Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Happy Ayyam-i-Ha !


Happy Ayyam-i-Ha!


What is Ayyam-i-Ha?
"Baha'is celebrate the festival of Ayyam-i-Ha each year from sunset on Feb. 25 to sunset of March 1 as a preparation for the Fast, which begins March 2 and ends March 20. During Ayyam-i-Ha, members of the Faith perform acts of charity, give gifts to friends and family, and attend social gatherings."
(from http://www.bahai.us/node/74 )
My gifts to my readers:

Here's a shortcut to the most uplifting, positive posts from this weblog to start your new year right! Let me know if I missed one of your favorites!

The Importance of Social Relationships (short)

1) For a human to sustain peak performance, it is not enough to engage the brain; we have to engage the heart.
Positive Deviance - (the new business model)
What I find refreshing and inspirational is that actual companies and business schools are even starting to think about humans in positive way
Virtue drives the bottom line (many references)

Religion, business, and science are often depicted as in conflict, so it catches the attention when all three of them agree on something. That something needs to be investigated.

Pathways to Peace ( Link to a beautiful multimedia show on virtues)
a beautiful musical slide show of virtues, quotes and Nature to inspire hope and action. Produced for the Pathways to Peace Project
Houston, we have a problem! (On the need for teamwork and consultation)
An "Interdisciplinary" team is a very different animal. It assumes that the problem is irreducibly large, and cannot be broken down into a set of somethings that one person can manage.
Importance of Social Relationships (with references)
A story is told of two stone-masons working on a huge church in Europe, one with great work and one with sloppy work that needed to be torn down and redone. When asked what they were doing, the poor one said: "I'm building a wall." The other said: "I'm building a cathedral." The spiritual issue matters so much it hurts, in ways science doesn't begin to grasp at the moment.
You can say that again! (On the importance of saying positive things twice)

The end of our exploring (T. S. Eliot)
T.S. Eliot, in the Four Quartets , said
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.



Baha'i US Center












Baha'i World Center

Sunday, February 25, 2007

National Patient Safety Awareness Week

NPSF Patient Safety Awareness Week
March 4-10, 2007
Posters, ideas, activities

National Patient Safety Foundation
http://www.npsf.org/
Conference ("Congress") : May 3-4, 2007 Washington DC
Journal: Journal of Patient Safety ($180+ /year)
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IHI.org
Institute for Healthcare Improvement
http://www.ihi.org/ihi
All improvement, some focus on safety
===========================
American Health Quality Association
Patient Safety Initiatives
And List of various state QIO's
The American Health Quality Association represents Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) and professionals working to improve the quality of health care in communities across America. QIOs share information about best practices with physicians, hospitals, and nursing homes. Working together with health care providers, QIOs identify opportunities and provide assistance for improvement.

MPRO - "The Michigan QIO"
http://www.mpro.org/
"MPRO, the Michigan QIO, is an active member of the Michigan Health and Safety Coalition, comprised of health care plans such as Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan (BCBSM), health care providers, medical associations, state agencies such as the Michigan Department of Community Health, as well as the three major auto companies and auto unions" (from AHQA's site)

"Through our Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services contract, MPRO serves as Michigan's Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) and assists Michigan's health care providers." (MPRO's self description)

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Michigan Health and Safety Coalition
2006 Conference Presentations
The 2007 Michigan Health and Safety Coalition Annual Patient Safety Conference will be held for two full days on Wednesday, March 28 and Thursday, March 29 at the Somerset Inn, Troy, MI
Participating Organizations (Go to MHSC for working links)

>>Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan

DaimlerChrysler Corporation

Ford Motor Company

General Motors Corporation

International Union, UAW

>>Michigan Association of Health Plans

Michigan Consumer Health Care Coalition

Michigan Department of Community Health

Michigan Education Special Services Association

Michigan Health & Hospital Association

Michigan Nurses Association

Michigan Osteopathic Association

MPRO

Michigan Pharmacists Association

Michigan State Medical Society


====================
GDAHC - Greater Detroit Area Health Council -
http://www.gdahc.org/programs_resources.asp
Southeast Michigan Regional Healthcare Coalition

GDAHC presents the following list:

Community Resources
Links to Local Community Resources.

The Greater Detroit Area Health Council is pleased to provide links to some of the area's top community resources for healthcare related information.

