22 results on '"Reyes Nieva, Harry"'
Search Results
2. Terminations in Primary Care: a Retrospective Observational Study of 16 Primary Care Clinics
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Groisser, Alissa R., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Ruan, Elise, Wright, Adam, and Schiff, Gordon D.
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- 2022
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3. Professional-Patient Boundaries: a National Survey of Primary Care Physicians’ Attitudes and Practices
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Reyes Nieva, Harry, Ruan, Elise, and Schiff, Gordon D.
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- 2020
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4. Overactive bladder in an integrated delivery system: a longitudinal cohort study
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Linder, Jeffrey A., Weissman, Joel S., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Lipsitz, Stuart, Haring, R. Sterling, DeAngelis, Julie, Kristy, Rita M., and Loughlin, Kevin R.
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- 2020
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5. Scale-up of networked HIV treatment in Nigeria: Creation of an integrated electronic medical records system
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Chaplin, Beth, Meloni, Seema, Eisen, Geoffrey, Jolayemi, Toyin, Banigbe, Bolanle, Adeola, Juliette, Wen, Craig, Reyes Nieva, Harry, Chang, Charlotte, Okonkwo, Prosper, and Kanki, Phyllis
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- 2015
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6. What works in medication reconciliation: an on-treatment and site analysis of the MARQUIS2 study.
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Schnipper, Jeffrey L., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Yoon, Catherine, Mallouk, Meghan, Mixon, Amanda S., Rennke, Stephanie, Chu, Eugene S., Mueller, Stephanie K., Smith Jr., G. Randy, Williams, Mark V., Wetterneck, Tosha B., Stein, Jason, Dalal, Anuj K., Labonville, Stephanie, Sridharan, Anirudh, Stolldorf, Deonni P., Orav, Endel John, Gresham, Marcus, Goldstein, Jenna, and Platt, Sara
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COUNSELING ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MEDICATION errors ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DOCUMENTATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUALITY assurance ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDICATION reconciliation ,DISCHARGE planning ,PATIENT safety - Abstract
Background The second Multicenter Medication Reconciliation Quality Improvement Study demonstrated a marked reduction in medication discrepancies per patient. The aim of the current analysis was to determine the association of patient exposure to each system-level intervention and receipt of each patient-level intervention on these results. Methods This study was conducted at 17 North American Hospitals, the study period was 18 months per site, and sites typically adopted interventions after 2-5 months of preintervention data collection. We conducted an on-treatment analysis (ie, an evaluation of outcomes based on patient exposure) of systemlevel interventions, both at the category level and at the individual component level, based on monthly surveys of implementation site leads at each site (response rate 65%). We then conducted a similar analysis of patient-level interventions, as determined by study pharmacist review of documented activities in the medical record. We analysed the association of each intervention on the adjusted number of medication discrepancies per patient in admission and discharge orders, based on a random sample of up to 22 patients per month per site, using mixed-effects Poisson regression with hospital site as a random effect. We then used a generalised linear mixed-effects model (GLMM) decision tree to determine which patient-level interventions explained the most variance in discrepancy rates. Results Among 4947 patients, patient exposure to seven of the eight system-level component categories was associated with modest but significant reductions in discrepancy rates (adjusted rate ratios (ARR) 0.75-0.97), as were 15 of the 17 individual system-level intervention components, including hiring, reallocating and training personnel to take a best possible medication history (BPMH) and training personnel to perform discharge medication reconciliation and patient counselling. Receipt of five of seven patient-level interventions was independently associated with large reductions in discrepancy rates, including receipt of a BPMH in the emergency department (ED) by a trained clinician (ARR 0.40, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.43), admission medication reconciliation by a trained clinician (ARR 0.57, 95% CI 0.50 to 0.64) and discharge medication reconciliation by a trained clinician (ARR 0.64, 95% CI 0.57 to 0.73). In GLMM decision tree analyses, patients who received both a BPMH in the ED and discharge medication reconciliation by a trained clinician experienced the lowest discrepancy rates (0.08 per medication per patient). Conclusion and relevance Patient-level interventions most associated with reductions in discrepancies were receipt of a BPMH of admitted patients in the ED and admission and discharge medication reconciliation by a trained clinician. System-level interventions were associated with modest reduction in discrepancies for the average patient but are likely important to support patient-level interventions and may reach more patients. These findings can be used to help hospitals and health systems prioritise interventions to improve medication safety during care transitions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Acute Care Utilization by Patients After Graduation of Their Resident Primary Care Physicians
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Solomon, Sonja R., Gooding, Holly C., Reyes Nieva, Harry, and Linder, Jeffrey A.
