Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8717669 | The American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2017 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Results suggest that MIH participation is associated with improved quality of life, reduced ED transports, ED admissions, and inpatient hospital admissions. The MIH program may have potential to improve health outcomes in patients who are frequent ED users for non-emergent or emergent/primary care treatable conditions by teaching them how to proactively manage their health and adhere to therapeutic regimens. Programmatic reasons for these improvements may include psychosocial bonding with participants who received in-home care, health coaching, and the MIH team's 24/7 availability that provided immediate healthcare access.
Keywords
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Emergency Medicine
Authors
Vicki A. PhD, Subhash PhD, Deepika MBBS, MPH, Hao MD, PhD, Liam PhD,