443 results
Search Results
2. 'Drinkable Book' uses antibacterial paper to purify water.
- Author
-
Byrne, Jen
- Published
- 2015
3. Paper underlines importance of patient counseling about bodyweight.
- Author
-
Lattermann, Christian
- Abstract
A blog about patient counseling on bodyweight is presented.
- Published
- 2013
4. Winning paper shows that neither rehab nor booklet impacted back surgery results.
- Abstract
The article reports on the conclusion by Alison H. McGregor that the two ways thought to enhance back surgery outcomes, that is, postoperative educational materials and rehabilitation programs, had no different effect on long-term outcomes with spinal discectomy or decompression surgery.
- Published
- 2011
5. 28th Annual AANA Meeting to provide a variety of papers, techniques, speakers.
- Author
-
Press R
- Abstract
The meeting in San Diego will encompass many aspects of arthroscopic orthopedic care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
6. NASS officials expect attendees, papers in record numbers at 2008 annual meeting.
- Author
-
Rapp SM
- Abstract
The meeting set for Oct. 14-18 at Toronto's Metro Convention Centre includes new topics, speakers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
7. Paper medical records unlikely to be contaminated by serious pathogens.
- Author
-
Owens, Colleen
- Published
- 2015
8. Journal retracts controversial paper questioning safety of HPV vaccine.
- Author
-
Gallagher, Gerard
- Published
- 2018
9. Association Between Nonmodifiable Demographic Factors and Patient Satisfaction Scores in Spine Surgery Clinics.
- Author
-
JOHNSON, BRADLEY C., VASQUEZ-MONTES, DENNIS, STEINMETZ, LEAH, BUCKLAND, AARON J., BENDO, JOHN A., GOLDSTEIN, JEFFREY A., ERRICO, THOMAS J., and FISCHER, CHARLA R.
- Abstract
The Press Ganey survey is the most widely used instrument for measuring patient satisfaction. Understanding the factors that influence these surveys may permit better use of survey results and may direct interventions to increase patient satisfaction. Press Ganey Clinician and Group Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems surveys administered to ambulatory spine surgery clinic patients within a large tertiary care network from May 2016 to September 2017 were retrospectively reviewed. Mean comparison testing was performed to measure associations between patient demographics and responses to "overall provider rating" and "recommend this provider's office" survey questions. Mean difference to achieve significance was set at α<0.05. A multivariate analysis was performed to determine independent factors. A total of 1400 survey responses from the offices of 11 orthopedic spine surgeons were included. Patients 18 to 34 years old had significantly lower responses to the overall provider rating question than older patients (P<.001), and increasing patient age was correlated with improved ratings. Highest education level was inversely correlated with satisfaction scores, with patients who had attained graduate level education having the lowest satisfaction scores (P=.001). Those with commercial insurance had significantly lower ratings for recommend this provider's office (P=.042) and overall provider rating (P=.022) questions than those with other insurance types. Patients administered the survey on paper had significantly lower ratings than those administered the survey online (P=.006). Provider ratings were significantly higher when the sex and ethnicity of the patient were concordant with the provider (P=.021). This study showed that independent, nonmodifiable factors such as age, education level, and survey mode were significantly associated with the satisfaction of ambulatory spine surgery clinic patients. [Orthopedics. 2019; 42(3):143-148.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Restroom hand dryers spread more bacteria than paper towels.
- Author
-
Muoio, David, Uldt, Amanda, Schoen, John, and Shajer, Emily
- Published
- 2015
11. Paper-based test screens for Ebola, dengue, yellow fever in minutes.
- Author
-
Offit, Will
- Published
- 2015
12. Paper standardizes definitions for pediatric TB.
- Published
- 2013
13. Controversy surrounds recent papers on use of neuraminidase inhibitors for influenza.
- Subjects
- *
INFLUENZA , *RESPIRATORY infections - Abstract
The article reports on the controversy surrounding recent papers on the use of neuraminidase inhibitors for influenza.
- Published
- 2014
14. VIDEO: Consensus paper says identify keratoconus as early as possible.
- Published
- 2015
15. Disease surveillance via smartphones cheaper, faster vs. paper-based surveys.
- Subjects
- *
SMARTPHONES , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
The article reports on the findings by researchers from the Kenya Ministry of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that using smartphones was cheaper, faster and more accurate at gathering information for disease surveillance compared to traditional paper survey methods.
- Published
- 2012
16. Reassess the compliance of paper, electronic records.
- Subjects
- *
OPTOMETRISTS , *MEDICAL records , *HEALTH insurance reimbursement - Abstract
The article presents the tips offered by Doctor Charles B. Brownlow, who recommends that optometrists should pay special attention to their patients' case history in order to guarantee reimbursement in the U.S.
- Published
- 2012
17. Development of an Instrument to Assess Athletic Trainers' Attitudes Toward Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Patients.
- Author
-
Ensign, Kristine A., Dodge, Brian M., Herbenick, Debby L., and Docherty, Carrie
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ATHLETIC trainers ,AFFECT (Psychology) ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,HEALTH occupations students ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,COGNITION ,BEHAVIOR ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,LGBTQ+ people ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL sampling ,STUDENT attitudes ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CIVIL rights ,EMAIL - Abstract
Purpose: To create an instrument to assess attitudes toward lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) patients among random samples of athletic trainers in the United States. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study using semi-structured interviews, paper-based questionnaires, and an electronic questionnaire. Development included three phases: (1) exploratory interviews and questionnaire responses, (2) construct validity and item reduction, and (3) criterion validity. Results: Six athletic trainers completed semi-structured interviews to develop themes regarding LGB patients. Additionally, 39 students in professional and post-professional athletic training programs answered questionnaires designed to elicit statements regarding LGB patients. For item reduction, 3,000 athletic trainers were emailed a questionnaire (response rate = 17%). For validation, another sample of 3,000 athletic trainers was sent the instruments (response rate = 13%). Athletic trainer emails were obtained from the National Athletic Trainers' Association. The resultant instrument was the 15-item Attitudes Toward Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Patients (ATLGBP) (α =.830). There were significant correlations between the ATLGBP and subscales of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual–Knowledge and Attitude Scale for Heterosexuals (hate: r =.464; civil rights: r = −.683; religion: r =.532; internal: r = −.612; knowledge: r = −.430; P <.001). Conclusions: The ATLGBP assesses affective, cognitive, and behavioral expressions of LGB attitudes in settings common to clinicians. The ability to assess attitudes toward LGB patients enables clinicians to identify areas on which to focus training and education. [Athletic Training & Sports Health Care. 2021;13(4):e146–e152.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Adding SUGAR: Service user and carer collaboration in mental health nursing research
- Author
-
Simpson, Alan, Jones, Julia, Barlow, Sally, Cox, Leonie, Simpson, Alan, Jones, Julia, Barlow, Sally, and Cox, Leonie
- Abstract
‘SUGAR: Service users and carers group advising on research’ is an exciting initiative established to develop collaborative working in mental health nursing research between mental health service users, carers, researchers and practitioners at City University London, UK. This paper will describe the background to SUGAR and how and why it was established; how the group operates; some of the achievements to date including researcher reflections; and case studies of how this collaboration influences our research. Written reflective narratives of service user and carer experiences of SUGAR were analysed using constant comparative methods by the members. Common themes are presented with illustrative quotes. The article highlights the benefits and possible limitations identified so far by members of SUGAR; outlines future plans and considers the findings in relation to literature on involvement and empowerment. This paper has been written by staff and members of SUGAR and is the first venture into collaborative writing of the group and reflects the shared ethos of collaborative working.
