Research and QI
Faculty in the Division of Hospital Medicine work through multiple Quality Improvement methods to improve the science of inpatient medicine, the systems and processes by which we provide that care, and increase quality and cost-effectiveness of that care.
Previous and current projects led by division faculty have had aims such as the following:
- Improving efficiency by applying the Lean methodology and “one-piece flow” to the hospital admission and discharge processes
- Evaluating outcomes of patients discharged from the Emergency Department after referral to Hospital Medicine for admission
- Standardizing the care for patients with alcohol withdrawal and providing medications for the maintenance of sobriety on discharge
- Using of individual patient care plans (ICPs) to improve outcomes and utilization for patients with frequent inpatient hospitalizations
- Decreasing unnecessary use of telemetry monitoring and short-term blood pressure treatment
- Reducing care variation in the evaluations of patients with low-risk chest pain and syncope
The Association of Discharge Before Noon and Length of Stay in Hospitalized Pediatric Patients
James HJ, Steiner MJ, Holmes GM, Stephens JR
Point-of-Care Ultrasound for Hospitalists: A Position Statement of the Society of Hospital Medicine
Soni NJ, Schnobrich D, Mathews BK, Tierney DM, Jensen TP, Dancel RD, Cho J, Dversdal RK, Mints G, Bhagra A, Reierson K, Kurian LM, Liu GY, Candotti C, Boesch B, LoPresti CM, Lenchus J, Wong T, Johnson G, Maw AM, Franco-Sadud R, Lucas BP
Recommendations on the Use of Ultrasound Guidance for Adult Abdominal Paracentesis: A Position Statement of the Society of Hospital Medicine
Cho J, Jensen TP, Reierson K, Mathews BK, Bhagra A, Franco-Sadud R, Grikis L, Mader M, Dancel RD, Lucas BP, Soni NJ
Things We Do for No Reason: Neuroimaging for Hospitalized Patients with Delirium
Chow S, McWilliams A, Kaplan DM, Stephens JR
Association of the Usability of Electronic Health Records With Cognitive Workload and Performance Levels Among Physicians
Mazur LM, Mosaly PR, Moore CR, Marks L
Community health workers trained to conduct verbal autopsies provide better mortality measures than existing surveillance: Results from a cross-sectional study in rural western Uganda
Nabukalu D, Ntaro M, Seviiri M, Reyes R, Wiens M, Sundararajan R, Mulogo E, Boyce RM
Private sector drug shops frequently dispense parenteral anti-malarials in a rural region of Western Uganda
Wang LT, Bwambale R, Keeler C, Reyes R, Muhindo R, Matte M, Ntaro M, Mulogo E, Sundararajan R, Boyce RM
Recommendations on the Use of Ultrasound Guidance for Adult Lumbar Puncture: A Position Statement of the Society of Hospital Medicine
Soni NJ, Franco-Sadud R, Kobaidze K, Schnobrich D, Salame G, Lenchus J, Kalidindi V, Mader MJ, Haro EK, Dancel RD, Cho J, Grikis L, Lucas BP
Osteochondrodysplasia
Liu A, McEntee J
Constipation-Related Health Care Utilization in Children Before and After Hospitalization for Constipation
Stephens JR, Steiner M, DeJong N, Rodean J, Hall M, Richardson T, Berry J
Credentialing of Hospitalists in Ultrasound-Guided Bedside Procedures:A Position Statement of the Society of Hospital Medicine
Lucas BP, Tierney DM, Jensen TP, Dancel RD, Cho J, El-Barbary M, Franco-Sadud R, Soni NJ
Issues Identified by Postdischarge Contact after Pediatric Hospitalization: A Multisite Study
Rehm KP, Brittan MS, Stephens JR, Mummidi P, Steiner MJ, Gay JC, Ayubi SA, Gujral N, Mittal V, Dunn K, Chiang V, Hall M, Blaine K, O’Neil M, McBride S, Rogers J, Berry JG