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1 ey are more likely to go next to a custodial nursing home.
2 ty hospital after an unwitnessed fall at her nursing home.
3  level of dependency of residents within the nursing home.
4  consequence of trying to have a life in the nursing home.
5 f between 5 and 12 annual falls in a typical nursing home.
6 jects older than 80 years of age living in a nursing home.
7 reduce agitation in persons with dementia in nursing homes.
8 itation wards, in the thirteen participating nursing homes.
9 on physical function compared to traditional nursing homes.
10  House nursing homes compared to traditional nursing homes.
11 teriuria plus pyuria among women residing in nursing homes.
12 conducted in people with dementia in 16 U.K. nursing homes.
13 highly prevalent among older women living in nursing homes.
14 , probiotics are not routinely used in Dutch nursing homes.
15 depression in people with dementia living in nursing homes.
16 ncluded other settings such as hospitals and nursing homes.
17  contributor to enhancing resident safety in nursing homes.
18  in hospitals and euro0.50 (1.61) per day in nursing homes.
19 sing care does not occur frequently in Swiss nursing homes.
20 evelop relationships with peers and staff in nursing homes.
21 ween euro2.42 (1.15) and euro16.18 (4.93) in nursing homes.
22  survive are more likely to be discharged to nursing homes.
23 roups conducted at each of the participating nursing homes.
24 be transported back into these settings from nursing homes.
25 dementia and 29 staff (42 unique dyads) in 9 nursing homes.
26 of 837 MRSA isolates were collected from the nursing homes.
27  among vulnerable, elderly populations in US nursing homes.
28 traints are still frequently administered in nursing homes.
29  developed for residents of Veterans Affairs nursing homes.
30 to quality care in many settings, especially nursing homes.
31 ff (N = 42 unique staff-resident dyads) in 9 nursing homes.
32 itly representing households, hospitals, and nursing homes.
33 tified nursing assistants (mean age=36) in 8 nursing homes.
34  arrangements for residents with dementia in nursing homes.
35  care facilities, including 59 hospitals, 92 nursing homes, 1 long-term acute care hospital (LTACH),
36 roportion was highly variable across the 591 nursing homes (10th percentile = 3.4%, 90th percentile =
37  1.49 [CI, 1.24 to 1.80]) and diagnosis in a nursing home (2.1% vs. 0.6%; aOR, 1.99 [CI, 1.34 to 2.93
38 as as follows: 4, recent hospitalization; 3, nursing home; 2, chronic hemodialysis; 1, critically ill
39 s with previous MRSA (93%) and patients from Nursing homes (21%).
40 ilities (44.5% to 31.0%; P(trend)<0.001) and nursing homes (30.8% to 25.7%; P(trend)<0.001).
41 and Relevance: Among older women residing in nursing homes, administration of cranberry capsules vs p
42                                Evidence that nursing home administrator (NHA) and director of nursing
43                                              Nursing home admission (63% compared with 23%) and death
44                  Secondary outcomes included nursing home admission and emergency department visits,
45 d the 1-year risks of anoxic brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause among
46 ere associated with risks of brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause that
47                 The authors examined time to nursing home admission and time to death in 957 patients
48 al and atypical antipsychotic use on time to nursing home admission and time to death in a group of o
49       Psychosis was strongly associated with nursing home admission and time to death, but neither co
50 16.8% (P<0.001), the rate of brain damage or nursing home admission decreased from 10.0% to 7.6% (P<0
51 ma (P = 0.03) were more likely to experience nursing home admission or severe functional impairment.
52 ical, was not associated with either time to nursing home admission or time to death after adjustment
53 as associated with a risk of brain damage or nursing home admission that was significantly lower than
54         The likelihood of having a long-term nursing home admission was considerably greater after ho
55 o requiring drug treatment for parkinsonism, nursing home admission, and death.
