¶ … Transitional Care of Older Adults Hospitalized with Heart Failure Experiment
Naylor, M.D., Brooten, D., Campbell, R.L., Maislan, G.,, McCauley, K.M. Schuartz, J. Transitional Care of Older Adults Hospitalized with Heart Failure: A Randomized Trial.
This article has an interesting approach to summarizing the experiment that was conducted. Instead of a formal abstract, the article instead summarizes the design and outline in several sections. These sections include objectives, design, setting, participants, intervention, measurements, results, and conclusions. The sections that are listed replace the standard format for an abstract that condenses the design and the findings into one formal section. Personally, I prefer the organization of this format better as it more clearly illustrates all of the factors in the research in a clear and easily identifiable format.
Analysis of the Introduction
The authors of this research do state the problem that they are researching in a clear and coherent manner. The specific problem relates to older adults and their vulnerability during a transition from a care facility to a home setting. During this transitional state, it has been identified that many preventable poor discharge outcomes occur. Individual factors contributing to negative outcomes include multiple comorbid conditions, functional deficits, cognitive impairment, emotional problems, and poor general health behaviors; system factors associated with poor outcomes include breakdowns in communication between providers and across healthcare agencies, inadequate patient and caregiver education, poor continuity of care, and limited access to services (Naylor, et al., 2004). Furthermore, it is estimated that roughly one third of all patients and caregivers report substantial unmet needs among this transitional population.
The problem this then framed in a more specific manner that includes a specific segment and the costs that this segment at to the healthcare systems expenditures. The breakdown in care and/or communication that this specific segment incurs is responsible for healthcare costs annually in the billions. The specific segment that is mentioned is the elder group that experiences a form of heart failure. This group is responsible for the highest hospitalization rate of all demographics and these patients typically have multiple comorbid medical conditions, numerous disabling symptoms, complex medication regimens, and limited self-management skills (Naylor, et al., 2004). The authors also note that little is known about the effectiveness of care management strategies for elders experiencing an acute episode of heart failure complicated by multiple other chronic health conditions
In my opinion the author clearly states the problem being investigated and introduces the problem with relative promptness. Hence the background is well-developed and adequate to support the background information needed to introduce the study and its place in the research and the literature regarding the subject. The importance of the study is clearly illustrated by demographical information as well as its financial implications. Furthermore, the study introduces the effectiveness of interventions based on other studies that have been conducted that have offered significant results. In particular, in my opinion, this is a valuable contribution to the article because it emphases the potential that research in this area can have on patient outcomes in this group.
The specific objective of this randomized control trial (RCT) RCTwas to examine the sustained effect of a 3-month comprehensive transitional care (discharge planning and home follow-up) intervention directed by advanced practice nurses (APNs) for elders hospitalized with heart failure on time to first readmission or death, total rehospitalizations, readmissions due to heart failure and comorbid conditions, quality of life, functional status, patient satisfaction, and medical costs. This study presents, on a spectrum of clinical and economic outcomes, the first multisite assessment of a transitional care intervention targeting the comprehensive set of serious health problems and risk factors common in elders throughout an acute episode of heart failure (Naylor, et al., 2004).
The scope of the study is well designed and provides enough background to introduce the problem in a clear and coherent manner that includes both theoretical and operational factors. The hypothesis is not as elaborate as the rest of the background. However, it seems to cover the research intention fairly well by simply stating that "given the established association between breakdowns in care during the transition from hospital to home and poor postdischarge outcomes, such an intervention needs to continue through the postdischarge period to assure longerterm improvements in patient and caregiver outcomes (Naylor, et al., 2004)." Although the hypothesis mentions an improvement in outcomes, it does not however give any quantitative...
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Naylor, PhD,, Dorothy A. Brooten, PhD, Roberta L. Campbell, PhD, Greg Maislin, MS, MA, Kathleen M. McCauley, PhD, and J. Sanford Schwartz, MD. All of the authors have graduate or post graduate degrees in the fields of health or medicine. This therefore makes them all qualified to write on the proposed study, and to carry out the research. They are, therefore, reliable and credible researchers in this field. The title of
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