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Browsing by Author "Mack, Laramie"
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Item Clinical Courses and Characteristics of Residents During a SARS-CoV-2 Outbreak at a Central Indiana Skilled Nursing Facility(Indiana University, 2020-12) Albert, Lauren; Lieb, Kristi; Mack, Laramie; Unroe, Kathleen; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground/Objective: Older adults such as skilled nursing facility residents have increased risk of serious SARS-CoV-2 infection and comprise a large proportion of the COVID-19 pandemic’s deceased—the US Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services report 232,831 cases and 38,518 resident deaths to date. Recent case reports reveal, as in other diseases, older adults may experience atypical symptomology, complicating identification of ill residents and efforts to slow transmission. While a few facility outbreaks have been characterized epidemiologically, little research exists regarding clinical timelines and trajectories which residents experience during COVID-19 illness. Methods: From May 9, 2020-June 1, 2020, daily notes on each COVID-19 positive resident’s status (n = 69) were taken by the medical director of a central Indiana nursing facility. Combined with a retrospective resident chart review of this same period, these notes were examined for COVID-19 infection symptoms and illness timelines to descriptively categorize a number of common illness trajectories and symptoms seen in residents with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Results: Residents fit four descriptive clinical timelines: concurrent symptom load with quick death (Avg 5.6 days) (n = 5), accumulating symptom load with gradual decline (Avg. 13.9 days) (n = 9), prolonged active symptom load with periods of stabilization and symptom reoccurrence (n = 42), and asymptomatic or atypical symptom load (n = 12). Most common symptoms were fever, hypoxia, anorexia, and fatigue/malaise. Of the 14 residents who died (20.3% of infected), 8 died in the facility and 6 died in the hospital. Conclusion and Implications: This retrospective case study adds to literature describing the presentation and symptomology of SARS-CoV-2 infection in residents of skilled nursing facilities and aids efforts to evaluate resident presentation, prognosis, and disease course. Robust descriptions of expected clinical courses may support realistic expectations of disease progression for residents and their family members experiencing future outbreaks.Item Conditions Associated with Successful Implementation of an Advance Care Planning Intervention in Nursing Homes(Oxford University Press, 2023-12-21) Hickman, Susan; Miech, Edward; Stump, Timothy; Mack, Laramie; Tu, Wanzhu; Unroe, Kathleen; School of NursingImplementing evidence-based interventions in nursing homes is challenging in part because clinical trials requiring a controlled experimental environment are difficult to sustain. In contrast, pragmatic clinical trials develop and evaluate evidence-based interventions in the “real world” with the goal of streamlining implementation after study completion. However, there is minimal information available identifying conditions associated with successful implementation of pragmatic interventions in the nursing home setting. The “Aligning Patient Preferences - a Role Offering Alzheimer’s patients, Caregivers, and Healthcare Providers Education and Support” (APPROACHES) project is a pragmatic trial designed to test and evaluate a staff-led advance care planning (ACP) intervention for residents with ADRD in 131 nursing homes (64 intervention, 67 control) between September 1, 2021 and August 31, 2022. ACP Specialists received training on ACP facilitation and implementation of the ACP program in the facility. Twenty of 65 (31%) sites successfully implemented the APPROACHES intervention and had > 75% of residents with documented ACP conversations. Using configurational analysis, we found two solutions directly linked with successful pragmatic implementation: (1) no executive director turnover during the observation period combined with site participation in monthly intervention support calls with ACP staff at other facilities; and (2) higher rates of hospitalization (3.96 – 7.2 per 1000 resident days) combined with a low number of certified beds. Findings suggest that leadership stability and engagement with peers were essential drivers of successful implementation. Having greater improvement opportunities as well as a more manageable caseload for the ACP Specialist may also help explain successful implementation.Item Re-opening nursing facilities to visitors during a pandemic: An early look at experiences(2022) Petrovic, Marija; Hickman, Susan E.; Mack, Laramie; Unroe, Kathleen T.; School of Nursing