Reducing Unnecessary Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents

  • Ouslander J
  • Berenson R
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Abstract

It's a common scenario: a 90-year-old resident of a U.S. nursing home — call her Ms. B. — has moderately advanced Alzheimer's disease, congestive heart failure with severe left-ventricular dysfunction, and chronic pain from degenerative joint disease. She develops a nonproductive cough and a fever of 100.4°F. The night nurse calls an on-call physician who is unfamiliar with Ms. B. Told that she has a cough and fever, the physician says to send her to the emergency room, where she's found to have normal vital signs except for the low-grade fever, a normal basic-chemistry panel and white-cell count, but a . . .

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Ouslander, J. G., & Berenson, R. A. (2011). Reducing Unnecessary Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents. New England Journal of Medicine, 365(13), 1165–1167. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmp1105449

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