- Published
- 2014
19. Performance of Two Artificial Intelligence Generative Language Models on the Orthopaedic In-Training Examination.
- Author
-
Lubitz, Marc and Latario, Luke
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,HEALTH care industry ,ORTHOPEDICS ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,LANGUAGE models - Abstract
Background: Artificial intelligence (AI) generative large language models are powerful and increasingly accessible tools with potential applications in health care education and training. The annual Orthopaedic In-Training Examination (OITE) is widely used to assess resident academic progress and preparation for the American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery Part 1 Examination. Materials and Methods: Open AI's ChatGPT and Google's Bard generative language models were administered the 2022 OITE. Question stems that contained images were input without and then with a text-based description of the imaging findings. Results: ChatGPT answered 69.1% of questions correctly. When provided with text describing accompanying media, this increased to 77.8% correct. In contrast, Bard answered 49.8% of questions correctly. This increased to 58% correct when text describing imaging in question stems was provided (P<.0001). ChatGPT was most accurate in questions within the shoulder category, with 90.9% correct. Bard performed best in the sports category, with 65.4% correct. ChatGPT performed above the published mean of Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education orthopedic resident test-takers (66%). Conclusion: There is significant variability in the accuracy of publicly available AI models on the OITE. AI generative language software may play numerous potential roles in the future in orthopedic education, including simulating patient presentations and clinical scenarios, customizing individual learning plans, and driving evidence-based case discussion. Further research and collaboration within the orthopedic community is required to safely adopt these tools and minimize risks associated with their use. [Orthopedics. 2024;47(3):e146–e150.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Early Postoperative Change in Hip Rotation Angle and Factors Contributing to It for Patients Undergoing Total Hip Arthroplasty.
- Author
-
Tateiwa, Toshiyuki, Masaoka, Toshinori, Takahashi, Yasuhito, Ishida, Tsunehito, Shishido, Takaaki, and Yamamoto, Kengo
- Subjects
MEDICAL research ,HEALTH care industry ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,ORTHOPEDICS ,ARTHROPLASTY ,HIP surgery - Abstract
Objective: A possible impairment in hip proprioception after total hip arthroplasty (THA) has been an issue of concern. The aims of this study were to investigate the extent of early postoperative change in standing hip rotation angle (HRAng) in patients with osteoarthritis (OA) undergoing THA and to consider a possible mechanism behind this. Materials and Methods: A total of 82 hips (82 patients; 63 women and 19 men) undergoing unilateral primary THA with total capsulectomy were included. We characterized the standing HRAng and internal/external range of motion (ROM) in the prone position before THA and 2 weeks after THA. Acetabular/cup and femoral/stem anteversion, combined anteversion (CA), and leg length discrepancy were also characterized. Correlations were examined postoperatively between the HRAng and the other analyzed variables. Results: The median standing HRAng showed a significant internal shift from external to more medial position (6.3° to 1.7°) 2 weeks after THA (P<.0001). The postoperative change in standing HRAng was significantly negatively correlated with the difference between the postoperative femoral anteversion and the stem anteversion (r
s =−0.429, P<.0001) and with the pre- to postoperative change in CA (rs =−0.3012, P=.0063). Conclusion: This study demonstrated that the extent of the rotational shift of the distal femur toward medial direction was significantly associated with increasing stem anteversion and CA. This phenomenon can be interpreted as a compensatory mechanism for maintaining the relative positional relationship between the pelvis and the proximal femur using proprioception. Therefore, we conclude that the extracapsular/extra-articular components may be prominent determinants of joint position sense. [Orthopedics. 2024;47(3):e114–e118.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Health Literacy in Pediatric Consultations on Allergy Prevention.
- Author
-
von Sommoggy, Julia, Skiba, Eva-Maria, Lander, Jonas, Apfelbacher, Christian, Curbach, Janina, and Brandstetter, Susanne
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,INFANT nutrition ,MEDICAL assistants ,PARENTS ,ALLERGIES - Abstract
Background: The first 3 years of life offer an opportunity to prevent allergic diseases. Pediatricians are an important source of health information for parents. However, a certain degree of health literacy is necessary to understand, appraise, and apply preventive behavior, which can be supported by health literacy (HL) sensitive consultations and a HL friendly environment. Objective: In this study, we want to shed light on how pediatricians in outpatient care in Germany advise on early childhood allergy prevention (ECAP) and how they consider parental HL. Methods: We conducted 19 semi-standardized telephone interviews with pediatricians from North-Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria. The interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, pseudonymized, and subjected to content analysis. Key Results: Current ECAP recommendations were well known among our sample. Despite the shift of evidence from avoidance of allergens toward early exposure, providing advice on ECAP was considered non-controversial and it was widely assumed that recommendations were easy to understand and apply for parents. However, ECAP was treated as an implicit topic resonating among others like infant nutrition and hygiene. Regarding HL, our interview partners were not aware of HL as a concept. However, they deemed it necessary to somehow assess parental information level and ability to understand provided information. Formal HL screening was not applied, but implicit strategies based on intuition and experience. Concerning effective HL-sensitive communication techniques, interviewees named the adaptation of language and visual support of explanations. More advanced techniques like Teach Back were considered too time-consuming. Medical assistants were considered important in providing an HL-sensitive environment. Time constraints and the high amount of information were considered major barriers regarding HL-sensitive ECAP counseling. Conclusion: It seems warranted to enhance professional education and training for pediatricians in HL and HL-sensitive communication, to reach all parents with HL-sensitive ECAP counseling. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2024;8(2):e47–e61.] Plain Language Summary: We asked pediatricians how they advise parents on prevention of allergy in children. We found that pediatricians were well aware of the recommendations on allergy prevention, but they did not pass on all the information to parents. The HL of parents (that is the ability to find, understand, appraise, and apply health information) was not an important issue for the doctors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Disparities Limit the Effect and Benefit of a Web-Based Clinic Intake System.
- Author
-
Shipp, Michael M., Thakkar, Madhuli Y., Sanghavi, Kavya K., Means Jr, Kenneth R., Giladi, Aviram M., and Means, Kenneth R Jr
- Abstract
With increasing value being placed on patient-centered care and the focus on efficiency and workflow in health care delivery, the authors have implemented a web-based system for demographic, medical history, and patient-reported outcomes data collection for every clinical visit at their specialty upper-extremity center. They evaluated initial success and disparities in use after 12 months. The authors evaluated questionnaire parameters from 2018 patients, focusing primarily on the new patient intake form. They analyzed form-completion time relative to appointment time and form-completion percentage at various times before the appointment. The authors grouped patients by age, sex, race, income, education, employment status, transportation access, self-reported pain, and quality-of-life scores. Waiting room time was evaluated. Of new patients, 94% used the web-based platform to complete the intake form. Of the 4898 completed forms, 69.7% were done more than 1 hour before appointment time, indicating that a personal device was used. When grouped by patient characteristics and controlling for all demographic factors, patients who were male, non-White, and older than 40 years; had lower family income; and had a high school education or less were significantly associated with later form completion. Of the 1136 patients for whom the authors had adequate waiting room time data, late form completion significantly increased odds of waiting more than 15 minutes to be placed into an examination room. These data indicate that the authors are reliably capturing important patient information before appointment time. This could improve clinical workflow and overall quality of care and also identify limits in access and online system use, providing opportunities to improve capture by developing targeted interventions for specific patient populations. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(3):e434-e439.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Development of a New Tool for Writing Research Key Information in Plain Language.
