Showing posts sorted by date for query resnick. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query resnick. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2015

Resnick to Head Gerontological Society

Congratulations to former INQRI Grantee Barbara Resnick, who was recently voted president-elect of the Gerontological Society of America (GSA).

Resnick, who currently serves as professor and Sonia Ziporkin Gershowitz Chair in Gerontology at the University of Maryland School of Nursing in Baltimore, will begin as president-elect in 2015-2016, and then become president for the 2016-2017 term.  GSA is devoted to research and education in all aspects of gerontology, including medical, biological, psychological and social.

“I am honored to serve in the role of GSA’s president-elect, and in the future, as its president,” Resnick said in a news release. “GSA has the opportunity to be a leader in interdisciplinary work in the areas of gerontology and geriatrics, including educational aspects, research, practice and policy.”

Resnick and fellow INQRI grantee Sheryl Zimmerman developed a successful intervention designed to deliver Function Focused Care to residents in assisted living facilities. Their intervention was designed to maintain and improve function, physical activity, muscle strength, psychosocial outcomes (efficacy expectations and life satisfaction) and decrease adverse events (pain, falls and hospitalizations) among assisted living residents. Residents in intervention treatment sites demonstrated fewer declines in function and spent more time in moderate level physical activity at 4 months and more overall counts of activity at 12 months when compared to residents in control sites. There were also fewer transfers to the hospital among those in the treatment sites.

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Nurse-led Intervention Successful in Increasing Older Patients' Activity Levels

Nurse-led primary care interventions can lead to sustained increases in physical activity (PA) among older adults, according to a recent article published in PLOS Medicine by lead author Tess Harris of St George's University of London. Additionally, the participating patients indicated that they felt positively about the intervention, reports Medical Xpress.

Researchers enrolled nearly 300 people ages 60-75 in the trial, and randomly separated them by household, to receive either standard care or the nurse-led intervention. Primary care nurses delivered PA consultations over a three month-period to the intervention group, providing individualized activity plans and feedback on data recorded from pedometers and accelerometers worn by the patients.

At the three month mark, the intervention group reported that they took 1,037 more steps than the control group. Additionally, the intervention group spent 63 more minutes per week in PA sessions of 10 minutes or more. There was a sustained gap at the 12-month mark, although it decreased to 609 steps per day and 40 minutes per week.

The trial, funded by the National Institute for Health Research, suggests that this type of nurse-led intervention may be an effective way to increase PA in older adults, resulting in better health. However, the researchers said that additional trials are needed to discover what aspects of the intervention were most effective and how it would work in larger and more socio-economically diverse populations.


INQRI grantees Barbara Resnick and Sheryl Zimmerman also found success with an intervention designed to deliver Function Focused Care to residents in assisted living facilities. Their intervention was designed to maintain and improve function, PA, muscle strength, psychosocial outcomes (efficacy expectations and life satisfaction) and decrease adverse events (pain, falls and hospitalizations) among assisted living residents. Residents in intervention treatment sites demonstrated fewer declines in function and spent more time in moderate level physical activity at 4 months and more overall counts of activity at 12 months when compared to residents in control sites. There were also fewer transfers to the hospital among those in the treatment sites.

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Staff Turnover Linked to Poor Patient Outcomes in LTCs

Two recent studies suggest that preventing staff turnover should be given greater emphasis in long-term care facilities (LTCs), Advanced Healthcare Network for Nurses reports. The studies examined the relationship between turnover of nursing staff and quality of care for nursing homes residents and found negative outcomes for patients in facilities with high turnover.

Published in December 2013, both studies were based on data from the 2004 National Nursing Home Survey. The first, "Are Nursing Home Survey Deficiencies Higher in Facilities with Greater Staff Turnover," found that turnover for both licensed nurses and certified nursing assistants (CNAs) were associated with problems in quality of care, qualify of life, and resident behavior deficiencies. The second study, "Turnover Staffing, Skill Mix, and Resident Outcomes in a National Sample of U.S. Nursing Homes," found a relationship between high turnover among CNAs and adverse patient outcomes such as pressure ulcers, urinary tract infections, and pain.

