311 results on '"S. Gillespie"'
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2. Importance of a thorough history and physical examination: Case report of atypical necrotizing fasciitis.
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Costa-Pattison D, Rush N, Gillespie S, Danford CA, and Siedlecki SL
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Medical History Taking methods, Debridement methods, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Fasciitis, Necrotizing diagnosis, Fasciitis, Necrotizing physiopathology, Physical Examination methods
- Abstract
Abstract: This case report presents a 34-year-old Middle Eastern woman with atypical symptoms of Type II Necrotizing Soft Tissue Infection (NSTI). Due to the difficulty in diagnosing Type II NSTI, the patient experienced protracted illness. Once diagnosed, the patient underwent multiple surgical debridement procedures requiring antibiotic and pain management therapy before being successfully discharged home. Initial diagnosis of Type II NSTI is challenging to the provider due to vague symptoms and late occurrence of cutaneous changes. When cutaneous lesions are identified, rapid surgical evaluation is imperative to minimize morbidity and mortality. This paper emphasizes the complexity of diagnosing Type II NSTI and the need for a comprehensive history and frequent physical examinations., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 American Association of Nurse Practitioners.)
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- 2025
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3. Delayed cord clamping: Perceptions, practices and influencers among the healthcare providers of selected healthcare facilities in Bangladesh.
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Jabeen S, Salam SS, Gillespie S, Hasan M, Islam S, Chowdhury AT, Ameen S, Balen J, Rahman AE, Arifeen SE, Nahar Q, and Anumba DO
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- Humans, Bangladesh, Female, Constriction, Infant, Newborn, Adult, Pregnancy, Delivery, Obstetric, Health Facilities, Attitude of Health Personnel, Male, Time Factors, Qualitative Research, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Umbilical Cord, Health Personnel psychology
- Abstract
Background: Umbilical cord clamping is a procedure of separating the newborn after birth with varying recommendations worldwide based on the timing of clamping. Although the benefits of delayed cord clamping (DCC) have been acknowledged, there is a lack of understanding regarding healthcare providers' perceptions and practices, particularly in Bangladesh. This study aimed to explore the perceptions, practices, and influencers of DCC among healthcare providers in selected secondary-level healthcare facilities in Bangladesh., Methods: This qualitative study was conducted at two public healthcare facilities. Purposive sampling was used to select 30 participants for in-depth and key-informant interviews and non-participatory observations for 13 deliveries were done. A thematic analysis approach was employed to identify emerging themes, and interpretive phenomenological analysis of the observations helped verify and contextualise the reported practices. Statistical software N-Vivo (Version-12, Denver) was used for data analysis., Results: Healthcare providers perceived that cord clamping should occur after one to three minutes, primarily informed by international literature, maternal health training, or peer guidance. Providers recognised DCC's benefits, such as enhanced bonding and reduced neonatal blood transfusions, and noted potential risks of early cord clamping like delayed adaptation and hypoxia. Observation of clamping practices revealed that most providers clamped after pulsation stopped or within three minutes, while caesarean sections often required immediate clamping. Variations existed in the number and type of clamps, with an absence of standardised guidelines. Influencing factors include the cultural impact of Traditional Birth Attendants (Dais), lack of formal training, clinical emergencies, and service delivery challenges such as high patient volumes and staff shortages. Peer learning was a major influencer of practices., Conclusion: Despite having a perception regarding DCC, gaps were identified in the practice of healthcare providers. Addressing this gap and the identified influencers will require the involvement of healthcare workers, guidance developers and planners across policy and practice., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Jabeen et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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4. Reply.
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Fundora MP, Calamaro C, Wu Y, Brown AM, St John A, Keiffer R, Xiang Y, Liu K, Gillespie S, Denning PW, Sanders-Lewis K, Seitter B, and Bai J
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The author declares no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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5. Use of in situ simulation to improve team performance and utilization of a rapid sequence intubation checklist.
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Waters KM, Hwu R, Kulkarni M, Okonye J, Zamor R, Chaudhary S, Jergel A, Gillespie S, Lewis A, Krieger R, Menon V, Bell G, Levy J, Prynn T, Regan J, Mathai C, Goodwin N, and Holmes S
- Abstract
Background: Intubation checklists have emerged as tools to reduce adverse events and improve efficiency during rapid sequence intubation (RSI) in pediatric emergency departments (PEDs). This study aimed to use multidisciplinary simulation (SIM) training as an educational tool to improve PED team performance during RSI scenarios through utilization of an RSI checklist., Methods: We created a checklist modeled after previously published PED checklists. PED multidisciplinary teams participated in video-recorded SIM training sessions involving a scenario requiring intubation three times, first without interruption then while receiving our intervention of rapid-cycle deliberate practice (RCDP) debriefing focusing on checklist utilization and team dynamics. Learners went through the scenario once more uninterrupted to apply learned skills. Team performance was evaluated via video review using the Simulation Team Assessment Tool (STAT) focusing on airway management and human factors sections. Scores were compared before and after intervention along with pre- and postintervention surveys., Results: A total of 483 learners participated in 64 SIM training sessions, 44 of whom met inclusion criteria and were included for data analysis. Scores increased postintervention for airway management, human factors and in total. Least-squares mean differences for total, airway, and human factors scores were 9.55 (95% confidence interval [CI] 7.24-11.85), 4.22 (95% CI 2.91-5.52), and 5.33 (95% CI 3.86-6.8), respectively, which was statistically significant with p -value of <0.001 across all categories. Surveys demonstrated improved role understanding and checklist utilization comfort postintervention., Conclusions: This study supports the benefit of multidisciplinary SIM training with RCDP-style methodology as an educational method for improving airway management, teamwork skills, and RSI checklist utilization for PED staff. Incorporation of additional maintenance SIM sessions for ongoing education is likely to be further beneficial and would allow evaluation of degradation of skills over time following initial training., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2024 Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
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6. Psychological and Academic Adaptation Through Universal Ethnic Studies Classes: Results of a Natural Experiment.
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Gillespie S, Morency MM, Chan E, and Ferguson GM
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adolescent, United States, Social Identification, Ethnicity psychology, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Schools, Academic Success, Racism psychology, Adaptation, Psychological, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Schools in the United States are increasingly offering ethnic studies classes, which focus on exploring students' ethnic-racial identities (ERI) and critical analysis of systemic racism, to their diverse student bodies, yet scant research exists on their effectiveness for students of different ethnic-racial backgrounds in multiracial classrooms. A policy change to require all high school students in one school district to take an ethnic studies class facilitated a natural experiment for comparing the effects of quasi-random assignment to an ethnic studies class (treatment) relative to a traditional social studies class (control; e.g., U.S. Government, Human Geography). Student surveys and school administrative data were used to compare students' ERI development, well-being, and academic outcomes across ethnic studies and control classes. Participants (N = 535 9th graders; 66.1% ethnic studies) had diverse ethnic-racial (33.5% non-Latine White, 29.5% Black, 21.1% Latine, 10.7% biracial, 2.8% Asian, 2.2% Native American) and gender identities (44.7% female, 7.1% non-binary). Ethnic studies students reported marginally higher ERI exploration and resolution than controls, and sensitivity analyses showed a statistically significant effect on ERI among participants with complete midpoint surveys. Higher resolution was associated with better psychological well-being for all students and higher attendance for White students. Students with low middle school grades (GPA < 2.0) had better high school grades in core subjects when enrolled in ethnic studies than the control class. Overall, the results of this natural experiment provide preliminary support for ethnic studies classes as a method for promoting ERI development, well-being, attendance, and academic achievement for students from diverse ethnic-racial backgrounds., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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7. Microbiome and Growth in Infants with Congenital Heart Disease.
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Fundora MP, Calamaro CJ, Wu Y, Brown AM, St John A, Keiffer R, Xiang Y, Liu K, Gillespie S, Denning PW, Sanders-Lewis K, Seitter B, and Bai J
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- Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Female, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Case-Control Studies, Feces microbiology, Body Weight, Body Height, Heart Defects, Congenital microbiology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome
- Abstract
Objective: To profile the gut microbiome (GM) in infants with congenital heart disease (CHD) undergoing cardiac surgery compared with matched infants and to investigate the association with growth (weight, length, and head circumference)., Study Design: A prospective study in the cardiac intensive care unit at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta and newborn nursery within the Emory Healthcare system. Characteristics including weight, length, head circumference, and surgical variables were collected. Fecal samples were collected presurgery (T
1 ), postsurgery (T2 ), and before discharge (T3 ), and once for controls. 16 small ribosomal RNA subunit V4 gene was sequenced from fecal samples and classified into taxonomy using Silva v138., Results: There were 34 children with CHD (cases) and 34 controls. Cases had higher alpha-diversity, and beta-diversity showed significant dissimilarities compared with controls. GM was associated with lower weight and smaller head circumference (z-score < 2). Lower weight was associated with less Acinetobacter, Clostridioides, Parabacteroides, and Escherichia-Shigella. Smaller head circumference with more Veillonella, less Acinetobacter, and less Parabacteroides., Conclusions: Significant differences in GM diversity and abundance were observed between infants with CHD and control infants. Lower weight and smaller head circumference were associated with distinct GM patterns. Further study is needed to understand the longitudinal effect of microbial dysbiosis on growth in children with CHD., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest Research reported in this publication was supported in part by The Imagine, Innovate and Impact (I(3)) Award from the Emory University School of Medicine (Woodruff Fund Inc. and Georgia CTSANIH award UL1-TR002378)., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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8. A toxic relationship: ultra-processed foods & plastics.
