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Kozyrskyj, Anita; Black, Charlyn; Chateau, Dan; Steinbach, Carmen – Canadian Journal on Aging, 2005
Hospitalization is a sentinel event that leads to loss of independence for many seniors. This study of long-stay hospitalizations (more than 30 days) in seniors was undertaken to identify risk factors for not going home, to characterize patients with risk factors who did go home and to describe one year outcomes following home discharge. Using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Patients, Risk, Nursing Homes
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Stirman, Shannon Wiltsey; DeRubeis, Robert J.; Crits-Christoph, Paul; Rothman, Allison – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2005
To determine the extent to which published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of psychotherapy can be generalized to a sample of outpatients, the authors matched information obtained from charts of patients who had been screened out of RCTs to inclusion and exclusion criteria from published RCT studies. Most of the patients in the sample who had…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Patients, Research Methodology, Psychological Studies
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Osman, Augustine; Kopper, Beverly A; Barrios, Frank; Gutierrez, Peter M.; Bagge, Courtney L. – Psychological Assessment, 2004
This investigation was conducted to validate the Beck Depression Inventory--II (BDI-II; A. T. Beck, R. A. Steer, & G. K. Brown, 1996) in samples of adolescent psychiatric inpatients. The sample in each substudy was primarily Caucasian. In Study 1, expert raters (N=7) and adolescent psychiatric inpatients (N=13) evaluated the BDI-II items to assess…
Descriptors: Patients, Test Reliability, Test Validity, Depression (Psychology)
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Schieveld, Jan N. M.; Leentjens, Albert F. G. – Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2005
Delirium is a serious neuropsychiatric disorder frequently seen in severely ill adult and geriatric patients. The clinical picture in adults is well known, as are the negative prognostic implications of delirium on length of hospital stay, morbidity, and mortality (American Psychiatric Association, 1999); however, it is less appreciated that…
Descriptors: Psychosis, Diseases, Hospitalized Children, Neuropsychology
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Monk, Timothy H.; Houck, Patricia R.; Shear, M. Katherine – Death Studies, 2006
Many patients with complicated grief suffer severe symptoms for several years after the loss, interfering with daily life. We sought to determine which elements of a patient's daily routine were likely to be missed or added. Sixty-four patients completed a diary each evening for 2 weeks. The diary asked whether each of 13 daily life activities…
Descriptors: Patients, Grief, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Emotional Response
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Riggs, Jack E.; Libell, David P.; Brooks, Claudette E.; Hobbs, Gerald R. – Journal of Rural Health, 2005
Context: Referral bias reflecting the preferential hospital transfer of patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) has been demonstrated as the major contributing factor for an observed high nonrisk-adjusted in-hospital crude acute stroke mortality rate at a rural academic medical center. Purpose: This study was done to assess the impact of a…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Referral, Bias, Medical Services
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Hayes, Andrew F. – Human Communication Research, 2006
Multilevel modeling (MLM) is growing in use throughout the social sciences. Although daunting from a mathematical perspective, MLM is relatively easy to employ once some basic concepts are understood. In this article, I present a primer on MLM, describing some of these principles and applying them to the analysis of a multilevel data set on…
Descriptors: Models, Social Sciences, Data Analysis, Physician Patient Relationship
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Gionta, Dana A.; Harlow, Lisa L.; Loitman, Jane E.; Leeman, Joanne M. – Structural Equation Modeling, 2005
Three structural equation models of communication between family members and medical staff were examined to understand relations among staff accessibility, inhibitory family attitudes, getting communication needs met, perceived stress, and satisfaction with communication. Compared to full and direct models, a mediational model fit best in which…
Descriptors: Patients, Family Attitudes, Family Needs, Structural Equation Models
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Burch-Sims, G.P.; Matlock, V.R. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2005
Sickle cell disease was first reported in 1910 by J. Herrick, and since then, various associated conditions and complications have been described. Sickle cell disease is a hereditary disorder characterized by abnormality of the hemoglobin in the red blood cell. During periods of decreased oxygen tension in the red blood cell's environment, the…
Descriptors: Patients, Pathology, Investigations, Incidence
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Randall, Billi; Moss, Helen E.; Rodd, Jennifer M.; Greer, Mike; Tyler, Lorraine K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2004
Patients with category-specific deficits have motivated a range of hypotheses about the structure of the conceptual system. One class of models claims that apparent category dissociations emerge from the internal structure of concepts rather than fractionation of the system into separate substores. This account claims that distinctive properties…
Descriptors: Semantics, Patients, Linguistic Theory, Computation
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Culbertson, William; Moberg, Paul; Duda, John; Stern, Matthew; Weintraub, Daniel – Assessment, 2004
The aim of the study was to investigate the utility of the Tower of London-Drexel (TOL DX ) in assessing the executive deficits associated with Parkinsons disease (PD). We sought to determine whether the TOL DX would differentiate between (a) patients with PD and healthy control participants (HCP), (b) demented and nondemented patients, and (c)…
Descriptors: Patients, Diseases, Test Validity, Dementia
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Westfall, John M.; Fernald, Douglas H.; Staton, Elizabeth W.; VanVorst, Rebecca; West, David; Pace, Wilson D. – Journal of Rural Health, 2004
Medical errors and patient safety have gained increasing attention throughout all areas of medical care. Understanding patient safety in rural settings is crucial for improving care in rural communities. To describe a system to decrease medical errors and improve care in rural and frontier primary care offices. Applied Strategies for Improving…
Descriptors: Safety, Medical Services, Demonstration Programs, Rural Areas
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Casey, Michelle M.; Moscovice, Ira – Journal of Rural Health, 2004
Critical access hospitals (CAHs) face many challenges in implementing quality improvement (QI) initiatives, which include limited resources, low volume of patients, small staffs, and inadequate information technology. A primary goal of the Medicare Rural Hospital Flexibility Program is to improve the quality of care provided by CAHs. This article…
Descriptors: Patients, Telephone Surveys, Information Technology, Hospitals
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Sanddal, Teri L.; Upchurch, James; Sanddal, Nels D.; Esposito, Thomas J. – Journal of Rural Health, 2005
Many American Indian nations, tribes, and bands are at an elevated risk for premature death from unintentional injury. Previous research has documented a relationship between alcohol-related injury and subsequent injury death among predominately urban samples. The presence or nature of such a relationship has not been documented among American…
Descriptors: Patients, Musicians, Intervention, Indians
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Michalec, Barret; Van Willigen, Marieke; Wilson, Kenneth; Schreier, Ann; Williams, Susan – Evaluation Review, 2004
Addressing methodological weaknesses of previous research, this study assesses whether African American women are, in fact, less likely to participate in breast cancer support groups than are White women. Of the breast cancer survivors, 958 (26% African Americans, 73% Caucasian) completed interviews concerning demographic characteristics, other…
Descriptors: African Americans, Social Support Groups, Whites, Sampling
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