143 research outputs found

    APRESENTAÇÃO DOSSIÊ: Filosofia da Educação Matemática

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    Este Dossiê, intitulado Filosofia da Educação Matemática, traz contribuições de pesquisadores nacionais de diferentes estados do país, como Bahia, Minas Gerais, Paraná, Santa Catarina e São Paulo e internacionais (França), além de uma entrevista com Ole Skovsmose, professor emérito da Universidade Aalborg, Dinamarca e professor colaborador do Programa de Pos-Graduação em Educação Matemática na Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), campus de Rio Claro. A intenção, neste dossiê, é expor pesquisas no âmbito da Filosofia da Educação Matemática.A filosofia da Educação Matemática, como área de investigação, visa argumentar, correlacionar ideias, pesquisar, atuar na realidade da experiência vivenciada como um convite ao debate. De acordo com Bicudo e Garnica (2003), a Filosofia da Educação Matemática se constitui como uma região de inquérito da Educação Matemática que preza por um pensar reflexivo, crítico e sistemático, com o qual se lança para questões postas pela Filosofia da Educação e pela Matemática, constituindo-se originariamente como um pensar próprio que avança em direção a compreensões mais abrangentes e que se põem a demandar mais compreensões. A tarefa da Filosofia da Educação Matemática é dizer do sentido da Educação Matemática, expor compreensões que vão se constituindo no solo da experiência vivenciada com e na Educaçao Matemática

    1829. A Systems Approach to Nursing Home Antimicrobial Stewardship

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    Background: Up to 70% of nursing home (NH) residents receive one or more courses of antibiotics (ATB) annually, of which over half may be inappropriate and risk harm. The current availability of in-house NH data is often insufficient to measure and track appropriateness, due to incomplete data or unusable formatting. Our 3-year project to improve antimicrobial stewardship (AMS) used the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Core Elements of AMS for NHs, with guided input from NH providers to develop and implement an electronic ATB de-escalation decision support tool that also captures otherwise inaccessible data. Methods: Our baseline assessment identified wide variation in providers’ knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs regarding ATB prescribing, leading us to identify de-escalation as the most feasible NH AMS intervention. Using facilitated open-ended conversations with leaders from three NH corporations, we developed an electronic decision support tool to systematically prompt de-escalation 48–72 hours post-prescribing. Subsequent site visits with NH clinical teams at a convenience sample of sites allowed us to explore how to incorporate decision support into their electronic health record (EHR). Results: We developed a tool anchored on data capture for the “acute change in condition” that triggers prescriber interactions. It uses clinical and laboratory data to prompt structured communication between nurses and prescribers. Placing this tool in the EHR reduced duplicate charting, enabled guidance from McGeer and Loeb criteria, and promoted its adoption into practice while ensuring data capture to assess appropriateness of ATB prescribing. Conclusion: Our electronic decision support tool captures clinical and laboratory data, which it then uses to systematically prompt conversations about de-escalation between nurses and prescribers, reducing variation in practice. Upon completion, the assessment ensures availability of data to assess, track, and report appropriate prescribing practices among prescribers. This tool proved acceptable to NH providers in three different corporations, suggesting feasibility of further expansion of this approach to a broader group of NH providers

    Wohnungseinbruch: Tat und Folgen: Ergebnisse einer Betroffenenbefragung in fünf Großstädten

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    Zweitveröffentlichung. Download von https://kfn.de/publikationen/kfn-forschungsbericht

    Persistence of Racial Inequities in Receipt of Influenza Vaccination among Nursing Home Residents in the United States

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    BACKGROUND: We sought to determine if the racial differences in influenza vaccination among nursing home (NH) residents during the 2008-09 influenza season persisted in 2018-19. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study of NHs certified by the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services during the 2018-19 influenza season in U.S. states with ≥ 1% black NH residents and a white-black gap in influenza vaccination of NH residents (N=2,233,392) of at least one percentage point (N=40 states). NH Residents during October 1, 2018 through March 31, 2019 aged ≥ 18 years and self-identified as black or white race were included. Residents' influenza vaccination status (vaccinated, refused, and not offered) was assessed. Multilevel modeling was used to estimate facility-level vaccination status and inequities by state. RESULTS: The white-black gap in influenza vaccination was 9.9 percentage points. In adjusted analyses, racial inequities in vaccination were more prominent at the facility- than at the state-level. Black residents disproportionately lived in NHs with majority blacks, which generally had the lowest vaccination. Inequities were most concentrated in the Midwestern region, also the most segregated. Not being offered the vaccine was negligible by difference in absolute percentage points among whites (2.6%) and blacks (4.8%) whereas refusals were higher among black (28.7%) than white residents (21.0%). CONCLUSIONS: The increase in the white-black vaccination gap among NH residents is occurring at the facility-level, in more states, especially those with the most segregation. Standing orders for vaccinations, previously reported to narrow the racial gap in vaccination among NH residents, should be considered

    Geographic variation in influenza vaccination among U.S. nursing home residents:A national study

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    OBJECTIVES: Estimates of influenza vaccine use are not available at the county level for U.S. nursing home (NH) residents but are critically necessary to guide the implementation of quality improvement programs aimed at increasing vaccination. Furthermore, estimates that account for differences in resident characteristics between counties are unavailable. We estimated risk‐standardized vaccination rates (RSVRs) among short‐ and long‐stay NH residents by U.S. county and identified drivers of geographic variation. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study utilizing 100% of 2013–2015 fee‐for‐service Medicare claims, Minimum Data Set assessments, Certification and Survey Provider Enhanced Reports, and Long‐Term Care: Facts on Care in the U.S. We separately evaluated short‐stay (<100 days) and long‐stay (≥100 days) residents aged 65 and older across the 2013–2014 and 2014–2015 influenza seasons. We estimated RSVRs via hierarchical logistic regression adjusting for 32 resident‐level covariates. We then used multivariable linear regression models to assess associations between county‐level NHs predictors and RSVRs. RESULTS: The study cohort consisted of 2,817,217 residents in 14,658 NHs across 2798 counties. Short‐stay residents had lower RSVRs than long‐stay residents (2013–2014: median [interquartile range], 69.6% [62.8–74.5] vs 84.0% [80.8–86.4]), and there was wide variation within each population (range, 11.4–89.8 vs 49.1–92.6). Several modifiable facility‐level characteristics were associated with increased RSVRs, including higher registered nurse to total nurse ratio and higher total staffing for licensed practical nurses, speech‐language pathologists, and social workers. Characteristics associated with lower RSVRs included higher percentage of residents restrained, with a pressure ulcer, and NH‐level hospitalizations per resident‐year. CONCLUSIONS: Substantial county‐level variation in influenza vaccine use exists among short‐ and long‐stay NH residents. Quality improvement interventions to improve vaccination rates can leverage these results to target NHs located in counties with lower risk‐standardized vaccine use
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