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1 d 25.78 [18.23-36.45] for any time in out-of-home care).
2 reatment and 127 (0.5%) spent time in out-of-home care.
3 eatment and 469 (10.7%) spent time in out-of-home care.
4 in association with any contact with out-of-home care.
5 feasible for use by practitioners working in home care.
6 .46-5.85) for children ever placed in out-of-home care.
7 argins of access or with a preference for at-home care.
8 was mediated through engagement with out-of-home care.
9 eir experiences and perceptions of receiving home care.
10 and clinic visits in lieu of inpatient or in-home care.
11 ng interventional efforts to improve patient home care.
12 best support older adults requiring nursing home care.
13 y was in part related to the site of nursing home care.
14 184 520 +/- US$111 075 for the fifth year of home care.
15 hird site, 29% of patients chose hospital-at-home care.
16 itutionalized people than in those receiving home-care.
17 e of admission rates to residential (nursing home) care.
18 home care that tapered off; 9% had Long-Term Home Care; 13% had Long-Term Nursing Home Care; and 14%
19 associated with a shorter length of stay in home care (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] for home care dis
20 PIM prevalence at hospital discharge and at home care admission was analyzed by Wilcoxon Signed Rank
24 ese areas may represent novel approaches for home care agencies to reduce HCW turnover and improve jo
30 al was conducted in partnership with a large home care agency in New York, New York, from May 2022 to
31 g was used to recruit nurses from across the home care agency with varied years of work experience.
32 s associated with a longer length of stay in home care (aHR, 0.82 [95% CI, 0.71-0.94]) after adjustin
35 During the first year, 93 (11%) receiving home care and 66 (11%) receiving facility care died, 29
36 h CDI, an intervention combining hospital-at-home care and FMT is cost-effective compared with standa
39 the focus of the study was temporary out-of-home care and not adoption; mortality surveillance was e
41 mmunities, confirming the important role for home care and professional intervention in maintaining o
43 y discourages physical restraints in nursing home care and suggests alternative practices may be an i
44 stration; $255 versus $123 for nursing home, home care, and hospice administration; and $465 versus $
49 ng-Term Home Care; 13% had Long-Term Nursing Home Care; and 14% had an Unstable trajectory with multi
50 95% CI, 1.03-1.17), higher odds of receiving home care (AOR, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.01-1.13), and lower odds
55 rom the resident physician, arrangements for home care as needed, and recommendations, appointments,
56 g the role of 'nurse staffing' under nursing home care, as well as the significance of associated/con
57 and Variation for Alzheimer Disease Nursing Home Care at End of Life) qualitative study, conducted f
59 ated maltreatment, and ever placed in out-of-home care) based on administrative data from the South A
60 l mortality, with the strongest evidence for home care behaviours and practices during home deliverie
61 over and higher job quality than traditional home care businesses, but the factors associated with th
64 69% of patients who were offered hospital-at-home care chose it over acute hospital care; in the thir
66 ticipants was 36059, 40159, and 37598 in the home-care, community-care, and comparison arms, respecti
67 000, 45.2 per 1000, and 43.5 per 1000 in the home-care, community-care, and comparison arms, respecti
69 nsertion team, inpatient nurses, and various home-care companies and outside institutions collected l
70 Two hundred five PICCs (58%) were managed by home-care companies and outside institutions, and 146 PI
72 ly staffing may enhance the value of Nursing Home Care Compare for nursing homes and others engaged i
74 oll Based Journal, Minimum Data Set, Nursing Home Care Compare, and Long-Term-Care Focus data for fis
76 ith neonatal abstinence syndrome, any out-of-home care contact mediated readmission risk by approxima
77 Mediation analyses showed that any out-of-home care contact mediated the association between subst
81 The participatory structure and practices of home care cooperatives in these areas may represent nove
83 this qualitative study of HCWs and staff at home care cooperatives, participants perceived cooperati
86 hospital epidemiology and infection control, home care, decontamination of the environment, and addit
88 are planning and decision making, supporting home care, demonstrating empathy for family emotions and
89 depths (PD) and inflammation when used as a home care dentifrice in Stage I and II periodontitis pat
90 gival inflammation over 6 months solely as a home care dentifrice without baseline SRP in Stage I and
91 vidence of adverse medical consequences from home care, despite a protocol designed to detect evidenc
92 n home care (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] for home care discharge, 1.39 [95% confidence interval [CI],
93 tion and control do not adequately cover the home care environment and more research needs to determi
94 story significantly reduce access to nursing home care, even when medical need and payment ability ar
95 t of contacts with children attending out-of-home care facilities dramatically decreased over the stu
97 ere identified who had been placed in out-of-home care for a median (interquartile range) period of 1
98 s appear to exist in the receipt of informal home care for disabled elderly people in the United Stat
101 en or gay men, with no studies investigating home care for transgender, queer, intersex or other sexu
102 ignificant improvements were observed in the home care group in relation to the symptoms of oral muco
106 ostly elective; there is little attention to home care, hospice, and nursing home care; role models a
107 tiated maltreatment and spent time in out-of-home care (HR 6.25 [95% CI 5.59-6.98] for any CPS involv
108 d rising rates of agency contacts and out-of-home care in some settings are effectively reducing chil
109 to sexual possibility situations, and out-of-home care increase sexual behavior, improved parent-chil
111 inked population birth, hospital, and out-of-home care information of all liveborn infants from New S
112 actice nurse-centered discharge planning and home care intervention for at-risk hospitalized elders r
116 schizophrenia have been referred to nursing home care, little is known about their characteristics.
