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Challenges of Nurses' Deployment to Other New York City Hospitals in the Aftermath of Hurricane Sandy

VanDevanter, Nancy; Kovner, Christine T; Raveis, Victoria H; McCollum, Meriel; Keller, Ronald
On October 29, 2012, a 12-ft storm surge generated by Hurricane Sandy necessitated evacuation and temporary closure of three New York City hospitals including NYU Langone Medical Center (NYULMC). NYULMC nurses participated in the evacuation, and 71 % were subsequently deployed to area hospitals to address patient surge for periods from a few days up to 2 months when NYULMC reopened. This mixed methods study explored nurses' experience in the immediate disaster and the subsequent deployment. More than 50 % of deployed nurse participants reported the experience to be extremely or very stressful. Deployed nurses encountered practice challenges related to working in an unfamiliar environment, limited orientation, legal concerns about clinical assignments. They experienced psychosocial challenges associated with the intense experience of the evacuation, uncertainty about future employment, and the increased demands of managing the deployment. Findings provide data to inform national and regional policies to support nurses in future deployments.
PMCID:4134446
PMID: 25053507
ISSN: 1099-3460
CID: 1075982

Translating infection control guidelines into practice: implementation process within a health care institution

Raveis, Victoria H; Conway, Laurie J; Uchida, Mayuko; Pogorzelska-Maziarz, Monika; Larson, Elaine L; Stone, Patricia W
Health-care-associated infections (HAIs) remain a major patient safety problem even as policy and programmatic efforts designed to reduce HAIs have increased. Although information on implementing effective infection control (IC) efforts has steadily grown, knowledge gaps remain regarding the organizational elements that improve bedside practice and accommodate variations in clinical care settings. We conducted in-depth, semistructured interviews in 11 hospitals across the United States with a range of hospital personnel involved in IC (n = 116). We examined the collective nature of IC and the organizational elements that can enable disparate groups to work together to prevent HAIs. Our content analysis of participants' narratives yielded a rich description of the organizational process of implementing adherence to IC. Findings document the dynamic, fluid, interactional, and reactive nature of this process. Three themes emerged: implementing adherence efforts institution-wide, promoting an institutional culture to sustain adherence, and contending with opposition to the IC mandate.
PMCID:4041365
PMID: 24598775
ISSN: 1049-7323
CID: 945722

EARLY INTERVENTION FALLS PREVENTION PROGRAM FOR COMMUNITY-DWELLING ELDERLY WITH DEMENTIA [Meeting Abstract]

Raveis, VH; Bear-Lehman, J; Galvin, J; Lanyi, V; Carrero, M; Tepfer, S; Karus, DG
ISI:000327442105439
ISSN: 1758-5341
CID: 1555592

PSYCHOSOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF SUCCESSFUL AGING IN ELDERLY COMMUNITY RESIDENTS: PERSPECTIVES FROM ISRAEL [Meeting Abstract]

Raveis, VH; Carmel, S; Tovel, H; Karus, DG
ISI:000327442102057
ISSN: 1758-5341
CID: 1555582

Emergency preparedness in a sample of persons with disabilities

Gershon, Robyn R M; Kraus, Lewis E; Raveis, Victoria H; Sherman, Martin F; Kailes, June I
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to characterize emergency preparedness in this vulnerable population, and to ascertain the role of the personal assistant (PA) and the potential impact of prior emergency experience on preparedness efforts. DESIGN: Cross-sectional Internet-based survey conducted in 2011. SETTING: Convenience sample. PARTICIPANTS: Two-hundred fifty-three community residents with cognitive and /or physical disabilities, all receiving personal assistance services. MAIN OUTCOME VARIABLES: Emergency preparedness, operationalized as responses to a seven-item scale. RESULTS: The mean score for the emergency preparedness scale was 2.32 (SD = 2.74), range 0-7. Even though 62.8 percent (n = 159) of the participants had previously experienced one or more large-scale emergencies, only 47.4 percent (n = 120) of the entire sample and 55.3 percent (n = 88) of those with actual emergency experience reported preparing an emergency plan. Sixty-three percent (n = 76) of those reporting a plan had involved their PA in its development. Participants who reported such involvement were significantly more likely to have higher scores on the emergency preparedness scale (p < 0.001). Participants who had experienced a prior emergency were also more likely to score higher on the emergency preparedness scale (p < 0.001). In general, participants reported limited attention to other basic preparedness recommendations: only 28 percent (n = 70) had prepared a "go-bag" with necessary supplies, 29 percent (n = 74) had developed a strategy for communicating with their PA during emergencies, and 32 percent (n = 81) had stockpiled emergency supplies. Of particular importance, only 26 percent (n = 66) had made alternative back-up plans for personal assistance. CONCLUSIONS: Involving the PA in the planning process and experiencing an emergency were both significantly associated with higher emergency preparedness scores in this sample of people living with disabilities. However, critical deficiencies in preparedness were noted, such as lack of back-up plans for replacing their PA. Despite a concerted national effort to improve preparedness in the population of people living with disabilities, important preparedness gaps remain. These findings highlight the need for additional study on emergency preparedness barriers in people living with disabilities so that effective strategies to reduce vulnerabilities can be identified.
PMID: 23716372
ISSN: 1932-149x
CID: 945712