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Yates J, Kadiyala S, Deeney M, Carriedo A, Gillespie S, Heindel JJ, Maffini MV, Martin O, Monteiro CA, Scheringer M, Touvier M, and Muncke J
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- Humans, Food Contamination, Food, Processed, Plastics adverse effects, Fast Foods adverse effects
- Abstract
Background: Among the crises engulfing the world is the symbiotic rise of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) and plastics. Together, this co-dependent duo generates substantial profits for agri-food and petrochemical industries at high costs for people and planet. Cheap, lightweight and highly functional, plastics have ideal properties that enable business models to create demand for low-cost, mass-produced and hyper-palatable UPFs among populations worldwide, hungry, or not. Evidence linking UPF consumption to deterioration in diet quality and higher risk of chronic diseases is well-established and growing rapidly. At the same time, the issue of plastic food contact chemicals (FCCs) is receiving increasing attention among the human health community, as is the generation and dispersion of micro- and nanoplastics., Main Body: In this commentary, we explore how the lifecycles and shared economic benefits of UPFs and plastics interact to co-produce a range of direct and indirect harms. We caution that the chemical dimension of these harms is underappreciated, with thousands of plastic FCCs known to migrate into foodstuffs. Some of these are hazardous and have been detected in humans and the broader environment, while many are yet to be adequately tested. We question whether policies on both UPF and plastic chemicals are fit for purpose when production and consumption of these products is adding to the chronic chemical exposures that plausibly contribute to the increasing global burden of non-communicable diseases., Conclusions: In the context of ongoing negotiations for a legally binding global treaty to end plastics pollution, and rapidly growing concern about the burgeoning share of UPFs in diets worldwide, we ask: What steps are needed to call time on this toxic relationship?, (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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9. Alterations in Child Feeding Behavior: An Underrecognized Clinical Complication of Food Allergy.
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Park J, Proctor KB, Estrem HH, Keesari R, Gillespie S, Thoyre SM, Sharp WG, and Vickery BP
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Background: Food allergy (FA) affects around 5.6 million children in the United States, conferring risk for negative impacts on growth and psychosocial functioning. While evidence suggests a higher prevalence of feeding difficulties in children with FA, the link between FA and feeding dysfunction remains unclear., Objective: To investigate feeding problems in children with parent-reported IgE-mediated FA and/or pediatric feeding disorder (PFD) compared with healthy children in a community-based sample and explore factors associated with feeding problems in children with FA., Methods: A matched cross-sectional cohort study used survey data from 352 parents of children aged 6 months to 7 years who reported a diagnosed IgE-mediated FA and/or PFD (50 with FA only, 67 with FA and PFD, and 235 with PFD only). Healthy children were matched based on age, sex, race, and socioeconomic factors. Feeding problems were assessed using the Pediatric Eating Assessment Tool. Matched-pairs generalized linear regressions compared each cohort and explored factors associated with feeding problems in children with FA., Results: Children with FA exhibited significantly higher feeding problems compared with healthy children. Children with a diagnosed PFD had more severe feeding problems, irrespective of comorbid FA. Factors linked with feeding problems in children with FA included older age, non-White race, increased medical comorbidity, and limited dietary variety., Conclusions: This study adds to evidence indicating a higher prevalence of feeding problems in children with FA. Clinicians treating FA patients should routinely screen for feeding and growth concerns and consider referral to multidisciplinary feeding programs as needed., (Copyright © 2024 American Academy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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10. The ultra-processed food industry has no business in sponsoring health and nutrition events.
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Gillespie S and Witten C
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- Humans, United Kingdom, Food-Processing Industry, Food, Processed, Fast Foods, Food Industry
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: none declared.
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- 2024
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11. Easing Suffering for ICU Patients and Their Families: Evidence and Opportunities for Primary and Specialty Palliative Care in the ICU.
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Doherty C, Feder S, Gillespie-Heyman S, and Akgün KM
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- Humans, Critical Care, Family psychology, Critical Illness therapy, Critical Illness psychology, Communication, Stress, Psychological therapy, Patient-Centered Care, Professional-Family Relations, Palliative Care, Intensive Care Units
- Abstract
Intensive care unit (ICU) admissions are often accompanied by many physical and existential pressure points that can be extraordinarily wearing on patients and their families and surrogate decision makers (SDMs). Multidisciplinary palliative support, including physicians, advanced practice nurses, nutritionists, chaplains and other team members, may alleviate many of these sources of potential suffering. However, the palliative needs of ICU patients undoubtedly exceed the bandwidth of current consultative specialty palliative medicine teams. Informed by standard-of-care palliative medicine domains, we review common ICU symptoms (pain, dyspnea and thirst) and their prevalence, sources and their treatment. We then identify palliative needs and impacts in the domains of communication, SDM support and transitions of care for patients and their families through their journey in the ICU, from discharge and recovery at home to chronic critical illness, post-ICU disability or death. Finally, we examine the evidence for strategies to incorporate specialty palliative medicine and palliative principles into ICU care for the improvement of patient- and family-centered care. While randomized controlled studies have failed to demonstrate measurable improvement in pre-determined outcomes for patient- and family-relevant outcomes, embracing the principles of palliative medicine and assuring their delivery in the ICU is likely to translate to overall improvement in humanistic, person-centered care that supports patients and their SDMs during and following critical illness., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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12. Association of patient photographs and reduced retract-and-reorder events.
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Rzewnicki D, Kanvinde A, Gillespie S, and Orenstein E
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Background: Wrong-patient order entry (WPOE) is a potentially dangerous medical error. It remains unknown if patient photographs reduce WPOE in the pediatric inpatient population., Materials and Methods: Order sessions from a single pediatric hospital system were examined for retract-and-reorder (RAR) events, a surrogate WPOE measure. We determined the association of patient photographs with the proportion of order sessions resulting in a RAR event, adjusted for patient, provider, and ordering context., Results: In multivariable analysis, the presence of a patient photo in the electronic health record was associated with 40% lower odds of a RAR event (aOR: 0.60, 95% CI: 0.48-0.75), while cardiac and ICU contexts had higher RAR frequency (aOR: 2.12, 95% CI: 1.69-2.67 and 2.05, 95% CI: 1.71-2.45, respectively)., Discussion and Conclusion: Patient photos were associated with lower odds of RAR events in the pediatric inpatient setting, while high acuity locations may be at higher risk. Patient photographs may reduce WPOE without interruptions., Competing Interests: E.O. is a co-founder and has equity in Phrase Health©, a clinical decision support analytics company. He received no direct revenue. He has also served as the principal investigator on an R41 and R42 grant with Phrase Health from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and the National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS). He has received salary support from NLM and NCATS. All other authors have no competing interests to declare., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association.)
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- 2024
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13. Participation Rates in 11 National Dental Practice-Based Research Network Surveys 2014-2022.
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Funkhouser E, Mungia R, Laws R, Nyongesa DB, Gillespie S, Leo MC, McBurnie MA, and Gilbert GH
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Surveys of health professionals typically have low response rates, which have decreased in recent years. We report on the methods used, participation rates, and study time for 11 national questionnaire studies of dentists conducted from 2014-2022. Participation rates decreased (87%-25%). Concurrent with this decrease was a decrease in the intensity with which the practitioners were recruited. Participation rates were higher when postal mail invitation and paper options were used (84% vs. 58%, p < .001). Completion rates were nearly twice as high in studies that recruited in waves than those that did not (61% vs. 35%, p = .003). Study time varied from 2.6 to 28.4 weeks. Study time was longest when postal mail and completion on paper were used (26.0 vs. 11.3 weeks, p = .01). Among studies using only online methods, study time was longer when invitations were staggered than when all invitations went out in one bolus (means 12.0 and 5.2, p = .04). Study time was positively correlated with participation rates (Spearman r = .80, p = .005). General dentists participated at an average of 12% higher rates than specialists. Recruitment methodology, such as recruiting in waves or stages, should be considered when designing surveys., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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14. Debriefer cognitive load during Traditional Reflective Debriefing vs. Rapid Cycle Deliberate Practice interdisciplinary team training.
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Wiltrakis S, Hwu R, Holmes S, Iyer S, Goodwin N, Mathai C, Gillespie S, Hebbar KB, and Colman N
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Background: Cognitive load impacts performance of debriefers and learners during simulations, but limited data exists examining debriefer cognitive load. The aim of this study is to compare the cognitive load of the debriefers during simulation-based team training (SbTT) with Rapid Cycle Deliberate Practice (RCDP) debriefing and Traditional Reflective Debriefing (TRD). We hypothesize that cognitive load will be reduced during RCDP compared to TRD., Methods: This study was part of a large-scale, interdisciplinary team training program at Children's Healthcare of Atlanta Egleston Pediatric Emergency Department, with 164 learners (physicians, nurses, medical technicians, paramedics, and respiratory therapists (RTs)). Eight debriefers (main facilitators and discipline-specific coaches) led 28 workshops, which were quasi-randomized to either RCDP or TRD. Each session began with a baseline medical resuscitation scenario and cognitive load measurement using the NASA Task Load Index (TLX), and the NASA TLX was repeated immediately following either TRD or RCDP debriefing. Raw scores of the NASA TLX before and after intervention were compared. ANOVA tests were used to compare differences in NASA TLX scores before and after intervention between the RCDP and TRD groups., Results: For all debriefers, mean NASA TLX scores for physical demands and frustration significantly decreased (- 0.8, p = 0.004 and - 1.3, p = 0.002) in TRD and mean perceived performance success significantly increased (+ 2.4, p < 0.001). For RCDP, perceived performance success increased post-debriefing (+ 3.6, p < 0.001), time demands decreased (- 1.0, p = 0.04), and frustration decreased (- 2.0, p < 0.001). Comparing TRD directly to RCDP, perceived performance success was greater in RCDP than TRD (3.6 vs. 2.4, p = 0.04). Main facilitators had lower effort and mental demand in RCDP and greater perceived success (p < 0.001)., Conclusion: RCDP had greater perceived success than TRD for debriefers. Main facilitators also report reduced effort and baseline mental demand in RCDP. For less experienced debriefers, newer simulation programs, or large team training sessions such as our study, RCDP may be a less mentally demanding debriefing methodology for facilitators., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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15. Clinical Correlates and Prevalence of Food Selectivity in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.