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- 2015
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8. Characteristics of Disease-Specific and Generic Diagnostic Pitfalls
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Schiff, Gordon D., Volodarskaya, Mayya, Ruan, Elise, Lim, Andrea, Wright, Adam, Singh, Hardeep, and Reyes Nieva, Harry
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Adult ,Male ,Medical Errors ,Research ,Health Policy ,Malpractice ,Middle Aged ,Online Only ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Ambulatory Care ,Humans ,Disease ,Female ,Diagnostic Errors ,Qualitative Research ,Original Investigation ,Quality of Health Care ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Key Points Question Are there similarities among clinical situations associated with diagnostic errors? Findings This qualitative study identified 836 relevant cases among 4325 patient safety incident reports, 403 closed malpractice claims, 24 morbidity and mortality reports, and 355 focus group responses. From these, 661 disease-specific and 21 generic diagnostic “pitfalls” were identified. Meaning Diagnostic pitfalls represent a potentially useful construct that bridges cognitive and systems diagnosis error approaches because they can delineate and demonstrate recurrent patterns of diagnostic error., Importance Progress in understanding and preventing diagnostic errors has been modest. New approaches are needed to help clinicians anticipate and prevent such errors. Delineating recurring diagnostic pitfalls holds potential for conceptual and practical ways for improvement. Objectives To develop the construct and collect examples of “diagnostic pitfalls,” defined as clinical situations and scenarios vulnerable to errors that may lead to missed, delayed, or wrong diagnoses. Design, Setting, and Participants This qualitative study used data from January 1, 2004, to December 31, 2016, from retrospective analysis of diagnosis-related patient safety incident reports, closed malpractice claims, and ambulatory morbidity and mortality conferences, as well as specialty focus groups. Data analyses were conducted between January 1, 2017, and December 31, 2019. Main Outcomes and Measures From each data source, potential diagnostic error cases were identified, and the following information was extracted: erroneous and correct diagnoses, presenting signs and symptoms, and areas of breakdowns in the diagnostic process (using Diagnosis Error Evaluation and Research and Reliable Diagnosis Challenges taxonomies). From this compilation, examples were collected of disease-specific pitfalls; this list was used to conduct a qualitative analysis of emerging themes to derive a generic taxonomy of diagnostic pitfalls. Results A total of 836 relevant cases were identified among 4325 patient safety incident reports, 403 closed malpractice claims, 24 ambulatory morbidity and mortality conferences, and 355 focus groups responses. From these, 661 disease-specific diagnostic pitfalls were identified. A qualitative review of these disease-specific pitfalls identified 21 generic diagnostic pitfalls categories, which included mistaking one disease for another disease (eg, aortic dissection is misdiagnosed as acute myocardial infarction), failure to appreciate test result limitations, and atypical disease presentations. Conclusions and Relevance Recurring types of pitfalls were identified and collected from diagnostic error cases. Clinicians could benefit from knowledge of both disease-specific and generic cross-cutting pitfalls. Study findings can potentially inform educational and quality improvement efforts to anticipate and prevent future errors., This qualitative study develops the construct and collects examples of diagnostic pitfalls, defined as clinical situations and scenarios vulnerable to errors that may lead to missed, delayed, or wrong diagnoses.
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- 2022
9. Antiviral and Antibiotic Prescribing for Influenza in Primary Care
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Linder, Jeffrey A., Reyes Nieva, Harry, and Blumentals, William A.
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- 2009
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10. Effects of a refined evidence-based toolkit and mentored implementation on medication reconciliation at 18 hospitals: results of the MARQUIS2 study.