56  of the composite end point of brain damage, nursing home admission, or death (hazard ratio, 0.67; 95
57                                  The risk of nursing home admission, severe functional impairment, or
58 ntipsychotic use was associated with time to nursing home admission.
59  0.68; 95% CI, 0.63-0.73 for application for nursing home admission; and HR, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.70-0.80
60 t-level data on adult inpatient hospital and nursing home admissions (2011-2012), we simulated the sp
61 -term outcome data (e.g., functional status, nursing home admissions), and the availability of long-t
62 injury, skilled nursing facility admissions, nursing home admissions, and other vision-associated cos
63 utcomes and a higher likelihood of long-term nursing home admissions.
64  ischemic attack, cardiovascular events, and nursing home admittance.
65  through prisons in much the same way it has nursing homes: after being introduced by staff or newly
66                      Person-directed care in nursing homes, also known as the 'culture-change movemen
67 10.5% had brain damage or were admitted to a nursing home and 9.7% died during the 1-year follow-up p
68 rolled efficacy trial with stratification by nursing home and involving 185 English-speaking women ag
69 epression, injury, skilled nursing facility, nursing home and others), direct nonmedical costs saved
70 le estimates of the lifetime risk of using a nursing home and the associated out-of-pocket costs are
71  implicit rationing of nursing care in Swiss nursing homes and (2) to explore the relationship betwee
72 isease 2019 (COVID-19) have been reported in nursing homes and assisted living facilities; however, t
73   Rates of antibiotic use vary widely across nursing homes and cannot be explained by resident charac
74 s between April 2014 and January 2017 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home resident
75  genetic diversity was heterogeneous between nursing homes and significantly higher overall (77%) tha
76    In addition, the heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes and the variable reporting of deaths of ol
77  exceeded 25% only in patients admitted from nursing homes and those with prior VTE.
78         Since MRSA bacteria are prevalent in nursing homes and yet relatively poorly studied in this
79 nasopharyngeal samples (5.4% vs. 5.4% in the nursing homes; and 4.3% vs. 4.7% in the family homes).
80 oluntary, private and care home, private and nursing home] and size of home [<32 or >/=32 residents])
81                               MRSA burden in nursing homes appears largely due to importation from ho
82                         Although Green House nursing homes are considered to represent an innovative
83 roblem of MRSA transmission and infection in nursing homes are needed in order to minimize the impact
84      In addition, MRSA prevention efforts in nursing homes are warranted.
85 d Infection Prevention program in a group of nursing homes as well as a national initiative to preven
86 etrospective cohort study based on quarterly nursing home assessments between April 2014 and January
87 ing, Green House, Pioneer Network, dementia, nursing home, assisted living and long-term care.
88 itive deficits, necessitating admission to a nursing home at age 39 years.
89 d in one of four settings: infusion centers, nursing homes, at home with skilled nursing assistance,
90  case rates between high- and low-performing nursing homes based on CMS quality measures.
91 nt-to-resident elder mistreatment (R-REM) in nursing homes can cause physical and psychological injur
92 mination of evidence-based best practices in nursing homes can result in the potential for fall reduc
93 xplicitly discourages physical restraints in nursing home care and suggests alternative practices may
94 ational research for the association between nursing home care quality and for-profit ownership.
95 adership is a key consideration in improving nursing home care quality.
96 rstanding the role of 'nurse staffing' under nursing home care, as well as the significance of associ
97                              Three outcomes--nursing home care, home care, and mortality--were modele
98 % had Long-Term Home Care; 13% had Long-Term Nursing Home Care; and 14% had an Unstable trajectory wi
99 ut-of-pocket spending and the utilization of nursing home care; Medicare claims data were used to ide
100 y measure of admission rates to residential (nursing home) care.
101  CCBM: from 0.7% to 10.4% (p < 0.001) in the nursing home collection, and from 0.3% to 5.0% (p < 0.00
102  analysis of 111 mealtime video clips from a nursing home communication training study was conducted.