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Wenzell ML, Pulver SL, McMahon MXH, Rubio EK, Gillespie S, Berry RC, Betancourt I, Minter B, Schneider O, Yarasani C, Rogers D, Scahill L, Volkert V, and Sharp WG
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Child, Preschool, Prevalence, Feeding Behavior, Food Preferences, Autism Spectrum Disorder psychology, Autism Spectrum Disorder epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To examine clinical correlates and prevalence of food selectivity (FS) - ie, self-restricted diet, reluctance to try new foods - in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) ascertained from a general outpatient autism clinic., Study Design: A multidisciplinary team (pediatric nurse practitioner, psychologist and dietitian) assessed medical and psychosocial histories and dietary habits in 103 children with ASD (mean age = 5.8 ± 2.2 years; range 2-10). Parents rated child mealtime behavior on the Brief Autism Mealtime Behavior Inventory (BAMBI) and disruptive behavior on the Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC). Height and weight measurements were collected. Children were classified as FS or no FS based on parent reported intake and mealtime behavior. A 24-hour dietary recall was used to record intake percentages < 80%. Logistic regression and multivariable modeling were used to evaluate clinical correlates with FS., Results: Of 103 children, 45.6% (n = 47) were classified as FS; 54.4% (n = 56) no FS. After adjusting for potential confounders, the odds of FS increased by 1.91 (95% CI: 1.38, 2.64, P < .001) for every half-SD increase in BAMBI total score and by 1.35 (95% CI: 1.05, 1.74, P = .020) for every half-SD increase in ABC Hyperactivity/Noncompliance. No group differences in anthropometrics or nutritional intake were identified., Conclusions: Food selectivity (FS) in children with ASD was strongly associated with greater severity of disruptive mealtime and hyperactivity/noncompliance behaviors. FS was not associated with anthropometrics or nutritional intake., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Dr. Scahill has served as a consultant to Roche, Janssen, Impel, and Finch. Dr. Scahill receives book royalties from Oxford, Guilford and American Psychological Association and license fees from Roche, Yamo, and AbbVie. We have no other conflicts of interest to disclose. Preliminary findings from this work were presented as a poster presentation at the Annual Southeastern Pediatric Research Conference in Atlanta, GA., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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16. A Validated Risk Stratification That Incorporates MAGIC Biomarkers Predicts Long-Term Outcomes in Pediatric Patients with Acute GVHD.
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Qayed M, Kapoor U, Gillespie S, Westbrook A, Aguayo-Hiraldo P, Ayuk FA, Aziz M, Baez J, Choe H, DeFilipp Z, Etra A, Grupp SA, Hexner E, Holler E, Hogan WJ, Kowalyk S, Merli P, Morales G, Nakamura R, Pulsipher MA, Schechter T, Shah J, Spyrou N, Srinagesh HK, Wölfl M, Yanik G, Young R, Kitko CL, Ferrara JLM, and Levine JE
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- Humans, Child, Female, Male, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Acute Disease, Risk Assessment, Infant, Interleukin-1 Receptor-Like 1 Protein blood, Algorithms, Transplantation, Homologous adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Graft vs Host Disease blood, Graft vs Host Disease diagnosis, Biomarkers blood, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Pancreatitis-Associated Proteins blood
- Abstract
Acute graft versus host disease (GVHD) is a common and serious complication of allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) in children but overall clinical grade at onset only modestly predicts response to treatment and survival outcomes. Two tools to assess risk at initiation of treatment were recently developed. The Minnesota risk system stratifies children for risk of nonrelapse mortality (NRM) according to the pattern of GVHD target organ severity. The Mount Sinai Acute GVHD International Consortium (MAGIC) algorithm of 2 serum biomarkers (ST2 and REG3α) predicts NRM in adult patients but has not been validated in a pediatric population. We aimed to develop and validate a system that stratifies children at the onset of GVHD for risk of 6-month NRM. We determined the MAGIC algorithm probabilities (MAPs) and Minnesota risk for a multicenter cohort of 315 pediatric patients who developed GVHD requiring treatment with systemic corticosteroids. MAPs created 3 risk groups with distinct outcomes at the start of treatment and were more accurate than Minnesota risk stratification for prediction of NRM (area under the receiver operating curve (AUC), .79 versus .62, P = .001). A novel model that combined Minnesota risk and biomarker scores created from a training cohort was more accurate than either biomarkers or clinical systems in a validation cohort (AUC .87) and stratified patients into 2 groups with highly different 6-month NRM (5% versus 38%, P < .001). In summary, we validated the MAP as a prognostic biomarker in pediatric patients with GVHD, and a novel risk stratification that combines Minnesota risk and biomarker risk performed best. Biomarker-based risk stratification can be used in clinical trials to develop more tailored approaches for children who require treatment for GVHD., (Copyright © 2024 The American Society for Transplantation and Cellular Therapy. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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17. Access to Part C, Early Intervention for children younger than 4 years evaluated for autism spectrum disorder.
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Mendez AI, McQueen E, Gillespie S, Klin A, Klaiman C, and Pickard K
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Infant, United States, White People, Autism Spectrum Disorder therapy, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Early Intervention, Educational methods, Healthcare Disparities, Black or African American
- Abstract
Lay Abstract: Health disparities are defined as preventable differences in the opportunities to achieve optimal health outcomes experienced by marginalized and underrepresented communities. For families with autistic children, health disparities limit accessing early intervention services-which have been found to improve quality of life and other outcomes. One specific early intervention service in the United States is Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, Part C Early Intervention programs, which are federally funded interventions for children birth-to-three with developmental delays. This study adds to this topic by examining which factors impact accessing Part C, Early Intervention services for children who were evaluated for autism. Results showed that only half of the sample received these services despite there being concerns about development for all children. In addition, results showed that those who identified as Black had decreased odds of having accessed Part C, Early Intervention compared to those who identified as White. These results suggest that there are disparities when it comes to accessing important early intervention services that may be negatively impacting the Black autistic community.
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- 2024
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18. Extensive intraocular melanoma with secondary glaucoma in a 15-month-old Thoroughbred filly.
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Pereira R, Gillespie S, Rapezzano G, Withers J, Duz M, and Foote A
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- Animals, Horses, Female, Eye Neoplasms veterinary, Eye Neoplasms surgery, Horse Diseases pathology, Horse Diseases surgery, Glaucoma veterinary, Glaucoma etiology, Melanoma veterinary, Melanoma surgery
- Abstract
A 15-month-old, grey, Thoroughbred filly presented for investigation of a 6-week history of corneal oedema and blepharospasm on the right eye (OD). The filly was otherwise healthy. Following ophthalmic examination, glaucoma on the OD was diagnosed. A space occupying mass within the anterior chamber was documented on transpalpebral ultrasonographic examination. This mass obliterated most of the anterior intraocular structures on the peripheral nasal side (corneal endothelium and drainage angle), leading to secondary glaucoma. After systemic and topical treatment addressing secondary glaucoma, the corneal oedema reduced. The mass was visualised as an irregularly rounded brown structure associated with the iris on the peripheral nasal side of the anterior chamber. Given the filly's signalment, location and appearance of the mass, a tentative diagnosis of intraocular melanoma was made and enucleation was performed. Histopathological evaluation of the globe revealed solid sheets of heavily pigmented melanocytic cells, disrupting the normal ciliary body architecture and extending into the iris and subretinal. The cells were pleomorphic, polyhedral to round with occasional spindle-shaped cells, and contained moderate to large amounts of granular black-brown pigment (melanin). The iridal component expanded into the anterior chamber, with cells directly opposed to Descemet's membrane, with loss of the endothelium and expanding and occluding the filtration angle in this area. The lesion infiltrated locally into the edge of the sclera, but did not extend through the sclera, though occasional perivascular clusters of melanophages were observed within the scleral stroma adjacent to the optic nerve. Diagnosis of a uveal melanocytic neoplasm was confirmed, with characteristics similar to only one reported case . This is a unique case of a rapidly growing, invasive, uveal melanoma in a young horse. Intraocular melanoma should be considered as a differential diagnoses for glaucoma in grey horses, regardless of the age and absence of melanocytic skin lesions., (© 2024 The Authors. Veterinary Medicine and Science published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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19. Outcome measures in pediatric chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy.
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Guttikonda A, Ahmad G, Goyal P, Xiang Y, Johnson LM, Gillespie S, Carvell KT, Butera R, and Verma S
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- Male, Female, Humans, Child, Immunoglobulins, Intravenous therapeutic use, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Retrospective Studies, Hand Strength physiology, Treatment Outcome, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating diagnosis, Polyradiculoneuropathy, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating drug therapy
- Abstract
Introduction/aims: Objective outcome measures in children undergoing treatment for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) are lacking. The aim of the study was to record serial grip strength and motor nerve conduction studies to assess interval change., Methods: This was a retrospective review of 16 children (8 females and 8 males; median age, 9.7 years; interquartile range, 6-13 years) with CIDP followed at a tertiary children's hospital from 2013 to 2021. Subjects were treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG). Right and left grip strength measurements were obtained at each clinic visit using a handheld dynamometer. Annual right median motor nerve conduction study data were recorded during the study period., Results: Mean duration of follow-up was 2.9 years. Grip strength (right: 0.19 kg/month, p < 0.001; left 0.23 kg/month, p < 0.001) and median F-wave latencies (-0.23/month, p = 0.015) showed significant improvement over time. Akaike information criterion showed time + IVIG frequency <21 days as best fit for grip strength and distal compound muscle action potential amplitude., Discussion: Our study results indicate serial grip strength measurements are a feasible and objective way to assess motor strength improvement in children with CIDP receiving immunotherapy., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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20. A Mixed-methods Examination of Culturally Responsive Adaptation to an Evidence-based Parent-mediated Intervention Implemented for Autistic Children.
