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Related Concept Videos

Data Reporting and Recording01:24

Data Reporting and Recording

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Reporting and recording are crucial in data documentation. The timely, thorough, and accurate documentation of facts is essential when recording patient data. Failure to record findings during an assessment or interpretation of a problem will result in loss of information and make the patient document unreliable. The reader is left with general impressions if the information is not specific. A recording is documenting data of the individual's health information in a traceable, secure, and...
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Types of Reports I: Hands-off Report01:25

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A hand-off report, also known as a change-of-shift report, is a crucial nursing process that ensures the smooth transition of patient care responsibilities between nursing staff.
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Types of Reports II: Incident or Occurrence Report01:21

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An Incident or Occurrence Report in a healthcare setting is a crucial document used to record any unexpected occurrence that may or may not have affected a patient, employee, or visitor. Such reports are critical to improving patient safety and include all details leading up to and including the event.
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How Data are Classified: Categorical Data01:11

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A variable, usually notated by capital letters such as X and Y, is a characteristic or measurement that can be determined for each member of a population. Data are the actual values of variables. They may be numbers, or they may be words. Datum is a single value.
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How Data are Classified: Numerical Data00:59

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Data that are countable or measurable in specific units are called numerical or quantitative data. Quantitative data are always numbers. Quantitative data are the result of counting or measuring the attributes of a population. Amount of money, pulse rate, weight, number of people living in a town, and number of students who opt for statistics are examples of quantitative data.
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Types of Reports III: Telephone and Verbal Reports01:26

Types of Reports III: Telephone and Verbal Reports

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Telephone and Verbal Reports in healthcare settings are two communication methods for conveying therapeutic instructions from healthcare providers to nurses or other healthcare staff.
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American journal of transplantation : official journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons·2022
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OPTN/SRTR 2020 Annual Data Report: Living Donor Collective

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The Participant-Reported Implementation Update and Score PRIUS: A Novel Method for Capturing Implementation-Related Data Over Time
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OPTN/SRTR 2016 Annual Data Report: Economics.

M A Schnitzler1,2, M A Skeans1, D A Axelrod3

  • 1Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation, Minneapolis, MN.

American Journal of Transplantation : Official Journal of the American Society of Transplantation and the American Society of Transplant Surgeons
|January 3, 2018
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Medicare costs for solid organ transplant recipients significantly differ based on outcomes. Higher costs are associated with graft failure, retransplantation, or death compared to successful graft survival.

Keywords:
Cost-benefit analysisMedicarecosts and cost analysishealth expenditures

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Area of Science:

  • Transplant Surgery
  • Health Economics
  • Nephrology

Background:

  • Solid organ transplantation is a life-saving procedure with significant healthcare costs.
  • Understanding Medicare reimbursement variations is crucial for resource allocation and policy development.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To analyze Medicare costs for solid organ transplant recipients across different post-transplant outcomes.
  • To quantify the financial impact of graft function, graft failure, retransplantation, and death on Medicare spending.

Main Methods:

  • Retrospective analysis of Medicare cost data for solid organ transplant recipients.
  • Categorization of costs based on patient outcomes: survival with graft function, survival with graft failure, and death.

Main Results:

  • Kidney transplant recipients: $75K (survival), $171K (failure/retransplant), $350K (death).
  • Liver transplant recipients: $154K (survival), $388K (retransplant), $740K (death).
  • Heart transplant recipients: $272K (survival), $1.2M (death). Costs escalate dramatically with adverse outcomes.

Conclusions:

  • Medicare costs for solid organ transplant recipients are highly variable depending on the patient's post-transplant trajectory.
  • Graft failure, retransplantation, and death represent substantially higher Medicare expenditures than successful graft survival.
  • These findings highlight the economic importance of optimizing transplant outcomes and graft longevity.