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Schnipper, Jeffrey L., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Mallouk, Meghan, Mixon, Amanda, Rennke, Stephanie, Chu, Eugene, Mueller, Stephanie, Smith Jr, Gregory Randy R., Williams, Mark V., Wetterneck, Tosha B., Stein, Jason, Dalal, Anuj, Labonville, Stephanie, Sridharan, Anirudh, Stolldorf, Deonni P., Orav, E. John, Levin, Brian, Gresham, Marcus, Yoon, Cathy, and Goldstein, Jenna
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MEDICATION error prevention ,HOSPITALS ,RESEARCH ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,MENTORING ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,HUMAN services programs ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,TIME series analysis ,DRUGS ,MEDICAL history taking ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MEDICATION reconciliation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,SECONDARY analysis ,PATIENT discharge instructions - Abstract
Background The first Multicenter Medication Reconciliation Quality Improvement (QI) Study (MARQUIS1) demonstrated that mentored implementation of a medication reconciliation best practices toolkit decreased total unintentional medication discrepancies in five hospitals, but results varied by site. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a refined toolkit on a larger group of hospitals. Methods We conducted a pragmatic quality improvement study (MARQUIS2) at 18 North American hospitals or hospital systems from 2016 to 2018. Incorporating lessons learnt from MARQUIS1, we implemented a refined toolkit, offering 17 system-level and 6 patient- level interventions. One of eight physician mentors coached each site via monthly calls and performed one to two site visits. The primary outcome was number of unintentional medication discrepancies in admission or discharge orders per patient. Time series analysis used multivariable Poisson regression. Results A total of 4947 patients were sampled, including 1229 patients preimplementation and 3718 patients postimplementation. Both the number of system-level interventions adopted per site and the proportion of patients receiving patient- level interventions increased over time. During the intervention, patients experienced a steady decline in their medication discrepancy rate from 2.85 discrepancies per patient to 0.98 discrepancies per patient. An interrupted time series analysis of the 17 sites with sufficient data for analysis showed the intervention was associated with a 5% relative decrease in discrepancies per month over baseline temporal trends (adjusted incidence rate ratio: 0.95, 95% CI 0.93 to 0.97, p<0.001). Receipt of patient- level interventions was associated with decreased discrepancy rates, and these associations increased over time as sites adopted more system- level interventions. Conclusion A multicentre medication reconciliation QI initiative using mentored implementation of a refined best practices toolkit, including patient-level and system-level interventions, was associated with a substantial decrease in unintentional medication discrepancies over time. Future efforts should focus on sustainability and spread. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Exploring Tai Chi Exercise and Mind-Body Breathing in Patients with COPD in a Randomized Controlled Feasibility Trial.
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Kraemer, Kristen M., Litrownik, Daniel, Moy, Marilyn L., Wayne, Peter M., Beach, Douglas, Klings, Elizabeth S., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Pinheiro, Adlin, Davis, Roger B., and Yeh, Gloria Y.
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TAI chi ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,BREATHING exercises ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,QUALITY of life - Abstract
In this pilot feasibility randomized controlled trial, participants with moderate to severe COPD were randomized to a 12-week tai chi or MBB intervention. Participants were assessed at baseline, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Feasibility, as assessed by intervention adherence, was the primary outcome. We also estimated preliminary between-group differences in COPD symptoms and health-related quality of life, cognitive-emotional function, and functional status across three timepoints: baseline, 12, and 24 weeks. A total of 92 participants were randomized 2:1 to tai chi (n = 61) or MBB (n = 31). The overall group adherence in the first 12 weeks was 62% in tai chi and 75% in MBB. From baseline to 12 weeks, tai chi demonstrated greater improvements in depressive symptoms (Cohen's d effect size (ES) = −.53; adj mean diff = −2.31 [-5.7, 1.07]), 6-minute walk test distance (ES =.47; adj mean diff = 62.04 [2.85, 121.22]), social support (ES =.36; adj mean diff =.19 [-0.11, 0.49]) and chair stand (ES =.44; adj mean diff =.91 [-0.05, 1.86]). Only improvements in social support were maintained at 24-week follow-up. Tai chi and MBB are feasible for individuals with COPD. Preliminary effects suggest that while our mindful breathing intervention may not be sufficient to impact outcomes, tai chi may result in short-term benefits in mood, social support and functional capacity. More work is needed to better understand mindful breathing for COPD and to examine methods for maintaining improvements from tai chi over time. Supplemental data for this article is available online at https://doi.org/10.1080/15412555.2021.1928037. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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12. Randomized Trial of Reducing Ambulatory Malpractice and Safety Risk: Results of the Massachusetts PROMISES Project.
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Schiff, Gordon D., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Griswold, Paula, Leydon, Nicholas, Ling, Judy, Federico, Frank, Keohane, Carol, Ellis, Bonnie R., Foskett, Cathy, Orav, E. John, Yoon, Catherine, Goldmann, Don, Weissman, Joel S., Bates, David W., Biondolillo, Madeleine, and Singer, Sara J.
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- 2017
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13. Addressing Ambulatory Safety and Malpractice: The Massachusetts PROMISES Project.