- Author
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Rudrabhatla A, Hendrix N, Gillespie S, Ulven K, Jergel A, Greenfield E, Guerra K, and Pickard K
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Infant, Culturally Competent Care organization & administration, Qualitative Research, Adult, Parents psychology, Autistic Disorder therapy, Caregivers psychology, Evidence-Based Practice organization & administration
- Abstract
Parent-mediated interventions (PMIs) are considered an evidence-based practice for fostering social communication skills in young autistic children and for promoting parent responsivity and empowerment, yet barriers to caregiver engagement are evident when PMIs are implemented within historically underserved community settings. Issues of caregiver engagement can reflect a lack of fit between PMIs and the needs of diverse families. We used a mixed methods approach to examine barriers to participating in an evidence-based PMI, Project ImPACT (Ingersoll & Dvortcsak, 2019), within an outpatient setting, as well as strategies that clinicians reported using to deliver and adapt Project ImPACT for minoritized families. Participants included 134 caregivers of a child 13 to 48 months with autism or other social communication differences and six clinicians delivering Project ImPACT. Findings suggest that caregivers experience barriers to participating in Project ImPACT and that these barriers are associated with caregivers' ability to complete the program. Although quantitative findings indicate that adaptation to Project ImPACT did not differ by caregiver and child background, qualitative findings highlighted that clinicians attempt to deliver Project ImPACT to respond to the needs of families from minoritized backgrounds by actively considering the family's culture, psychosocial experiences, goals, and specific barriers. Further, both qualitative and quantitative findings suggest that culturally responsive care and adaptations may support caregiver engagement, including rapport, trust, buy-in, and attendance. Approaches to center cultural alongside contextual/psychosocial considerations within family-centered care in the implementation of PMIs are also highlighted., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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21. Trigeneration based on the pyrolysis of rural waste in India: Environmental impact, economic feasibility and business model innovation.
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Ascher S, Gordon J, Bongiovanni I, Watson I, Hermannsson K, Gillespie S, Sarangi S, Biakhmetov B, Bhargava PC, Bhaskar T, Krishna BB, Pandey A, and You S
- Abstract
Pyrolysis-based waste-to-bioenergy development has the potential to resolve some of the major challenges facing rural communities in India such as poor electrification, household air pollution, and farmland degradation and contamination. Existing understanding and analysis of the economic feasibility and environmental impact of bioenergy deployment in rural areas is limited by parameter uncertainties, and relevant business model innovation following economic evaluation is even scarcer. This paper uses findings from a new field survey of 1200 rural households to estimate the economic feasibility and environmental impact of a pyrolysis-based bioenergy trigeneration development that was designed to tackle these challenges. Based on the survey results, probability distributions were constructed and used to supply input parameters for cost-benefit analysis and life cycle assessment. Monte Carlo simulation was applied to characterise the uncertainties of economic feasibility and environmental impact accounting. It was shown that the global warming potential of the development was 350 kg of CO
2 -eq per capita per annum. Also, the survey identified a significant mismatch between feedstock prices considered in the literature and prices asked for by the surveyed villagers. The results of the cost-benefit analysis and life cycle assessment were then applied to propose two novel business models inspired by the Business Model Canvas, which had the potential to achieve up to 90 % economic profitability and result in a benefit-cost ratio of 1.35-1.75. This is the first study achieving combined environmental and economic analysis and business model innovation for rural bioenergy production in developing countries., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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22. Trends in pediatric firearm-related injuries and disparities in acute outcomes.
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Mulugeta MG, Bailey G, Parsons K, Gillespie S, Johnson LM, Doh KF, Reisner A, and Blackwell LS
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Male, Female, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Child, Preschool, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Pandemics, Wounds, Gunshot epidemiology, Firearms, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Firearm-related injuries (FRI) are an increasing cause of death and injury in children. The etiology for this rise is multifactorial and includes socioeconomic factors. Despite its prevalence and documented increase over COVID-19, there is a paucity of research on disparities and the influence of social determinants of health (SDH) in pediatric FRI. This study aims to explore the epidemiology of this vulnerable population in Atlanta, trends over time and relevant dates such as COVID-19 and a state firearm law, and disparities in clinical outcomes., Methods: Retrospective cohort of patients with FRI (0-20 years-old, x̄=9.8, Median = 11) presenting to our hospital EDs from January 2014 to April 2023 ( N = 701) and eligible for the Trauma Registry. This period includes two major events, namely the COVID-19 pandemic (March 2020), and passage of state law Constitutional Carry Act (SB 319) (April 2022), allowing for permit-less concealed firearm carry. Single series interrupted time series (ITS) models were run and clinical outcome differences between race and insurance groups were calculated unadjusted and adjusted for confounders using inverse propensity treatment weights (IPTW). The primary outcome was mortality; secondary are admission and discharge., Results: Majority of FRI involved patients who were male (76.7%), Black (74.9%), publicly insured (82.6%), ≤12 years-old (61.8%), and injured by unintentional shootings (45.6%) or assault (43.7%). During COVID-19, there was a sustained increase in FRI rate by 0.42 patients per 1,000 trauma visits per month (95% CI 0.02-0.82, p = 0.042); post-SB 319 it was 2.3 patients per 1,000 trauma visits per month (95% CI 0.23-4.31, p = 0.029). Publicly insured patients had 58% lower odds of mortality than privately insured patients (OR 0.42, 95% CI 0.18-0.99, p = 0.047). When controlled for race and mechanism of injury, among other confounding factors, this association was not significant ( p = 0.652)., Conclusion: Pediatric FRI are increasing over time, with disproportionate burdens on Black patients, at our hospitals. Disparities in mortality based on insurance necessitate further study. As social and economic repercussions of COVID-19 are still present, and state firearm law SB 319 is still in effect, assessment of ongoing trends is warranted to inform preventative strategies., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The handling editor SK declared a shared affiliation with the author(s) at the time of review., (Copyright © 2024 Mulugeta, Bailey, Parsons, Gillespie, Johnson, Doh, Reisner and Blackwell.)
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- 2024
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23. Association between social determinants of health and pediatric traumatic brain injury outcomes.
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Parsons K, Mulugeta MG, Bailey G, Gillespie S, Johnson LM, Myers HE, Reisner A, and Blackwell LS
- Abstract
Introduction: Social determinants of health (SDH) are factors that may impact outcomes following pediatric traumatic brain injuries (TBI). The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between race and functional outcomes in a diverse pediatric population. We further explored how this association may be modified by SDH factors, including insurance status, social vulnerability, and child opportunity., Methods: A cohort study ( N = 401) of children aged 0-18 [median = 9.22 years (IQR: 3.56-13.59)] presenting to the Emergency Department at Level I and II Trauma Centers with mild to severe head injuries. Geocoded variables were used to evaluate SDH. The sample was described overall and by racial/ethnic group, which were adjusted for confounders using inverse propensity treatment weights (IPTW). Weighted and unweighted Firth logistic regression models (mortality) and generalized linear regression models (GOS-E scores) were reported without and then with potential effect modifiers., Results: The sample is majority male (65.84%); race/ethnicity are as follows: White (52.37%), Black/African Americans (35.91%), and Hispanic (11.72%). Black (31.25%) and Hispanic (27.66%) patients had higher rates of severe TBI. 35.89% of White patients were categorized as more socially vulnerable compared to 62.68% Black and 70.21% Hispanic patients. A total 63.64% of White patients were from higher opportunity neighborhoods, compared to 25.87% of Black and 51.06% of Hispanic patients. A total 50.95% of White patients, 25.87% of Black patients, and 17.02% of Hispanic patients were privately insured. There were no differences found between racial and ethnic groups on mortality or GOS-E scores., Discussion: Patients from minority backgrounds had more severe injuries, many resulting from pedestrian vs. motor vehicle accidents. Additionally, patients from minority backgrounds experience more social vulnerability and lower opportunity. Despite these discrepancies, we did not observe differences on rates of mortality or functional outcomes in either racial or ethnic groups. SDH were not found to impact outcomes. Further research is needed to determine how these complex social and environmental variables impact health outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Parsons, Mulugeta, Bailey, Gillespie, Johnson, Myers, Reisner and Blackwell.)
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- 2024
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24. Breastfeeding Following Spinal Cord Injury: Consumer Guide for Mothers.
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Krassioukov A, Elliott S, Hocaloski S, Krassioukova-Enns O, Hodge K, Gillespie S, Caves S, Thorson T, Alford L, Basso M, McCracken L, Lee A, Anderson K, Andretta E, Chhabra HS, Hultling C, Rapidi CA, Sorensen FB, Zobina I, Theron F, Kessler A, Courtois F, and Berri M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Infant, Newborn, Infant, Breast Feeding, Spinal Cord Injuries, Mothers psychology
- Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that infants be breastfed exclusively for the first 6 months of age. However, there are few resources available on the effects a spinal cord injury (SCI) can have for breastfeeding mothers. It is difficult to find information to address the unique challenges women with SCI experience when planning or trying to breastfeed. Our international team, including women with SCI, health care providers, and SCI researchers, aims to address the information gap through the creation of this consumer guide. The purpose of this consumer guide is to share the most common issues women with SCI experience during breastfeeding and provide information, practical suggestions, recommendations, and key resources in lay language. General information about breastfeeding is available on the internet, in books, or from friends and health care providers. We do not intend to repeat nor replace general breastfeeding information or medical advice. Breastfeeding for mothers with SCI is complex and requires a team of health care providers with complementary expertise. Such a team may include family physician, obstetrician, physiatrist, neurologist, occupational and physical therapist, lactation consultant, midwife, and psychologist. We hope this consumer guide can serve as a quick reference guide for mothers with SCI planning of trying to breastfeed. This guide will also be helpful to health care providers as an educational tool., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (© 2024 American Spinal Injury Association.)
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- 2024
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25. Feasibility and acceptability of a low-resource-intensive, transdiagnostic intervention for children with social-communication challenges in early childhood education settings.