- Author
-
Kurtz-Rossi, Sabrina, Okonkwo, Ifechi Augusta, Chen, Ye, Dueñas, Noe, Bilodeau, Timothy, Rushforth, Alice, and Klein, Andreas
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,TEST validity ,RELIABILITY in engineering ,HEALTH literacy ,TEST reliability ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) - Abstract
Background: The complexity of research informed consent forms makes it hard for potential study participants to make informed consent decisions. In response, new rules for human research protection require informed consent forms to begin with a key information section that potential study participants can read and understand. This research study builds on exiting guidance on how to write research key information using plain language. Objective: The aim of this study was to develop a valid and reliable tool to evaluate and improve the readability, understandability, and actionability of the key information section on research informed consent forms. Methods: We developed an initial list of measures to include on the tool through literature review; established face and content validity of measures with expert input; conducted four rounds of reliability testing with four groups of reviewers; and established construct validity with potential research participants. Key Results: We identified 87 candidate measures via literature review. After expert review, we included 23 items on the initial tool. Twenty-four raters conducted 4 rounds of reliability testing on 10 informed consent forms. After each round, we revised or eliminated items to improve agreement. In the final round of testing, 18 items demonstrated substantial inter-rater agreement per Fleiss' Kappa (average =.73) and Gwet's AC1 (average =.77). Intra-rater agreement was substantial per Cohen's Kappa (average =.74) and almost perfect per Gwet's AC1 (average = 0.84). Focus group feedback (N = 16) provided evidence suggesting key information was easy to read when rated as such by the Readability, Understandability and Actionability of Key Information (RUAKI) Indicator. Conclusion: The RUAKI Indicator is an 18-item tool with evidence of validity and reliability investigators can use to write the key information section on their informed consent forms that potential study participants can read, understand, and act on to make informed decisions. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2024;8(1):e29–e37.] Plain Language Summary: Research informed consent forms describe key information about research studies. People need this information to decide if they want to be in a study or not. A helpful form begins with a short, easy-to-read key information section. This study created a tool researchers can use to write the key information about their research people can read, understand, and use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Outreach for Young Adult African Americans with Risk Factors for Stroke.
- Author
-
Feinberg, Iris, Aycock, Dawn M., Tighe, Elizabeth L., and Detamore, Delaney
- Subjects
INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,DISEASE risk factors ,RISK perception ,STROKE ,ONE-way analysis of variance - Abstract
Background: Research suggests that younger adult African American people (age 18–35 years) have more than double the risk of having a stroke than White people. Stroke risk education is lacking for this cohort; there is a dearth of materials that are targeted and focused for young adult African Americans. There is also little research on developing and testing age and culturally appropriate health literate materials that may help this population better understand personal risk factors for stroke. Objective: The aim of this study was to understand factors to guide creating and disseminating plain language health messages about stroke risk awareness among young adult African Americans. Methods: African American participants age 18 years and older completed an online survey (N = 413). Descriptive statistics, one-way analysis of variance, and two-step cluster analyses were used to evaluate stroke risk awareness, perceived risk of stroke, message creation factors, and online health information seeking behavior. Open-ended survey items described modifiable and non-modifiable reasons for perceived risk of stroke. Key Results: Participants reported differences on overall stroke risk factor awareness by perceived risk of stroke was significant (F[2, 409] = 4.91, p =.008) with the very low/low group (M = 1.66, p <.01), showing significantly lower overall stroke risk factor awareness compared to the moderate and high/very high groups. Both respondents who thought their stroke risk was very low/low and moderate/high/very high commented about family history (54.1% and 45.9%, respectively) as the reason and 88.2% of very low/low commented that they did not have risk factors for stroke because they were young. Cluster analysis indicated the Mostly Clear Preferences cluster was more likely to select mostly/very on positive, informational, and long-term messages and medical authority sources. The largest of three clusters reported medical sources as the highest rated source for both finding and trusting health information (47.2%, n = 195). Conclusion: Young adult African Americans have a scarce understanding of modifiable stroke risk factors; health education materials should focus on positive information messaging that shows a long-term result and is presented by a medical authority. We did not observe any age or sex differences among the data, which suggests different message modalities may not be needed. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2024;8(1):e38–e46.] Plain Language Summary: In this study, we collected data to create a targeted stroke risk awareness health education video for young African American adults (age 18 years and older). The video was based on analysis of data from 413 participants focusing on perception of stroke risk, stroke risk knowledge, as well as preference for message type, source credibility, and modality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Information Literacy: Developing Life Long Skills Through Nursing Education
- Author
-
Barnard, Alan, Nash, Robyn, O'Brien, Michael, Barnard, Alan, Nash, Robyn, and O'Brien, Michael
- Abstract
The amount and complexity of information with which nurses have to deal continues to grow exponentially. Support has grown for integrated curriculum approaches that include appropriate instruction in the use of a variety of information formats and instruction which focuses on a resource-based and process approach. This paper argues that collaboration has to be fostered in meaningful ways between teaching faculty and librarians for information literacy enhancement. Such approaches to teaching and learning demand a major shift in educational paradigms and encompass resource-based learning, undergraduate research, service learning inquiry learning and problem-based learning. The implementation of an integrated curriculum promises advanced information skills, access and use of available evidence to support clinical decision making and a foundation for lifetime learning. This paper reports on the rationale of an integrated curriculum, changes to nursing education and obstacles within higher education and workplaces to the development and application of advanced information skills.
- Published
- 2005
26. Operating Room and Hospital Air Environment.
- Author
-
Coury, John G., Lum, Zachary C., Dunn, Jacob G., Huff, Kathryn E., Lara, Daniel L., and Trzeciak, Marc A.
- Abstract
One method of preventing surgical-site infection is lowering intraoperative environmental contamination. The authors sought to evaluate their hospital's operating room (OR) contamination rate and compare it with the remainder of the hospital. They tested environmental contamination in preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative settings for a total joint arthroplasty patient. A total of 190 air settle plates composed of trypsin soy agar were placed in 19 settings within the hospital. Locations included the OR with light and heavy traffic, with and without masks, jackets, and shoe covers; the substerile room; OR hallways; the sterile equipment processing center; preoperative areas; post-anesthesia care units; orthopedic floors; the emergency department; OR locker rooms and restrooms; a resident's home; and controls. The trypsin soy agar plates were incubated at 36 °C for 48 hours. Colony counts were performed for each plate. Average colony-forming units (CFUs) were calculated in each setting. The highest CFUs were in the OR locker room, at 28 CFUs per plate per hour. Preoperative and post-anesthesia care unit holding areas were 7.4 CFUs and 9.6 CFUs, respectively. The main orthopedic surgical ward had 10.0 CFUs per plate per hour, whereas the VIP hospital ward had 17.0 CFUs per plate per hour. All OR environments had low CFUs. A live OR had slightly higher CFUs than settings without OR personnel. In comparison with the local community household, the OR locker room, restrooms, hospital orthopedic wards, emergency department, preoperative holding, post-anesthesia care unit, and OR hallway all had higher airborne contamination. On the basis of these results, the authors recommend environmental sampling as a simple, fast, inexpensive tool for monitoring airborne contamination. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(3):e414-e416.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Rank-Ordered List of Cost-effective Strategies for Preventing Prosthetic Joint Infection in Total Joint Arthroplasty in an Academic US Hospital.