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Schiff, Gordon D., Reyes Nieva, Harry, Griswold, Paula, Leydon, Nicholas, Ling, Judy, Biondolillo, Madeleine, and Singer, Sara J.
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MEDICAL malpractice , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *OUTPATIENT medical care , *PATIENT safety , *PREVENTION - Abstract
The authors comments on the viability of the Massachusetts Proactive Reduction of Outpatient Malpractice: Improving Safety, Efficiency, and Satisfaction (PROMISES) project in addressing ambulatory safety and malpractice. Topics covered include a description of how the intervention was developed and fielded, the lessons learned in the course of the project, and implications for future efforts in the field of malpractice claims in the ambulatory setting.
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- 2016
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14. Evaluating Ambulatory Practice Safety: The PROMISES Project Administrators and Practice Staff Surveys.
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Singer, Sara J, Reyes Nieva, Harry, Brede, Namara, Ling, Judy, Leydon, Nicholas, Weissman, Joel S, Goldmann, Don, Griswold, Paula, Yoon, Catherine, Orav, E John, Bates, David W, Biondolillo, Madeleine, and Schiff, Gordon D
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- 2015
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15. Doing Right by Our Patients When Things Go Wrong in the Ambulatory Setting.
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Schiff, Gordon, Griswold, Paula, Ellis, Bonnie R., Puopolo, Ann Louise, Brede, Namara, Reyes Nieva, Harry, Federico, Frank, Leydon, Nicholas, Ling, Judy, Wachenheim, Deborah, Leape, Lucian L., and Biondolillo, Madeleine
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- 2014
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16. Mining the health disparities and minority health bibliome: A computational scoping review and gap analysis of 200,000+ articles.
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Reyes Nieva H, Bakken S, and Elhadad N
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- Humans, Mental Health, Health Inequities, Minority Health, Hearing
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Without comprehensive examination of available literature on health disparities and minority health (HDMH), the field is left vulnerable to disproportionately focus on specific populations or conditions, curtailing our ability to fully advance health equity. Using scalable open-source methods, we conducted a computational scoping review of more than 200,000 articles to investigate major populations, conditions, and themes as well as notable gaps. We also compared trends in studied conditions to their relative prevalence using insurance claims (42 million Americans). HDMH publications represent 1% of articles in Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE). Most studies are observational in nature, although randomized trial reporting has increased fivefold in the past 20 years. Half of HDMH articles concentrate on only three disease groups (cancer, mental health, and endocrine/metabolic disorders), while hearing, vision, and skin-related conditions are among the least well represented despite substantial prevalence. To support further investigation, we present HDMH Monitor, an interactive dashboard and repository generated from the HDMH bibliome.
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- 2024
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17. Using a Health Information Exchange to Characterize Changes in HIV Viral Load Suppression and Disparities During the COVID-19 Pandemic in New York City.
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Tucker E, Reyes Nieva H, Schiffer K, Yin MT, Castor D, Gordon P, Elhadad N, and Zucker J
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Background: HIV viral suppression requires sustained engagement in care. The COVID-19 pandemic challenged care accessibility for many people living with HIV (PLWH). We used health information exchange data to evaluate the effect of pandemic-related disruptions in HIV care on viral load suppression (VLS) and to examine racial/ethnic disparities in VLS., Methods: We performed a retrospective observational cohort study of PLWH using data from a regional health information exchange in the New York City region between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2022. We established 2 cohorts: PLWH who received HIV care in 2020 (cohort A) and PLWH who did not receive HIV care in 2020 (cohort B). We categorized HIV VLS outcomes as suppressed or not suppressed and calculated the prevalence of VLS between 2018 and 2022. We compared proportions using chi-square tests and used unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression to estimate the association among variables, including race/ethnicity, cohort, and VLS., Results: Of 5 301 578 patients, 34 611 met our inclusion criteria for PLWH, 11 653 for cohort A, and 3141 for cohort B. In 2019, cohort B had a lower prevalence of VLS than cohort A (86% vs 89%, P < .001). Between 2019 and 2021, VLS dropped significantly among cohort B (86% to 81%, P < .001) while staying constant in cohort A (89% to 89%, P = .62). By 2022, members of cohort B were less likely than cohort A to be receiving HIV care in New York City (74% vs 88%, P < .001). Within both cohorts, Black and Hispanic patients had lower odds of VLS than White patients., Conclusions: In New York City, VLS remained high among PLWH who continued to receive care in 2020 and dropped among PLWH who did not receive care. VLS was lower among Black and Hispanic patients even after controlling for receipt of care., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All authors: No reported conflicts., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America.)
