practice Frame) can collide with the orientation that is represented by the technology and its implementation (the System Frame), resulting in adaptations at the individual and organization levels. METHODS: The paper draws on two qualitative research studies that examined the implementation of BCMA in inpatient settings using observation and ethnographic fieldwork, content analysis of email communications, and interviews with healthcare professionals. RESULTS: Two frames of reference are described: the System Frame and the Practice Frame. We found collisions of these frames that prompted adaptations at the individual and organization levels. The System Frame was less integrated and flexible than the Practice Frame, less able to account for all of the dimensions of everyday patient care to which medication administration is tied. CONCLUSION: Collisions in frames during implementation of new technology result in adaptations at the individual and organization level that can have a variety of effects. We found adaptations to be a means of evolving both the work routines and the technology. Understanding the frames of clinical workers when new technology is being designed and implemented can inform changes to technology or organizational structure and policy that can preclude unproductive or unsafe adaptations.


Subject(s)
Health Plan Implementation/organization & administration , Hospital Information Systems/organization & administration , Medication Systems, Hospital/organization & administration , Adaptation, Psychological , Electronic Health Records , Humans , Nursing Staff, Hospital , Organizational Innovation , Software , Task Performance and Analysis
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