118 cket spending and the utilization of nursing home care; Medicare claims data were used to identify co
119 iented than acute hospital care, hospital-at-home care met quality standards at rates similar to thos
122 yte globulin), nutritional status, exercise, home care, modulation of microbiota, enhancing homeostat
124 the perspectives of the wife, daughter, and home care nurse of a patient who died from pancreatic ca
128 complementary foods, morbidity, appropriate home care or care-seeking during childhood illnesses.
129 and is high in individuals living in out-of-home care or engaged in justice and mental health system
130 ), better parental ratings of the quality of home care (OR, 3.31; 95% CI, 1.15-9.54; P =.03), earlier
133 are clinicians and staff members involved in home care, outpatient rehabilitation, and senior centers
134 ncer care, prescription drugs, primary care, home care, palliative care, and nursing home coverage.
136 ing and nearly 20% of older Chinese-American home care patients have at least one potentially inappro
137 le abstract: A new US-based study finds that home care patients with language barriers are at higher
140 onal hazards model of time to discharge from home care, post-BBA year (1998) was associated with a sh
141 care, including health education to improve home-care practices, to create demand for skilled care,
142 s were randomly assigned to receive either a home care program by a nurse or standard care for 18 wee
146 enerally unpaid) and formal (generally paid) home care received by survey participants who reported a
148 l, 775 patients were analyzed, including 155 home care recipients and 620 extracted from the inpatien
150 attention to home care, hospice, and nursing home care; role models are few; and students are not enc
151 lp to facilitate minimal-invasive primary or home care sampling for classical systemic diagnostic app
153 older LGBTQI+ people should be considered by home care service providers as a way of reducing homopho
156 lanced Budget Act (BBA) reduced payments for home care services to help control Medicare spending.
157 ruited citizens received training to provide home care services to hospital-discharged older Chinese
158 riences of other sexual minorities receiving home care services who are represented by the LGBTQI+ um
160 eased primary care visits and connections to home care services, which may have increased antihyperte
163 s steadily declined in subsequent years, but home-care services, in stark contrast, unexpectedly incr
169 Post-surgical treatment included routine home care supplemented with daily chlohexidine rinse and
172 The mean cost was lower for hospital-at-home care than for acute hospital care (5081 dollars vs.
173 ceived many fewer hours per week of informal home care than married disabled men (14.8 hours; 95% CI,
174 Recovery with initially high nursing home or home care that tapered off; 9% had Long-Term Home Care;
176 lace routine quarterly follow-up visits with home care to reduce the patient and provider burden.
177 hospital stay, laboratory tests, receipt of home care, transfer to long-term care, and medication in
179 osis, type of surgery, frailty, preoperative home care use, neoadjuvant therapy, cancer site, and can
180 llow-up information was collected on regular home care visits and BADL function at 1 and 3 years and
181 is, the rates of hospitalization and regular home care visits for the independent without difficulty
182 in individuals who had been placed in out-of-home care vs 5.1% in those who had not), substance misus
183 -81.0%); this rate was slightly lower during home care vs inpatient stay (57.5% [IQR, 30.7%-85.9%] vs
185 o induce gingivitis (induction), after which home care was reinstated until 35 days (resolution).
186 s, individuals who had been placed in out-of-home care were 1.4 to 5 times more likely to experience
188 iated maltreatment, and time spent in out-of-home care) were computed from data obtained from the Sou
190 e clinical benefits of combining hospital-at-home care with FMT for older patients with CDI, but its
191 rt study, patients receiving acute, virtual, home care with remote monitoring and as-needed return ur
192 ions of older adults rely on the services of home care workers (HCWs), a workforce marked by poor wor
193 Mandatory LGBTQI+ sensitivity training for home care workers was identified for reducing homophobia
194 y men fear or experience discrimination from home care workers, with some choosing to hide their sexu
197 ital settings and in community settings with home-care workers, and the limited research involving fa