An INQRI study led by Robin Newhouse and Laura Morlock, published in the May 2013 issue of Medical Care, underscores the importance of nurse staffing in providing quality care. The researchers tested in 23 rural hospitals a quality collaborative intervention to improve care for heart failure patients. At the end of the study, the researchers found no quantitative difference between the intervention and control groups on implementation of the key measures. They did find that hospitals with lower turnover in nurse staffing implemented more of the measures. The researchers assert that the study speaks to the central role of nurses in quality improvement.

INQRI also looked at patient outcomes in LTCs in The Res-Care-AL Intervention Study.  Researchers, led by Barbara Resnick and Sheryl Zimmerman, conducted a randomized controlled trial to test Function Focused Care – Assisted Living, an intervention designed to maintain and improve function, physical activity, muscle strength, psychosocial outcomes, and decrease adverse events (pain, falls, and hospitalizations) among assisted living residents.

Monday, August 5, 2013

Improving Function Among Older Adults

A recent article on the Advance for Nurses website shares the way that care is delivered to older adults in the Senior Adult Unit at Addison Gilbert Hospital in Massachusetts.  This geriatric nursing unit is finding success by focusing on getting patients out of their beds and keeping them active.  Patients are encouraged to eat meals in a dining room and not in their beds.  Classes are offered to keep them engaged and healthy.

INQRI grantees Barbara Resnick and Sheryl Zimmerman also found success with an intervention designed to deliver Function Focused Care to residents in assisted living facilities. Their intervention was designed to maintain and improve function, physical activity, muscle strength, psychosocial outcomes (efficacy expectations and life satisfaction) and decrease adverse events (pain, falls and hospitalizations) among assisted living residents. Residents in intervention treatment sites demonstrated fewer declines in function and spent more time in moderate level physical activity at 4 months and more overall counts of activity at 12 months when compared to residents in control sites. There were also fewer transfers to the hospital among those in the treatment sites.

To learn more about the Resnick-Zimmerman study, please click here.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

INQRI Grantee's New Site to Disseminate Function Focused Care

INQRI grantee Barbara Resnick was awarded two Helen and Leonard Stulman Foundation grants to expand her INQRI work on disseminating function focused care to additional assisted living facilities. With part of this funding, Dr. Resnick has established a website which provides information and tips for caregivers to encourage residents to participate in routine daily functional tasks and engage in other types of physical activity. The site features video coaching and other resources.

This is just one of the videos available on the site:


Check out the rest of the resources here.

Friday, March 29, 2013

INQRI’s Focus on Dissemination and Implementation

Marita G. Titler, PhD, RN, FAAN, Deleise S. Wilson, PhD, RN, Barbara Resnick, PhD, CNRP, FAAN, Leah L. Shever, PhD, RN 

With our paper, “Dissemination and Implementation: INQRI’s Potential Impact,” we explored the implementation strategies, challenges, and lessons learned from conducting five INQRI funded implementation studies. We also presented two case examples of other INQRI studies to illustrate dissemination strategies. We repeatedly saw that INQRI teams used common implementation strategies across studies which addressed education, ongoing interaction with sites, use of implementation tools, and visibility of the projects on the study units. However, many studies experienced some challenges with institutional review board reviews. Several of the PIs were concerned about the short-time dedicated to the actually implementation phase of the research. Despite this challenge, the teams found that success in the engagement of site coordinators and nurses involved with their projects and the development of tools for other hospitals to use for improving practice. We would encourage researchers interested in pursuing dissemination and implementation projects to focus on understanding the importance of context, as well as the complexity of implementation, and ensuring good communication with clinicians and study sites.

This post is part of our week-long blog carnival focused on the Medical Care supplement.  Click here to access all posts in this carnival.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

More Videos From The INQRI 2012 National Conference

We are pleased to share with all of you the final three recordings from our National Conference, which convened in Washington, DC at the end of April. Below you will see a video from Dr. Susan Hassmiller discussing the role of INQRI in the development and implementation of the Future of Nursing and the Campaign for Action. The two videos following Dr. Hassmiller's comments are panel discussions on "Dissemination & Implementation" and "The Business Case for Changes Nursing". Feel free to share these videos and comment on them either on the blog or their respective Youtube pages.

INQRI and the Future of Nursing




In this session from the 2012 INQRI national conference, RWJF's advisor for nursing, Susan Hassmiller shares her thoughts about INQRI's role in the Future of Nursing and the Campaign for Action.