103                   This study uses Medicare's Nursing Home Compare and a university long-term care dat
104 n leadership education and certification and Nursing Home Compare quality outcomes (e.g. pain, cathet
105 ion changes for residents in the Green House nursing homes compared to traditional nursing homes.
106 rimary care, home care, palliative care, and nursing home coverage.
107                 This trend is referred to as nursing home culture change in the U.S.
108                                   Of 786,328 nursing home decedents, 27.6% in 2004 and 39.8% in 2009
109                  The proportion of deaths in nursing homes decreased over 10 years (-0.36% annually,
110 were admission from chronic care facility or nursing home, dependent functional status, and higher Am
111 aged 57-61 will stay at least one night in a nursing home during their lifetimes, but only 32% of the
112                                        Of 53 nursing home elderly (aged >/=65 y) who met eligibility
113 he serum zinc concentrations and immunity of nursing home elderly with a low serum zinc concentration
114 ers of immunosenescence were measured in the nursing home elderly.
115  serum zinc concentrations of zinc-deficient nursing home elderly.
116 e in increasing serum zinc concentrations in nursing home elderly; however, not all zinc-deficient el
117                              In 2016, 42% of nursing homes enrolled in the National Healthcare Safety
118 o represent an innovative model changing the nursing home environment into more person-centered, this
119 mates, at least partly due to an increase in nursing home episodes of short duration.
120 The number of skilled nursing facilities and nursing homes experiencing >= 5 CRE acquisitions annuall
121  age structures and heterogeneous burdens in nursing homes explain some but not all of the heterogene
122 ursing homes who were currently working at a nursing home facility, who represented 680,846 certified
123 sability in 13 activities and admission to a nursing home from 1998 to 2010.
124                                              Nursing homes from all three language regions of Switzer
125                         Removing patients in nursing homes from the calculation gives a prevalence of
126 ment in an adult population in hospitals and nursing homes from the healthcare payer perspective.
127                             Many traditional nursing homes have attempted to transform themselves to
128                                              Nursing homes have highly divergent urine culturing rate
129  of women and up to 77% of women residing in nursing homes have urinary incontinence, yet only 25% se
130                          End-of-life care in nursing homes holds several risk factors for the use of
131 ospital administration; $255 versus $123 for nursing home, home care, and hospice administration; and
132 ative expenditures of hospitals, physicians, nursing homes, home care agencies, and hospices.
133 131 (ST131) Escherichia coli infections in a nursing home in The Netherlands.
134 CAUTI" will now be implemented in nearly 500 nursing homes in all 50 states through a project funded
135 andomized clinical trial was conducted in 36 nursing homes in Connecticut.
136 er prevention and treatment in hospitals and nursing homes in Flanders was found to be low compared t
137                                Hospitals and nursing homes in Flanders, a region of Belgium.
138 cted with eight staff members working in two nursing homes in Greater London, United Kingdom.
139 istics collected from residents of community nursing homes in Maryland and Michigan between 2012 and
140  MRSA from nasal swabbing of residents of 26 nursing homes in Orange County, California, and characte
141 ospective cohort study of Medicare-certified nursing homes in Oregon, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania tha
142 n among residents of a sample of Connecticut nursing homes in the first half of May 2020.
143 ts, specialist palliative care units and all nursing homes in the locality, whether they were known t
144 cts in an academic referral hospital and two nursing homes in the same geographic region.
145                           Medicare-certified nursing homes in the USA located within 50 miles of a Ce
146                                     R-REM in nursing homes is highly prevalent.
147 are and resident and care worker outcomes in nursing homes is requested.
148 hat the percentage of people ever staying in nursing homes is substantially higher than previous esti
149 taff in long-term care (LTC) settings (e.g., nursing homes) is a mounting concern and is associated w
150                                              Nursing homes led by DONs with Bachelor's degrees or hig
151                                              Nursing homes led by NHAs with both Master's degrees or
152                                           In nursing homes, little is known about the occurrence of i
153 uria plus pyuria at baseline, residing in 21 nursing homes located within 50 miles (80 km) of New Hav
154 ate, their need for care will greatly affect nursing homes, long-term care facilities, and long-term
155 .0001), most commonly hospice/death (12%) or nursing home/long-term care facility (6%).
