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Query: UMLS:C0026986 (
myelodysplastic syndrome
)
14,926
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Multidimensional functional assessment is the basis of individualized care. It is especially important in the care of elderly, with the complexity of symptomatology and often with cognitive impairment present. An assessment instrument for elderly persons, used in this study, is the Resident Assessment Instrument/Minimum Data Set (
RAI
/
MDS
) and its incorporated
MDS
Cognitive Performance Scale (CPS). The purposes of the study were to demonstrate the cognitive performance in elderly persons in different levels of care by using the CPS and to elicit the views of staff on use of the
RAI
/
MDS
. Cognitive impairment was found in 1276 elderly persons in six levels of care studied, an important factor to consider when organizing care of elderly. An intervention study was carried out for 1 year in three nursing home wards, with training and supervision in implementation of the
RAI
/
MDS
including individualized and documented care. Part of a questionnaire was used to evaluate staff (n = 50) views on using the instrument. A majority of the staff thought that the
RAI
/
MDS
could contribute to the improvement of quality of care, documentation in nursing records, and in co-operation and engagement. Further research is necessary to elicit more knowledge on the usefulness and benefits of the instrument.
...
PMID:Staff views on the Resident Assessment Instrument, RAI/MDS, in nursing homes, and the use of the Cognitive Performance Scale, CPS, in different levels of care in Stockholm, Sweden. 975 34
Using standardized assessment instruments may help staff identify needs, problems and resources which could be a basis for nursing care, and facilitate and improve the quality of documentation. The Resident Assessment Instrument/Minimum Data Set (
RAI
/
MDS
) especially developed for the care of elderly people, was used as a basis for individualized and documented nursing care. This study was carried out to compare nursing documentation in three nursing home wards in Sweden, before and after a one-year period of supervised intervention. The review of documentation focused on structure and content in both nursing care plans and daily notes. The greatest change seen after intervention was the writing of care plans for the individual patients. Daily notes increased both in total and within parts of the nursing process used, but reflected mostly temporary situations. Even though the documentation of nursing care increased the most, it was the theme medical treatment which was the most extensive overall. A difference was seen between computer-triggered Resident Assessment Protocol (RAP) items, obtained from the
RAI
/
MDS
assessments, and items in the nursing care plans; the former could be regarded as a means of quality assurance and of making staff aware of the need for further discussions. The
RAI
/
MDS
instrument seems to be a useful tool for the dynamic process in nursing care delivered and as a basis for documentation. The documentation should communicate a patient's situation and progress, and if staff are to be able to use it in their everyday nursing care activity, it must be well-structured and freely available. The importance of continuing education and supervision in nursing documentation for development of a reliable source of information was confirmed by the present study.
...
PMID:Review of nursing documentation in nursing home wards - changes after intervention for individualized care. 1035 42
There is a growing need for an integrated health information system to be used in community, institutional and hospital based settings. For example, changes in the structure, process and venues of service delivery mean that individuals with similar needs may be cared for in a variety of different settings. Moreover, as people make transitions from one sector of the healthcare system to another, there is a need for comparable information to ensure continuity of care and reduced assessment burden. The
RAI
/
MDS
series of assessment instruments comprise an integrated health information system because they have consistent terminology, common core items, and a common conceptual basis in a clinical approach that emphasizes the identification of functional problems.
...
PMID:Integrated health information systems based on the RAI/MDS series of instruments. 1078 69
The paper explores the meaning of Resident Assessment Instruments. It gives a summary of existing
RAI
instruments and derived applications. It argues how all of these form the basis for an integrated health information system for "chain care" (home care, home for the elderly care, nursing home care, mental health care and acute care). The primary application of
RAI
systems is the assessment of client care needs, followed by an analysis of the required and administered care with the objective to make an optimal individual care plan. On the basis of
RAI
, however, applications have been derived for reimbursement systems, quality improvement programs, accreditation, benchmarking, best practice comparison and care eligibility systems. These applications have become possible by the development on the basis of the Minimum Data Set of
RAI
of outcome measures (item scores, scales and indices), case-mix classifications and quality indicators. To illustrate the possibilities of outcome measures of
RAI
we present a table and a figure with data of six Dutch nursing homes which shows how social engagement is related to ADL and cognition. We argue that
RAI
/
MDS
assessment instruments comprise an integrated health information system because they have consistent terminology, common core items, and a common conceptual basis in a clinical approach that emphasizes the identification of functional problems.
...
PMID:[Integrated health information system based on Resident Assessment Instruments]. 1129 44
The purpose of this study was to apply a benchmarking methodology to identify the most effective approaches used by long-term care facilities in implementing new computerized resident assessment instrument/minimum data set (
RAI
/
MDS
) systems and to develop implementation protocols based on these "best practices." Site visits were conducted with 3 long-term care facilities, selected on the basis of a national search. Facility directors, directors of nursing, information system managers, and frontline staff at each facility were targeted, and questionnaires were developed for each to assess factors viewed as important to successful implementation. A convergence was found in recommended action steps reported across sites to facilitate introduction and implementation of new
RAI
/
MDS
software. An example of how benchmarking results were used to develop an implementation plan is provided. Benchmarking provided a useful methodology for identifying best practices to guide implementation planing for adoption of a new computerized
RAI
/
MDS
system in the current trial. The benchmarking steps described are replicable and can be used to guide implementation of other new systems in the nursing home setting.
