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"Since publication of the original a decade ago, there has been considerable growth and evolution of the healthcare landscape as it pertains to access to care and the providers delivering that care. Urgent medical issues are increasingly being managed by providers with varying training. This book provides important teaching points around commonly encountered medical issues. Some of these improve the quality of care and some even help providers identify occult critical illness. While not comprehensive, this book is meant to be easily readable and relevant. Based on sales and reviews of the prior edition, it has been serving a valuable role for an array of providers"--
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Cognitive Therapy --- Psychiatry --- Psychological Theory --- Treatment Outcome
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Human reproductive technology --- Infertility --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted. --- Treatment Outcome --- Treatment --- therapy. --- Infertility. --- Treatment Outcome. --- Treatment.
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Background: Provisions of the Affordable Care Act (2010) require the use of validated quality measures (QMs) to evaluate the quality of health care programs, services, and outcomes. The need for such measures is crucial in serious mental illness (SMI), a long-term illness involving substantial functional impairment over multiple symptom domains that affects more than 11 million U.S. adults. Using QMs to assess the effect of programs designed to improve the mental health of SMI populations is an important task in improving the quality of these programs and services and, ultimately, health outcomes. Although stakeholders have proposed a variety of QMs, none are used consistently across all treatment sites or all forms of SMI. Key areas of uncertainty remain. Knowledge gaps for SMI include an agreed-upon list of relevant QMs; identification of the most meaningful outcomes by which to measure the success of QMs; identification of barriers to and facilitators of their implementation; and robust assessments of whether use of such measures improves medical, psychiatric, and patient-centered outcomes. -- Purpose: The goal of this Technical Brief is to identify how QMs are currently used in the SMI population and to describe the evidence supporting their use. -- Methods: We discussed with Key Informants and performed targeted searches of published and gray literature on questions of (1) a description of QMs; (2) the context for their use; (3) research linking QMs to changes in outcomes; and (4) current key issues in future uptake, use, evidence gaps, and research priorities. -- Findings: The evidence base, which was sparse, suggests that no uniformly accepted practices exist on how to define or implement QMs for SMI, nor on which QMs are the most relevant. Outcomes against which to evaluate the effectiveness of QMs are difficult to measure. Time, the additional burden of using QMs on a resource-limited health care system, and a thin evidence base on their use were key barriers to implementation of QMs. Indeed, we found no prospective research evaluating whether the use of QMs for SMI leads to changes in outcomes. Of note, evidence does not exist that indicates that certain measures often used as proxies for quality of care actually measure quality of care or improve outcomes. -- Conclusions: The literature does not indicate an agreed-upon list of preferred relevant QMs for the SMI population, and the outcomes against which to assess the effectiveness of QMs are challenging to measure. Relatedly, and possibly of greatest practical importance, no studies have assessed whether the use of QMs improves health outcomes for patients with SMI nor do stakeholders agree on preferred outcomes. Accordingly, critical issues for the field to address include (1) determining the level of evidence (or strength of evidence) necessary to support implementation of QMs, given the complexities of studying the topic and the likely limited research funding; (2) developing the evidence base that assesses the link between QM use and outcomes; (3) considering when to invest the time and resources on measuring outcomes of care to evaluate the impact of QMs, and when process measures (proxies of the outcomes) are a reasonable and more feasible alternative; (4) determining the resource needs for QM implementation; and (5) developing validated and reliable QM tools that can be implemented feasibly in real-world practice.
Mental Disorders --- Treatment Outcome --- Quality Improvement --- therapy. --- United States --- Treatment Outcome. --- Quality Improvement. --- United States.
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Background: Provisions of the Affordable Care Act (2010) require the use of validated quality measures (QMs) to evaluate the quality of health care programs, services, and outcomes. The need for such measures is crucial in serious mental illness (SMI), a long-term illness involving substantial functional impairment over multiple symptom domains that affects more than 11 million U.S. adults. Using QMs to assess the effect of programs designed to improve the mental health of SMI populations is an important task in improving the quality of these programs and services and, ultimately, health outcomes. Although stakeholders have proposed a variety of QMs, none are used consistently across all treatment sites or all forms of SMI. Key areas of uncertainty remain. Knowledge gaps for SMI include an agreed-upon list of relevant QMs; identification of the most meaningful outcomes by which to measure the success of QMs; identification of barriers to and facilitators of their implementation; and robust assessments of whether use of such measures improves medical, psychiatric, and patient-centered outcomes. -- Purpose: The goal of this Technical Brief is to identify how QMs are currently used in the SMI population and to describe the evidence supporting their use. -- Methods: We discussed with Key Informants and performed targeted searches of published and gray literature on questions of (1) a description of QMs; (2) the context for their use; (3) research linking QMs to changes in outcomes; and (4) current key issues in future uptake, use, evidence gaps, and research priorities. -- Findings: The evidence base, which was sparse, suggests that no uniformly accepted practices exist on how to define or implement QMs for SMI, nor on which QMs are the most relevant. Outcomes against which to evaluate the effectiveness of QMs are difficult to measure. Time, the additional burden of using QMs on a resource-limited health care system, and a thin evidence base on their use were key barriers to implementation of QMs. Indeed, we found no prospective research evaluating whether the use of QMs for SMI leads to changes in outcomes. Of note, evidence does not exist that indicates that certain measures often used as proxies for quality of care actually measure quality of care or improve outcomes. -- Conclusions: The literature does not indicate an agreed-upon list of preferred relevant QMs for the SMI population, and the outcomes against which to assess the effectiveness of QMs are challenging to measure. Relatedly, and possibly of greatest practical importance, no studies have assessed whether the use of QMs improves health outcomes for patients with SMI nor do stakeholders agree on preferred outcomes. Accordingly, critical issues for the field to address include (1) determining the level of evidence (or strength of evidence) necessary to support implementation of QMs, given the complexities of studying the topic and the likely limited research funding; (2) developing the evidence base that assesses the link between QM use and outcomes; (3) considering when to invest the time and resources on measuring outcomes of care to evaluate the impact of QMs, and when process measures (proxies of the outcomes) are a reasonable and more feasible alternative; (4) determining the resource needs for QM implementation; and (5) developing validated and reliable QM tools that can be implemented feasibly in real-world practice.