156 re was defined as new placement in a skilled nursing home/long-term/rehabilitation facility on hospit
157        In very elderly individuals living in nursing homes, low PPA from central to peripheral arteri
158 ittle is known about whether the Green House nursing home model has positive effects on physical func
159 e change nursing home model, the Green House nursing home model, has shown positive psychological out
160                   A promising culture change nursing home model, the Green House nursing home model,
161 e interval [CI], 3.60-16.51), discharge to a nursing home (mOR, 2.65; 95% CI, 1.41-4.99), presence of
162                                              Nursing home (NH) patients often acquire colonization wi
163 l differences in influenza vaccination among nursing home (NH) residents during the 2008-09 influenza
164 entable infection-related hospitalization in nursing home (NH) residents.
165  organisms (MDROs) spread between hospitals, nursing homes (NHs), and long-term acute care facilities
166 hort-stay acute care hospitals (ACHs), and 6 nursing homes (NHs).
167 ased education and best practice programs in nursing homes (NHs).
168                                          Six nursing home norovirus outbreaks occurring in South Caro
169 tend to drive norovirus transmission in U.S. nursing home norovirus outbreaks.
170 tics administration was implemented in three nursing homes of the Rivas Zorggroep for residents with
171                                           30 nursing homes (of at least 20 beds) in northern Israel.
172 nderstood, with residents with dementia in a nursing home often viewed as asexual or incapable of bei
173 market factors to examine the quality of 195 nursing homes operating in a rural state of United State
174 ive disabilities, frailty, or residence in a nursing home or assisted living facility.
175 g the inclusion criteria such as living in a nursing home or being aged less than 70 years.
176  1007 patients, 146 (15%) were admitted to a nursing home or died by 1 year after surgery, with highe
177 5% had a Steady Recovery with initially high nursing home or home care that tapered off; 9% had Long-
178 7% were home but required help, 5.1% were in nursing home or rehabilitation facilities, and 5.3% were
179 follow-up survey, 51 (7%) were admitted to a nursing home or reported inability to get out of bed, dr
180 I}, 1.90-12.4]; P = .001) and residency in a nursing home (OR, 3.55 [95% CI, 1.12-11.24]; P = .031) w
181 tcomes among three groups of residents in 15 nursing homes per group.
182 re Alzheimer's disease increased the risk of nursing home placement during 12 months of treatment, bu
183 ezil and starting of memantine on subsequent nursing home placement in patients with moderate-to-seve
184 ervational studies have suggested a delay in nursing home placement with dementia drug treatment, but
185                 162 (55%) patients underwent nursing home placement within 4 years of randomisation,
186 ently associated with longer hospital stays, nursing home placement, and death in patients outside th
187 nt caregiver distress, and result in earlier nursing home placement.
188 ften result in long-term hospitalization and nursing home placement.
189 me of the trial, reported in this study, was nursing home placement: an irreversible move from indepe
190 nt effect over time, with significantly more nursing home placements in the combined donepezil discon
191 for evaluation of its effectiveness in daily nursing home practice.
192 icance of associated/contextual factors with nursing home quality even in a small rural state.
193  outcomes were measured using facility-level nursing home quality indicator rates selected from the M
194 g and continuing education hours as improved nursing home quality indicators have been found to be re
195 ocused on the relationship of RN staffing to nursing home quality indicators, controlling for organiz
196  of adverse events; measures of hospital and nursing home quality; and patient satisfaction.
