L
Lori Popejoy
Researcher at University of Missouri
Publications - 103
Citations - 2203
Lori Popejoy is an academic researcher from University of Missouri. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 83 publications receiving 1922 citations. Previous affiliations of Lori Popejoy include John A. Hartford Foundation & Boone Hospital Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Randomized Clinical Trial of a Quality Improvement Intervention in Nursing Homes
Marilyn Rantz,Lori Popejoy,Gregory F. Petroski,Richard W. Madsen,David R. Mehr,Mary Zwygart-Stauffacher,Lanis L. Hicks,Victoria T. Grando,Deidre D. Wipke-Tevis,Jane Bostick,Rose Porter,Vicki S. Conn,Meridean Maas +12 more
TL;DR: It appears that only those nursing homes that sought the additional intensive support of the gerontological clinical nurse specialist were able to effect enough change in clinical practice to improve resident outcomes significantly.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nursing home care quality: a multidimensional theoretical model integrating the views of consumers and providers.
Marilyn Rantz,Mary Zwygart-Stauffacher,Lori Popejoy,Victoria T. Grando,David R. Mehr,Lanis L. Hicks,Vicki S. Conn,Deidre D. Wipke-Tevis,Rose Porter,Jane Bostick,Meridean Maas +10 more
TL;DR: The seven dimensions of the consumer multidimensional model of nursing home care quality are: staff, care, family involvement, communication, environment, home, and cost.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Outcomes of Aging in Place
TL;DR: Study results suggest that community-based care with nurse coordination enhances clinical outcomes of long-term care participants.
Journal ArticleDOI
Predicting mortality in nursing home residents with lower respiratory tract infection: The Missouri LRI Study.
David R. Mehr,Ellen F. Binder,Robin L. Kruse,Steven Zweig,Richard W. Madsen,Lori Popejoy,Ralph B. D'Agostino +6 more
TL;DR: An 8-variable model is developed to identify patient characteristics predictive of 30-day mortality in nursing home residents with an LRI that distinguishes nursing homeResidents at relatively low risk for mortality due to LRI.
Journal ArticleDOI
Nursing Home Quality and Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Management Practices
Deidre D. Wipke-Tevis,Donna A. Williams,Marilyn Rantz,Lori Popejoy,Richard W. Madsen,Gregory F. Petroski,Amy Vogelsmeier +6 more
TL;DR: To measure pressure ulcer quality indicator (QI) scores and to describe the self‐reported skin integrity assessment, pressure Ulcer risk assessment, and pressure ulcers prevention and treatment practices in long‐term care facilities (LTCFs).