Connie M. Ulrich
University of Pennsylvania
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Publication
Featured researches published by Connie M. Ulrich.
JAMA | 2016
Justin E. Bekelman; Scott D. Halpern; Carl Rudolf Blankart; Julie P. W. Bynum; Joachim Cohen; Robert Fowler; Stein Kaasa; Lukas Kwietniewski; Hans Olav Melberg; Bregje D. Onwuteaka-Philipsen; Mariska G. Oosterveld-Vlug; Andrew Pring; Jonas Schreyögg; Connie M. Ulrich; Julia Verne; Hannah Wunsch; Ezekiel J. Emanuel
IMPORTANCE Differences in utilization and costs of end-of-life care among developed countries are of considerable policy interest. OBJECTIVE To compare site of death, health care utilization, and hospital expenditures in 7 countries: Belgium, Canada, England, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and the United States. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Retrospective cohort study using administrative and registry data from 2010. Participants were decedents older than 65 years who died with cancer. Secondary analyses included decedents of any age, decedents older than 65 years with lung cancer, and decedents older than 65 years in the United States and Germany from 2012. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Deaths in acute care hospitals, 3 inpatient measures (hospitalizations in acute care hospitals, admissions to intensive care units, and emergency department visits), 1 outpatient measure (chemotherapy episodes), and hospital expenditures paid by insurers (commercial or governmental) during the 180-day and 30-day periods before death. Expenditures were derived from country-specific methods for costing inpatient services. RESULTS The United States (cohort of decedents aged >65 years, N = 211,816) and the Netherlands (N = 7216) had the lowest proportion of decedents die in acute care hospitals (22.2.% and 29.4%, respectively). A higher proportion of decedents died in acute care hospitals in Belgium (N = 21,054; 51.2%), Canada (N = 20,818; 52.1%), England (N = 97,099; 41.7%), Germany (N = 24,434; 38.3%), and Norway (N = 6636; 44.7%). In the last 180 days of life, 40.3% of US decedents had an intensive care unit admission compared with less than 18% in other reporting nations. In the last 180 days of life, mean per capita hospital expenditures were higher in Canada (US
American Journal of Bioethics | 2008
Christine Grady; Marion Danis; Karen L. Soeken; Patricia O'Donnell; Carol Taylor; Adrienne Farrar; Connie M. Ulrich
21,840), Norway (US
Nursing Research | 2005
Connie M. Ulrich; Marion Danis; Deloris Koziol; Elizabeth Garrett-Mayer; Ryan Hubbard; Christine Grady
19,783), and the United States (US
American Journal of Bioethics | 2016
Stephen Campbell; Connie M. Ulrich; Christine Grady
18,500), intermediate in Germany (US
Nursing Research | 2003
Connie M. Ulrich; Karen L. Soeken; Nancy Miller
16,221) and Belgium (US
Archive | 2007
Connie M. Ulrich; Sarah J. Ratcliffe
15,699), and lower in the Netherlands (US
Ajob Primary Research | 2012
Connie M. Ulrich; Kathleen A. Knafl; Sarah J. Ratcliffe; Therese S. Richmond; Christine Grady; Claiborne Miller-Davis; Gwenyth R. Wallen
10,936) and England (US
Nursing Ethics | 2005
Connie M. Ulrich; Karen L. Soeken
9342). Secondary analyses showed similar results. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Among patients older than 65 years who died with cancer in 7 developed countries in 2010, end-of-life care was more hospital-centric in Belgium, Canada, England, Germany, and Norway than in the Netherlands or the United States. Hospital expenditures near the end of life were higher in the United States, Norway, and Canada, intermediate in Germany and Belgium, and lower in the Netherlands and England. However, intensive care unit admissions were more than twice as common in the United States as in other countries.
BMJ | 2014
Connie M. Ulrich
Purpose/methods: This study investigated the relationship between ethics education and training, and the use and usefulness of ethics resources, confidence in moral decisions, and moral action/activism through a survey of practicing nurses and social workers from four United States (US) census regions. Findings: The sample (n = 1215) was primarily Caucasian (83%), female (85%), well educated (57% with a masters degree). no ethics education at all was reported by 14% of study participants (8% of social workers had no ethics education, versus 23% of nurses), and only 57% of participants had ethics education in their professional educational program. Those with both professional ethics education and in-service or continuing education were more confident in their moral judgments and more likely to use ethics resources and to take moral action. Social workers had more overall education, more ethics education, and higher confidence and moral action scores, and were more likely to use ethics resources than nurses. Conclusion: Ethics education has a significant positive influence on moral confidence, moral action, and use of ethics resources by nurses and social workers.
Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2017
Mark Toles; Helene Moriarty; Ken Coburn; Sherry Marcantonio; Alexandra L. Hanlon; Elizabeth Mauer; Paige L. Fisher; Melissa O’Connor; Connie M. Ulrich; Mary D. Naylor
BackgroundMonetary incentives in survey research may provide important gains from a methodological perspective in the control and reduction of survey error associated with potential nonresponse of participants. However, few studies have systematically investigated the use of monetary incentives or other methods to improve the response rates in the nonphysician clinician population. ObjectiveTo investigate differences in response rates to a mailed self-administered survey of nonphysician clinicians who were randomized to receive a prepaid monetary incentive, a postsurvey prize drawing, or no incentive. MethodsA randomized controlled trial of financial incentives was conducted from November 2002 to February 2003. Nonphysician clinicians (nurse practitioners [NPs] and physician assistants [PAs]; N = 3,900) randomly selected to participate in a national ethics-related study were assigned randomly in equal allocations (n = 1,300 [650 NPs, 650 PAs]) to three incentive groups: (a) no incentive; (b) a