197 eath included increasing age, residence in a nursing home, recent surgery, septic shock, NF, meningit
198                                              Nursing homes represent a unique and important methicill
199 re the dominant MRSA clones in Orange County nursing homes, representing 83% of all isolates, althoug
200 f the frequency and diversity of MRSA in the nursing home reservoir was carried out and compared to t
201 3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.02-1.04), nursing home residence (OR, 1.8; 95% CI, 1.2-2.9), histo
202 utcome of adjusted relative risk of death or nursing home residence at 90 days increased progressivel
203                        Prior antibiotic use, nursing home residence, and transfer from an outside hos
204                     Along with older age and nursing home residence, cancer and chemotherapy strongly
205  of disease progression on the basis of age, nursing home residence, comorbid conditions, obesity, re
206                                   Older age, nursing home residence, preexisting cardiovascular disea
207 sion, income, number of sick leave days, and nursing home residency.
208 lity pension, income, days of sick leave, or nursing home residency.
209 ient at risk per day and euro2.15 (3.10) per nursing home resident at risk per day.
210                                              Nursing home resident outcomes were measured using facil
211 e been repeatedly identified as essential to nursing home resident quality of life.
212 resent at admission, where the patient was a nursing home resident, was on hemodialysis, or was readm
213                               A total of 426 nursing home residents (233 in the intervention group an
214                      We examined 187 elderly nursing home residents (aged 80-102 years) and 50 commun
215 , 164 (79%) had diarrhea, and 158 (76%) were nursing home residents (vs.
216 We conducted a retrospective cohort study of nursing home residents aged >=65 years using 2007 to 201
217 respiratory-related hospital admissions from nursing home residents aged 65 years and older.
218                        A cohort of 190 frail nursing home residents aged 80-102 years and a cohort of
219 n a cohort of Department of Veterans Affairs nursing home residents from 7 states between 2012 and 20
220                   Fifteen cognitively intact nursing home residents from two facilities were intervie
221 17 in 591 nursing homes and covering >90% of nursing home residents in Ontario, Canada.
222 he effect on reducing hospital admissions of nursing home residents in the USA.
223 Diagnosing urinary tract infections (UTI) in nursing home residents is complex, as specific urinary s
224 phylococcus aureus (MRSA) colonization among nursing home residents is high.
225                        Selected outcomes for nursing home residents might be improved by increasing t
226 eline was significantly lower in the elderly nursing home residents than in the community-dwelling se
227 ella vaccine induces VZV immunity in elderly nursing home residents that is similar to that produced
228               The growth in hospice care for nursing home residents was associated with less aggressi
229 e six countries studied, staff reported that nursing home residents were restrained through limb and/
230                                              Nursing home residents with dementia commonly experience
231                                              Nursing home residents with dementia experience increase
232 tal stimulation and eating performance among nursing home residents with dementia.
233 teristics of eating performance cycles among nursing home residents with dementia.
234 dent interactions during care activities for nursing home residents with dementia.
235 inuing inappropriate medication use in frail nursing home residents without a decline in their well-b
236                                              Nursing home residents' use of hospice has substantially
237 scribing is a well-known clinical problem in nursing home residents, but few interventions have focus
238  radiographically documented pneumonia among nursing home residents, compared with usual care.
239 t due to aging population, growing number of nursing home residents, poorly understood biology, and d
240      Upon further examination of the elderly nursing home residents, we found that higher frequencies
241 associated diarrhea (AAD) occurs in 2-25% of nursing home residents, which may lead to dehydration, m
242                     Of deaths, 66 (50%) were nursing home residents.
243 medication use and to improve prescribing in nursing home residents.
244 llance and antibiotic treatment data for 234 nursing home residents.
245 proving care quality and quality of life for nursing home residents.
246 neumonia or LRTI compared with usual care in nursing home residents.
247 mportant public health problem among elderly nursing home residents.
248 ed patients undergoing electroconversion and nursing home residents.
249 isms, and noninfectious adverse events among nursing home residents.
250 hem to provide competent and quality care to nursing home residents.
251 0% were Black, 16% were Latinx, and 21% were nursing home residents.
252 iotics demonstrated the prevention of AAD in nursing home residents.