Mental Disorders --- Treatment Outcome --- Quality Improvement --- therapy. --- United States --- Treatment Outcome. --- Quality Improvement. --- United States.
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Human reproductive technology --- Infertility --- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted. --- Treatment Outcome --- Treatment --- therapy. --- Infertility. --- Treatment Outcome. --- Treatment.
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Fatty Acids, Omega-3 --- Neoplasms --- Treatment Outcome. --- physiology. --- prevention & control.
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Background and objectives: There is ongoing debate on criteria for the definition of a positive resection margin after radical surgery for rectal cancer. It is generally accepted that in order for R0 resection to be obtained, surgical margins should be greater than 1 mm. The aim of this study is to investigate the impact of threatened resection margins on the oncologic outcome of patients, with a focus on local, regional and metastatic recurrence rates, overall survival rates and recurrences-free survival rates in n on metastatic patients treated for rectal adenocarcinoma by curative total mesorectal excision. Patients and methods: We identified a sample of 163 patients who underwent curative total mesorectal excision for rectal adenocarcinoma in Cliniques Universitaires Saint-Luc in Brussels between 2005 and 2015. We studied local, regional and metastatic recurrence rates, overall survival and recurrence-free survival rates. We compared these outcome parameters in patients with pathological distal margins of < 1 mm, with a control whose margins were greater than 1 mm. Results: Our study included a total of 163 patients (105 male, 58 female). Patients were divided in 4 groups according to their pathological distal margins. 152 (93, 3%) patients had large margins. 5 (3, 1%) patients had margins of 1 mm (limit margins), and 1 (0, 6%) patient had margins of < 1mm (invaded margins). 5 (3, 1%) patients had unknown pathological distal margins. Median age for all patients on the date of surgery was of 67, 1 years. 129 (79, 1%) of our patients underwent neo adjuvant treatment, which consisted in radio-chemotherapy in 115 (70, 6%) cases and radiotherapy alone in 14 (8, 6 %) cases. 92 (56, 4%) patients underwent adjuvant treatment after surgery. Most patients were staged Ct3 (119, 73 %) CN1 (72, 44, 2%), Cm0 (142, 87, 1%). Proportionally to the size of the group, tumors were more advanced in the limit margin group. Regarding recurrence rates, 26 (16, 0%) patients relapsed. Relapse was metastatic in 23 (14, 1%) patients, regional in 5 (3, 1%) patients, and local in 3 (1, 8%) patients. The patient with an invaded margin did not present any kind of relapse. In the limit margin group, 2 patients (40, 0%) suffered metastatic relapse. In the large margin group 20 patients (13, 2 %) presented metastatic relapse. Recurrence-free 5-years survival rates were not estimable due to the lack of sufficient events. Overall 5-years survival was 100% for the limit margin, invaded margin, unknown margin group, 79, 9% for the large margin group, and 81, 2 % all group considered. Conclusion: Our results showed that recurrence was more frequent in the limit margin group. This could indicate that the larger the surgical margin, the lower the recurrence rate, which is a result we expected to find. However, relapse in this group was metastatic, which was surprising as we expected to observe more cases of local. Due to the small number of patients in the limit margin and invaded margin groups, and the important imbalance in numbers, we were not able to make statistical comparison between the groups.
Retrospective Studies --- Treatment Outcome --- Adenocarcinoma --- Colorectal Surgery --- Margins of Excision
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"This book addresses a critical challenge in evidence-based psychotherapy: how to use empirically supported treatments (ESTs) in real-world clinical contexts. There are many common situations where ESTs do not provide sufficient guidance for clinical decision making, such as when a patient presents with multiple problems or fails to respond to standard protocols. Pioneering scientist-practitioner Jacqueline B. Persons now offers a theoretically and empirically grounded case formulation framework that helps therapists draw on the best available techniques while tailoring them to the needs of the individual patient." "A major contribution for all clinicians committed to understanding and using what really works in therapy, this book belongs on the desks of practitioners, students, and residents in clinical psychology, psychiatry, counseling, and social work. It will serve as a text in graduate-level courses on cognitive-behavior therapy and in clinical practica."
Cognitive therapy. --- Psychiatry --- Psychological Theory. --- Treatment Outcome. --- Case formulation.
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Cancer. --- Pituitary Diseases --- Pituitary Neoplasms --- Pituitary gland. --- Treatment Outcome. --- Therapy.
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