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Siller M, Morgan L, Fuhrmeister S, Wedderburn Q, Schirmer B, Chatson E, and Gillespie S
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- Child, Preschool, Humans, Communication, Feasibility Studies, Learning, School Teachers, Autism Spectrum Disorder
- Abstract
Abstract: Preschool classrooms provide a unique context for supporting the development of children with social-communication challenges. This study is an uncontrolled clinical trial of an adapted professional development intervention for preschool teachers (Social Emotional Engagement-Knowledge & Skills-Early Childhood). Social Emotional Engagement-Knowledge & Skills-Early Childhood is a low-resource-intensive, transdiagnostic intervention to address the learning needs of children with social-communication challenges and consists of four asynchronous online modules and three synchronous coaching sessions. The current research evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of intervention and research procedures, implemented in authentic early childhood education settings. Participants included one teacher and one target child with social-communication challenges from 25 preschool classrooms, sampled to maximize variability. Overall, the current research revealed high levels of feasibility, with 9 out of 10 benchmarks met: (a) procedures for participant recruitment reliably identified a neurodiverse sample of children with teacher-reported social-communication challenges; (b) teachers showed high levels of program engagement and Social Emotional Engagement-Knowledge & Skills-Early Childhood completion (76%); and (c) results revealed a robust pattern of gains in Social Emotional Engagement-Knowledge & Skills-Early Childhood classrooms and associations among key outcome measures (including active engagement, student teacher relationship, social-communication competencies). Implications for the design of a subsequent, larger effectiveness-implementation hybrid trial (Type 1) are discussed., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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26. Descriptive characteristics of extinction bursts: A record review.
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Muething C, Cariveau T, Bottini S, Slocum S, Williams C, Gillespie S, and Scheithauer M
- Abstract
Procedural extinction is sometimes associated with a temporary increase in responding known as an extinction burst. Extinction bursts present unique challenges in the context of treating behavior targeted for reduction. The present study updates the prevalence of extinction bursts using a clinical sample (N = 108) receiving treatment for targeted behavior. The prevalence of extinction bursts in our sample (24%) was consistent with that in prior literature. The extinction-burst magnitude decreased across sessions after extinction was contacted during treatment, but this sample did not demonstrate decreased persistence or magnitude of extinction bursts across successive transitions from baseline to treatment. We also examined the prevalence and magnitude of extinction bursts based on the function and topography of targeted behavior and treatment components and found no consistent relation among these variables. These findings should lead clinicians to prepare for transient extinction bursts when implementing extinction-based treatment for challenging behavior., (© 2024 Society for the Experimental Analysis of Behavior (SEAB).)
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- 2024
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27. Motherhood after Spinal Cord Injury: Breastfeeding, Autonomic Dysreflexia, and Psychosocial Health: Clinical Practice Guidelines.
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Krassioukov A, Elliott S, Hocaloski S, Krassioukova-Enns O, Hodge K, Gillespie S, Caves S, Thorson T, Alford L, Basso M, McCracken L, Lee A, Anderson K, Andretta E, Chhabra HS, Hultling C, Rapidi CA, Sørensen FB, Zobina I, Theron F, Kessler A, Courtois F, and Berri M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Mothers psychology, Quality of Life, Adult, Spinal Cord Injuries complications, Breast Feeding, Autonomic Dysreflexia etiology, Autonomic Dysreflexia therapy, Autonomic Dysreflexia physiopathology
- Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that children be breastfed exclusively for the first 6 months of age. This recommendation may prove challenging for women with spinal cord injury (SCI) who face unique challenges and barriers to breastfeeding due to the impact of SCI on mobility and physiology. Tailored provision of care from health care professionals (HCPs) is important in helping women navigate these potential barriers. Yet, HCPs often lack the confidence and SCI-specific knowledge to meet the needs of mothers with SCI. An international panel of clinicians, researchers, consultants, and women with lived experience was formed to create an accessible resource that can address this gap. A comprehensive survey on breastfeeding complications, challenges, resources, and quality of life of mothers with SCI was conducted, along with an environmental scan to evaluate existing postpartum guidelines and assess their relevance and usability as recommendations for breastfeeding after SCI. Building on this work, this article provides evidence-based recommendations for HCPs, including but not limited to general practitioners, obstetricians, pediatricians, physiatrists, lactation consultants, nurses, midwives, occupational therapists, and physiotherapists who work with prospective and current mothers with SCI., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (© 2024 American Spinal Injury Association.)
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- 2024
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28. A comparison of rapid cycle deliberate practice and traditional reflective debriefing on interprofessional team performance.
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Colman N, Wiltrakis SM, Holmes S, Hwu R, Iyer S, Goodwin N, Mathai C, Gillespie S, and Hebbar KB
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Clinical Competence, Curriculum, Educational Measurement, Simulation Training, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
Background: In simulation-based education, debriefing is necessary to promote knowledge acquisition and skill application. Rapid Cycle Deliberate Practice (RCDP) and Traditional Reflective Debriefing (TRD) are based in learning theories of deliberate practice and reflective learning, respectively. In this study, we compared the effectiveness of TRD versus RCDP on acquisition of conceptual knowledge and teamwork skills among interdisciplinary learners in the pediatric emergency department., Methods: One hundred sixty-four learners including emergency department attending physicians, fellows, nurses, medical technicians, paramedics, and respiratory therapists, participated in 28 in-situ simulation workshops over 2 months. Groups were quasi-randomized to receive RCDP or TRD debriefing. Learners completed a multiple-choice test to assess teamwork knowledge. The TEAM Assessment Tool assessed team performance before and after debriefing. Primary outcomes were teamwork knowledge and team performance., Results: Average pre-intervention baseline knowledge assessment scores were high in both groups (TRD mean 90.5 (SD 12.7), RCDP mean 88.7 (SD 15.5). Post-test scores showed small improvements in both groups (TRD mean 93.2 (SD 12.2), RCDP mean 89.9 (SD 13.8), as indicated by effect sizes (ES = 0.21 and 0.09, for TRD and RCDP, respectively). Assessment of team performance demonstrated a significant improvement in mean scores from pre-assessment to post-assessment for all TEAM Assessment skills in both TRD and RCDP arms, based on p-values (all p < 0.01) and effect sizes (all ES > 0.8). While pre-post improvements in TEAM scores were generally higher in the RCDP group based on effect sizes, analysis did not indicate either debriefing approach as meaningfully improved over the other., Conclusions: Our study did not demonstrate that either TRD versus RCDP was meaningfully better in teamwork knowledge acquisition or improving skill application and performance. As such, we propose Reflective Deliberate Practice as a framework for future study to allow learners to reflect on learning and practice in action., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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29. Regional Anesthesia as an Alternative to Procedural Sedation for Forearm Fracture Reductions in the Pediatric Emergency Department.
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Sulton CD, Fletcher N, Murphy J, Gillespie S, and Burger RK
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- Humans, Child, Forearm, Fracture Fixation methods, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hematoma, Retrospective Studies, Conscious Sedation methods, Forearm Injuries therapy, Anesthesia, Conduction methods, Radius Fractures therapy
- Abstract
Background: Pediatric forearm fractures are common injuries in the pediatric emergency department (PED). Pediatric procedural sedation (PPS) is often required for forearm fracture reductions and pain control for casting. Bier blocks and hematoma blocks are types of regional anesthesia (RA) procedures that can be performed as a potential alternative to PPS., Objective: The objective of this study is to compare the safety of RA with that of PPS. We hypothesized that RA has a safety profile that is equal or superior to PPS as well as a shorter duration of treatment in the PED., Methods: Pediatric emergency department encounters in patients presenting with a diagnosis of radius fracture, ulna fracture, distal "both-bone" fracture, Monteggia fracture, and/or Galeazzi fracture were included. Outcomes of interest included patient adverse events (AEs), sedation medications used, PED duration of treatment (arrival time to disposition time), sedation failures, and reduction failures., Results: Propensity matching was performed resulting in 632 well-matched RA-PPS pairs. The PPS cohort had 13% of encounters with at least 1 AE compared with 0.2% in the RA cohort, P < 0.001. The most common AE in the PPS group was hypoxia (9.8%), and the only AE in the RA group was an intravenous infiltrate (0.16%). Within the matched cohorts, PPS required more medications than RA (100% vs 60%, P < 0.001). Ketamine alone was more commonly used in the PPS group than the RA group (86% vs 0.2%, P < 0.001). Propofol was used only in the PPS group. The average duration of treatment was 205 (SD, 81) minutes in the PPS group and 178 (SD, 75) minutes in the RA group ( P < 0.001). There were no reduction failures in either group., Conclusions: Bier blocks and hematoma blocks are an acceptable alternative to PPS for children requiring forearm reductions. The AE rate is low and the reduction success rate is high. Duration of treatment in the PED is shorter for patients receiving RA compared with PPS., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Training Health Center Staff in the Provision of Culturally Responsive Care for Sexual and Gender Minority Patients: Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Mayer KH, Peretti M, McBurnie MA, King D, Smith NX, Crawford P, Loo S, Sigal M, Gillespie S, Davis JA, Cahill S, Grasso C, and Keuroghlian AS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Sexual Behavior, Gender Identity, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
Purpose: The study was designed to evaluate whether an educational intervention to train the health center (HC) staff to optimize care for sexual and gender minority (SGM) patients could improve documentation of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) and increase preventive screenings. Methods: Twelve HCs were matched and randomized to either receive a tailored, multicomponent educational intervention or a 1-hour prerecorded webinar. Documentation of SGM status and clinical testing was measured through analysis of data that HCs report annually. Nonparametric statistics were used to assess associations between baseline HC characteristics and outcome measures. Results: The HCs were geographically, racially, and ethnically diverse. In all but one HC, <10% of the patients were identified as SGM. Intervention HCs underwent between 3 and 10 trainings, which were highly acceptable. In 2018, 9 of 12 HCs documented SO and 11 of 12 documented GI for at least 50% of their patients. Five of 6 intervention HCs increased SO documentation by 2020, compared to 3 of 6 control HCs (nonsignificant, NS). Five intervention HCs increased GI documentation, although generally by less than 10%, compared to 2 of the controls (NS). Intervention HCs tended to increase documentation of preventive services more than control HCs, but the changes were NS. Conclusions: An educational intervention designed to train the HC staff to provide culturally responsive services for SGM patients was found to be acceptable, with favorable, but nonsignificant changes. Further refinement of the intervention using a larger sample of HCs might demonstrate the effectiveness of this approach. Clinical trial registration #: NCT03554785.