253  people, active-duty military personnel, and nursing home residents.
254 ldest segment of the US population-long-stay nursing home residents.
255 e not suitable to distinguish UTI and ASB in nursing home residents.Trial registration Netherlands Tr
256 are incarcerated, homeless, or hospitalized; nursing home residents; active-duty military personnel;
257 ne (hereafter, "varicella vaccine") in frail nursing homes residents nor about immune phenotypes asso
258 documentation of care and the social care of nursing homes residents.
259  contact and most intensive interaction with nursing-home residents are also those having the least t
260  wards, long-term acute-care facilities, and nursing homes resulting in median 8.0%, 3.0%, and 1.9% r
261 sponses in managing sexual expression in the nursing home setting.
262 ' and nurses' perceptions of the position in nursing-home settings in Israel, using a standardized to
263 y held (personhood versus biomedical model), nursing home staff adopted a role or a combination of ro
264 y of communication and collaboration between nursing home staff and primary care and specialist pract
265 esentations of sexuality in dementia held by nursing home staff ranged from the perception that sexua
266                                              Nursing home staff's responses varied depending on the s
267                                       In 322 nursing homes, staff returned questionnaires regarding 1
268 re linked to Medicare files for hospital and nursing home stays, emergency department visits, outpati
269 more health care services (hospitalizations, nursing home stays, physician visits; P < 0.001 for all
270                 This study used the National Nursing Home Survey and National Nursing Assistant Surve
271 plex sampling design effects in the National Nursing Home Survey and National Nursing Assistant Surve
272                     This study used National Nursing Home Survey data on leadership education and cer
273 esidents in care homes (residential homes or nursing homes that provide residents with 24-hour suppor
274            MRSA strains recovered from study nursing homes that were clonal when typed by the commerc
275 plementation of probiotics to prevent AAD in nursing homes, to evaluate effects on AAD occurrence, an
276 e highest for individuals with the Long-Term Nursing Home trajectory ($63,082), closely followed by i
277       As job satisfaction has been linked to nursing home turnover, attention to training may improve
278 he intervention group) from 47 New York City nursing home units (23 experimental and 24 control) in 5
279 r adjusting for 14 resident characteristics, nursing home urine culturing predicted total antibiotic
280                                              Nursing home urine culturing was measured as the proport
281                                  We examined nursing home urine-culturing practices and their associa
282                We used data on up to 18 y of nursing home use and out-of-pocket costs drawn from the
283 , we estimated a dynamic parametric model of nursing home use and spending.
284                                     59 Dutch nursing home wards for long-term care.
285 care-dependent residents and 275 nurses from nursing home wards.
286  units (23 experimental and 24 control) in 5 nursing homes was assessed.
287 er prevention and treatment in hospitals and nursing homes was calculated as annual cost for Flanders
288                         In all participating nursing homes, we identified all residents who died duri
289 lizations occurring among residents of these nursing homes were identified through the Medicare Minim
290          A total of 131 218 residents in 591 nursing homes were included; 7.9% of resident assessment
291                                     Enrolled nursing homes were randomised to a facility-wide standar
292                                              Nursing homes were randomized to the multicomponent inte
293 lication of exclusion and matching criteria, nursing homes were selected at random within three regio
294 though the USA100 variant was predominant in nursing homes, whereas USA300 was predominant in hospita
295     2897 certified nursing assistants in 580 nursing homes who were currently working at a nursing ho
296 rs had lower rates of care deficiencies than nursing homes with less credentialed leaders.
297                      Previous research found nursing homes with more credentialed leaders had lower r
298  enhance resident safety by reducing HAIs in nursing homes, with particular emphasis on reducing indw
299 5 (95% CI, 108.6-110.3) hospitalizations per nursing home-year during outbreak vs nonoutbreak periods
300 57.0) vs 41.9 (95% CI, 41.4-42.4) deaths per nursing home-year in outbreak vs nonoutbreak periods (se

 
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