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Advancing Excellence in Health Care. A mission to improve the quality, safety, efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare for all Americans. Information from AHRQ’s research helps people make more informed decisions and improve the quality of health care services.
John M. Eisenberg Building, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville, MD 20850
Phone: 301-427-1364
http://www.ahrq.gov

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Healthcare 411 Audio Newscast Series
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, has a new audio newscast series to help keep you informed of the Agency's latest health care research findings, news, and information. AHRQ is the lead Federal agency in the effort to improve patient safety and reduce medical errors. Go to www.healthcare411.ahrq.gov to hear the newscasts through your computer or download them to a portable digital player such as an iPod®.
John M. Eisneberg Building, 540 Gaither Road, Rockville, MD 20850
Phone: 301-427-1364
http://healthcare411.ahrq.gov

American Red Cross - Southeastern Michigan
American Red Cross of Southeastern Michigan - serving Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.
100 Mack Avenue P.O. Box 33351, Detroit, MI 48232
Phone: 313-833-4440
http://www.semredcross.org

Detroit Wayne County Health Authority
The Detroit Wayne County Health Authority is a collaboration between the city of Detroit, County of Wayne, the State of Michigan, health providers and community members to improve the health of the citizens of Detroit and Wayne County. Its mission is to coordinate efforts to meet the health needs of the uninsured and under-insured residents in Detroit and Wayne County by assuring access and improving health status of all people.

Phone: 313-874-7443
http://www.dwcha.org

Michigan Health and Safety Coalition
The Michigan Health and Safety Coalition (MH&SC) is a collaborative quality improvement effort focused on improving patient safety in Michigan.
27000 W. 11 Mile Road, Mail Code: B713, Southfield, MI 48034
Phone: 248-448-6266
http://www.mihealthandsafety.org

Michigan Steps Up
Michigan Steps Up is a program of the Michigan Department of Community Health established by Surgeon General Kimberlydawn Wisdom.Step 1. Move More. Step 2. Eat Better. Step 3. Don't Smoke.
MDCH -- Office of the Surgeon General, Captial View, 7th Floor, 201 Townsend, Lansing, MI 48913
Phone: 517-373-3500
http://www.michigan.gov

National Business Coalition on Health
The National Business Coalition on Health (NBCH) is a national, non-profit, membership organization of employer-based health coalitions. NBCH and its members are dedicated to value-based purchasing of health care services through the collective action of public and private purchasers.

Phone: 202-775-9300
http://www.nbch.org

Physician Survey Data 2005
Released by the Michigan Department of Community Health.
Washington Square Building, 7th Floor, 109 Michigan Avenue, Lansing, MI 48913
Phone: 517-373-3500
http://www.mhc.org/mhc_images/physiciansurvey2005.pdf

Prescription Relief
Prescription Relief is a community service program that increases access to prescription drugs for low-income residents. Through the program, maintenance prescription drugs are available for $8 per prescription, per month for eligible residents. Seniors enrolled in the Medicare Rx Program are not eligible to participate.
5555 Glendon Court, Dublin, OH
Phone: 1-866-378-4686
http://www.prescriptionrelief.com

United Way - Southeastern Michigan
United Way for Southeastern Michigan - serving Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties.
1212 Griswold, Detroit, MI 48226
Phone: 313-226-9200
http://www.uwcs.org

ACGME - Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
http://www.acgme.org/acWebsite/home/home.asp



Articles
Consumers as partners - Martin Hatlie JD
From Patient Safety and Quality Healthcare
www.psqh.com

To date, almost all patient safety reform agendas [ in the USA ] have marginalized consumer input. ...These approaches fail to appreciate that not all, but many consumers are intelligent, fully-functioning adults... Indeed, at this moment in history some consumers have been trained and work in industries significantly ahead of healthcare in understanding organizational risk management, systems-based quality improvement, high-reliability performance, teamwork, and communication in complex, dynamic, human enterprises.

... Other developed countries appear to be moving forward significantly faster [than the USA] on implementation. The UK, Australia, and Canada already have patient safety authorities in place ... In addition, the World Health Organization (WHO) launched a World Alliance for Patient Safety in October of this year [2004] dedicated to "bringing significant benefits to patient sin countries rich and poor, developed and developing, in all corners of the globe(WHO,2004)" Under the leadership of Sir Liam Donaldosn, MSC MD,chief medical officer of England, the WHO Alliance includes six action ares, including a global challenge to reduce healthcare-associated infection in 2005-2006 and, notably, a Patient for Patient Safety initiative that actually relies on consumers to develop and leadimplementation of its objectives.

Progress elsewhere may be partially explained by structural differences..., less ...litigation ... [and] leadership...[ and the role of public health.]

JCAHO is also poised to play a key role in coordinating WHO patient safety work in the U.S.

World Health Organization
http://www.who.int/patientsafety/en/
World Alliance for Patient Safety [WHO]
http://www.who.int/patientsafety/about/en/index.html

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Avian flu confirmed in England - in turkeys

Avian flu (H5N1) has made it to England.

