KQED
25 June 2014
Text / 800-1500 Words
United States
A coordinated care program is helping provide in-home care to those who are considered pre-hopsice and who are combatting chronic health issues. While the program doesn't always financially help the hospitals it operates out of due to a reduction in emergency room visits, the patient is able to save almost half of what they would have spent on regular hospital visits.
http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2015/10/16/449243933/how-uganda-came-to-earn-high-marks-for-quality-of-death
Rae Ellen Bichell
NPR
3 January 2016
Text / 800-1500 Words
Uganda has the best quality of death among low-income countries, according to the Economic Intelligence Unit. Its success stems in part from the strictly regulated but available supply of morphine, which is distributed by pharmacists in labeled bottles.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/05/16/the-power-of-nursing
David Bornstein
The New York Times
6 May 2012
Text / 1500-3000 Words
In 2010, 5.9 million children were reported as abused or neglected in the United States. The Nurse-Family Partnership, or NFP, arranges for registered nurses to make regular home visits to first-time low-income or vulnerable mothers, starting early in their pregnancies and continuing until their child is 2.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/25/health/a-racial-gap-in-attitudes-toward-hospice-care.html
Sarah Varney
The New York Times
21 August 2015
Text / 800-1500 Words
Despite years of change, African Americans feel ostracized from the medical care community that is dominated mainly by white people, especially when it comes to hospices. Some are trying to remove the stigma of hospice care as well as make health care systems more fair.
http://www.scpr.org/news/2015/12/10/56139/using-paramedics-to-help-hospice-patients-avoid-un
Stephanie O'Neill
Southern California Public Radio (KPCC)
10 December 2015
Radio / 3-5 Minutes
A hospice patient's end-of-life desires are most often thwarted when well-meaning loved ones see the patient in some sort of distress. New programs ask first-responder paramedics to work with hospice programs to better honor a person’s end-of-life wishes.
https://wamu.atavist.com/from-institution-to-inclusion
Martin Austermuhle
American University Radio (WAMU)
14 March 2016
Text / Over 3000 Words
For individuals with developmental disabilities in Washington, D.C., inclusion’s uphill battle, while still happening, has shown results. After the practice of institutionalization ended decades ago, there was a shift to group home living, nonprofit advocacy groups, and job placements. Challenges remain though, like slow-moving bureaucracy, funding, and those still fighting inclusion, but moves toward inclusive jobs and living continue.
http://wyomingpublicmedia.org/post/wyoming-elderly-tough-it-out-even-younger-generations-migrate-away
Melodie Edwards
Wyoming Public Radio
5 June 2015
Text / 800-1500 Words
These days, most rural communities in the U.S. are elderly communities - 15 percent of Wyoming’s population is over 65 and a high percentage of them live on ranches in small towns. New caregiver programs allow seniors to continue living at home and to keep doing what they are able, with assistance provided if needed.
http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2015/08/14/zen-and-the-art-of-dying-well
Courtney E. Martin
The New York Times
14 August 2015
Text / 1500-3000 Words
Patients' last years of life are the most expensive for the health care system. For a fifth of the cost, a Zen hospice program, in San Francisco, is helping those who are dying improve their quality of death by enjoying the present.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/04/28/if-this-was-a-pill-youd-do-anything-to-get-it
Ezra Klein
The Washington Post
28 April 2013
Text / Over 3000 Words
*Medical research has done wonders to rid populations of diseases; however, the U.S. health care system has failed to appropriate the right resources to Medicare patients with one or more chronic conditions. Health Quality Partners in Doylstown, PA enrolls Medicare patients with at least one chronic illness and hospitalization and sends a trained nurse to see them on a routine basis, whether they are healthy or sick. As a result, the HQP program has reduced hospitalizations and cut Medicare costs.
http://www.popsci.com/every-breath-you-take-theyll-be-tracking-you
Alison Bruzek
Popular Science
18 December 2014
Text / Under 800 Words
In Louisville, KY, many people suffer from allergies or asthma and need to take inhalers to assist their breathing. A new inhaler called Propeller Health connects to Bluetooth devices to help patients track their inhaler dosages as a form of self-surveillance. The data collected also has a broader impact, offering scientists insight on people’s breathing patterns in different geographic regions as well as the effectiveness of certain medicated inhalers.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/nyregion/nyc-nurses-aid-low-income-first-time-mothers.html?_r=0
John Leland
The New York Times
15 December 2012
Text / Over 3000 Words
New mothers who live in poverty are faced with fewer resources to help them with their physical and mental health as well as the health of their babies. In New York City, the Nurse-Family partnership matches nurses with economically poor first-time mothers. Different studies have shown that women in the program have healthier pregnancies and children.
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