Long-Term Care

Nursing homes improve quality measures

Contemporary Long-Term Care Weekly, August 22, 2006

The Annals of Internal Medicine conducted a study on the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization (QIO) program-with promising results. The study showed that nursing homes that worked with OIOs had improvements within the five chosen quality measures. The five quality measures took a seven day look-back period and calculated the percentage of residents with moderate daily pain or severe pain, those with pressure ulcers, and the percentage of residents who were physically restrained on a daily basis. Also analyzed was the percentage of residents requiring assistance with daily activities and the percentage of short-stay residents with moderate or severe pain. According to the journal, 434 nursing homes targeted decline in activities of daily living for improvement, 2,477 targeted pain in chronic care residents, 609 targeted use of physical restraints, 1,380 targeted development of pressure ulcers.

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