Healthcare Editors Society Gives AJN Awards for Cartoon Cover, Three Blog Posts

ashpe award 2013-1To briefly toot our own horn: The American Society of Healthcare Publication Editors (ASHPE) recognizes editorial excellence and achievement in the field of health care publishing. AJN has received 2013 silver awards for the October 2012 cover (see image below) and for three blog posts:

“Grief: The Proposed DSM-5 Gets It Wrong,” by Karen Roush, AJN clinical managing editor

“The Cruel Irony of Alzheimer’s Disease,” by Amy Collins, AJN editor

“Forward or Back? Some Personal Notes on Why the Affordable Care Act Matters,” by Jacob Molyneux, AJN senior editor/blog editor

AJN1012.Cover.Online

Misplacing Our Focus on Quality Improvement

Gold_StarBy Maureen Shawn Kennedy, AJN editor-in-chief

I welcome manuscripts written by nurses in clinical practice, especially comprehensive updates on managing a clinical syndrome or a common problem that readers would find informative and interesting. I call these the “meat and potato” papers—the ones that provide substantial content, the need-to-know information that will help nurses provide quality, evidence-based care. The best ones discuss the physiology and pathology underlying clinical symptoms, practice implications for ongoing monitoring and management, and patient and family teaching and concerns.

The other papers I value are those that describe quality improvement initiatives or processes that improve outcomes and, by following the SQUIRE (Standards for QUality Improvement Reporting Excellence) guidelines, are sufficiently detailed so that others can replicate them. (For information on what we seek to publish, see a recent blog post.)

Lately, though, I’m seeing more and more submissions that are not so much focused on how to use best practices to improve care, but rather on ways to improve scores on the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey. The authors typically describe the impetus for the improvement as low scores, get administrative support to set benchmarks for improving scores, and define success as improved scores. Often the changes are clinically insignificant but scores increase, so everyone is happy.

While the HCAHPS is a national measure that has been adopted as a measure of quality, it’s important to keep in mind that it measures […]

Article Types, Topics of Interest, and Other Considerations for Prospective AJN Authors

iPad app exhibit AORNBy Maureen Shawn Kennedy, AJN editor-in-chief

I recently wrote a post that attempted to give readers a clearer sense of what we are looking for in article submissions and what we are not looking for: “My Professor Said to Submit My Paper (We Hope They Also Told You This).”

This post will just provide a quick overview of the types of articles we publish, as well as a plug for why it’s good to be published in AJN.

In terms of impact factor, AJN ranks 29/95 among ranked nursing journals, with an impact factor of 1.119. (Nursing journals with higher impact factors tend to be specialty research journals, whereas AJN publishes a broad range of content in addition to research, and for a variety of audiences.) Through our robust print, digital, iPad, institutional, and social media channels, AJN reaches more nurses than any other nursing journal.

We publish original research, quality improvement (QI), and review articles as primary feature articles and as CE articles. We also publish shorter, focused columns. All submissions must be evidence based and are peer-reviewed.

Clinical features should cover epidemiology, pathology, current research/“what’s new” in knowledge and/or treatment, nursing implications. There is no specific limit for word count, though feature articles are usually in the range of 6,000 to 10,000 words. (We have done two-part and three-part series for larger papers.) For examples of feature articles, see any of the CE articles on our Web site, […]

Original Research: Perioperative Medication Withholding in Patients With Parkinson’s Disease

Drawing of the face of a Parkinson's disease patient showing characteristic symptoms: mainly hypomimia, a expression-less mask-like face. Appeared in Nouvelle iconographie de la Salpétrière [Tome 1] : clinique des maladies du système nerveux / publiée sous la direction du professeur Charcot,... ; par Paul Richer,... Gilles de la Tourette,... Albert Londe,.... - 1888. Chapter "Habitude exterieure et facies dans la paralyse agitante". Plate XL1V 1888 drawing of face of a Parkinson’s patient revealing “characteristic symptoms: mainly hypomimia, a expression-less mask-like face.” Appeared in Nouvelle iconographie de la Salpétrière [Tome 1] : clinique des maladies du système nerveux./Wikimedia Here’s the abstract of our January original research CE article, “Original Research: Perioperative Medication Withholding in Patients with Parkinson’s Disease: A Retrospective Electronic Health Records Review.”

Abstract

Background: Carbidopa-levodopa (Sinemet), the gold-standard treatment for Parkinson’s disease, has a short half-life of one to two hours. When patients with Parkinson’s disease are placed on NPO (nil per os, or nothing by mouth) status for surgery, they may miss several doses of carbidopa-levodopa, possibly resulting in exacerbation of Parkinson’s disease symptoms. Clear guidelines regarding perioperative symptom management are lacking.

Objectives: The goals of this study were threefold: to measure the perioperative duration of the withholding of carbidopa-levodopa in patients with Parkinson’s disease, to record the time of day surgeries were performed on these patients, and to record perioperative exacerbations of Parkinson’s disease symptoms.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective review of patient electronic health records at a […]

From the Blogs: Negotiating Medicare, Nurses Doing Research, Reader Comments

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oOClkw1TNks&feature=player_embedded]
Medicare is confusing for providers who aren’t yet familiar with it. Here’s a Nursetopia post that draws attention to its complexity and notes the useful video above (it’s one of a series of videos on different aspects of Medicare). Those of you who know all about it already: Drop by her thoughtful (and consistently updated!) blog and let her know your own tips on handling the ins and outs of Medicare and Medicaid.

EBP matters. Terri Schmitt at Nurse Story has a frank and engaging post on evidence-based practice (EBP): “Translation of EBP: Why Creating Nurse Scientists is the Way to Improve Patient Outcomes.” Here’s what she promises to cover in it:

  • Research is sometimes far removed from bedside nurses
  • Research is COOL!
  • Research is about PATIENTS and not fame/fortune of researcher
  • Research is critical to practice and there are big gaps that nurses need to fill
  • Bedside nurses may be the most crucial link in research ideas, translation, and practice.

(Shameless plug for related AJN content: See our recent, amazingly useful step-by-step CE series on how nurses can get involved in evidence-based practice.)

Plus a brief note on reader comments: we’ve been getting a lot of great comments lately on this blog, and we’re grateful for that. So thank you. A fair number of the comments were on posts from previous months, such as this post comparing U.S. and Australian health care systems. Is somebody by chance teaching a nursing course that requires students to leave thoughtful, respectful, engaged comments in the blogosphere? If […]

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