22 research outputs found

    Bilingual Proficiency Among California's Health Care Professionals

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    Explores the policy options for encouraging and measuring second-language competence among healthcare providers in California

    Primary Care Health Workforce in the United States

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    Synthesizes findings about trends in the composition, supply, and distribution of the primary care workforce; demand for and pressures on primary care providers; and the impact of technologies, payment policies, market forces, and scope of practice laws

    Promising Scope of Practice Models for the Health Professions

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    Compares California's SOP laws setting parameters for nurse practitioners, physical therapists, physician assistants, and paramedics to broader provisions in other states or institutions. Recommends more expansive and uniform SOP laws across states

    Community Health Workers and Promotores in California

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    Provides an overview of, and describes the challenges facing, the emerging workforce of public health professionals who carry out a variety of health promotion, case management, and service delivery activities at the community level

    Funding Community Health Worker Programs and Services in Minnesota: Looking to the Future

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    This report is a supplement to the 2006 report "Advancing Community Health Worker Practice and Utilization: The Focus on Funding"

    Advancing Community Health Worker Practice and Utilization: The Focus on Financing

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    There is a growing interest in the use of community health workers in various roles in the US health care system. These workers go by various titles and names -- including promotora and community health advisor -- but all assist members of the communities they serve. As the role of these workers becomes more accepted and desirable in the overall system of care, they face the challenges of moving from being an exceptional add-on to the system to being more a part of the mainstream. Issues such as educational preparation, formal credentialing, licensure and compensation are all part of this process. In particular, various organizations are interested in but challenged by the need for sustainable financing of the CHW position. It is time to explore and develop viable financing arrangements that go beyond short-term grants.To address these concerns, this research was undertaken to study sustainable financing mechanisms for community health workers. The focus is on existing and emerging funding, reimbursement and payment policies for community health workers. The study seeks to identify promising examples and models of payment programs for community health workers generally in the United States. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first national project with this exclusive focus.The audiences for this report include community health workers, directors of programs that employ or work with community health workers, and administrators of public and private coverage programs such as health plans, insurance companies and state Medicaid programs seeking options for improving health care access and quality at the same or lower costs. Businesses, non-profit organizations and consumers exploring the possibilities of using the services community health workers could provide might also be interested in the findings

    Consumer ethnicity three decades after: a TCR agenda

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    Research into consumer ethnicity is a vital discipline that has substantially evolved in the past three decades. This conceptual article critically reviews its immense literature and examines the extent to which it has provided extensive contributions not only for the understanding of ethnicity in the marketplace but also for personal/collective well-being. We identify two gaps accounting for scant transformative contributions. First, today social transformations and conceptual sophistications require a revised vocabulary to provide adequate interpretive lenses. Second, extant work has mostly addressed the subjective level of ethnic identity projects but left untended the meso/macro forces affecting ethnicity (de)construction and personal/collective well-being. Our contribution stems from filling both gaps and providing a theory of ethnicity (de)construction that includes migrants as well as non-migrants

    Einstein on music: A unique source for musical life in the twentieth century

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    Assessing the Impact of California's Nurse Staffing Ratios on Hospitals and Patient Care

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    Examines how the minimum nurse-to-patient staffing requirements in acute-care hospitals in California, implemented in 2004, affected the employment of registered nurses, the hospitals' financial status, and the quality of care
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