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- 2024
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31. Expert Clinician Certainty in Diagnosing Autism Spectrum Disorder in 16-30-Month-Olds: A Multi-site Trial Secondary Analysis.
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Klaiman C, White S, Richardson S, McQueen E, Walum H, Aoki C, Smith C, Minjarez M, Bernier R, Pedapati E, Bishop S, Ence W, Wainer A, Moriuchi J, Tay SW, Deng Y, Jones W, Gillespie S, and Klin A
- Subjects
- Child, Preschool, Humans, Diagnostic Errors, Diagnosis, Differential, Uncertainty, Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnosis, Autistic Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
Differential diagnosis of young children with suspected autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is challenging, and clinician uncertainty about a child's diagnosis may contribute to misdiagnosis and subsequent delays in access to early treatment. The current study was designed to replicate and expand a recent report in this Journal (McDonnell et al. in J Autism Dev Disord 49:1391-1401, https://doi.org/10.1080/15374416.2020.1823850 , 2019), in which only 60% of diagnoses were made with complete certainty by clinicians evaluating 478 toddlers and preschool children referred for possible ASD to specialized clinics. In this study, secondary analyses were performed on diagnostic, demographic and clinical data for 496 16-30-month-old children who were consecutive referrals to a 6-site clinical trial executed by specialized centers with experienced clinicians following best-practice procedures for the diagnosis of ASD. Overall, 70.2% of diagnoses were made with complete certainty. The most important factor associated with clinician uncertainty was mid-level autism-related symptomatology. Mid-level verbal age equivalents were also associated with clinician uncertainty, but measures of symptomatology were stronger predictors. None of the socio-demographic variables, including sex of the child, was significantly associated with clinician certainty. Close to one third of early diagnoses of ASD are made with a degree of uncertainty. The delineation of specific ranges on the ADOS-2 most likely to result in clinician uncertainty identified in this study may provide an opportunity to reduce random subjectivity in diagnostic decision-making via calibration of young-child diagnostic thresholds based on later-age longitudinal diagnostic outcome data, and via standardization of decision-making in regard to clinical scenarios frequently encountered by clinicians., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2024
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32. 'Housing First' Increased Psychiatric Care Office Visits And Prescriptions While Reducing Emergency Visits.
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Hanson D and Gillespie S
- Subjects
- Humans, Housing, Prescriptions, Emergency Service, Hospital, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Ill-Housed Persons
- Abstract
Housing First is an approach to ending homelessness that recognizes permanent housing as a platform for stability and engagement in health services. As part of a randomized controlled trial to test the effects of permanent supportive housing with the Housing First approach in Denver, Colorado, we analyzed the intervention's impact on health care use, Medicaid enrollment, and mortality among people experiencing chronic homelessness who had frequent arrests and jail stays. Two years after assignment to the Housing First intervention, participants had an average of eight more office-based visits for psychiatric diagnoses, three more prescription medications, and six fewer emergency department visits than the control group. Although enrollment in Medicaid increased over the course of the study for both the intervention group and the control group, the intervention group was 5 percentage points less likely to be enrolled in Medicaid. Supportive housing had no significant impact on mortality. When considering pathways to scale up supportive housing, policy makers should recognize the potential of Housing First to facilitate the use of office-based psychiatric care and medications in a population with many health care needs.
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- 2024
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33. Using the life course health development model to address pediatric mental health disparities.
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Smith LH, Nist MD, Fortney CA, Warren B, Harrison T, Gillespie S, Herbell K, Militello L, Anderson CM, Tucker S, Ford J, Chang MW, Sayre C, and Pickler R
- Subjects
- Humans, Child, Health Inequities, Life Change Events, Mental Health
- Abstract
Topic: Early-life experiences, the transmission of health and disease within families, and the influence of cumulative risks as well as protective factors throughout life shape the trajectory of health, including mental health. Long-term health trajectories established early in life are influenced by biologic, social, and environmental factors. Negative trajectories may be more salient if exposures to adversity occur during critical developmental periods., Purpose: The purpose of this brief is to (a) review pediatric health disparities related to depression and the intergenerational transmission of pediatric depression using a Life Course Health Development (LCHD) model and (b) provide recommendations for pediatric mental health research., Sources: Peer-reviewed papers available for PubMed, CINAL, and Medline. Other sources include published books, papers, and gray materials., Conclusions: The LCHD model is a perspective to guide and foster new scientific inquiry about the development of mental health outcomes over the life course. The model enables synthesis of mental health, nursing, and public health, linking mental health prevention, risk reduction, and treatment in children., (© 2024 The Authors. Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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34. Validation of a novel clinical tool for monitoring distal limb stiffness.
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Jacklin BD, Hanousek K, Gillespie S, Liedtke A, Tucker R, Fiske-Jackson A, and Smith RK
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Objective: To validate a novel technique to measure limb stiffness in a clinical setting., Animals: Three horses and three ponies owned by the Royal Veterinary College., Procedures: Limb stiffness indices for both forelimbs were first derived using the gold standard of kinematic analysis. Using the same animals, limb stiffness indices were then calculated using portable floor scales to record weight and an electrogoniometer to record changes in metacarpophalangeal joint angle. The two techniques were then assessed for correlation and repeatability., Results: The repeatability of limb stiffness measurement using the novel clinical tool was considered to be good based on a small coefficient of variation (5.70%). The correlation of limb stiffness as derived by both methods was high ( r = 0.78, p < 0.01). Limb stiffness was positively correlated with the mass of the subject ( r = 0.85, p < 0.01), with heavier horses having greater limb stiffness., Clinical Relevance: This study has compared a novel method to measure distal forelimb stiffness non-invasively in a clinical setting to kinematic analysis in six equids. It has demonstrated that limb stiffness increases in a linear fashion with body mass consistent with the role of forelimbs providing energy storage. Because in vivo limb stiffness has been shown previously to alter with injury to the superficial digital flexor tendon, it is hypothesized that this technique will offer a practical technique for the clinician to assess limb stiffness in clinical cases. Further study will be necessary to determine its clinical usefulness in such cases., Competing Interests: BJ was employed by CVS Group Plc. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest. The author(s) declared that they were an editorial board member of Frontiers, at the time of submission. This had no impact on the peer review process and the final decision., (Copyright © 2024 Jacklin, Hanousek, Gillespie, Liedtke, Tucker, Fiske-Jackson and Smith.)
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- 2024
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35. Ethical applications of digital community-based research with Black immigrant and refugee youth and families.
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Hodges HR, Gillespie S, Cherubini FDS, Ibrahim SA, Gibson H, Ali Daad AM, Davis SL, Abdi SM, Senesathith V, Food Culture And Health Study Data Collection Team, and Ferguson GM
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Research Personnel, Community-Based Participatory Research, Acculturation, Refugees, Emigrants and Immigrants
- Abstract
The capacity to conduct psychology research online has expanded more quickly than have ethics guidelines for digital research. We argue that researchers must proactively plan ways to engage ethically in online psychological research with vulnerable groups, including marginalized and immigrant youth and families. To that end, this article describes the ethical use of internet and cell phone technologies in psychological research with Black immigrant and refugee youth and families, which demands efforts to both deepen and extend the Belmont principles of respect for persons, beneficence, and justice. We describe and apply four research frameworks-community-based participatory research, transdisciplinary team science, representational ethics, and cross-cultural psychology-that can be integrated to offer practical solutions to ethical challenges in digital research with Black immigrant and refugee youth and families. Then, as an illustration, we provide a case example of this approach using the Food, Culture, and Health Study conducted with Black Jamaican American and Somali American youth and families, who experience tridimensional acculturation due to their race and have been disproportionately impacted by the dual pandemics of COVID-19 and racism/Whiteness. We offer this article as a road map for other researchers seeking to conduct ethical digital community-based psychological research with Black immigrant youth and families and other marginalized communities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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36. Assessing the US treatment landscape for paediatric feeding disorder: A survey of multidisciplinary providers.
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Sharp WG, Estrem HH, Romeo C, Pederson J, Proctor KB, Gillespie S, Du C, Marshall J, and Raol N
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- Child, Humans, United States, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Allied Health Personnel, Early Intervention, Educational, Feeding and Eating Disorders
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Background: Paediatric feeding disorder (PFD) is a common childhood condition, estimated to impact one in 37 American children under the age of five. Such high prevalence occurs against a backdrop of limited understanding of the community treatment landscape in the United States., Method: To better understand the community treatment landscape for PFD in the United States and identify provider and treatment delivery characteristics, we collected primary data through a web-based survey targeting providers from all four PFD domains (i.e., medical, nutritional, feeding skill, and/or psychosocial) between January 2022 and March 2022. The 71-item cross sectional survey focussed on patient, provider and treatment characteristics. We distributed the survey using an electronic survey tool through Feeding Matters listserv followed by solicitation to discipline specific listservs and professional networks. The analytic approach involved descriptive statistics compared across settings and provider types, focussing on respondents within the United States., Results: Eighty-three percent of respondents reported practicing in the United States. Most of the US sample (74.3%) involved providers from the feeding skill domain (speech-language pathologist - SLP, occupational therapist - OT) who reported delivering care through early intervention or outpatient settings using responsive and sensory based approaches. These approaches lack rigorous empirical evaluation., Conclusions: Survey results suggest a need to support community providers in engagement with research activity to promote a better understanding of treatment approaches and outcomes associated with a large cohort of providers delivering care (i.e. SLPs, OTs) to patients with PFD., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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37. Promoting positive development among refugee adolescents.
