Hospital acquired pneumonias are caused by which of the following?
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According to attribution theory, we use two general reasons…
According to attribution theory, we use two general reasons or attributions to explain people’s behavior. They are ____.
According to the motivational model presented in the text, p…
According to the motivational model presented in the text, perceived inequity directly affects ____.
Extra Credit Question (worth 2 points; no word limit) What 1…
Extra Credit Question (worth 2 points; no word limit) What 1 or 2 topics do you think the most important (or interesting) in this course? And what 1 or 2 topics (related to HSR) would you like to be covered in the rest of the semester?
What is a measure of the ‘access to care’ in a population?
What is a measure of the ‘access to care’ in a population?
Which of the following does not accurately describe an aspec…
Which of the following does not accurately describe an aspect of the transition toward value-based care?
Which type of research is usually conducted when relatively…
Which type of research is usually conducted when relatively little is known about the phenomenon under study?
The expansion of health insurance coverage across the entire…
The expansion of health insurance coverage across the entire population is the central aim of the population health movement.
Read the abstract provided below and determine the type of r…
Read the abstract provided below and determine the type of review: Abstract Issue: The Affordable Care Act’s (ACA’s) health insurance marketplaces provide a critical source of coverage and financial assistance. States operating their own marketplaces cover a significant number of consumers without access to employment-based health insurance or public programs. Federal actions under the Trump administration have undermined the marketplaces, but the new administration has opportunities to implement and advocate for policies that strengthen state-based marketplaces (SBMs) to ensure they continue to serve as a coverage safety net. Goal: Identify federal policies to support SBMs and the consumers they serve. Methods: Structured interviews with directors and officials from 17 SBMs and analysis of recent federal policies impacting SBMs. Key Findings and Conclusions: The Trump administration has hindered SBMs by establishing onerous requirements and creating consumer confusion. Affordability remains a primary barrier to marketplace coverage, and federal initiatives could help reduce premiums and cost sharing. SBMs are an important resource for people who do not have access to affordable insurance through their jobs, but federal policy changes are needed to clear an easier pathway to coverage. In addition, the federal government should reinvest in advertising and outreach for the federally facilitated marketplace.
Using PICOT framework, analyze the abstract provided below a…
Using PICOT framework, analyze the abstract provided below and formulate the research question. *Note: ‘T’ is optional; but ‘PICO’ parts are necessary. **This is an example of an answer for this type of question: Population: Bariatric adolescents considering or undergoing gastric bypass surgery. Intervention: The nurse’s role as a primary member of the multidisciplinary team regarding perioperative care of the bariatric adolescent patient. Comparison: The nurse’s role as a secondary member of the multidisciplinary team without any specialized training and is only involved in perioperative care of the bariatric adolescent patient. Outcome: When the nurse is involved as one of the primary members in the multidisciplinary team approach, the bariatric adolescent patient has better continuity of care. Time: perioperative including the 6 weeks post-recovery. PICOT Question: Does the bariatric adolescent patient undergoing gastric bypass have better continuity of care perioperatively and postoperatively when the nurse is a primary member of the multidisciplinary team versus when the nurse is a secondary member whose only role is in providing perioperative care during 6 weeks post-recovery? ——————————————————– AbstractImportance: State decisions not to expand Medicaid under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act could reduce emergency access to acute care hospitals. Objective: To determine the relationship between state Medicaid expansion and emergency access to acute care hospitals in the United States. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional study linked hospital-level data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services from 2007 to 2017 to US Census data for all 50 US states and the District of Columbia. Geospatial analyses and difference-in-differences regression models were used to compare temporal changes in the size of the population without 30-minute access to acute care hospitals between 32 states that expanded Medicaid with the population without access in 19 that did not, before and after expansion. Analyses focused on the total population and those with low incomes; secondary analyses examined emergency access to safety-net hospitals. Exposures: State-level Medicaid expansion. Main Outcomes and Measures: Population without emergency access to an acute care hospital, defined as living outside a 30-minute drive of any hospital. Results: States that did not expand Medicaid experienced an increase in the population without access to hospitals overall (without expansion: 6.76% to 6.79% [0.03%]; vs with expansion: 5.65% to 5.35% [–0.30%]; difference-in-differences, 0.33%; 95% CI, 0.33%-0.34%; P