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- 2023
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18. A metadata framework for computational phenotypes.
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Spotnitz M, Acharya N, Cimino JJ, Murphy S, Namjou B, Crimmins N, Walunas T, Liu C, Crosslin D, Benoit B, Rosenthal E, Pacheco JA, Ostropolets A, Reyes Nieva H, Patterson JS, Richter LR, Callahan TJ, Elhussein A, Pang C, Kiryluk K, Nestor J, Khan A, Mohan S, Minty E, Chung W, Wei WQ, Natarajan K, and Weng C
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With the burgeoning development of computational phenotypes, it is increasingly difficult to identify the right phenotype for the right tasks. This study uses a mixed-methods approach to develop and evaluate a novel metadata framework for retrieval of and reusing computational phenotypes. Twenty active phenotyping researchers from 2 large research networks, Electronic Medical Records and Genomics and Observational Health Data Sciences and Informatics, were recruited to suggest metadata elements. Once consensus was reached on 39 metadata elements, 47 new researchers were surveyed to evaluate the utility of the metadata framework. The survey consisted of 5-Likert multiple-choice questions and open-ended questions. Two more researchers were asked to use the metadata framework to annotate 8 type-2 diabetes mellitus phenotypes. More than 90% of the survey respondents rated metadata elements regarding phenotype definition and validation methods and metrics positively with a score of 4 or 5. Both researchers completed annotation of each phenotype within 60 min. Our thematic analysis of the narrative feedback indicates that the metadata framework was effective in capturing rich and explicit descriptions and enabling the search for phenotypes, compliance with data standards, and comprehensive validation metrics. Current limitations were its complexity for data collection and the entailed human costs., 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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19. Timeliness of Point-of-Care Viral Load Results Improves Human Immunodeficiency Virus Monitoring in Nigeria.
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Chaplin B, Agbaji O, Reyes Nieva H, Olatunde B, Chang C, Mitruka K, Sule H, Dajel T, Zee A, Ahmed ML, Ahmed I, Okonkwo P, Rawizza H, and Kanki P
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- Humans, Point-of-Care Systems, Viral Load methods, Nigeria, Point-of-Care Testing, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections drug therapy, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV-1 genetics
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Background: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) viral load (VL) monitoring is critical for antiretroviral therapy (ART) management. Point-of-care (POC) VL testing has been reported to be feasible and preferred over standard-of-care (SOC) testing in many low- and middle-income country settings where rapid results could improve patient outcomes., Methods: The timeliness of receipt of VL results was evaluated in an open-label, randomized, controlled trial among patients newly initiating ART. Clinical outcomes with POC VL monitoring using Cepheid Xpert vs SOC VL at Jos University Teaching Hospital and Comprehensive Health Centre Zamko in Nigeria were assessed. We determined time between specimen collection and recording of VL in patient charts, receipt of results, and ART switch for those who met virologic failure criteria., Results: Between April 2018 and October 2019, we screened 696 ART-naive individuals; 273 were randomized to POC and 268 to SOC HIV-1 VL testing. Participants in the POC arm received VL results significantly faster than those in the SOC arm (0.1 median days, interquartile range [IQR], 0.1-0.2 vs 143.1 days, IQR, 56.0-177.1, respectively; P < .0001). Participants in the POC arm with confirmed virologic failure vs those in the SOC arm were switched more rapidly to a second-line regimen (0 median days, IQR, 0-28 vs 66 days, IQR, 63-123, respectively; P = .03)., Conclusions: POC VL testing resulted in significant improvement in the timeliness of VL result receipt by patients and use for effective HIV clinical management. In patients experiencing VL failure, POC monitoring enabled prompt switching to second-line ART regimens., Clinical Trials Registration: NCT03533868., Competing Interests: Potential conflicts of interest. All remaining authors: No reported conflicts of interest. All authors have submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. Conflicts that the editors consider relevant to the content of the manuscript have been disclosed., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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20. A scoping review of ethics considerations in clinical natural language processing.
