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California’s Medicaid Personal Care Assistants: Characteristics and Turnover among Family and Non-Family Caregivers
07-15-15
Personal care assistants (PCAs) provide supports and services that enable older adults and individuals with disabilities to remain in their homes and community settings. State Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services programs facilitate use of alternatives to institutional care by paying for...
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Positioning Medical Assistants for a Greater Role in the Era of Health Reform
06-13-15
Medical assistants (MAs) are one of the fastest-growing occupations in the United States. As of 2014 there were about 585,000 MAs in the United States, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics projected the MA workforce to grow by 29% from 2012 to 2022. The MA population is primarily female, ethnically...
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Asian Health Services: Medical Assistants Improve Language Access and Patient-Centered Care
04-03-15
Asian Health Services (AHS) is an urban federally-qualified health center in Oakland, California. It has developed new roles for medical assistants and other frontline staff to capitalize on their language capacity and other skills to provide health coaching and health navigation services to an...
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Central Massachusetts Community Health Center Partnership: Update 2014
09-02-14
The Central Massachusetts Community Health Center Partnership (CMCHCP) is a collaborative effort of employers and training centers intended to address the workforce needs of Worcester-area community health centers. The partnership’s first project focuses on training incumbent and new medical...
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Patient-Centered Medical Home Model: Do School-Based Health Centers Fit the Model?
08-01-13
School-based health centers (SBHCs) are an important component of health care reform. The SBHC model of care offers accessible, continuous, comprehensive, family-centered, coordinated, and compassionate care to infants, children, and adolescents. These same elements comprise the patient-centered...
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Internationally Educated Nurses in the United States: Their Origins and Roles
06-28-13
Despite the importance of the internationally educated nurse (IEN) workforce, there has been little research on the employment settings of IENs and other aspects of their employment. We analyzed data from the 2008 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses to characterize IENs in the United States...
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The Nursing Workforce in an Era of Health Care Reform
04-18-13
The foundation of the health care delivery system is its workforce, including the 2.8 million registered nurses (RNs) who provide health care services in countless settings. The importance of RNs is expected to increase in the coming decades, as new models of care delivery, global payment, and a...
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Editorial: Oral Health
07-05-12
The Institute of Medicine has called for nurses to play a greater role in oral health. Nurses often provide care for the vulnerable populations that are least likely to receive necessary, health-sustaining dental care. The link between mouth care, oral health and systemic health is well documented...
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Preparing the Clinic Leaders of Tomorrow - The Clinic Leadership Institute Emerging Leaders Program
06-01-12
California’s community clinics require strong, committed leaders who can navigate their organizations through an increasingly complex healthcare system and meet the needs of their diverse patient populations. Clinics are facing considerable pressure to adapt to changes brought on by the passage of...
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Health Reform and the Health Care Workforce
03-06-12
This monograph assesses how the Affordable Care Act will influence the demand for health care workers, as well as the nature of care they provide.
Full Publication
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Physician Assistant and Nurse Practitioner Staffing Patterns in California's Licensed Community Clinics: 2005 - 2008
06-01-10
Physician assistants (PAs) and nurse practitioners (NPs) play a critical role in the delivery of primary care in California’s licensed community clinics. Between 2005 and 2008, however, clinics increasingly relied on PAs and NPs as care providers. The use of PAs increased more than the use of NPs....
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An Aging U.S. Population and the Health Care Workforce: Factors Affecting the Need for Geriatric Care Workers
02-01-06
As the U.S. experiences a rapid aging of the nation's population, with the number of Americans age 65 and over doubling between 2000 and 2030, the demand for long-term care will rise significantly. The nation faces critical shortages in the health care workforce, particularly among direct...
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Public Policies to Promote Community-based and Interdisciplinary Health Professions Education
04-29-00
CONTEXT: Many rural and inner-city communities in the United States have persistent shortages of health professionals. In addition, health services are increasingly delivered in community-based settings by interdisciplinary teams. Yet, health professions students in the US continue to receive most...
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Health Professions Education and Relationship-centered Care
12-01-94
The biomedical model has formed the foundation and defined the character of contemporary American medical practice and education. There is a growing perception, however, that the biomedical model cannot fully reflect the broad clinical realities of modern health care and that practitioners must...