INQRI Panel: Dissemination and Implementation - INQRI's Potential Impact 




Presented by INQRI grantees: Marita Titler, Deleise Wilson, Barbara Resnick and Leah Shever. Moderated by Polly Pittman. At INQRI's national conference (April 26-27, 2012), a select group of INQRI grantees used their findings as the basis for discussions about the relationship between their research and trends in interdisciplinary collaboration, methodology and implementation science, quality measurement, dissemination and implementation, and the business case for nursing.

INQRI Panel: The Business Case for Changes in Nursing To Improve Quality and Value




Presented by INQRI grantees: Olga Yakusheva, Doug Wholey and Kevin Frick. Moderated by INQRI Co-Director Mark Pauly. At INQRI's national conference (April 26-27, 2012), a select group of INQRI grantees used their findings as the basis for discussions about the relationship between their research and trends in interdisciplinary collaboration, methodology and implementation science, quality measurement, dissemination and implementation, and the business case for nursing.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Hospital Efforts To Keep Elderly Strong

Yesterday, Lindsey Tanner, reporting for the Huffington Post, described new initiatives being implemented by hospitals to encourage elderly patients to be more active and improve their quality of life. Ms. Tanner detailed how hospitals are utilizing nurses and volunteers to facilitate simple walking exercises that result in patients being just as healthy when discharged as they were on arrival.

Does this initiative sound familiar to you? It should!

Previous INQRI grantee Dr. Barbara Resnick focused her INQRI supported research efforts on Function Focused Care in assisted living communities that resulted in improved well-being for geriatric participants, in addition to improving the culture of safety for staff at the facilities that implemented the program.

Click here to read the HuffPost article.

Click here to read more about Dr. Resnick's work, including a video of a recent lecture she presented at the University of Pennsylvania's Institute of Aging.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Video: Function Focused Care: Optimizing Function and Activity Among Older Adults

Two weeks ago, INQRI grantee, Barbara Resnick, PhD, RN, CRNP, FAAN, FAANP, guest lectured at the University of Pennsylvania's Institute of Aging. Dr. Resnick's presentation focused on her work addressing function focused care and the outcomes associated with this cost-effective intervention. We encourage all of you to view this candid lecture on how function focused care can improve the lives of elderly individuals in assisted living, skilled-nursing facilities as well as acute care.

Click here to view the video.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

INQRI Team Receives $100,000 Grant to Improve Function, Increase Physical Activity and Improve Independence of Assisted Living Residents in Maryland

A team of INQRI researchers at the University of Maryland has received a $100,000 grant from the Leonard & Helen Stulman Charitable Foundation to further disseminate a project intended to change how care is provided to residents in assisted living and improve function, physical activity and overall quality of life of the residents. The project, Function Focused Care for Assisted Living (FFC-AL), was originally led by an interdisciplinary team of researchers including a nursing professor at the University of Maryland and a social work professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The grant will allow the team to implement and test a protocol that uses a train the trainer model to facilitate adoption of function focused care in 20 residential living facilities in the Baltimore area.

Function focused care involves helping residents to do as much for themselves as possible, with assistance or coaching as needed. Activities can be as simple as putting on a shirt or feeding oneself. It also involves helping people engage in as much physical activity as possible.

Barbara Resnick, Ph.D., CR.N.P., F.A.A.N., F.A.A.N.P., professor of nursing at the University of Maryland School of Nursing and Sheryl Zimmerman, Ph.D., professor of social work and director of aging research at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Social Work led an INQRI team in testing a protocol in four residential living facilities that used a function focused care nurse (FFCN) who worked with staff at residential living facilities to help them learn to implement and regularly use function focused care in those facilities. The FFCN helped to assess the environment and policies and procedures that affect function focused care; provided education for staff; helped staff develop goals for function focused care and mentored and motivated staff. Initial results of the 12-month study are promising.

“There’s no question that the goals of function focused care—encouraging seniors to function as independently as possible and to get regular exercise—are important and beneficial to their health and well-being,” said Resnick. “Ensuring that assisted living staff are fully trained in providing this type of care and that they provide it consistently is where the rubber meets the road. We hope that our study will provide guidance about the best ways to implement and ensure function focused care.”