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Bear Don't Walk OJ 4th, Reyes Nieva H, Lee SS, and Elhadad N
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Objectives: To review through an ethics lens the state of research in clinical natural language processing (NLP) for the study of bias and fairness, and to identify gaps in research., Methods: We queried PubMed and Google Scholar for articles published between 2015 and 2021 concerning clinical NLP, bias, and fairness. We analyzed articles using a framework that combines the machine learning (ML) development process (ie, design, data, algorithm, and critique) and bioethical concepts of beneficence, nonmaleficence, autonomy, justice, as well as explicability. Our approach further differentiated between biases of clinical text (eg, systemic or personal biases in clinical documentation towards patients) and biases in NLP applications., Results: Out of 1162 articles screened, 22 met criteria for full text review. We categorized articles based on the design ( N = 2), data ( N = 12), algorithm ( N = 14), and critique ( N = 17) phases of the ML development process., Discussion: Clinical NLP can be used to study bias in applications reliant on clinical text data as well as explore biases in the healthcare setting. We identify 3 areas of active research that require unique ethical considerations about the potential for clinical NLP to address and/or perpetuate bias: (1) selecting metrics that interrogate bias in models; (2) opportunities and risks of identifying sensitive patient attributes; and (3) best practices in reconciling individual autonomy, leveraging patient data, and inferring and manipulating sensitive information of subgroups. Finally, we address the limitations of current ethical frameworks to fully address concerns of justice. Clinical NLP is a rapidly advancing field, and assessing current approaches against ethical considerations can help the discipline use clinical NLP to explore both healthcare biases and equitable NLP applications., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association.)
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- 2022
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21. BEAM study (Breathing, Education, Awareness, Movement): a randomised controlled feasibility trial of tai chi exercise in patients with COPD.
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Yeh GY, Litrownik D, Wayne PM, Beach D, Klings ES, Reyes Nieva H, Pinheiro A, Davis RB, and Moy ML
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- Aged, Dyspnea therapy, Exercise, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive therapy, Tai Ji
- Abstract
Background: Despite therapeutic advances, the management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) remains complex. There is growing interest in multidimensional, mind-body exercises to improve both physical and psychosocial aspects of COPD burden. Few US data are available in this population on tai chi (TC) a mind-body exercise incorporating physical activity, breathing and mindful awareness. We explored feasibility and preliminary efficacy of TC in COPD in an US academic medical setting., Methods: Patients with COPD Global Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stages 2-4 were randomised to a 12-week TC programme or education control. At 12 weeks, those in TC were randomised again to continue in maintenance classes or not to further explore optimal duration. All groups were followed to 24 weeks. Feasibility/safety parameters were analysed descriptively. Preliminary between-group differences were estimated in symptoms (dyspnoea, fatigue), health-related quality-of-life (Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire CRQ), cognitive-emotional measures (mood, COPD self-efficacy) and functional status (6 min walk test, lower body strength, flexibility, physical activity)., Results: Ninety-two subjects were randomised (N=61 TC, N=31 education). Mean age was 68±8 years, 66% male, mean forced expiratory volume in 1 s % predicted 57±13, 28% were GOLD stage 3-4. Overall retention was 85%. Nineteen adverse events occurred, most being study-unrelated COPD exacerbations. From baseline to 12 weeks, there were between-group improvements favouring TC, in CRQ-total (Cohen's d effect size (ES)=0.46; adj mean diff (AMD)=0.31), CRQ-emotion (ES=0.54; AMD=0.49), Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (ES=-0.37; AMD=2.39) and Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS)-fatigue (ES=-0.34; AMD=-0.17). From baseline to 24 weeks, there was an improvement favouring TC in CRQ-dyspnoea (ES=0.41; AMD=0.46). Among TC participants, there was a positive effect of maintenance classes on self-efficacy (ES=-0.69; AMD=-0.40), 6 min walk (ES=0.56; AMD=49.26 feet), PROMIS-fatigue (ES=-0.41; AMD=-0.28) and chair stand (0.43; AMD=0.56)., Conclusion: TC in patients with COPD is feasible and safe. Preliminary analyses support a potential modest role in improving quality-of-life, cognitive-emotional health and function that should be further studied., Trial Registration Number: NCT01551953., Irb Reference: BIDMC 2010P-000412; VA 2540., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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22. Time of day and the decision to prescribe antibiotics.
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Linder JA, Doctor JN, Friedberg MW, Reyes Nieva H, Birks C, Meeker D, and Fox CR
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- Acute Disease, Adult, Aged, Choice Behavior, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, Physicians psychology, Time Factors, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Decision Making, Drug Prescriptions statistics & numerical data, Fatigue, Office Visits, Physicians statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, Respiratory Tract Infections drug therapy
- Published
- 2014
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