5 results on '"Agarwala, A. V."'
Search Results
2. Patient and Visit Characteristics Associated With Otolaryngology Telemedicine Care.
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Miller, Lauren E., Xu, Lucy, Lorch, Alice C., Armstrong, Grayson W., Agarwala, Aalok V., and Naunheim, Matthew R.
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HEALTH services accessibility , *OPERATIVE otolaryngology , *CROSS-sectional method , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *MEDICAL care , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *PLASTIC surgery , *RACE , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MEDICAL appointments , *HEALTH equity , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *TELEMEDICINE , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *MEDICARE - Abstract
Background: Clinicians are increasingly adopting telemedicine in an effort to expand patient access and efficiently deliver care. The degree of health disparities among patients receiving otolaryngologic telemedical care is unclear. Aims: We performed a retrospective cross-sectional study to explore disparities in telemedicine delivery. Methods: We evaluated otolaryngology clinical visits from January 2019 to November 2022. We obtained patient demographics and visit characteristics (e.g., subspecialty, telemedicine vs in-person). Our primary outcome was demographic characteristics of otolaryngology patients who received telemedicine vs in-person care during the study timeframe. Results: A total of 231,384 otolaryngology clinical visits were reviewed, of which 26,895 (11.6%) were telemedicine visits. Rhinology (36.5%) and facial plastics (28.4%) subspecialties performed the most telemedicine visits. On multivariate analysis, individuals who identified as Asian, non-English speaking, and with Medicare insurance were statistically significantly less likely to use telemedicine than in-person services. Conclusion: Our findings suggest that expanding telemedicine care may not improve access for all populations, and socioeconomic factors are important considerations to ensure patients are receiving equally accessible care. Futures studies are warranted to understand how these disparities may impact health outcomes and patient satisfaction with care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Emergency manual peri-crisis use six years following implementation: Sustainment of an intervention for rare crises.
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Goldhaber-Fiebert, Sara N., Frackman, Anna, Agarwala, Aalok V., Doney, Allison, and Pian-Smith, May C.M.
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CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *CARDIAC arrest , *OPERATING rooms , *COLLEGE majors - Abstract
Use of cognitive aids during emergencies increases key actions and decreases omissions, both known to save lives. With little known about emergency manual (EM) clinical use, we aimed to help answer "Will EMs be used peri-crisis at a meaningful frequency?" and to explore clinical sustainment. Prospective, observational study. Operating Rooms. All patients undergoing anesthesia at a major academic medical center during the study periods; ∼75,000 cases. To understand the initial and sustainment phases of EM implementation, we placed a question regarding EM use at the end of every anesthetic case to prospectively measure EM use at: implementation, one-year later, and six years post-implementation. For more than twenty-four thousand cases in each approximately 6-month study period, EMs were used peri-crisis (before, during or after a perioperative crisis) in 145 cases initially (0.55%; SE 0.045%), 42 cases one-year later (0.17%; SE 0.026%), and 57 cases (0.21%; SE 0.028%) six years post-implementation. Peri-crisis EM uses dropped 0.38% (97.5% CI: 0.26%, 0.49%) from initial to one-year post-implementation. After that, peri-crisis EM uses did not differ significantly from one-year to six years post-implementation, showing sustainment [increased 0.04% (97.5% CI: −0.05%, 0.12%)]. Among cases with cardiac arrest or CPR, as a subset proxy for relevant crises, EMs were used in 7/13 such cases initially (54%, SE 13.6%), 8/20 one-year later (40%; SE 10.9%) and 7/13 six years later (54%; SE 13.6%). After an initial expected drop, EM peri-crisis use six years post-implementation was: sustained without intensive additional efforts, averaged ∼10 times per month at a single institution, and was reported in more than half of cases with cardiac arrest or CPR. Peri-crisis use of EMs is appropriately rare, though for relevant crises can have substantial positive impacts as described in prior literature. The sustained use of EMs may be related to increasing cultural acceptance of EMs, as reflected in survey result trends and broader cognitive aid literature. [Display omitted] • Peri-crisis emergency manual use sustained for five years, after initial downtrend • Emergency manuals were used in more than half of intraoperative cardiac arrests • Clinicians are valuing and culturally accepting emergency manuals more over time [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Anesthesia Workspace Cleanliness and Safety: Implementation of a Novel Syringe Bracket Using 3D Printing Techniques.
