Background: Boston Children's Hospital's Level IV Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) discharges about a third of its medically complex infants home. Parental feedback indicated a need for more education and training in discharge preparation.
Purpose: The NICU to Nursery (N2N) program was created to better prepare parents to care for their medically complex infants following Level IV NICU discharge.
Background: Neonatal patients who no longer require level IV neonatal intensive care unit care are transferred to less acute levels of care. Standardized assessment tools have been shown to be beneficial in the transfer of patient care. However, no standardized tools were available to assist neonatal providers in the assessment and communication of the infants needs at transfer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Our objective is to describe the implications, anticipated and perceived, by providers in a level-IV neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) with immediate patient access to inpatient notes and test results in the wake of the 21st Century Cures Act (CCA).
Study Design: Using a mixed-method approach in February 2021, a preimplementation survey of neonatologists, neonatal fellows, nurse practitioners, and neonatal nurses reported their perspectives on the new 21st CCA and how they anticipated that it would change their practices, and the experience of families in the NICU. In the follow-up to implementation, a postsurvey was completed by staff reporting their experiences in July 2021.
Background: In the United Kingdom, there is a current priority for high-quality dementia care provided at home. However, home care or domiciliary care is an area where problems have been reported, in terms of a lack of consistency, coordination and appropriate responses to the specific needs of those with dementia. The views of informal carers, who often must respond to these problems when supporting relatives, are crucial in shedding light on the issues and in seeking to promote solutions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The objective of the study was to localize sources of interictal high-frequency activity (HFA), from tripolar electroencephalography (tEEG), in patient-specific, realistic head models.
Methods: Concurrent electroencephalogram (EEG) and tEEG were recorded from nine patients undergoing video-EEG, of which eight had seizures during the recordings and the other had epileptic activity. Patient-specific, realistic boundary element head models were generated from the patient's magnetic resonance images (MRIs).