- Author
-
Azar, Adrian, Ryan, Kayla, Ibe, Izuchukwu, and Montgomery, Spencer
- Abstract
Although the overall rate of prosthetic joint infection (PJI) is low, it remains a major complication associated with total joint arthroplasty (TJA). PJI represents a significant economic burden to the health care system that is projected to increase commensurate with increasing joint replacement volumes. This review provides a rank-ordered list of cost-effective strategies that are performable intraoperatively and have data supporting their efficacy at preventing PJI after TJA. This study may be helpful in assisting surgeons, ambulatory surgery center owners, and hospital acquisition committees to make reasonable and cost-conscious decisions in the face of changing reimbursement. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(6):327–332.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Update on Current Concepts of Blood Flow Restriction in the Perioperative Period of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
- Author
-
Hasegawa, Morgan E., Delos Reyes, Chloe D., Rimm, Julian B., Radi, Joshua K., Singh, Dylan S., Obana, Kyle K., Weldon IV, Edward J., Thorne, Tyler J., Tamate, Trent M., Alferos, Sarah Rosabelle, and Min, Kyong S.
- Abstract
Anterior cruciate ligament tears or ruptures are common orthopedic injuries. Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) is an orthopedic procedure allowing for earlier return to sports, improved maintenance of lifestyle demands, and restored knee stability and kinematics. A perioperative rehabilitative adjunct recently gaining interest is blood flow restriction (BFR), a method in which temporary restriction of blood flow to a chosen extremity is introduced and can be used as early as a few days postoperative. There has been increasing investigation and recent literature regarding BFR. This review synthesizes current concepts of BFR use in the ACLR perioperative period. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(6):e333–e340.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A Refined Teach-back Observation Tool: Validity Evidence in a Pediatric Setting.
- Author
-
Abrams, Mary Ann, Crichton, Kristin Garton, Oberle, Edward J., Flowers, Stacy, Crawford, Timothy N., Perry, Michael F., Mahan, John D., and Reed, Suzanne
- Subjects
HEALTH care teams ,HEALTH literacy ,INTRACLASS correlation ,SIMULATED patients ,LEGAL evidence - Abstract
Background: Teach Back (TB) is recommended to assess and ensure patient understanding, thereby promoting safety, quality, and equity. There are many TB trainings, typically lacking assessment tools with validity evidence. We used a pediatric resident competency-based communication curriculum to develop initial validity evidence and refinement recommendations for a Teach-back Observation Tool (T-BOT). Objective: This study aimed to develop initial validity evidence for a refined T-BOT and provide guidance for further enhancements to improve essential TB skills training among pediatric residents. Methods: After an interactive health literacy (HL) training, residents participated in recorded standardized patient (SP) encounters. Raters developed T-BOT scoring criteria, then scored a gold standard TB video and resident SP encounters. For agreement, Fleiss' Kappa was computed for >2 raters, and Cohen's Kappa for two raters. Percent agreement and intraclass correlation (ICC) were calculated. Statistics were calculated for gold standard (GS) and TB items overall for all six raters, and for five faculty raters. Agreement was based on Kappa: no agreement (≤0), none to slight (0.01–0.20), fair (0.21–0.40), moderate (0.41–0.60), substantial (0.61–0.80), almost perfect (0.81–1.00). Key Results: For six raters, Kappa for the GS was 0.554 (moderate agreement) with 71.4% agreement; ICC =.597; for SP encounters, it was 0.637 (substantial) with 65.4% agreement; ICC =.647. Individual item agreement for SP encounters average was 0.605 (moderate), ranging from 0.142 (slight) to 1 (perfect). For five faculty raters, Kappa for the GS was 0.779 (substantial) with 85.7% agreement; ICC =.824; for resident SP encounters, it was 0.751 (substantial), with 76.9% agreement; ICC =.759. Individual item agreement on SP encounters average was 0.718 (substantial), ranging from 0.156 (slight) to 1 (perfect). Conclusion: We provide initial validity evidence for a modified T-BOT and recommendations for improvement. With further refinements to increase validity evidence, accompanied by shared understanding of TB and rating criteria, the T-BOT may be useful in strengthening approaches to teaching and improving essential TB skills among health care team members, thereby increasing organizational HL and improving outcomes. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(4):e187–e196.] Plain Language Summary: We provide initial validity evidence for a refined T-BOT and recommendations for further enhancements to improve essential TB skills among pediatric residents. With attention to a shared understanding of TB and rating criteria, this tool may be used to improve HL training, thereby increasing organizational HL and improving outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Invasive Pyoderma Gangrenosum and Concomitant Methicillin-Sensitive Staphylococcus aureus Septic Arthritis of the Glenohumeral Joint.
- Author
-
Schultzel, Mark and Murali, Sujatha
- Abstract
A 78-year-old man with a history of multiple cancers presented with severe shoulder pain, elevated inflammatory markers, an ulcerating skin lesion along the anterior shoulder, symptoms concerning for septic arthritis, and a lytic lesion of the humeral head. A negative work-up for malignancy prompted infectious work-up and biopsies, revealing positive methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus cultures, yet a curious finding of perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates and fibrinoid necrosis from both the dermal vessel wall from a skin biopsy and humeral head bone biopsy, suggestive of pyoderma gangrenosum. This was a previously undocumented presentation of pyoderma gangrenosum invasion into a large joint with concomitant bacterial septic arthritis. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(5):e321–e325.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Health care practices must 'have a playbook' to prepare for, respond to cyberattacks.
- Author
-
Hickman, George T. "Buddy"
- Published
- 2024
32. Computer-Assisted Navigation Accurately Delivers Preoperative Targets for Acetabular Component Orientation During Direct Anterior Approach Total Hip Arthroplasty.
