Browsing by keyword "outcome assessment (health care)"
Now showing items 1-2 of 2
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Post-Acute Care Setting, Facility Characteristics, and Post-Stroke Outcomes: A Systematic ReviewOBJECTIVE: To synthesize research comparing post-stroke health outcomes between patients rehabilitated in skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) and inpatient rehabilitation facilities (IRFs). Secondly, to evaluate relationships between facility characteristics and outcomes. DATA SOURCES: PubMed and CINAHL searches spanned January 1, 1998 to October 6, 2016 and encompassed MeSH and free-text keywords for stroke, IRF/SNF, and study outcomes. Human and English limits were used. STUDY SELECTION: Observational and experimental studies examining outcomes of adult stroke patients rehabilitated in an IRF or SNF were eligible. Studies had to provide site of care comparisons and/or analyses incorporating facility-level characteristics and had to report > 1 primary outcome (discharge setting, functional status, readmission, quality of life, all-cause mortality). Unpublished, single-center, descriptive, and non-US studies were excluded. Articles were reviewed by one author and when uncertain, discussion with study coauthors achieved consensus. Fourteen (0.3%) titles were included. DATA EXTRACTION: The types of data, time period, size, design, and primary outcomes were extracted. We also extracted two secondary outcomes (length of IRF/SNF stay, cost) when reported by included studies. Effect measures, modeling approaches, methods for confounding adjustment, and potential confounders were extracted. Data were abstracted by one author and the accuracy verified by a second reviewer. DATA SYNTHESIS: Two studies evaluating community discharge, one study evaluating predicted readmission probability, and 3 studies evaluating all-cause mortality favored IRFs over SNFs. Functional status comparisons were inconsistent. No studies evaluated quality of life. Two studies confirmed increased costs in the IRF versus SNF setting. Although substantial facility variation was described, few studies characterized sources of variation. CONCLUSIONS: The few studies comparing post-stroke outcomes indicated better outcomes (with greater costs) for patients in IRFs versus SNFs. Contemporary research on the role of the post-acute care setting and its attributes in determining health outcomes should be prioritized to inform reimbursement system reform.
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Priorities for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research: A Report of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Centers for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research Working GroupThe Centers for Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (CCORs) held a meeting to review how cardiovascular outcomes research had evolved in the decade since the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute 2004 working group report and to consider future directions. The conference involved representatives from governmental agencies, outcomes research thought leaders, and public and private healthcare partners. The main purposes of this meeting were to (1) advance collaborative high-yield, high-impact outcomes research; (2) identify priorities and barriers to important cardiovascular outcomes research; and (3) define future needs for the field. This report highlights the key topics covered during the meeting, including an examination of the recent history of outcomes research, an evaluation of the current academic climate, and a vision for the future of cardiovascular outcomes research.
