Our findings suggest important opportunities to improve the quality of cancer care for older adults.
The extent to which nursing homes rely on the use of contracted licensed staff, factors associated with this staffing practice, and the resultant effect on the quality of resident care has received little public attention. Merging the On-line Survey Certification and Reporting System database with the Area Resource File from 1992 through 2002, the authors regressed organizational and market-level variables on the use of 5 percent or more contract full-time equivalent registered nurses and licensed practical nurses. Since 1997, the proportion of facilities using 5 percent or more contract licensed staff more than tripled. Use of contract nurses was associated with more deficiency citations, characteristics of poorer facilities, and tight labor markets. Nursing homes increasingly rely on contract nurses. The failure of nursing homes to attract and retain a competent, stable workforce creates a vicious cycle of staffing practices, which may lead to decline in quality of care.
More generous state Medicaid nursing home reimbursement and higher competition may advance the investment in medical infrastructure, which in turn may positively affect the quality of care provided to nursing home residents.
OBJECTIVES: To examine the effect of organizational characteristics on physical restraint use for hospitalized nursing home residents. DESIGN: Secondary analysis of data obtained between 1994 to 1997 in a prospective phase lag design experiment using an advanced practice nurse (APN) intervention aimed at reducing physical restraint for a group of hospitalized nursing home residents. SETTING: Eleven medical and surgical units in one 600‐bed teaching hospital. PARTICIPANTS: One hundred seventy‐four nursing home residents aged 61 to 100, hospitalized for a total of 1,085 days. MEASUREMENTS: Physical restraint use, APN intervention, age, perceived fall risk, behavioral phenomena, perceived treatment interference, mental state, severity of illness, day of week, patient–registered nurse (RN) ratio, patient–total nursing staff ratio, and skill mix. RESULTS: Controlling for the APN intervention, age, and patient behavioral characteristics (all of which increased the likelihood of restraint use), weekend days as an organizational characteristic significantly increased the odds of restraint (weekend day and patient–RN ratio on physical restraint use: odds ratio (OR) = 1.92, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.38–2.68, P < .001; weekend day and patient–total staff ratio on physical restraint use: OR = 1.91, 95% CI = 1.37–2.66, P < .001; weekend day and skill mix on physical restraint use: OR = 1.91, 95% CI = 1.37–2.67, P < .001). CONCLUSION: Key findings suggest that organization of hospital care on weekends and patient characteristics that affect communication ability, such as severely impaired mental state, English as a second language, sedation, and sensory‐perceptual losses, may be overlooked variables in restraint use.
Objectives:The stress-related psychological symptoms experienced by informal family caregivers do not always improve or resolve after the death of the care recipient. The purpose of this study was to explore the independent associations of sociodemographic variables, personality and coping, environmental variables, and caregiver guilt with the sleep quality and psychological distress of former family caregivers of individuals with dementia following care recipient's death. Method:A cross-sectional, correlational study was conducted with a sample of 171 former family caregivers of people with dementia. Participants completed an online survey comprised of six instruments and demographic items. Caregiver personal variables (e.g. personality and coping), environmental variables, guilt, psychological distress (depressive and anxiety symptoms), and sleep quality were evaluated using psychometrically validated measures. Results:In bivariate analysis, post-caregiving guilt was significantly associated with depressive and anxiety symptoms (p < 0.01). After controlling for covariates, dysfunctional coping and neuroticism explained 32% of the variance in depressive symptoms (R 2 = .52, ΔR 2 = .32, F(5, 165) = 36.24, p < .001) and 24% of the variance in anxiety symptoms (R 2 = .41, ΔR 2 = .24, F(5, 165) = 22.65, p < .001), while dysfunctional coping, pre-loss depression, and extraversion accounted for 16% of the variance in sleep quality (R 2 = .30, ΔR 2 = .16, F(6, 164) = 11.44, p < .001). Conclusion:This study demonstrates the critical role of personal variables, including personality traits, coping strategies, and pre-loss depression, in explaining psychological distress and sleep quality in this sample of former dementia caregivers.
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