- Author
-
Bradley, Michael P., Muir, Jeffrey M., and Wang, Sheila
- Abstract
Despite its success, total hip arthroplasty (THA) remains associated with potentially significant complications associated with component malposition. Preoperative planning can mitigate some of these potential concerns; however, the accurate intraoperative delivery of preoperative targets can be challenging. Computer-assisted navigation may assist with intraoperative target delivery, although the integration of these two technologies is relatively uncommon. We retrospectively reviewed cases of THA planned with a computed tomography–based preoperative planning software and performed with the use of an imageless, computer-assisted navigation system. Postoperative acetabular component orientation from radiographs was compared with preoperative targets and intraoperative navigation measurements. A total of 76 patients were included in the analysis. The mean anteversion target (20.0°±3.1°) did not differ significantly from the mean intraoperative navigation measurement (20.5°±3.3°; P=.30; mean difference, 2.2°±2.3°). The mean radiographic measurement (26.6°±6.5°) differed from the target by a mean of 7.5°±6.1° (P<.001). The mean inclination target (38.4°±1.9°) did not differ significantly from the mean intra-operative measurement (38.0°±1.5°; P=.20; mean difference, 1.3°±1.7°) but differed from the radiographic measurement by a mean of 5.2°±4.2° (41.8°±5.6°; P<.001). No adverse events were reported in the 90-day period following the index procedure. Our study demonstrated that an imageless navigation system can accurately deliver computed tomography–derived preoperative targets for acetabular component orientation. Differences noted on radiographs may be due to the difference in patient positioning for the postoperative imaging (standing) as compared with preoperative imaging or surgery itself (supine). [Orthopedics. 2023;46(4):218–223.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. The Correlation Among COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance, the Ability to Detect Fake News, and e-Health Literacy.
- Author
-
Nazari, Abouzar, Hoseinnia, Maede, Pirzadeh, Asiyeh, and Salahshouri, Arash
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,VACCINE hesitancy ,INFORMATION technology ,COVID-19 vaccines ,INFORMATION literacy ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has seen a rise in the spread of misleading and deceptive information, leading to a negative impact on the acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine and public opinion. To address this issue, the importance of public e-Health literacy cannot be overstated. It empowers individuals to effectively utilize information technology and combat the dissemination of inaccurate narratives. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the relationship between the ability to identify disingenuous news, electronic health literacy, and the inclination to receive the COVID-19 immunization. Methods: In this descriptive-analytical cross-sectional study conducted during summer 2021 in Isfahan, Iran, 522 individuals older than age 18 years, seeking medical attention at health centers, were surveyed. The participants were selected through a meticulous multistage cluster sampling process from the pool of individuals referred to these health centers. Along with demographic information, data collection instruments included the standard e-Health literacy questionnaire and a researcher-developed questionnaire designed to identify misinformation. The collected questionnaires were entered into SPSS 24 for statistical analysis, which included the Kruskal-Wallis test, the Chi-square test, the Spearman test, and logistic regression models. Key Results: The study findings revealed a statistically significant relationship between acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine and the ability to identify deceptive news. An increase of one unit in the score for recognizing misinformation led to a 24% and 32% reduction in vaccine hesitancy and the intention to remain unvaccinated, respectively. Furthermore, a significant correlation was found between the intention to receive the vaccine and e-Health literacy, where an increase of one unit in e-Health literacy score corresponded to a 6% decrease in the intention to remain unvaccinated. Additionally, the study found a notable association between the ability to detect false and misleading information and e-Health literacy. Each additional point in e-Health literacy was associated with a 0.33% increase in the capacity to identify fake news (Spearman's Rho = 0.333, p <.001). Conclusion: The study outcomes demonstrate a positive correlation between the COVID-19 vaccine acceptance, the ability to identify counterfeit news, and proficiency in electronic health literacy. These findings provide a strong foundation for policymakers and health care practitioners to develop and implement strategies that counter the dissemination of spurious and deceitful information related to COVID-19 and COVID-19 immunization. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(3):e130–e138.] Plain Language Summary: We investigated the relationship between the ability to detect fake news and e-health literacy, with acceptance of a COVID-19 vaccine in Isfahan. The results demonstrated that acceptance of the COVID-19 vaccine is associated with a high level of ability to detect fake news and high level of e-Health literacy in individuals. Also, the high level of e-health literacy increases the ability to detection of fake news. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Social Media and Black Maternal Health: The Role of Health Literacy and eHealth Literacy.
- Author
-
George, Nerissa, Reynolds, Simone, de Long, Rachel, Kacica, Marilyn, Ahmed, Rukhsana, and Manganello, Jennifer
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,WHITE women ,SOCIAL media ,MEDIA literacy ,MATERNAL mortality ,BLACK women ,SOCIOLOGY of work - Abstract
Background: Black women experience greater maternal mortality and morbidity than White women. Although there are many causes of this disparity, providing more and better maternal health information to this population may be beneficial. Social media offers a way to easily and quickly disseminate information to empower and educate Black women about health during pregnancy. Objective: This study sought to identify social media use patterns to determine what sources Black women used to obtain information about pregnancy and to explore whether health literacy/eHealth literacy influence those patterns. Methods: This cross-sectional, nationally representative survey panel included 404 Black women. Health literacy was measured by the Single Item Literacy Screener, and eHEALS was used to measure eHealth literacy. We examined participants' social media activity, social media use, social media use for support, and sharing of pregnancy-related health information. Relationships between health literacy, eHealth literacy, and social media use were assessed. Key Results: Overall, 67.5% of participants had high health literacy, and the average eHealth literacy score was high (34.5). Most women (71.6%) reported using more than three social media accounts as a source for pregnancy information. Women with low health literacy searched social media for general and specific pregnancy health information, reported more social media use during pregnancy in general (p <.001), and more use of social media for giving and getting support (p =.003). Women with higher eHealth literacy were more likely to report more social media use (r = 0.107, p =.039) and often used social media to give and get support (r = 0.197, p =.0001). Women with high health literacy more often reported sharing the pregnancy information they found on social media with their nurse (χ
2 = 7.068, p =.029), doula (χ2 = 6.878, p =.032), and childbirth educator (χ2 = 10.289, p =.006). Women who reported higher eHealth literacy also reported more often sharing the pregnancy information they found on social media with their doctor (r = 0.115, p =.030), nurse (r = 0.139, p =.001), coworkers (r = 0.160, p =.004), and family or friends (r = 0.201, p =.0001). Conclusion: Substantial numbers of Black women use social media to find pregnancy health information. Future studies should elicit more detailed information on why and how Black women use social media to obtain pregnancy information and support as well as what role health literacy and eHealth literacy may have on birth outcomes. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(3):e119–e129.] Plain Language Summary: This study aimed to identify Black women's sources for pregnancy information and to examine whether a relationship exists between health literacy/eHealth literacy and social media use. Findings support that Black women use social media for pregnancy information. Those with lower health literacy use social media more often and use social media more to share and to obtain pregnancy health information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Journal Discipline Plays a Significant Role in Academic Attention But Not in Social Media Attention in the Peripheral Nerve Literature.
- Author
-
Huddleston, Hailey P., Kurtzman, Joey S., Rahimzadeh, Jason, and Koehler, Steven M.
- Abstract
Evaluating the impact of articles can be performed through bibliometric analysis or social media impact using the Altmetric Attention Score (AAS). The purpose of this study was to report on the social media impact of peripheral nerve studies; how article demographic factors, such as journal specialty (hand, orthopedics, plastic surgery), affect AAS; and how AAS correlates with bibliometrics, namely citation number. While orthopedic journals received the highest academic attention, there was no significant difference in social media attention between journal groups. These findings suggest AAS may be useful to authors in deciding which journal in which to pursue publication. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(3):e143–e148.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Chronic Recurrent Multifocal Osteomyelitis: A Review of the Noninfectious Inflammatory Bone Disease and Lessons for More Timely Diagnosis.
