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Susan Fairchild

Susan Fairchild

Research Interests:
Older adults comprise approximately 60% of all adult, nonobstetric hospital admissions. Nurses Improving Care for Health System Elders (NICHE) is a national program aimed at system improvement to achieve patient-centered care for older... more
Older adults comprise approximately 60% of all adult, nonobstetric hospital admissions. Nurses Improving Care for Health System Elders (NICHE) is a national program aimed at system improvement to achieve patient-centered care for older adults. The NICHE hospitals use the Geriatric Institutional Assessment Profile (GIAP) to assess their institutional readiness to provide quality care to older adults and to document improvement in geriatric care delivery. To explore the factorial structure of the 28-item Geriatric Care Environment Scale (GCES) of the GIAP, test its validity with a sample of staff registered nurses (RNs), and evaluate its invariance across 4 groups of RNs who worked at 4 different types of hospitals. Staff RNs (N = 9,400) at 71 acute hospitals, who responded to the GIAP from 1999 to 2004, were split randomly into 2 groups for cross-validation. A 3-step data analysis was completed. The a priori factor structure was developed using exploratory factor analysis. The obtained factor model was validated, and its invariance by types of hospitals was examined by confirmatory factor analyses. The GCES is internally consistent (Cronbach's alpha = .93) and accounts for approximately 55% of the total variance. The 4 factors extracted from the exploratory factor analysis are Aging-Sensitive Care Delivery, Resource Availability, Institutional Values Regarding Older Adults and Staff, and Capacity for Collaboration. The 4-factor structured model is validated in a half-randomly selected sample (normed fit index [NFI] = .931, nonnormed fit index [NNFI] = .933, comparative fit index [CFI] = .939, root-mean-square error of approximation [RMSEA] = .058) and does not vary significantly across the 4 groups of RNs who worked at the 4 different types of hospitals (NFI = .969, NNFI = .975, CFI = .976, RMSEA = .027). The GCES is a reliable measure of RN perception of how care provided to older adults reflects age-sensitive principles and the organizational practice environment that supports or hinders care delivery.
Page 1. Social Workers' Perceptions of Staff Attitudes Toward Resident Sexuality in a Random Sample of New York State Nursing Homes: A Pilot Study Susan K. Fairchild, MPH Gerard E. Carrino, MPH Mildred Ramirez, PhD ABSTRACT.... more
Page 1. Social Workers' Perceptions of Staff Attitudes Toward Resident Sexuality in a Random Sample of New York State Nursing Homes: A Pilot Study Susan K. Fairchild, MPH Gerard E. Carrino, MPH Mildred Ramirez, PhD ABSTRACT. ...
ABSTRACT. There are growing numbers of Adult Day Health Care (ADHC) programs providing needed health services to community-dwelling elderly. Therefore, ADHC staff are in an opportune position to identify and to intervene in suspected... more
ABSTRACT. There are growing numbers of Adult Day Health Care (ADHC) programs providing needed health services to community-dwelling elderly. Therefore, ADHC staff are in an opportune position to identify and to intervene in suspected elder mistreatment (EM) cases. In this ...
Nursing turnover is costly for health care organizations. Newly licensed registered nurses work behavior is a complex process, influenced by their attitudes toward their work, personal characteristics, job opportunities, and workplace... more
Nursing turnover is costly for health care organizations. Newly licensed registered nurses work behavior is a complex process, influenced by their attitudes toward their work, personal characteristics, job opportunities, and workplace attributes. Several characteristics are significant in predicting satisfaction (ethnicity, gender) and organizational commitment (patient load, mandatory overtime, shift, and unit type) and intent to stay (income, age) over and above work attitudes. Among the most important implications are how the findings can inform management and policy. Findings from this study provide information that may be useful for those organizations that want to decrease their turnover rates.
Despite an increasing emphasis on adult day health care (ADHC) programs as alternatives to institutional care for persons with dementia, little research based on direct assessment of clients' cognitive status has been conducted in such... more
Despite an increasing emphasis on adult day health care (ADHC) programs as alternatives to institutional care for persons with dementia, little research based on direct assessment of clients' cognitive status has been conducted in such settings. The goal of this analysis was to estimate the prevalence of cognitive impairment among ADHC clients using commonly used screening measures. Age-adjusted and non-age-adjusted prevalence estimates of cognitive impairment in New York State ADHC programs were developed using a probability sample of 336 clients. Estimates were made using traditional cutting scores on standard cognitive screening measures, such as the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), as well as latent class analyses applied to the same item sets. Average prevalence estimates of cognitive impairment were 55% across age cohorts and 60% for persons aged 65 and over. The MMSE yielded a prevalence estimate of 58% across age cohorts and 63% for those aged 65 and over. Using a more conservative cut score, the estimate for the MMSE was 33%; latent class estimates of moderate to severe impairment indicate that approximately 30% of the ADHC clients had cognitive impairment suggestive of probable or definite dementia. Community alternatives to institutional care for the elderly are increasing in popularity. These findings suggest that 1. While institutions are serving the most severely cognitively impaired, age-adjusted prevalence ratios for the ADHC sample approach the bounds of the institutional estimates. 2. The institutional setting will continue to be an important mode of care for the more severely impaired individuals. 3. Daycare is serving a high proportion of the mildly and moderately cognitively impaired individuals. It follows, therefore, that such programs need to address the needs of these individuals by developing specialized care plans and tracks targeted for the cognitively impaired.