This raises again the question I addressed earlier today in Home Monitoring Industry, of wishing an emergency room or other surveillance unit could , upon releasing a questionable case, leave an electronic tether on them to be notified if things improve or get worse following release.

Deadly Bird Flu confirmed in BritishTurkeys
New York Times
Alan Cowell
Feb 4, 2007
excerpt:

LONDON, Feb. 3 — British authorities confirmed Saturday that an outbreak of bird flu discovered among turkeys at a poultry farm in eastern Britain had been caused by the deadly A(H5N1) strain, which has killed humans in other parts of the world.

The disease has killed 2,500 turkeys near Lowestoft since Thursday, making it the biggest outbreak of the strain reported in Britain since concern about its global spread began to take root in 2003.

An additional 160,000 birds will now be culled in an effort to contain the outbreak, government officials said.


No immediate risk

Fred Landeg, a senior government veterinarian, said there was no public health concern. “Avian influenza is a disease of birds,” he said, “and whilst it can pass very rarely and with difficulty to humans, this requires extremely close contact with infected birds, particularly feces.”

How did it get to England?

The disease is commonly transmitted to farmed birds by infected migrating birds.

But since 2003, 164 people, most of them in Asia, have died of the A(H5N1) strain, and authorities worry that the virus could easily become transmissible among humans to create a global pandemic. About 200 million birds have either died or been killed in the same period.

On Saturday, the World Health Organization confirmed that the strain had killed a 22-year-old Nigerian woman, making her the first known human fatality in sub-Saharan Africa, Reuters reported.

Tests carried out at a laboratory in London confirmed the findings of Nigerian health authorities, who announced on Wednesday that the woman had died after catching the virus from an infected chicken.

Incidentally, we note that the migratory patterns of birds is heavily influenced by the climate, so all of this may be a downstream effect of global warming and human-induced instability in the plantet's weather.

South Dakota hospital gets $400 million gift

Global competition for pediatrics business increases:

From today's New York Times
Hopes Soar after Record Hospital Gift of $400 Million

by Stephanie Strom

excerpt:

Now, T. Denny Sanford, a low-key billionaire who made his home and fortune here, will help sustain the state’s economic boom with a $400 million gift to the Sioux Valley Hospitals and Health System, the state’s largest employer. Hospital officials hope the gift — the largest ever to a hospital, according to the Center for Philanthropy at Indiana University — will help transform Sioux Valley Hospitals, which will change its name to Sanford Health, into a national institution that will eclipse Johns Hopkins and the Mayo Clinic.

“He told me he doesn’t want this to be just another Mayo,” said Kelby K. Krabbenhoft, Sioux Valley’s chief executive.

It has four stated goals: to build five pediatric clinics around the country; to expand research, especially in pediatrics; to build a health care campus with more than 20 separate facilities, and to identify a promising line of medical research and follow it to a cure, much the same way John D. Rockefeller’s money found a cure for yellow fever and Bill Gates is searching for a cure for H.I.V./AIDS.

Home monitoring industry - and privacy

As more and more people need to monitor elderly parents , Information Technology is providing ways to do that remotely. Would parents want the same setup to track their children away at college?

This is beginning to look a lot like strategic IT, use of "technology mediated collaboration" to cut health care costs and dramatically transform the way hospitals think of themselves and provide quality control over extensive services.

Or, would anyone want something similar to keep track of a friend or family member who was an inpatient in a hospital. There's an interesting question. Would hospitals encourage this constant vigilance from outsiders or discourage it? Given the shortage in nursing care in many places, maybe this is destined to become a new feature of in-patient hospital care.

For that matter, maybe no one should even go for an out-patient visit without being wired up and having a remote group of friends and family virtually along for the ride, aware of everything being done or not done. I can recall personally going to a large chain hospital emergency room for chest pains, being looked at briefly and put into a solitary closed room, and not seeing another human being for the next 80 minutes. I would have really preferred that someone at least would know if I fell over. The reason it's called "observation unit" is because someone is supposed to be "observing" the patient and would know if they collapsed.

Again, we have technological capacity (a remote TV video monitor) versus privacy concerns competing for more visibility versus less visiblity. These issues need to be addressed.

It raises the question as well as to whether some "observation unit" patients couldn't be released early, if heavily remotely monitored, or if some observation patients taking up Emergency Department beds couldn't be physically sent home, or to the cafeteria, or anywhere except taking up a bed, while they were still in "electronic tether" range and being monitored remotely. That could free up beds for people who really need them.

Today's New York Times has an article
In Elder Care, Signing On Becomes a Way to Drop By
Christine Larson
Feb 4, 2007

CONNIE ARAPS, 57, of Delray Beach, Fla., thought that her father, Tom Araps, 87, was managing just fine on his own. But when he came to stay with her for a few months in 2005, she found that he was skipping meals, sleeping all morning and not taking daily walks.