Resnick noted that support for the project comes in part through her appointment as the Sonya Ziporkin Gershowitz Endowed Chair in Gerontology at the University of Maryland School of Nursing. The chair enables a national expert in the field to conduct research and educate students in the growing nursing specialty of gerontology. Resnick is using some of the funding to cover a 50 percent project manager for the function focused care dissemination study.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

INQRI Team Recognized for Work on "Aging in Place"

Congratulations to our team at the University of Maryland, led by Barbara Resnick and Sheryl Zimmerman.  Their project on Function-Focused Care recently won a Dorland Health Silver Crown Award in the Aging in Place category.

Dorland Health, a division of Access Intelligence, created the awards program to honor excellence and dedication among industry-leading organizations who provide exceptional services, products, and information to the over 55 community, and also recognizes individual healthcare professionals who achieve great success working with the senior population.

The Resnick-Zimmerman team conducted a randomized controlled trial to test Function Focused Care – Assisted Living (FFC-AL), an intervention designed to maintain and improve function, physical activity, muscle strength, psychosocial outcomes (efficacy expectations and life satisfaction) and decrease adverse events (pain, falls and hospitalizations) among assisted living residents. A total of 171 residents and 96 direct care workers (DCW) were followed for 12 months. Based on observations of care interactions, DCWs in treatment sites provided more function focused care by 12 months than those in the control sites. Residents in treatment sites demonstrated fewer declines in function and spent more time in moderate level physical activity at 4 months and more overall counts of activity at 12 months when compared to residents in control sites. There were fewer transfers to the hospital among those in the treatment sites. There was evidence of dissemination and implementation of FFC-AL within the sites that endured beyond the study period, showing that the team's work led to institutional policy and environmental changes. The study findings suggest that using a FFC-AL approach may help to prevent some of the persistent functional decline commonly noted in these communities, increase time spent in physical activity, and decrease the need for acute care transfers.

Click here to learn more about the Dorland Health Silver Crown Awards.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

The Res-Care-AL Intervention Study

This presentation was made at the fifth annual meeting of the Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative and depicts a randomized controlled trial to test a restorative care intervention for assisted living. The project incorporated patient centered outcomes (falls); nursing centered outcomes (restorative care services); and system-centered outcomes (staff turnover) as designated by the National Quality Forum. The primary aim of this study was to maintain or improve the residents' physical activity, physical status, function, and length of stay in the facility. The secondary aim related to residents' focuses on mood, life satisfaction, resilience, self-efficacy and outcome expectations, social-support for exercise, and person-environment fit. This team was co-led by Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, a nurse researcher, and Sheryl Zimmerman, PhD, MSW, a social worker.

Part 1:



Part 2:

Monday, September 27, 2010

INQRI at the State of the Science

We are very excited that six INQRI teams will be presenting as part of two panels at this week's State of the Science event, hosted by the Council for the Advancement of Nursing Science. If you are at the event, please be sure to check them out.

The INQRI panel on "Nursing Care Processes" will be featured in today's symposium on "Testing The Reliability of Nursing Quality" from: 3:00pm - 5:00pm, Empire Ballroom. Moderated by INQRI national advisory committee member Linda Burnes Bolton.

NURSE-PHARMACIST COLLABORATION ON MEDICATION RECONCILIATION: A NOVEL APPROACH TO INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
Linda L. Costa, PhD, RN, NEA-BC
E. Robert Feroli, PharmD, FASHP
Johns Hopkins

THE EFFECTS OF NURSING STRUCTURES AND PROCESSES ON MEDICATION ERRORS
Linda Flynn, PhD, RN, University of Maryland
Dong C. Suh, PhD, MBA, Rutgers University
Geri L. Dickson, PhD, RN, Rutgers University
Minge Xie, PhD, Rutgers University
Carol Boyer, PhD, Rutgers University

QUALITY COST: NURSING PREDICTORS OF DISCHARGE READINESS
Marianne Weiss, RN, DNSc
Olga Yakusheva, PhD
Kathleen Bobay, RN, PhD
Marquette University Colleges of Nursing and Business
Three INQRI teams will be part of their own panel on "Quality of Care in Diverse Settings" on Wednesday from: 9:45am - 11:15am, Calvert Room. Moderated by INQRI program director Mary Naylor.
LINKING NURSING RESOURCES IN NICUS TO VLBW INFANT OUTCOMES
Eileen Lake, RN, PhD, FAAN, University of Pennsylvania
Thelma Patrick, RN, PhD, The Ohio State University
Jeannette Rogowski, PhD, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
Jeffrey Horbar, MD, University of Vermont
Douglas Staiger, PhD, Dartmouth College
Robyn Cheung, RN, PhD, University of Pennsylvania
Michael Kenny, MS, University of Vermont