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Abdi S, Akinsulure-Smith AM, Sarkadi A, Fazel M, Ellis BH, Gillespie S, Juang LP, and Betancourt TS
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- Child, Humans, Adolescent, Emotional Adjustment, Acculturation, Adolescent Development, Refugees psychology, Emigrants and Immigrants
- Abstract
Of the estimated 35.3 million refugees around the world (UNHCR, Figures at a Glance, 2022), approximately 50% are children under the age of 18. Refugee adolescents represent a unique group as they navigate developmental tasks in an unstable and often threatening environment or in resettlement contexts in which they often face marginalization. In addition to physiological, social, and psychological changes that mark adolescence, refugee youth often face traumatic experiences, acculturative stress, discrimination, and a lack of basic resources. In this consensus statement, we examine research on refugee adolescents' developmental tasks, acculturative tasks, and psychological adjustment using Suárez-Orozco and colleague's integrative risk and resilience model for immigrant-origin children and youth proposed by Suárez-Orozco et al. Finally, we discuss recommendations-moving from proximal to more distal contexts., (© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Research on Adolescence published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Research on Adolescence.)
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- 2023
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38. Acculturation, Acculturative Stress, Experience of Discrimination, and Cesarean Birth in Mexican American Women.
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Spurlock EJ, Pickler RH, Ruiz RJ, Ford J, Gillespie S, and Kue J
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Stress, Psychological, Texas, Acculturation, Mexican Americans psychology, Cesarean Section
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Introduction: There is evidence that Mexican Americans are more likely to have cesarean birth than non-Hispanic White Americans. The purpose of this study was to identify factors related to acculturation along with psychological and sociodemographic factors associated with birth mode in a prospective cohort of Mexican American women in Texas. Methods: This secondary analysis included 244 Mexican American pregnant women. Women with a prior cesarean birth were excluded. Variable selection was guided by Berry's Theoretical Framework of Acculturation. Correlations and logistic regression were used to examine relationships and predict risk of cesarean birth. Mediators and moderators were also considered. Results: Eighty women birthed by cesarean. Analytic and parent samples were similar in all demographics. After controlling for parity in logistic regression, greater Spanish language-related acculturative stress (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 1.06, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.01, 1.11], p = .028) and experience of discrimination (AOR, 1.18, 95% CI [1.00, 1.38], p = .044) increased the odds of cesarean birth. The relationship between acculturative stress and birth mode was moderated by birth facility. Conclusion: Acculturative stress and discrimination may play a role in birth mode for Mexican American women birthing in Texas. Birth facility and acculturative stress may be interacting in ways that have clinical significance but are yet unexplored., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2023
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39. Correction: A Survey of Community Providers on Feeding Problems in Autism Spectrum Disorder.
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Burrell TL, Sharp WG, Gillespie S, Pickard K, Brasher S, Buckley D, and Scahill L
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- 2023
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40. Abatacept for graft versus host disease prophylaxis in patients 60 years and older receiving mismatched unrelated donor transplantation for hematologic malignancies.
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Raghunandan S, Qayed M, Watkins BK, Graiser M, Gorfinkel L, Westbrook A, Gillespie S, Bratrude B, Petrovic A, Suessmuth Y, Horan J, Kean LS, and Langston AA
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- Humans, Abatacept, Unrelated Donors, Immunosuppressive Agents therapeutic use, Transplantation Conditioning, Graft vs Host Disease prevention & control, Graft vs Host Disease drug therapy, Hematologic Neoplasms drug therapy, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
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- 2023
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41. Examining adaptations necessary to support the implementation of a parent-mediated intervention for children with autism spectrum disorder and moderate feeding problems.
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Pickard K, Burrell TL, Brasher S, Buckley D, Gillespie S, Sharp W, and Scahill L
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Lay Abstract: Moderate feeding problems and disruptive mealtime behaviors are common in children with autism spectrum disorder. Although parent-mediated interventions are able to support feeding problems in autistic children, most research has occurred within specialty clinics when delivered by highly trained clinicians. Thus, the fit of these interventions within community settings is not clear. To address this limitation, this study explored adaptations to a parent-mediated intervention, Managing Eating Aversions and Limited Variety (i.e. MEAL Plan), to improve its fit and use within community settings. Participants were 14 multidisciplinary providers who attended one of the three intensive workgroups that included focus groups about the fit of MEAL Plan in their practice setting. Qualitative analysis was used to determine the main themes that came up within the focus groups. Specific themes included the appropriateness MEAL Plan for autistic and non-autistic children, how providers might adapt their delivery of MEAL Plan, billing and insurance considerations, administrator support for MEAL Plan, and the content and format of ongoing training and consultation. By proactively considering and responding to these factors, it may be possible to enhance MEAL Plan so that it is better able to be delivered and sustained within community practices that support autistic children., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2023
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42. Outcomes of children with life-threatening status asthmaticus requiring isoflurane therapy and extracorporeal life support.
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Kolli S, Opolka C, Westbrook A, Gillespie S, Mason C, Truitt B, Kamat P, Fitzpatrick A, and Grunwell JR
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- Child, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Status Asthmaticus drug therapy, Isoflurane therapeutic use, Asthma drug therapy, Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
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Background: Severe, refractory asthma is a life-threatening emergency that may be treated with isoflurane and extracorporeal life support. The objective of this study was to describe the clinical response to isoflurane and outcomes after discharge of children who received isoflurane and/or extracorporeal life-support for near-fatal asthma., Methods: This was a retrospective descriptive study using electronic medical record data from two pediatric intensive care units within a single healthcare system in Atlanta, GA., Results: Forty-five children received isoflurane, and 14 children received extracorporeal life support, 9 without a trial of isoflurane. Hypercarbia and acidosis improved within four hours of starting isoflurane. Four children died during the index admission for asthma. Twenty-seven percent had a change in Functional Status Score of three or more points from baseline to PICU discharge. Patients had median percent predicted FEV1 and FEV1/FVC ratios pre- and post-bronchodilator values below normal pediatric values., Conclusion: Children who received isoflurane and/or ECLS had a high frequency of previous PICU admission and intubation. Improvement in ventilation and acidosis occurred within the first four hours of starting isoflurane. Children who required isoflurane or ECLS may develop long-lasting deficits in their functional status. Children with near-fatal asthma are a high-risk group and require improved follow-up in the year following PICU discharge.
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- 2023
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43. Effectiveness of a Vendor Predictive Model for the Risk of Pediatric Asthma Exacerbation: A Difference-in-Differences Analysis.
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Murugan A, Kandaswamy S, Ray E, Gillespie S, and Orenstein E
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- Child, Humans, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitalization, Risk Factors, Steroids therapeutic use, Electronic Health Records, Asthma drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Asthma is a common cause of morbidity and mortality in children. Predictive models may help providers tailor asthma therapies to an individual's exacerbation risk. The effectiveness of asthma risk scores on provider behavior and pediatric asthma outcomes remains unknown., Objective: Determine the impact of an electronic health record (EHR) vendor-released model on outcomes for children with asthma., Methods: The Epic Systems Risk of Pediatric Asthma Exacerbation model was implemented on February 24, 2021, for volunteer pediatric allergy and pulmonology providers as a noninterruptive risk score visible in the patient schedule view. Asthma hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits, or oral steroid courses within 90 days of the index visit were compared from February 24, 2019, to February 23, 2022, using a difference-in-differences design with a control group of visits to providers in the same departments. Volunteer providers were interviewed to identify barriers and facilitators to model use., Results: In the intervention group, asthma hospitalizations within 90 days decreased from 1.4% (54/3,842) to 0.7% (14/2,165) after implementation with no significant change in the control group (0.9% [171/19,865] preimplementation to 1.0% [105/10,743] post). ED visits in the intervention group decreased from 5.8% (222/3,842) to 5.5% (118/2,164) but increased from 5.5% (1,099/19,865) to 6.8% (727/10,743) in the control group. The adjusted difference-in-differences estimators for hospitalization, ED visit, and oral steroid outcomes were -0.9% (95% confidence interval [CI]: -1.6 to -0.3), -2.4% (-3.9 to -0.8), and -1.9% (-4.3 to 0.5). In qualitative analysis, providers understood the purpose of the model and felt it was useful to flag high exacerbation risk. Trust in the model was calibrated against providers' own clinical judgement., Conclusion: This EHR vendor model implementation was associated with a significant decrease in asthma hospitalization and ED visits within 90 days of pediatric allergy and pulmonology clinic visits, but not oral steroid courses., Competing Interests: E.O. is a co-founder and has equity in Phrase Health, a clinical decision support analytics company. He receives no direct revenue. He has also served as the principal investigator on an R41 and R42 grant with Phrase Health from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) and the National Center for Advancing Translational Science (NCATS). He has received salary support from NLM and NCATS., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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44. HIV in youth prevention in the emergency department initiative: A survey of pediatric emergency medicine providers.
