In the

NEWS hospitals must file staffing plans to be submitted to the legislature in January 2015. And this fall, the Massachusetts Nurses Association petitioned to bring the matter directly to the voters through a 2014 ballot initiative. • Staffing and health care reform. Cost savings might ultimately prompt better staffing levels. Beginning with fiscal year 2014 (October 1, 2013),

Photo by Yoav Levy / Phototake.

Clinical News

The Top Clinical News Stories of 2013 Revisiting routine screenings. The year 2013 showed a sharp trend away from recommen­ dations for routine screening for certain diseases, but contro­ versies surrounding such recommendations are likely to continue. Here are two prime examples. • The latest guidelines from the American Urological Association, based on a systematic literature review, discourage 14

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the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program imposes larger penalties on hospitals with too many readmissions of heart attack, heart failure, and pneumonia patients within 30 days of discharge (and will expand to include other conditions and higher penalties in 2015). A ­recent study in Health Affairs showed that hospitals with

higher nurse-staffing levels may be 25% less likely to incur those penalties. Budget shortfalls—thanks in part to sequester-driven reimbursement cuts—may lead to further cuts of support staff and other spending. Whether nurses can work more efficiently to adjust to these cuts and whether nonnursing duties will be added to bedside nurses’ job descriptions remain to be seen.—Laura Wallis

prostate cancer screening in men either younger than 55 or older than 70. Men 55 to 69 benefited most from prostatespecific antigen (PSA) screening at two-to-four year intervals. One man per 1,000 screened for PSA elevations in this age group will avoid a prostate cancer death in 10 years. For more on this issue, see last January’s AJN Reports (http://bit. ly/VDh8HK). • Studies continued to add to the debate about the effectiveness of breast cancer screening. An analysis of more than 30 years of data in the United Kingdom, published in June’s Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, found that having mammograms didn’t ­reduce deaths from breast cancer. Another study, in the June 11 British Journal of Cancer, showed that screening could lead to overdiagnosis and overtreatment; by one estimate, for each breast cancer death prevented by mammography, three patients are overdiagnosed and treated— a chance many women in the United Kingdom are presumably willing to take. Nevertheless, many physicians don’t warn patients of screening risks, and according to a research letter in JAMA Internal

Medicine (online October 21), when patients were warned of risks, most of the information was inaccurate. The other side of the argument? A retrospective analysis published online in Cancer (September 9, 2013) of women diagnosed with breast cancer in the 1990s and followed through 2010 showed that 71% of breast cancer deaths occurred in women 40 to 49 who didn’t receive mammograms, supporting the argument for regular screening before age 50. Gun violence. Each year, ­31,000 people in the United States die from firearms, and extensive ­media coverage of several mass shootings this year revived attention on—and controversy over—gun control and mental health treatment needs. There are few data that actually connect mental illness with firearm deaths, but gun laws do appear to make a difference: states with the most firearm laws reported the lowest firearm homicide and suicide deaths between 2007 and 2010, according to a report in JAMA Internal Medicine (May 13, 2013). And a study of 27 developed countries found that per capita gun ownership correlated strongly with rates of gun-related deaths; ajnonline.com

the rate of gun ownership was highest in the United States, and not surprisingly, so was the rate of gun-related deaths. Responding to an executive order from President Obama, the Institute of Medicine published research priorities for reducing gun violence (http://bit.ly/18Or1Kf) to establish scientifically sound public health policies on the issue. Whether better funding for mental health care could help prevent gun violence wasn’t addressed in the report. For more on mental health and violence, see this month’s Mental Health Matters. Chronic diseases. Life expectancy in the United States has increased because of advances in treatment for infectious diseases; however, treatments for chronic

diseases, many of which are preventable, consume 75% of U.S. health care spending. For example, half of all U.S. adults have at least one chronic illness, and one in three is obese; heart disease, cancer, and stroke account for half of all deaths; cigarettes cause almost all lung cancer deaths; and diabetes is the leading cause of kidney failure and amputations. A lack of exercise, poor nutrition, smoking, and excessive alcohol use cause most chronic diseases (see an overview from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at http://1. usa.gov/9QBepF). As the year proceeds, expect to see providers and policymakers paying more attention to chronicdisease care. End-of-life care. Quality of life among people approaching death

is better if they’re not hospitalized, sent to ICUs, or placed on feeding tubes. But as the population ages, particularly with the chronic diseases outlined above, more efforts will be needed—and soon—to ensure more timely transfer of patients to hospice when costly and futile care cannot result in a cure. Although twice as many Medicare patients died in hospice in 2009 as in 2000, for example, many remained in ICUs for anywhere from three days to a month before reaching hospice. Patients who have end-of-life talks with caregivers receive more hospice care more often, but palliative care often remains an addon rather than a plan arrived at through discussion among physicians, patients, and families.— Carol Potera and Gail M. Pfeifer, MA, RN, news director

NewsCAPS Study links sexual violence to violent sexual media exposure. An innovative study of adolescent perpe-

trators of sexual violence, published online (October 7) in JAMA Pediatrics, focused on adolescent perpetrators rather than victims and studied female as well as male perpetrators. The report found “clear associations” between viewing violent X-rated materials and sexually violent behavior. It also found that female perpetrators became active later than males. The report suggested that the “frequent consumption” of sexual, violent, and sexually violent media should “be a marker of concern” for providers of adolescent health care, called for school programs supporting bystander intervention, and supported policies that could enhance the likelihood of perpetrators being identified earlier. Data were gathered from Growing Up with Media, a longitudinal survey that examines associations between violent behavior and exposure to violent media. The study’s definition of sexual violence is broad (including unwanted touching and kissing, for example, and considering “psychological coercion” violence). The report didn’t assess whether exposure to violent sexual media was a cause or a result of violent sexual behavior. Nurses are still using physical restraints to ensure safety in elder care. Despite the proven negative

consequences of physical restraint use, many nurses still believe restraints are necessary in some instances to ensure patient safety—particularly to prevent falls—and often decide in favor of using them when caring for the elderly, according to a report published online October 12 in the International Journal of Nursing Studies. The authors conducted a systematic review that identified 31 studies, published in English or German between 1991 and 2013, regarding nurses’ attitudes toward the use of physical restraints. Qualitative studies showed that nurses generally didn’t question the use of restraints, although when they did feel a need to use them, they were conflicted about doing so. And nurses didn’t actively avoid using restraints or seek alternatives. Findings of quantitative studies of nurses’ feelings regarding restraint use were inconsistent. The results suggest that nurses’ attitudes regarding the use of restraints haven’t changed much over the past 20 years, and the authors recommend strict policy changes to ensure a restraint-free environment and stronger interventions to reduce clinicians’ ability to use restraints.

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