Blogs

Taking the Final Step From the Bench to the Hospital or Clinic Bedside

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INDIANAPOLIS – A new Regenstrief Institute and Indiana University Center for Aging Research (IUCAR) study provides effective strategies to help hospital systems, physicians and other care providers to overcome end zone hurdles and actually take evidence-based research to the patient's hospital or clinic bedside.

The paper has been published online by the Journal of Clinical Interventions in Aging, a peer-reviewed, open access publication.

Real-Time, Evidence-Based Information at Clinicians' Fingertips to Streamline Mental Health Care

(Toronto, ON) May 12, 2010 — Mental health, the second leading cause of disability and premature death in Canada, impacts the lives of every Canadian, much like technology. Mental health and technology are now being brought together with an innovative tool developed by University of Toronto Bloomberg nursing researchers in collaboration with Toronto-based software development company HInext and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). This tool has the potential to improve mental health care planning in Ontario and beyond.

Canadian Consumers Demand More Patient-Centred Healthcare: HealthCast Report

Shifting demographics force Canada's health professionals to look at how they integrate resources and technology to meet changing needs, according to PwC survey.

TORONTO - A growing and aging population, more people living with chronic disease, and inconsistent service delivery, due in part to financial and workforce shortages, are placing increased pressure on the healthcare system in Canada. This is according to the HealthCast series of reports on health industry trends published by the PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) Health Research Institute and the supplementary Canadian Compendium from PwC Canada. The latest research includes insight from 3,500 consumers around the world, including 500 Canadians, as well as 815 global health leaders and experts (85 in Canada).

HPME Research Day 2010

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The Department of Health Policy and Managment at the University of Toronto is holding a Research Day tomorrow, Wednesday May 5th, 2010, on "Experiments and Incentives in Health Care."

Sholom Glouberman of PAC will be participating in the panel discussion: E-Health: Will the Promise be Realized?

More than just a technical challenge, the pursuit of e-health is a transformational process with implications for how healthcare is organized and delivered. In Ontario and Canada, the road towards the electronic enablement of health services has been fraught with challenges, setbacks and surprises. Against this backdrop, Research Day 2010 poses the question, Will the Promise Be Realized?

Medical Home Pays Off, Improving Primary Care and Cutting Cost at 2 Years

Group Health patients visit ERs and hospitals less in Health Affairs study

Seattle—In a two-year evaluation at Group Health Cooperative, transforming primary care into a “patient-centered medical home” model paid off. Published in the May 2010 Health Affairs, the evaluation compared the medical home prototype to Group Health’s other medical centers, showing:

  • The quality of care was higher, patients reported having better experiences, and clinicians said they felt less “burned out.”
  • Patients had 29 percent fewer emergency visits and 6 percent fewer hospitalizations, resulting in a net savings of $10 per patient per month.
  • For every dollar Group Health invested, mostly to boost staffing, it recouped $1.50.

Complicated and Complex Systems: What would a new perspective of medicare look like?

This presentation was delivered for the Advances in Health Informatics Conference in 2010 as part of the Think Tank on Revisiting eHealth Strategies at the University of Waterloo. The presentation is based on the place of patient information in complex systems.

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