...
PMID:Benchmarking implementation of a computerized system for long-term care. 1207 71
Fall Risk Factors have been analysed (
RAI
-
MDS
-System) in a population of patients, who were hospitalised between 1995 and 2000 in a geriatric department of a community hospital. In multivariate analysis, viseral-problems, incontinence and depression were fall-protective factors, whereas problems with transfer, the use of assistive walking-aids, female gender and age were fall risk-factors. No independent contribution to the fall-risk was delivered by memory-impairment, problems in decision-making, low body-mass-index, the use of more than three medications and the use of restraints. Fall injuries were analysed in a patient population (n = 218), that was hospitalized in the year 2001 in the geriatric department of a community hospital after a fall. The analysis showed an enormous heterogenicity of the injury-patterns: 58.7% of the fall-patients suffered from a fracture, 10.6% of them had more than one fracture, 34% suffered from other injuries. 77 surgical interventions were performed. The mean length of stay of the fall-patients was 4.5 days higher than the mean of all geriatric patients.
...
PMID:[Fall risk factors and fall injuries in hospitalized elderly patients]. 1545 31
The Resident Assessment Instrument/Minimum Data Set (
RAI
/
MDS
) used in nursing homes (NHs) participating in the Federal Medicare and Medicaid programs is a state-of-the-art, computerized clinical assessment instrument.
RAI
/
MDS
-derived data are essential, used for NH reimbursement, quality measurement, regulatory quality monitoring activities, and clinical care planning. Completing or coordinating the
RAI
/
MDS
, which may be conceived of as implementation, is a federally mandated responsibility of the RN involving clinical assessment, a core professional competency of any RN. How the
RAI
/
MDS
is implemented in each NH provides evidence of how each NH as an organization understands both the
RAI
/
MDS
process and its organizational level responsibility for promotion of RN competence in clinical assessment. Research literature related to
RAI
/
MDS
development, testing, and accuracy is used to identify what is known about organizational level implementation of the
RAI
/
MDS
. Evidence-based suggestions to enhance RN competence in
RAI
/
MDS
clinical assessments, given existing organizational barriers, are provided.
...
PMID:Implementation of the resident assessment instrument/minimum data set in the nursing home as organization: implications for quality improvement in RN clinical assessment. 1806 21
The study explored whether apathy and depressive mood symptoms (DMS) are related to cognitive and functional features of dementia in 63 nursing home (NH) residents with early-onset dementia (EOD). All EOD residents from one NH (n = 41) and a random sample from another NH were assessed for depressive symptoms (Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS]), apathy (Neuropsychiatric Inventory [NPI]), global cognitive functions (Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE]), activities of daily living (ADL, Minimum Data Set-Resident Assessment Instrument [
MDS
-
RAI
]), and overall dementia severity (Global Deterioration Scale [GDS]). DMS were not associated with apathy and dementia severity. Regression analyses adjusted for age, gender, the type of dementia, and DMS revealed that dementia severity measures accounted, respectively, for 14% (ADL), 13% (GDS), and 9% (MMSE) of the variance in apathy. In line with previous research in older patients, the higher apathy scores were associated with more cognitive and functional problems in EOD.
...
PMID:Apathy and depressive mood in nursing home patients with early-onset dementia. 1934 2
The Resident Assessment Instrument/Minimum Data Set (
RAI
/
MDS
) is the foundational clinical framework for nursing home care, functioning as both a clinical assessment instrument and an assessment process. An RN is mandated by statute to complete or coordinate the work associated with this framework. Using both focus groups and questionnaires, 24 RN
MDS
coordinators attending a national conference for
MDS
coordinators described their work in its organizational context. Shortell et al.'s continuous quality framework of structural, technical, cultural, and strategic organizational dimensions was used to categorize descriptive themes. Clinical implications of the study findings are summarized.
...
PMID:The work of the RN Minimum Data Set coordinator in its organizational context. 2007 17
Health-related quality of life (HRQL) for nursing home residents is important, however, the concept of quality of life is broad, encompasses many domains and is difficult to assess in people with dementia. Basic activities of daily living (ADL) are measured routinely in nursing homes using the Resident Assessment Instrument-Minimum Data Set Version 2.0 (RAI-MDS) and Functional Independence Measure (FIM) instrument. We examined the relationship between HRQL and ADL to assess the future possibility of ADL dependency level serving as a surrogate measure of HRQL in residents with dementia. To assess ADL, measures derived from the
RAI
-
MDS
and FIM data were gathered for 111 residents at the beginning of our study and at 6-month follow-up. Higher scores for independence in ADL were correlated with higher scores for a disease-specific HRQL measure, the Quality of Life-Alzheimer's Disease Scale. Preliminary evidence suggests that FIM-assessed ADL is associated with HRQL for these residents. The associations of the dressing and toileting items with HRQL were particularly strong. This finding suggests the importance of ADL function in HRQL. The
RAI
-
MDS
ADL scales should be used with caution to evaluate HRQL.
...
PMID:Greater Independence in Activities of Daily Living is Associated with Higher Health-Related Quality of Life Scores in Nursing Home Residents with Dementia. 2741 76
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