- Author
-
Krout, Jeffrey C., Rees, Andrew B., Goldin, Amanda N., Moran, Cullen P., Graham, Thomas B., Lawrenz, Joshua M., Halpern, Jennifer L., Schwartz, Herbert S., and Holt, Ginger E.
- Abstract
Chronic recurrent multifocal osteomyelitis (CRMO) is an idiopathic autoinflammatory disease of the bone that typically occurs in children and adolescents. CRMO is characterized by recurrent periods of exacerbation and remission of symptomatic, osteolytic/sclerotic sterile bone lesions and is often a diagnosis of exclusion. Treatment consists of multimodal anti-inflammatory medication management by rheumatology and rarely involves surgery. This review summarizes the clinical presentation, pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of this disease and highlights the role of the orthopedic surgeon. With increased familiarity with CRMO, clinicians will be able to diagnose and treat the condition in a more timely manner. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(3):e149–e155.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Factors Associated With Loss to Follow-up During the First Year After Total Knee Arthroplasty.
- Author
-
Schexnayder, Stuart P., Valentino, John L., Leonardi, Claudia, Bronstone, Amy B., and Dasa, Vinod
- Abstract
Despite increased pressure to capture patient-reported outcome measures for at least 1 year following total joint arthroplasty (TJA), follow-up rates during the first year after TJA are typically lower than desired and may result in biased findings if data are not missing at random. We conducted a retrospective review of medical records of primary total knee arthroplasty patients treated by a single surgeon at an urban academic private hospital. Main measures were demographics (sex, age, race, and insurance), body mass index, travel distance to clinic, and the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS). Multivariable regression analyses were performed to identify patient characteristics associated with attendance at follow-up visits and predictors of attendance at 6-month follow-up. Among the 205 study patients, follow-up visit attendance declined from a high of 95.7% at day 14 to lows of 69.2% at 6 months and 64.4% at 1 year. Attendance at the previously scheduled follow-up visit was a statistically significant predictor of attendance at 3-month (P=.0015), 6-month (P=.0002), and 1-year (P<.0001) follow-up visits, and travel distance was significantly associated with attending the 1-year follow-up visit (P=.042). Patients with the most favorable KOOS Symptom, Pain, and Function in daily living subscale scores at 3-month follow-up were significantly less likely to attend the 6-month follow-up visit than patients with the least favorable KOOS scores. Prospective studies are needed to identify the full range of factors that may contribute to high rates of loss to follow-up after TJA, which should be of concern to researchers, clinicians, and hospitals. [Orthopedics. 2023;46(2):93–97.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Antibiotic Prophylaxis Is Not Necessary for Invasive Dental Procedures in Existing Total Knee Arthroplasty Implants.
- Author
-
Sax, Oliver C., Bains, Sandeep S., Chen, Zhongming, Delanois, Ronald E., and Nace, James
- Abstract
Antibiotic prophylaxis before an invasive dental procedure (IDP) for patients with preexisting knee implants has been suggested, but its use has yet to reach consensus. Therefore, we sought to examine antibiotic prophylaxis before an IDP for patients who had undergone a total knee arthroplasty (TKA). We specifically assessed 90-day to 1-year (1) periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) and (2) revision. We queried a national, all-payer database for patients undergoing primary TKA between 2010 and 2020 (n=1,952,917). We identified IDP, as defined by any procedure that involves gingival manipulation, and stratified according to antibiotic prophylaxis. A control cohort of TKA recipients without subsequent IDP was then established. All 3 cohorts were matched according to demographic and health metrics (n=496). Chi-square testing generated the odds ratio (OR) with 95% CI for postoperative PJI and revision. The odds for PJI and revision at all time points were statistically similar between antibiotic prophylaxis and no antibiotic prophylaxis (PJI: OR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.11-4.00; P≥.479; revision: OR, ≥0.33; 95% CI, 0.03-4.00; P≥.248). Additionally, both IDP cohorts and the control cohort had similar rates of postoperative PJI (P≥.367) and revision (P≥.173) at all time points. Antibiotic prophylaxis before an IDP for TKA recipients did not decrease the risk of PJI or revision up to 1 year after the index procedure. These results support the trend by dentists and orthopedic surgeons to refrain from antibiotic prophylaxis. However, it likely has utility in patients at high risk, as suggested by current guidelines. [Orthopedics. 20XX;XX(X):xx-xx.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A Glass Ceiling in Orthopedic Surgery: Publication Trends by Gender.
- Author
-
Johnson, Mitchell A., Weber, Kristy L., Parambath, Andrew, Shah, Neal, Dardas, Agnes Z., Ronen, Shelly, and Shah, Apurva S.
- Abstract
Women are underrepresented across the field of orthopedic surgery and may face barriers to academic advancement. Research presentation at national meetings and publication record are important drivers of advancement in academic orthopedic surgery. However, little is known regarding potential gender differences in publication after orthopedic conference research presentation. This investigation analyzed research presentations at the Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons in 2016 and 2017. Author gender was determined through a search of institutional and professional networking websites for gender-specific pronouns. Resulting publications were identified using a systematic search of PubMed and Google Scholar databases. A total of 1696 of 1803 (94.1%) abstracts from 2016 to 2017 had identifiable gender for both the first and last authors, with 1213 (71.5%) abstracts ultimately being published. There were no differences in average sample size or level of evidence between genders. Abstracts authored by women were significantly less likely to lead to publication compared with those by men (67.1% vs 72.1%, P=.023), with articles authored by women having a longer median time to publication (median, 20 months [interquartile range, 19] vs 17 months [interquartile range, 15]; P=.003). This discrepancy was most apparent in adult reconstruction, with women having a 15.5% lower rate of publication (55.1% [27/49] vs 70.6% [307/435]; P=.026) and lower publication journal impact factor (2.7±1.4 vs 3.4±3.4, P=.040) than men. Potential reasons for these discrepancies, including disproportionate domestic obligations, inadequate mentorship, and bias against female researchers, should be addressed. [Orthopedics. 20XX;XX(X):xx-xx.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Q&A: 'Shorter is better' message slow to reach pediatrics.
