90 research outputs found

    Sustainability in Quality Improvement and Patient Safety Initiatives

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    The question often asked of a quality improvement initiative is whether the improvement process has been sustained within the organization. Rarely is the question answered satisfactorily. The sustainability of an improvement process is important as it justifies the investment of human and financial capital. The term \u27evaporation of improvements\u27 addresses the dilemma that between 33% to 70% of all innovations are reportedly not sustained (Fleiszer, Semenic, Ritchie, Richer, & Denis, 2015) . This evaporation of improvement captures the frustrating inability of many institutions to maintain the achieved improvement after the newness of the initial effort wears off (Buchanan, Fitzgerald, & Ketley, 2007). This article addresses the components of what makes a quality initiative sustainable by applying a framework developed that identifies components necessary within a sustainable quality initiative evident from the development process through to the implementation phase of the initiative which becomes part of the fabric of an organization

    New Morbidities 2.0

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    Robert Sanborn and Angelo Giardino\u27s introduction for Volume 4, Issue 1: New Morbidities 2.

    Review: The Batterer as Parent: Addressing the Impact of Domestic Violence on Family Dynamics

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    A Review of The Batterer as Parent: Addressing the Impact of Domestic Violence on Family Dynamics, 2nd Edition, by Lundy Bancroft, Jay G. Silverman, and D. Ritchie

    Sustainability and Spread of Community-based Initiatives: A case study of Community Cares, a Children’s Hospital’s 16 year effort to serve its community

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    The sustainability and spread of innovations is often elusive, presenting continuous challenges to clinicians and healthcare leaders. Somewhere between 33 - 70% of all innovations are reportedly not sustained, and even fewer are spread beyond the original team, or to other units within an organization. In plain language, sustainability is defined as locking in progress, while continually building upon that foundation, while spread is the exchange of knowledge and experience to others beyond the original implementing team. The literature supports the concept that sustainability is both multi-dimensional and multi-factorial and has several characteristics and pre-conditions. Tax-exempt, not-for-profit organizations in the USA must provide measurable community benefits to the populations they seek to serve. Many of these community benefits take the form of locating necessary services closer to or directly within the communities being served in order to enhance access. A case study of a 16 year effort to provide a medical home-oriented primary care model to underserved children in Houston, Texas Children’s Pediatrics’ Community Cares, is presented as illustrative of such a community benefit. Many of the characteristics and preconditions essential to a model for sustainability and spread are highlighted and the Community Cares case study is discussed from the standpoint of this framework

    Measuring Success in Public Education: Whether Wanted or Not

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    Robert Sanborn and Angelo Giardino\u27s introduction for Volume 3, Issue 2: Measuring Success in Public Education

    Food Insecurity and Children: Hunger?… In America?... How is that possible?

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    Despite being one of the wealthiest nations in the world, the United States continues to be plagued by the problem of food insecurity, especially at the child level. The editors\u27 implications piece presents a call for greater urgency in addressing the problem of food insecurity in the United States

    Human Trafficking: Awareness, Data and Policy

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    The implications of the new research presented in Volume 2, Issue 1 (Human Trafficking) of the Journal of Applied Research on Children are explored, calling attention to the need for increased awareness, greater availability of data, and proactive policy solutions to combat child trafficking

    New Morbidities 2.0

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    Robert Sanborn and Angelo Giardino\u27s introduction for Volume 4, Issue 1: New Morbdities 2.

    Accountable Communities: A Concept Broader than Health Care

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    Angelo Giardino and Robert Sanborn\u27s introduction for Volume 4, Issue 2: Accountable Communities: Healthier Neighborhoods, Healthier Children

    Quality Improvement and Safety in Healthcare: Reflections on essential frameworks to guide applied scholarship that promotes transformation and innovation

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    The publication of the inaugural issue of the Journal of Nursing and Interprofessional Leadership in Quality and Safety (JONILQS) is a unique milestone that is the culmination of visionary leadership, scholarly effort, and keen attention to the many tasks necessary to launch a journal. The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston’s School of Nursing launches this journal to address the focus on quality and safety initiatives and research that helps to make the health care we provide safer and better. This journal seeks to highlight practical work from the field that will change things for the better for the patients and health care systems we serve
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