Tensions inherent in the evolving role of the infection preventionist

Conway, Laurie J; Raveis, Victoria H; Pogorzelska-Maziarz, Monika; Uchida, May; Stone, Patricia W; Larson, Elaine L
BACKGROUND: The role of infection preventionists (IPs) is expanding in response to demands for quality and transparency in health care. Practice analyses and survey research have demonstrated that IPs spend a majority of their time on surveillance and are increasingly responsible for prevention activities and management; however, deeper qualitative aspects of the IP role have rarely been explored. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative content analysis of in-depth interviews with 19 IPs at hospitals throughout the United States to describe the current IP role, specifically the ways that IPs effect improvements and the facilitators and barriers they face. RESULTS: The narratives document that the IP role is evolving in response to recent changes in the health care landscape and reveal that this progression is associated with friction and uncertainty. Tensions inherent in the evolving role of the IP emerged from the interviews as 4 broad themes: (1) expanding responsibilities outstrip resources, (2) shifting role boundaries create uncertainty, (3) evolving mechanisms of influence involve trade-offs, and (4) the stress of constant change is compounded by chronic recurring challenges. CONCLUSION: Advances in implementation science, data standardization, and training in leadership skills are needed to support IPs in their evolving role.
PMCID:3904104
PMID: 23880116
ISSN: 0196-6553
CID: 627672

FAMILY CAREGIVING TO OLDER, MINORITY CANCER SURVIVORS LIVING IN THE COMMUNITY: PERSPECTIVES FROM A RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL OF CAREGIVER PROBLEM-SOLVING SKILLS TRAINING [Meeting Abstract]

Raveis, VH; Tobin, J; Karus, D; Zhao, R; Faber, KE; Carrero, M; Estrada, I
ISI:000303602003231
ISSN: 0016-9013
CID: 1555612

Continued Sexual Risk Behaviour in African American and Latino Male-to-Female Transgender Adolescents Living with Hiv/Aids: A Case Study

Van Devanter, Nancy; Duncan, Alexandra; Raveis, Victoria H; Birnbaum, Jeffrey; Burrell-Piggott, Tiphani; Siegel, Karolynn
PURPOSE: This study examined the social and contextual factors associated with continued high risk sexual behaviors among male-to-female transgender (MTFTG) adolescents living with HIV/AIDS. The study is part of a larger qualitative study of 59 racial/ethnic minority adolescents living with HIV/AIDS. METHODS: In-depth focused interviews were conducted with five MTFTG adolescents (16-24 years) living with HIV. Content analysis was conducted to identify themes related to continued sexual risk behaviors. RESULTS: Four out of five of MTFTG adolescents reported inconsistent condom use since their HIV diagnosis. Transgender stigma contributed to financial vulnerability leading to the adoption of sex work to support themselves. Sex and drugs were used to manage transgender stigma and sexual risk-taking with sex work partners was influenced by financial vulnerability. CONCLUSIONS: MTFTG adolescents with HIV have unique psychosocial needs related to transgender stigma and structural needs to decrease financial vulnerability that contribute to risky sexual behavior.
PMCID:3478681
PMID: 23101032
ISSN: 2155-6113
CID: 945702

Managing conflicts of interest in clinical care: a national survey of policies at U.S. medical schools

Chimonas, Susan; Patterson, Lisa; Raveis, Victoria H; Rothman, David J
PURPOSE: Policy recommendations specify how academic medical centers should manage clinical conflicts of interest (CCOIs), including gifts and payments to physicians from pharmaceutical companies. However, no reliable data exist on the extent to which schools have policies to manage CCOIs. The authors sought to determine the extent and strength of medical schools' CCOI policies. METHOD: A survey asked compliance officers at 125 MD-granting medical schools in the United States to indicate whether their institutions had policies covering 11 areas of CCOI and to provide copies of relevant policies. Policies were scored as 0 (no policy), 1 (permissive), 2 (moderate), or 3 (stringent), based on published recommendations. Each school's scores were averaged to create a measure of overall policy strength. The authors also collected information on schools' public/private status, hospital ownership/affiliation, and NIH funding to determine whether these characteristics were associated with differences in policy strength. RESULTS: A representative sample of 77 of 125 (62%) medical schools responded between October 2007 and December 2008. Absence of policy was the most frequent finding in 7 of 11 CCOI areas. The mean score for overall policy strength was 1.2. Greater NIH funding was associated with stronger policies in 9 areas. CONCLUSIONS: This analysis provides a comprehensive overview of medical schools' CCOI policies. Wider adoption of CCOI policies is crucial to eliminate undue industry influence in clinical care and to preserve public trust in the medical profession. The authors close with a consideration of why so few medical schools have implemented strong policies.
PMID: 21248603
ISSN: 1040-2446
CID: 160830

"I'm not going to die from the AIDS": resilience in aging with HIV disease

Emlet, Charles A; Tozay, Shakima; Raveis, Victoria H
PURPOSE: Adults aging with HIV/AIDS can experience resilience in spite of the deleterious affects of the disease. This study seeks to examine the lived experiences of older adults with HIV/AIDS as it relates to strengths and resilience in dealing with this devastating disease. DESIGN AND METHODS: Semistructured in-depth interviews were conducted with 25 adults, 50 years and older, living with HIV/AIDS. The interview transcripts were analyzed using constant comparative methodology following the tenets of adaptive theory. RESULTS: The majority of informants expressed experiences of resilience and strengths as related to living with HIV/AIDS. Seven major themes emerged from the analysis including self-acceptance, optimism, will to live, generativity, self-management, relational living, and independence. IMPLICATIONS: The research identified the importance of strengths and resilience among older adults living with HIV/AIDS. Further research is needed to explore these phenomena with larger samples. Practitioners should identify and implement methods for assessing resilience among older HIV-infected adults.
PMCID:3018866
PMID: 20650948
ISSN: 0016-9013
CID: 160831