To satisfy her father’s desire to live alone, but to ease her mind about his safety, Ms. Araps found an apartment for him less than a mile from her home and had it equipped with QuietCare, a home health alarm system provided by ADT Security Services.

She drops by his apartment often, and logs into a Web site several times a day to check on him. Motion sensors track how often Mr. Araps opens the refrigerator, when he gets out of bed and how long he stays in the bathroom. If his normal patterns vary, the alarm company alerts her.

One day, the company called her to say that no one had entered or left the apartment all day. It turned out that a home health aide had failed to show up, and her father had not received his diabetes medication. Ms. Araps rushed over and made sure that her father took his pills.

“We are so pleased with all the technology,” she said. “I don’t think we would have let him live alone without it.” On the market since August, the QuietCare system costs $199 to install, and monitoring starts at $79.95 a month. In addition to the QuietCare system, Ms. Araps had the alarm company install video cameras showing the floors and the foot of her father’s bed, so she could see if he had fallen.

Other items:
* 19 million americans care for someone over age 75, according to National Alliance for Caregiving.
* QuietCare - alrm technology
* Nursing homes have been using this technology for years (peek ahead), and a few allow family members to view the data remotely. More are moving into home versions.
* Not all systems are emergency alarms, according to the Times:

A system called iCare Health Monitoring uses a very different model. It is not meant to serve as an emergency alarm system. Instead, it tries to prevent emergencies by allowing care providers, family members and older people themselves keep track of specific health data, like blood pressure, weight or medications use. Nurses monitor the system, but not around the clock.

Using a small electronic device with a text screen and four input buttons, the system asks a series of daily multiple-choice questions about an older person’s health. Family members or other care providers can view the answers online and look for any telltale changes in health. Available through www.cvs.com and some CVS pharmacy stores since July, the system costs $99 to install and $49.95 a month for monitoring.

Alberta Jackson, 78, of Aurora, Colo., who has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, uses iCare to track her lung function every day. She spends about eight minutes a day answering questions. Once when she responded that she was not feeling well, a nurse called within minutes to check on her.

A final warning:

While geriatric care managers can offer invaluable help to families, the industry is largely unregulated.

“There are fabulous care managers out there who really know the whole system and are well trained,” Ms. Stone said. “But, buyer, beware: there is no required accreditation.” Only a few states require care managers to be licensed, although care managers who are also nurses or social workers may have state licenses.

Starting in 2010, the National Association of Professional Geriatric Care Managers will require all its members to hold one of four specific certifications in care management or social work.

Geriatric care managers usually charge $80 to $200 an hour, depending on the services provided. The managers can have vastly differing backgrounds, typically in nursing or social work. “If your mother has complex medical problems, you probably want a nurse,” said Andrew Carle, assistant professor and director of the program in assisted living/senior housing administration at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va. “If she’s lonely or has social issues, a social worker might be a better fit.”



*But, not everyone wants big brother looking over their shoulder. Interestingly enough,
there was another article in the Times today on the far end of the Privacy spectrum:
States Oppose National Driver's Licence

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A revolt against a national driver's license, begun in Maine last month, is quickly spreading to other states.

The Maine Legislature on Jan. 26 overwhelmingly passed a resolution objecting to the Real ID Act of 2005. The federal law sets a national standard for driver's licenses and requires states to link their record-keeping systems to national databases.

Within a week of Maine's action, lawmakers in Georgia, Wyoming, Montana, New Mexico, Vermont and Washington state also balked at Real ID. They are expected soon to pass laws or adopt resolutions declining to participate in the federal identification network.

''It's the whole privacy thing,'' said Matt Sundeen, a transportation analyst for the National Conference of State Legislatures. ''A lot of legislators are concerned about privacy issues and the cost. It's an estimated $11 billion implementation cost.''

The law's supporters say it is needed to prevent terrorists and illegal immigrants from getting fake identification cards.

States will have to comply by May 2008. If they do not, driver's licenses that fall short of Real ID's standards cannot be used to board an airplane or enter a federal building or open some bank accounts.

About a dozen states have active legislation against Real ID, including Arizona, Georgia, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Utah and Wyoming.

With reimbursement and regulatory requirements pushing patients out of hospitals sooner,
this becomes more and more of an issue on tracking patients for the first few days after they have left the hospital setting and are transitioning to home care or new medications.

From personal experience again, I know that when a child of mine is released with instructions to me to "keep an eye on her and let us know if anything changes", it exhausts me trying to figure out what level of change constitutes a problem sufficient to drop everything and drive over to the hospital. This is probably a very wide-spread problem.