- Author
-
Weldon, Rose
- Published
- 2024
41. Physicians struggle with heavy patient volumes, excessive documentation.
- Author
-
Volansky, Rob
- Published
- 2024
42. Development of Mothers' Health Literacy: Findings From the KUNO-Kids Study.
- Author
-
Pawellek, Maja, Köninger, Angela, Melter, Michael, Kabesch, Michael, Apfelbacher, Christian, and Brandstetter, Susanne
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,MATERNAL health ,CHILDBIRTH ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CHILDREN'S health - Abstract
Background and Objective: The aim of this study was to analyze the longitudinal development of health literacy (HL) in a large cohort of new mothers in Germany and to investigate which determinants are associated with the initial HL level and with change over time. Methods: Longitudinal data from 1,363 mothers participating with their child in the KUNO-Kids Health Study was used; data were collected at birth of the child (baseline), after 6 and 12 months, using interviews and self-report questionnaires. The HL of mothers was assessed with the health care scale of the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire, which has 16 items on accessing, understanding, appraising, and applying health information in the health care setting. Latent growth curve models were used to analyze average trajectories and predictors of HL in the total sample and in the subgroup of first-time mothers. Key Results: HL values increased from baseline (M = 35.46, standard deviation [SD] = 7.34) over 6 months (M = 37.31, SD = 7.31) to 12 months (M = 38.01, SD = 7.41). The increase was statistically significant in the total sample (1.188, standard error [SE] = 0.087, p <.001) and in the subgroup of first-time mothers (1.357, SE = 0.113, p <. 001), with a steeper trajectory for mothers with lower HL at baseline. Several personal and situational variables were associated with HL at baseline (e.g., education, child health) and with its development (e.g., number of children). Conclusion: Overall, new mothers became slightly more health literate during their child's first year of life. However, some groups of mothers could benefit from support in developing HL skills even before childbirth. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(1):e39–e51.] Plain Language Summary: We investigated how health literacy (that is the ability to find, understand, and apply health information) develops in new mothers in Germany. Mothers told us that this ability slightly improved during the child's first year of life. Some mothers still have difficulties in dealing with health information; these mothers should be supported even before childbirth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Health Literacy and Serious or Persistent Mental Illness: A Mixed Methods Study.
- Author
-
McLean, Allen, Goodridge, Donna, Stempien, James, Harder, Douglas, and Osgood, Nathaniel
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,MEDICAL personnel ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,MENTAL illness ,PATIENT-centered care - Abstract
Background: Health literacy is increasingly recognized as a major determinant of health; however, our insights into the health literacy strengths and needs of adults living with serious or persistent mental illness remain limited by a notable lack of research in this area. Improving our understanding is important because people in this group are especially vulnerable to numerous negative health outcomes, many preventable. Objective: To assess the health literacy strengths and needs of people living with serious or persistent mental illness in terms of their ability to acquire, understand, and use information about their illness and the health services they require. Methods: A cross-sectional convergent mixed methods design guided by the Ophelia Access and Equity Framework. People diagnosed with serious or persistent mental illness were offered participation. Quantitative and qualitative data was collected using questionnaires (Health Literacy Questionnaire [HLQ], World Health Organization [WHO-5]) and semi-structured interviews. Hierarchical cluster analysis identified and grouped participants with similar health literacy scores into mutually exclusive groups, for the development of clinical vignettes. Key Results: Participants struggled most with the appraisal of health information (HLQ mean 2.72, standard deviation [SD].63 [scale 1–4]) and navigating what they often perceived to be a confusing health care system (HLQ mean 3.29, SD.79 [scale 1–5]). On the other hand, most participants reported positive experiences with their health care providers (HLQ mean 3.19, SD.62 [scale 1–4]) and generally felt understood and supported. The cluster analysis suggests we should not assume people living with serious or persistent mental illness have homogeneous HL strengths and needs, meaning a one-size-fits-all solution for improving health literacy in this diverse group will likely not be a successful strategy. It will be important to explore solutions that embrace patient-centered care approaches. Conclusions: This study is one of only a handful assessing the health literacy strengths and needs of people living with serious or persistent mental illness. By collecting both quantitative and qualitative data, then analyzing the results using sophisticated cluster analysis methods, the authors were able to develop clinical vignettes per the Ophelia Framework that offer results in a practical way that can be readily understood and acted upon by stakeholders. We found that the HLQ is a measure of HL that is acceptable to mental health clients, and our findings provide preliminary data on the use of this instrument in the mental health population. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(1):e2–e13.] Plain Language Summary: This study explored the health literacy strengths and needs of people living with serious or persistent mental illness. The results showed a mix of strengths and needs among our participants, though several consistent themes emerged. Most of our participants felt understood and supported by their health care providers, but many often struggle with judging the quality of health information and finding their way through the health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Latex Allergy as an Independent Risk Factor for Prosthetic Joint Infection.
- Author
-
Sherman, William F., Ross, Bailey J., Ofa, Sione A., Dowd, Thomas C., and Lee, Olivia C.
- Subjects
INFECTIOUS arthritis ,TOTAL hip replacement ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,INFECTION ,REOPERATION ,COMPLICATIONS of prosthesis ,LATEX allergy ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
In response to increasing rates of self-reported latex allergies, changes have been made to prevent anaphylaxis in the operating room, including the use of latex-free gloves. However, the impact of these changes on the risk of prosthetic joint infection (PJI) after arthroplasty is unclear. This study evaluated whether documented latex allergy is an independent risk factor for PJI and aseptic revision surgery after total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA). A retrospective matched cohort study was conducted with an administrative claims database. A total of 17,501 patients who underwent TKA and had documented latex allergy were matched 1:4 with 70,004 control subjects, and 8221 patients who underwent THA and had documented latex allergy were matched 1:4 with 32,884 control subjects. Multivariable logistic regression showed that patients who had TKA and had a latex allergy showed significantly higher risk of PJI at both 90 days (odds ratio [OR], 1.26) and 1 year (OR, 1.22) and significantly higher risk of aseptic revision TKA at 1 year (OR, 1.21) after surgery compared with control subjects. Patients who had THA and had a latex allergy had significantly higher risk of PJI at 1 year (OR, 1.19) compared with control subjects. Rates of aseptic revision THA were higher in the latex allergy cohort but statistically comparable (P>.05). Latex allergy was associated with significantly increased risk of PJI and aseptic revision after TKA and significantly increased risk of PJI after THA. More work is needed to determine whether these risks can be mitigated or if latex allergy is an inherent, nonmodifiable risk factor requiring modification to typical arthroplasty pathways. [Orthopedics. 2022;45(4):244-250.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Poor Patient Follow-up After Metal-on-Metal Total Hip Arthroplasty.
- Author
-
Costales, Timothy G., Greenwell, Patrick H., Shield III, William, Chapman, Danielle M., Griffin, William L., Dalury, David F., and Shield, William 3rd
- Abstract
Routine follow-up approximately every 2 to 5 years after total hip arthroplasty (THA) is a common practice. However, although patients are informed of the importance of follow-up, our mean follow-up rate for patients after standard non-metal-on-metal (MOM) THA is only 19%. The US Food and Drug Administration has released several statements on the importance of follow-up every 2 years after MOM THA. With the potential risks of MOM THA apparently widely known, we report on our ability to obtain timely follow-up at 2 separate centers. Two separate centers performed 570 MOM THA procedures between 2002 and 2010. An attempt was made to reach every patient by either telephone or letter to obtain ion levels, radiographs, and examinations. Repeat telephone calls and/or letters to those not reached were made annually. Patients were told of the unique importance of follow-up at each contact. Of the patients, 43% had not been seen within the past 5 years, and only 26% had been seen within the past 2 years. Only 61% had their first measurement of ion levels, and only 30% of patients had a second set of measurement of ion levels. A total of 48 revisions occurred in this group, and 36 patients died. Despite the apparent widespread dissemination of information regarding the potential risks of MOM THA and concerted efforts to contact patients for follow-up, we have been able to achieve a follow-up rate of only 26%. This rate is only marginally better than the mean follow-up for non-MOM THA in our practices. The implications of this poor follow-up are unknown. [Orthopedics. 2022;45(4):e196-e200.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Hippocratic Oath: Analysis and Contemporary Meaning.