A FOCUS ON FUNCTION IN ASSISTED LIVING FACILITIES
Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, University of Maryland
Elizabeth Galik, PhD, CRNP, University of Maryland
Sheryl Zimmerman, PhD, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Ann Gruber-Baldini, PhD, University of Maryland

SMOKING CESSATION COUNSEL, CORE MEASURES, INTENT TO QUIT
Robin Newhouse, PhD, RN, University of Maryland
Cheryl Dennison, PhD, CRNP, Johns Hopkins University
To check out the full program of events, please click here.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Day 1 is Over (That was Fast!)

Time flies with so many amazing presentations!

Thanks to the remaining members of Cohort 3 who presented findings this afternoon:

Nancy Donaldson and Carolyn Aydin examined the impact of: unit level nurse workload, staff nurse characteristics, selected risk assessment practices and preventive intervention processes of care on patient outcomes.  They found that unit and patient characteristics and workload can prevent medication errors.  They also noted that microsystem evidence suggested an association between hospital acquired pressure ulcers and rate of falls, suggesting that perhaps they witnessed a "culture of safety" factor.

Barbara Resnick and Sheryl Zimmerman tested the implementation of a function focused nursing approach to improve the quality of care provided to residents in assisted living communities.  They found that direct care workers and residents both embraced the function focused care and that despite fears of injury, there were no adverse events (deaths, falls) experienced in their intervention.  In fact, they found a significant decrease in hospital transfers of enrolled residents paired with improved balance and improvements in walking 50 feet.

Joanne Disch and Doug Wholey presented on their project which was designed to characterize nurse-physician co-leadership of heart failure care in the VA.  They noted that heart failure care is about more than routines and processes - it involves effective teamwork.  They found that teamwork effects readmissions through its effect on being prepared to provide individual care and that nurse-physician co-leadership improves teamwork.

Cindy Corbett and Stephen Setter presented on their work to empower home care nurses to efficiently resolve medication discrepancies.  In their work, they found that nurses resolved about 93% of the discrepancies they identified.  The pharmacists found twice as many discrepancies, but only resolved half of them. 

Ciaran Phibbs and Pat Stone discussed the impacts of nurse staffing, skill mix and experience on quality and costs in long term care.  They found that having more RNs, more LPNs and more stable staffing are all correlated with lower readmissions. Also, the number of nursing hours, skills mix, tenure and contract affect quality of care.

Sue Letvak and Sat Gupta presented on their team's project to determine the prevalence of nurse presenteeism (working when sick) due to muscoskeletal pain and depression and its impact on quality of care and costs.  The results were staggering - 18% of interviewed nurses reported some depression (compared to a national average of 9%), 70% reported pain and 61% reported presenteeism.  They found that the number of patient falls and medication errors both increased by about 18% with each unit of presenteeism score.  Additionally, there were significant cost losses due to productivity reduction, reduction in quality of care, increased fall and medication errors.

As you can tell, we had quite the day... and there is much more to come tomorrow!

Check back for updates and be sure to follow us via Twitter using hashtag #INQRI2010.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

The Importance of Physical Activity... and How Nurses Play a Key Role

In a new article in the American Journal of Nursing, authors Todd Ruppar and Vicki Conn present their findings from a meta-analysis designed to synthesize findings from 163 studies related to promoting physical activity in adults with chronic illness. They found that there are several interventions that effectively promote physical activity across a variety of patient populations.
"On average, intervention increased physical activity the equivalent of 945 steps per day, or 48 minutes of physical activity per week, per patient—an amount that's likely to be clinically important for sedentary, chronically ill adults. Among the numerous intervention attributes and practices, however, the effect on physical activity varied considerably. This article addresses the implications of these meta-analysis findings in order to provide nurses with reliable evidence supporting or negating the purported benefits of common strategies and practices used to promote physical activity among chronically ill adults."
Click here to read the article.