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Labudde EJ, Gillespie S, Wood A, Middlebrooks L, Gooding HC, Morris CR, and Camacho-Gonzalez A
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- Adult, Child, Humans, Adolescent, Attitude of Health Personnel, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Surveys and Questionnaires, Emergency Service, Hospital, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Pediatric Emergency Medicine, HIV Infections prevention & control, HIV Infections drug therapy, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use
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Background: The incidence of HIV among adolescents remains high, and adolescents are known to participate in sexual behaviors that increase their risk for HIV, such as unprotected sex and sex with multiple partners. HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has been shown to be effective at preventing HIV when taken daily and is approved by the FDA for use in adolescents. Efforts to screen patients in adult emergency departments and connect them with PrEP services have been validated. We surveyed pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) providers to determine their knowledge of PrEP, prescribing practices, willingness to prescribe, and barriers to a screening protocol in the pediatric emergency department (PED)., Methods: We administered a survey to a multidisciplinary group of PEM providers to measure knowledge, use, willingness, and implementation barriers to PrEP as well as elements needed for a successful referral system., Results: A total of 87 responses were included for analysis. While 79.1% of all providers had heard of PrEP, only 14.8% of prescribing providers had ever discussed PrEP with a patient, and none had ever prescribed PrEP. Overall, 76.3% of all providers were knowledgeable about PrEP based on answers to true/false questions, with prescribing providers significantly more likely to be knowledgeable compared to nurses (p = 0.005). Knowledgeable providers had higher willingness scores to refer for PrEP compared to providers who were not knowledgeable. Ninety-two percent of providers felt a PrEP referral process from the PED would be feasible. Creation of an eligibility algorithm and educational materials were the most common efforts providers preferred to make them more likely to refer for PrEP. The most notable barriers perceived by providers included patient noncompliance with therapy (20.9%), acceptance of PrEP discussion among patients and parents (19.8%), and cost of therapy (15.1%)., Conclusion: PEM providers are knowledgeable about PrEP but have little experience with discussing or prescribing PrEP. Their willingness to refer for PrEP and anticipated feasibility of a PrEP referral system is encouraging. These results support the need for future educational efforts among PEM providers and creation of referral systems for PrEP services from the PED., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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45. Developing a multimodal maternal infant perinatal outpatient delivery system: the MOMI PODS program.
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Bose Brill S, Juckett LA, D'Amico Gordon R, Thomas N, Bunger A, Fareed N, Voisin C, Flores P, Mao S, Benninger KL, Grobman W, Panchal B, Gillespie S, and Lorenz A
- Abstract
Progress in maternal child health has been hampered by poor rates of outpatient follow up for postpartum individuals. Primary care after delivery can effectively detect and treat several pregnancy-related complications and comorbidities, but postpartum linkage to primary care remains low. In this manuscript, we share the experience of implementing a novel mother-infant dyad program, the Multimodal Maternal Infant Perinatal Outpatient Delivery System (MOMI PODS), to improve primary care linkage and community resource access postpartum via integration into pediatric care structures. With a focus on providing care for people who are publicly insured, we designed a program to mitigate maternal morbidity risk factors in postpartum individuals with chronic disease or pregnancy complications. We discuss the systematic process of designing, executing, and evaluating a collaborative clinical program with involvement of internal medicine/pediatric, family medicine, and obstetric clinicians via establishing stakeholders, identifying best practices, drawing from the evidence base, designing training and promotional materials, training partners and providers, and evaluating clinic enrollment. We share the challenges encountered such as in achieving sufficient provider capacity, consistent provision of care, scheduling, and data tracking, as well as mitigation strategies to overcome these barriers. Overall, MOMI PODS is an innovative approach that integrates outpatient postpartum care into traditional pediatric structures to increase access, showing significant promise to improve healthcare utilization and promote postpartum health., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (© 2023 Bose Brill, Juckett, D'Amico Gordon, Thomas, Bunger, Fareed, Voisin, Flores, Mao, Benninger, Grobman, Panchal, Gillespie and Lorenz.)
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- 2023
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46. Patient-reported outcomes in children with sickle cell disease at presentation for an acute pain episode.
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Bakshi N, Liu Z, Gillespie S, Keesari R, Leake D, Khemani K, Kumari P, Rees CA, Dampier C, and Morris CR
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- Humans, Child, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Acute Pain etiology, Anemia, Sickle Cell complications
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- 2023
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47. Abatacept for the prevention of GVHD in patients receiving mismatched unrelated transplants: a real-world analysis.
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Raghunandan S, Gorfinkel L, Graiser M, Bratrude B, Suessmuth Y, Gillespie S, Westbrook AL, Williams KM, Schoettler ML, Kean LS, Horan J, Langston AA, Qayed M, and Watkins B
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- Humans, Abatacept therapeutic use, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation adverse effects, Graft vs Host Disease etiology, Graft vs Host Disease prevention & control
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- 2023
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48. Establishing a clinical informatics umbilical cord: lessons learned in launching infrastructure to support dyadic mother/infant primary care.
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Bose-Brill S, D'Amico R, Bartley A, Ashmead R, Flores-Beamon P, Jallaq S, Li K, Mao S, Gillespie S, Fareed N, Venkatesh KK, Crossnohere NL, Davis J, Bunger AC, and Lorenz A
- Abstract
The Multimodal Maternal Infant Perinatal Outpatient Delivery System (MOMI PODS) was developed to facilitate the pregnancy to postpartum primary care transition, particularly for individuals at risk for severe maternal morbidity, via a unique multidisciplinary model of mother/infant dyadic primary care. Specialized clinical informatics platforms are critical to ensuring the feasibility and scalability of MOMI PODS and a smooth perinatal transition into longitudinal postpartum primary care. In this manuscript, we describe the MOMI PODS transition and management clinical informatics platforms developed to facilitate MOMI PODS referrals, scheduling, evidence-based multidisciplinary care, and program evaluation. We discuss opportunities and lessons learned associated with our applied methods, as advances in clinical informatics have considerable potential to enhance the quality and evaluation of innovative maternal health programs like MOMI PODS., Competing Interests: None declared., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association.)
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- 2023
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49. Changes in pediatric injuries sustained while engaged in activities where helmet usage is recommended during the COVID-19 pandemic.
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Troy BM, Fraser Doh K, Linden AF, Xiang Y, Gillespie S, and Agarwal M
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Background: Unintentional injuries, including traumatic brain injuries (TBI), are the leading cause of pediatric morbidity and mortality in the USA. Helmet usage can reduce TBI incidence and severity; however, the epidemiology of pediatric TBI and helmet use is ever evolving. With lifestyle changes potentially accelerated by the pandemic, we predicted a decrease in helmet utilization with an associated increase in TBI during the pandemic compared to the pre-pandemic period., Results: There were 1093 patients that presented with AWHUR injuries from 2018 to 2020 with an annual increase from 263 patients in 2018 up to 492 in 2020. The most frequently implicated mechanisms included bicycles (35.9%), ATVs (20.3%), skateboards (11.6%), scooters (8.3%), and dirt bikes (7.4%). Unhelmeted patients increased from 111 (58.7%) in 2018 to 258 (64.8%) in 2020. There was not a significant difference in the proportion of injuries that were unhelmeted from 38.9% in 2018-2019 to 35.2% in 2020 (p = 0.30), as well as the proportion of head injuries from 2018 to 2019 (24.3%) to 2020 (29.3%) (p = 0.07). A significant increase was seen in neurosurgical consultation from 17 (6.5%) in 2018 to 87 (17.7%) in 2020 (p = 0.02). Notably, there was an increase in the percentage of publicly insured patients presenting with injuries from AWHUR during 2020 (p < 0.001); this group also had suboptimal helmet usage., Conclusion: This study found an increase in patients presenting with injuries sustained while engaged in AWHUR in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic. Concerningly, there was a trend toward decreased helmet utilization and increased injury severity markers. Further analysis is needed into the communities impacted the most by AWHUR injuries., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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50. Evaluation of the diagnostic performance of the urine dipstick test for the detection of urinary tract infections in patients treated in Kenyan hospitals.
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Maina J, Mwaniki J, Mwiti F, Kiiru S, Katana J, Wanja F, Mukaya J, Khasabuli O, Asiimwe B, Gillespie S, Stelling J, Mshana S, Holden M, Sabiiti W, and Kiiru J
- Abstract
Introduction: Culture is the gold-standard diagnosis for urinary tract infections (UTIs). However, most hospitals in low-resource countries lack adequately equipped laboratories and relevant expertise to perform culture and, therefore, rely heavily on dipstick tests for UTI diagnosis., Research Gap: In many Kenyan hospitals, routine evaluations are rarely done to assess the accuracy of popular screening tests such as the dipstick test. As such, there is a substantial risk of misdiagnosis emanating from inaccuracy in proxy screening tests. This may result in misuse, under-use or over-use of antimicrobials., Aim: The present study aimed to assess the accuracy of the urine dipstick test as a proxy for the diagnosis of UTIs in selected Kenyan hospitals., Methods: A hospital-based cross-sectional method was used. The utility of dipstick in the diagnosis of UTIs was assessed using midstream urine against culture as the gold standard., Results: The dipstick test predicted 1416 positive UTIs, but only 1027 were confirmed positive by culture, translating to a prevalence of 54.1 %. The sensitivity of the dipstick test was better when leucocytes and nitrite tests were combined (63.1 %) than when the two tests were separate (62.6 and 50.7 %, respectively). Similarly, the two tests combined had a better positive predictive value (87.0 %) than either test alone. The nitrite test had the best specificity (89.8 %) and negative predictive value (97.4 %) than leucocytes esterase (L.E) or both tests combined. In addition, sensitivity in samples from inpatients (69.2 %) was higher than from outpatients (62.7 %). Furthermore, the dipstick test had a better sensitivity and positive predictive value among female (66.0 and 88.6 %) than male patients (44.3 and 73.9 %). Among the various patient age groups, the dipstick test's sensitivity and positive predictive value were exceptionally high in patients ≥75 years old (87.5 and 93.3 %)., Conclusion: Discrepancies in prevalence from the urine dipstick test and culture, the gold standard, indicate dipstick test inadequacy for accurate UTI diagnosis. The finding also demonstrates the need for urine culture for accurate UTI diagnosis. However, considering it is not always possible to perform a culture, especially in low-resource settings, future studies are needed to combine specific UTI symptoms and dipstick results to assess possible increases in the test's sensitivity. There is also a need to develop readily available and affordable algorithms that can detect UTIs where culture is not available., Competing Interests: The author(s) declare that there are no conflicts of interest, (© 2023 The Authors.)
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- 2023
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