The study introduces the "Conflict-Choice model" (C-C) as an analytic framework for studying consumer demand for health and healthcare. The proposed approach integrates the Theory of Consumer Behavior (TCB), the Investment Theory of Demand (ITD), and the Health Belief Model (HBM) into a single model that might be applied to a wide spectrum of health behavior and use of health services. Separating the episode of care into the two phases (patient initiated and physician dominated), the C-C model is limited to the individual's decision to seek service.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Okla State Med Assoc
February 2013
There is ample evidence of the positive impact of electronic health records (EHR) on operational efficiencies and quality of care. Yet, growth in the adoption of EHR and sharing of information among providers has been slow. The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009 provides financial incentives for eligible providers to adopt and implement EHR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper develops a model that enables the health administrator to identify the balance that minimizes the projected cost of holding cash. Adopting the principles of mathematical expectation, the model estimates the expected total costs of adopting each of the several strategies concerning the cash balance that the organization might maintain. Expected total costs consist of anticipated short costs, resulting from a potential shortage of funds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe author examined relationships between adverse medical events (AMEs) on discharge decisions. Using secondary data capturing inpatient utilization from Oklahoma hospitals, the author employed logistic regression to estimate the probability of extended hospital stay and the need for postacute care as a function of AMEs, and multiple regression analysis to assess the effect of AMEs on the number of days of care. Findings showed that an AME increased the likelihood of extended hospital stay, number of extended days of care, and needed postacute care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQual Manag Health Care
January 2010
Background: In this study, we examined the proposition that the occurrence of adverse medical events (AMEs) increases spending on inpatient hospital care.
Methods: Employing the individual and the episode of care as the unit of analysis, the study relied on data assembled in the Public Use Data File maintained by the Oklahoma State Department of Health. Multiple regression analyses were used to examine the covariates of the revenue per case and its components, the average revenue per day, and the number of days per case.
World Health Popul
August 2009
The worldwide shortage of nurses which results from a global undersupply and high attrition rates affects developed countries in the West the same way as it affects developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The difference lies in the fact that developing countries serve as a readily available source of trained nurses for developed countries in Europe, North America and parts of Oceania. Strong "pull" and "push" factors favour wealthier nations in the West in their efforts to deal with domestic shortages through overseas recruitment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurs Leadersh (Tor Ont)
August 2009
The worldwide shortage of nurses, which results from a global undersupply and high attrition rates, affects developed countries in the West the same way as it affects developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The difference lies in the fact that developing countries serve as a readily available source of trained nurses for developed countries in Europe, North America and parts of Oceania. Strong "pull" and "push" factors favour wealthier nations in the West in their efforts to deal with domestic shortages through overseas recruitment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the distribution of co-morbidity among 167,738 inpatients, aged 65 or more, who experienced an episode of hospitalization during 1999 in short-term institutions that are located in Oklahoma. The analysis was conducted in two phases. In the first, logistic regression analysis was used to examine covariates that separate inpatients who presented at least one secondary diagnosis from those who were not co-morbid.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Serv Manage Res
February 2006
This study examines the co-variates that separate patients who presented an emergent condition without a physician referral and were admitted through the hospital emergency department (ED) from their counterparts who were referred by a physician for the treatment of an elective or urgent condition and were admitted through the admissions department. The analysis was based on 295,945 inpatient admissions in 1999 to short-term acute-care hospitals in Oklahoma. Employing hospital admission as the unit of analysis, logistic regression was used to examine the differential likelihood of admission without a physician referral and through the ED of the uninsured, Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid recipients, African Americans and Native Americans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study examines the influence of financial incentives and the racial status of the patient on the use of extended care following an episode of hospitalization. Post-hospital care (PHC) is defined as the services provided by a skilled nursing facility (SNF) or intermediate care facility (ICF) following discharge. The focus of the analysis is on the use or nonuse of PHC, the presence or absence of a delay in transfer to an ICF or SNF and, limited to those who experienced a postponement, the length of the delayed discharge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdm Policy Ment Health
May 2004
Increasing competition in the market for mental health and substance abuse MHSA services and the potential to realize significant administrative savings have created an imperative to monitor, evaluate, and control spending on administrative functions. This paper develops a generic model that evaluates spending on administrative personnel by a group of providers. The precision of the model is demonstrated by examining a set of data assembled from five MHSA service providers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLimited to 251,768 discharges during 1999 from short-term hospitals located in Oklahoma, the objective of this study was to examine the influence of insurance status, prospective payment, and the unit of payment on variation in the length of stay. The regression analysis indicated that elderly patients whose care was financed by the Medicare pricing system and the uninsured experienced a significantly shorter episode of hospitalization than their commercially insured counterparts. Conversely, Medicaid recipients, whose care was financed by a fixed per diem and uninsured or self-responsible patients, experienced a significantly shorter hospital stay than the commercially insured.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe specific effects of vehicular type on the likelihood of an injury occurring are relatively unexplored. This study sought to assess the relative risk of injury to occupants of four-wheel drive vehicles and their counterparts in passenger cars. Data for 1143 occupants from all of the 454 crashes in Oklahoma, in 1995 that involved a four-wheel drive vehicle were used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Health Care Poor Underserved
February 2002
The purpose of this study is to examine differences in the use of preventive or early-detection services by the temporarily and chronically uninsured. The use of preventive care was measured by an index that depicts the use of nine preventive or early-detection services and the use or nonuse of each procedure on the index. Respondents whose lapse in insurance coverage was one year or more were identified as chronically uninsured, while those whose lapse in coverage was less than one year were identified as temporarily uninsured.
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