- Author
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Long, Dustin R., Doney, Allison, Bartels, Devan L., Tan, Crystal E., Sayal, Puneet K., Anderson, Thomas A., and Agarwala, Aalok V.
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THREE-dimensional printing , *PRINTMAKING , *SYRINGES , *BATHS , *ANESTHESIA , *HARM reduction - Abstract
Purpose. Wide variability persists in the preparation and storage of common anesthetic medications despite the recognition of anesthesia workspace standardization as a national quality improvement priority. Syringe contamination and medication swaps continue to pose significant hazards to patient safety. Methods. We assessed differences in practice related to the availability of commonly prepared anesthetic medications. Using baseline provider surveys (n = 87) and anesthesia workspace audits (n = 80), we designed a custom syringe organization device using 3D printing techniques to serve as a cognitive aid and organizational tool. We iteratively tested and then deployed this device in all 60 operating rooms at a single institution, and then, repeated postintervention surveys (n = 79) and workspace audits (n = 75) one year after introduction. Results. Implementation was associated with significant improvements in provider-reported medication availability during coverage and handoff situations (43.7% versus 76.2% reporting 95% confidence preintervention versus postintervention, p<0.001). This was substantiated by audits of the anesthesia workspace which demonstrated reduced variability in the location (p<0.001) and availability (p<0.001) of key medications. Provider confidence in the cleanliness of syringes was also improved (p=0.01). A high degree of acceptance and compliance with the intervention was reported, with 80.4% of syringes observed to be stored in the device one year after implementation and approximately 95% of respondents reporting positive measures of usability and convenience. Conclusion. Use of a simple organizational device for syringes in the anesthesia workspace has numerous safety benefits. 3D printing offers improvements in adaptability and affordability compared with prior approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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5. Implementation of a new strategy to improve the peri-operative management of neuromuscular blockade and its effects on postoperative pulmonary complications.
- Author
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Rudolph, M. I., Chitilian, H. V., Ng, P. Y., Timm, F. P., Agarwala, A. V., Doney, A. B., Ramachandran, S. K., Houle, T. T., and Eikermann, M.
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NEUROMUSCULAR blocking agents , *PERIOPERATIVE care , *LUNG surgery complications , *DRUG dosage , *DRUG antagonism , *DRUG administration , *HOSPITAL care , *LUNG disease prevention , *CHOLINESTERASE inhibitors , *DOSE-effect relationship in pharmacology , *LENGTH of stay in hospitals , *HOSPITAL costs , *LONGITUDINAL method , *LUNG diseases , *MYONEURAL junction , *PARASYMPATHOMIMETIC agents , *QUALITY assurance , *SURGICAL complications , *PHARMACODYNAMICS ,PREVENTION of surgical complications - Abstract
Inappropriate dosing of neostigmine for antagonism of neuromuscular blockade has been associated with postoperative pulmonary complications. We evaluated the effects of a quality improvement initiative tailored to optimise the use of neostigmine in antagonising neuromuscular blockade on postoperative pulmonary complications, costs and duration of hospital stay. The quality improvement initiative consisted of: a reduction in available neostigmine aliquot sizes; a cognitive aid; an educational component; and a financial incentive for the intra-operative documentation of train-of-four measurement before administration of neostigmine. We conducted a pre-specified analysis of data obtained in our quality improvement study. Additional analyses were conducted in a propensity-matched cohort. An interrupted time series design was used to discriminate between the intervention and a counterfactual scenario. We analysed 12,025 consecutive surgical cases performed in 2015. Postoperative pulmonary complications occurred in 220 (7.5%) of 2937 cases pre-intervention and 568 (6.3%) of 9088 cases post-intervention. Adjusted regression analyses showed significantly a lower risk of postoperative pulmonary complications (OR 0.73 (95%CI 0.61-0.88); p = 0.001), lower costs (incidence rate ratio 0.95 (95%CI 0.93-0.97); p < 0.001) and shorter duration of hospital stay (incidence rate ratio 0.91 (95%CI 0.87-0.94); p < 0.001) after implementation of the quality improvement initiative. Analyses in a propensity-matched sample (n = 2936 per group) and interrupted time series analysis (n = 27,202 cases) confirmed the findings. Our data show that a local, multifaceted quality improvement initiative can enhance the quality of intra-operative neuromuscular blocking agent utilisation, thereby reducing the incidence of postoperative pulmonary complications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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