- Author
-
Sioutis, Spyros, Reppas, Lampros, Bekos, Achilles, Limneos, Pantelis, Saranteas, Theodosis, and Mavrogenis, Andreas F.
- Abstract
The Hippocratic oath is traditionally taken by medical school graduates at the time of their graduation, either in its original form or in a modern variation. It is considered the earliest expression of medical ethics, establishing principles of ethics that remain of paramount significance today. However, it was written in antiquity, whereas medicine has been constantly evolving. This article reviews, analyzes, and interprets each section of the oath to determine to what extent it remains relevant to contemporary medicine. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(5):264-272.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Effect of Personalized Patient Videos on Patient Satisfaction After Arthroscopic Shoulder Surgery.
- Author
-
Sims, Laura A., Khan, Raymond, and Sauder, David J.
- Abstract
Dissatisfaction after shoulder arthroscopy may be influenced by the information that patients receive. Multimedia is an emerging modality of information delivery. The goal of this study was to evaluate whether providing patients with a personalized video of their arthroscopic shoulder surgery improved satisfaction through a multisurgeon randomized controlled study. Patients undergoing arthroscopic shoulder decompression, rotator cuff repair, or labral repair were randomized to either the intervention group, receiving a video recording of their surgery, or the control group, not receiving a video. Patients who had previous ipsilateral shoulder arthroscopy or who could not participate in follow-up were excluded. Patient satisfaction was assessed at 3 months with a visual analog scale (VAS), Likert scale, and Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Hand and Shoulder (QuickDASH) score. The intervention group included 50 participants, and the control group included 47 participants, with 18% loss to follow-up. Mean control group VAS score was 8.5±2.2 and intervention group VAS score was 9.0±1.5, a difference that was not significantly different (P=.27). No statistically significant differences were noted for Likert scale scores and QuickDASH scores. A subgroup analysis of age group, sex, surgeon, and surgical procedure showed no significant differences. Based on these findings, personalized patient videos do not appear to improve satisfaction with surgery. Surgeons should investigate other means to improve patient satisfaction in the small group of dissatisfied patients. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(3):e331-e336.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Qualitative Study of Patient Themes for the Quality of the Total Joint Arthroplasty Experience.
- Author
-
Amanatullah, Derek F., Eppler, Sara L., Shah, Romil F., Mertz, Kevin, Roe, Allison K., Murasko, Marlon, and Kamal, Robin N.
- Abstract
Patients have limited involvement in the development of quality measures that address the experience of undergoing total joint arthroplasty (TJA). Current quality measures may not fully assess the aspects of care that are important to patients. The goal of this study was to understand quality of care in TJA from the patient perspective by exploring patients' knowledge gaps, experiences, and goals. The authors completed a prospective qualitative analysis of patients who had undergone hip or knee TJA. Patients completed an open-ended, structured questionnaire about the surgical and recovery process as it relates to quality of care. The authors used a phenomenologic approach and purposeful sampling to enroll 74 patients 6 to 8 weeks after TJA. Responses underwent thematic analysis. Codes were used to identify themes that were important to patients in quality of care in TJA. The authors identified 3 themes: (1) returning to activity without pain or complication, which included psychological, functional, and complication-related goals; (2) negotiating the physical and psychological challenges of recovery, which encompassed the need for assistance from the caregiver as well as psychological and physical barriers to recovery; and (3) being prepared and informed for the process of surgery, including physical, logistical, and psychological preparation. Both patients and health systems may benefit from efforts to address these patient-centered themes of quality care through quality measures for TJA (eg, improving the psychological challenges of recovery). Future quality measures, such as assessment of patient experience, may be made more patient centered if they measure and improve aspects of care that matter to patients. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(2):117-122.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Obesity, Angiotensin-Blocking Drugs, and Acute Kidney Injury in Orthopedic Surgery.
- Author
-
Hennrikus, Matthew T., Hennrikus, William P., Lehman, Erik, and Hennrikus, Eileen F.
- Abstract
Postoperative acute kidney injury occurs in 7% to 11% of orthopedic surgeries. The effect of preoperative angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) on the development of postoperative acute kidney injury remains controversial. Adipose tissue has its own independently regulated angiotensin system. The primary aim of this study was to examine the effects of obesity and preoperative ACEIs and ARBs on postoperative acute kidney injury. Charts were reviewed of adult elective orthopedic surgery patients during a 2-year period when patients were instructed to take their ACEI or ARB on the morning of surgery. The patients were divided into an obese cohort (body mass index [BMI] ≥30 kg/m2) and a nonobese cohort (BMI <30 kg/m2). A multivariable model was created for the outcome of acute kidney injury, using obesity as a primary predictor and adjusting for demographics, medications, comorbidities, and intraoperative parameters in a logistic regression analysis. Obesity increased the likelihood of developing acute kidney injury after orthopedic surgery (odds ratio [OR], 1.86; 95% CI, 1.07-3.22; P=.028). For every 5-unit increase in BMI, the odds of acute kidney injury were 1.43 (95% CI, 1.26-1.62; P<.001). When receiving ACEIs or ARBs, only the nonobese patients had a statistically increased likelihood of postoperative acute kidney injury (OR, 3.30; 95% CI, 1.12-9.70; P=.030). Obesity is an independent risk factor for postoperative acute kidney injury. Obesity appears to influence the effect that preoperative ACEIs and ARBs have on postoperative acute kidney injury. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(2):e253-e258.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Early Bony Hip Reconstructive Surgery for Hip Subluxation in Children With Severe Cerebral Palsy.
- Author
-
Bean, Betsey K., Baird, Glen O., Caskey, Paul M., Bronson, William B., McMulkin, Mark L., and Tompkins, Bryan J.
- Abstract
Hip subluxation occurs frequently in children with severe cerebral palsy. This retrospective study examined the effects of age and type of bony surgery on radiographic outcomes of children with severe cerebral palsy who were treated for hip subluxation. The study included nonambulatory children with cerebral palsy undergoing bony hip reconstructive surgery consisting of proximal femoral varus derotational osteotomy (VDRO) alone or combined with pelvic osteotomy. The migration index was recorded for preoperative, postoperative, and final follow-up (minimum 2 years) radiographs. Failure was defined as subsequent bony hip reconstructive surgery or final follow-up migration index greater than 50%. Seventy-seven hips in 40 patients younger than 6 years (55 VDRO alone, 22 combined) and 73 hips in 43 patients older than 6 years (27 VDRO alone, 46 combined) met inclusion criteria. For VDRO alone, the failure rate for patients younger than 6 years (33%) was significantly higher than for patients older than 6 years (7%). For combined procedures, failure rates between younger (0%) and older groups (9%) were not significantly different. Patients younger than 6 years undergoing combined procedures started with a significantly worse migration index than patients undergoing VDRO alone, 72% vs 46%, yet had significantly better final migration indices of 13% vs 31%, respectively. For surgeons performing bony reconstructive surgery to treat hip subluxation in younger children with severe cerebral palsy who are nonambulatory, the findings of this study support the use of combined VDRO and pelvic osteotomy. [Orthopedics. 2021;44(2):e294-e300.]. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.