INQRI commends the authors on this important work. In fact, INQRI researchers at the University of Maryland are in the final stages of a randomized controlled trial to test a restorative care intervention for assisted living (AL). This project was designed to maintain or improve the residents' physical activity, physical status, function, and length of stay in the facility. The secondary aim related to residents focuses on mood, life satisfaction, resilience, self-efficacy and outcome expectations, social-support for exercise, and person-environment fit. The project incorporates patient centered outcomes (falls); nursing centered outcomes (restorative care services); and system-centered outcomes (staff turnover) as designated by the National Quality Forum. This team is co-led by Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, a nurse researcher, and Sheryl Zimmerman, PhD, MSW, a social worker.

Click here to read the team's recent article from the May-June 2010 edition of Geriatric Nursing.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

INQRI Projects Featured in Geriatric Nursing

The INQRI program is pleased to report that the latest edition of Geriatric Nursing features all INQRI projects in their selection of featured articles.

Please click here to read the letter from editor Barbara Resnick (also an INQRI grantee), "The Difference Nurses Are Making to Improve Quality of Care to Older Adults through the Interdisciplinary Nursing Quality Research Initiative."

Featured Articles:

The Impact of Worker Health on Long Term Care: Implications for Nursing Managers
Susan Letvak, Christopher J. Ruhm

SPEACS-2: Intensive Care Unit “Communication Rounds” with Speech Language Pathology Mary Beth Happ, Brooke M. Baumann, Jennifer Sawicki, Judith A. Tate, Elisabeth L. George, Amber E. Barnato

Age-Related Differences in Perception of Quality of Discharge Teaching and Readiness for Hospital Discharge
Kathleen L. Bobay, Teresa A. Jerofke, Marianne E. Weiss, Olga Yakusheva

Nurse Identified Hospital to Home Medication Discrepancies: Implications for Improving Transitional Care
Cynthia F. Corbett, Stephen M. Setter, Kenn B. Daratha, Joshua J. Neumiller, Lindy D. Wood

Satisfaction with Assisted Living: The Unexplored Role of Physical Activity
Barbara Resnick, Elizabeth Galik, Ann L. Gruber-Baldini, Sheryl Zimmerman

Volume 31, Issue 3, Pages 153-238, e1-e2 (May-June 2010)

Monday, August 24, 2009

Shared Resource: Treatment Fidelity

At the INQRI annual meeting, Cohort 3 researcher Barbara Resnick offered to share a presentation she has given regarding treatment fidelity. Click on her slide to view the slides as a PDF.




Wednesday, August 19, 2009

AHRQ Innovations Exchange - Long Term Care

Check out today's edition of the AHRQ Innovations Exchange, highlighting issues in long term care.

A few highlights:

INQRI's Connection to Long Term Care

Although much of our work is focused on acute care settings, in the last couple of years, INQRI has expanded to other health care settings. To that end, we are very interested in the issues surrounding long term care.

"The Res-Care-AL Intervention Study" is a randomized controlled trial to test a restorative care intervention for assisted living (AL). The project incorporates patient centered outcomes (falls); nursing centered outcomes (restorative care services); and system-centered outcomes (staff turnover) as designated by the National Quality Forum. The primary aim of this study is to maintain or improve the residents' physical activity, physical status, function, and length of stay in the facility. The secondary aim related to residents focuses on mood, life satisfaction, resilience, self-efficacy and outcome expectations, social-support for exercise, and person-environment fit. This team is co-led by Barbara Resnick, PhD, CRNP, a nurse researcher, and Sheryl Zimmerman, PhD, MSW, a social worker.

Click here to check out an update on the project.

As previously mentioned in this blog, our program director, Mary Naylor is the Marian S. Ware Professor in Gerontology at the University of Pennsylvania. She is passionate about ensuring that top quality care is delivered across settings. Click here to learn about Dr. Naylor's transitional care model.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

The Nurse as Leader in Delivering Care

This panel presentation was delivered by members of INQRI's third cohort of grantees at the 4th Annual INQRI Meeting. Facilitated by NAC Member Shelley White-Means.

Part 1 features Dr. Barbara Resnick, presenting on the study "The Res-Care-AL Intervention Study."



Part 2 features Dr. Doug Wholey, presenting on the study "Multidisciplinary Organization and Outcomes for Chronic Heart Failure Patients in the VA."



Part 3 features Dr. Kathleen Stevens, presenting on the study "Small Troubles, Adaptive Responses [STAR]: Fostering a Quality Culture in Nursing."



Part 4 features Dr. Cynthia Corbett, presenting on the study "Empowering Home Care Nurses to Efficiently Resolve Medication Discrepancies."