132 results
Search Results
2. PCNEO, a New Proficiency Testing Program for Flow Cytometric Analysis of Plasma Cell Neoplasms From the College of American Pathologists Diagnostic Immunology and Flow Cytometry Committee.
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Dorfman, David M., Devitt, Katherine A., Wei Cui, Bashleben, Christine, Naharro, Elena C. Frye, Hedley, Benjamin, Hupp, Meghan, Karlon, William J., Murphy, Claire E., Cherian, Sindhu, Olteanu, Horatiu, Seifert, Robert P., Rosado, Flavia N., and Linden, Michael A.
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FLOW cytometry , *MULTIPLE myeloma , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *IMMUNOGLOBULIN light chains , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *GLYCOPROTEINS , *CELL lines , *PERIPHERAL circulation , *ANTIGENS , *CYTOPLASM , *MEDICAL laboratories , *QUALITY assurance , *CASE studies , *STAINS & staining (Microscopy) , *PLASMACYTOMA - Abstract
Context.--In 2018 the College of American Pathologists Diagnostic Immunology and Flow Cytometry Committee designed and implemented a new plasma cell neoplasia flow cytometry proficiency testing program--PCNEO--to allow clinical flow cytometry laboratories to monitor and assess their performance compared with a peer group. Objective.--To report the results from the first 4 years of the PCNEO program. Design.--Program participants were sent 2 sets of challenges per year, each including 1 wet challenge and 2 dry challenges, with associated clinical and laboratory findings. The wet challenges were composed of myeloma cell line specimens (with or without dilution in preserved whole blood) for flow cytometric analysis. The dry (paper) challenges were composed of clinical case summaries and images of flow cytometric test results from various flow cytometry laboratories of committee members. Results.--A total of 116 to 145 laboratories from 17 countries enrolled in the proficiency testing program. For the wet challenges, almost all participants (97%--100%; cumulative, 98.2%) correctly identified the presence of neoplastic plasma cell populations based on flow cytometric analysis of undiluted myeloma cell lines. Slightly fewer participants (89.0%--97.4%; cumulative, 95.2%) correctly identified the presence of neoplastic plasma cell populations based on flow cytometric analysis of diluted myeloma cell lines (10% or 50% dilutions into peripheral blood) intended to better represent a typical clinical sample. There was generally agreement among 80% or more of participants for positive or negative staining for CD38, CD138, CD19, CD20, and surface and cytoplasmic K and λ light chains. Similarly, 84% to 100% of participants were able to correctly identify the presence of neoplastic plasma cell populations in paper challenges, including the presence of small, neoplastic plasma cell populations (0.01%--5.0% clonal plasma cells) and the presence of nonneoplastic plasma cell populations (correctly identified by 91%--96% of participants). Conclusions.--Participant performance in the new proficiency testing program was excellent overall, with the vast majority of participants able to perform flow cytometric analysis and identify neoplastic plasma cell populations and to identify small plasma cell clones or expanded populations of reactive plasma cells in dry challenge flow cytometry results. This program will allow laboratories to verify the accuracy of their testing program and test interpretations for the assessment of patients suspected of having a plasma cell neoplasm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. A bibliometric review on vitamins and Alzheimer's disease between 1996 and 2023.
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Xiaoyu Sun, Haichun Xu, Huiling Qu, and Wenwu Dong
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VITAMINS ,PUBLISHING ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,BETA carotene ,NEUROLOGY ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,BIBLIOMETRICS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,SERIAL publications ,VITAMIN E ,COGNITION ,OXIDATIVE stress ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DEMENTIA ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a major disease that affects the elderly worldwide. Several studies have revealed that vitamins may influence the risk of developing AD. However, information in this field remains ambiguous. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the relationship between AD and vitamins, identify journal publications and collaborators, and analyze keywords and research trends using a bibliometric method. Methods: We systematically searched the Web of Science (WOS) Core Collection for papers published on AD and vitamins. Retrieved data regarding institutions, journals, countries, authors, journal distribution, keywords, and so on. SPSS 25 software was used for the statistical analysis, and CiteSpace V.6.1.R6 was used to visualize the information through collaborative networks. Results: A total of 2,838 publications were ultimately included in accordance with the specified inclusion criteria. The number of publications gradually increased from 1996 to 2023, with papers published in 87 countries/regions and 329 institutions. China (centrality: 0.02) and the University of Kentucky (centrality: 0.09) were the major research countries and institutions, respectively. NEUROLOGY was cited most frequently, reaching 1,573, and had the greatest impact. The cited keywords show that "Alzheimer's disease," "oxidative stress," "vitamin E," and "dementia" have been research hotspots in recent years. Beta-carotene emerged in 2023 and was identified as a developmental trend in this field. Conclusion: This is the first bibliometric analysis of vitamins associated with AD. We identified 2,838 articles in the field of vitamins and AD, analyzed the information of major countries/regions, institutions, and core journals in this field, and summarized the research hotspots and frontiers. These findings provide useful information for researchers to explore the role of vitamins in AD further. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Laboratory medicine -- an American system: discussion paper.
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Ferns, G. A. A. and Austin, D.
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CLINICAL pathology ,UNIVERSITY hospitals ,ACADEMIC medical centers - Abstract
The article focuses on laboratory medicine in the United States with an example of the University of Washington Hospital Medical Center (UWHMC) in Seattle, Washington. The organization of laboratory medicine varies according to local needs and history. Clinical chemistry, microbiology, immunology, genetics and informatics are the part of laboratory medicine. Detailed information about the UWHMC is provided.
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- 1990
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5. Roles of Academic Writers in a Department: Benefits, Structures, and Funding.
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Weidner, Amanda, Elwood, Samantha, Thacker, Erin E., Furst, Wendy, Partington, Leigh, Asif, Irfan, Zazove, Philip, Johnson II, Theodore M., Okuyemi, Kola, Gilchrist, Valerie, Asif, Irfan M, and Johnson, Theodore M 2nd
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,MASS media ,FAMILY medicine ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Background and Objectives: Despite the prevalence of published opinions about the use of professional academic writers to help disseminate the results of clinical research, particularly opinions about the use of ghost writers, very little information has been published on the possible roles for professional writers within academic medical departments or the mechanisms by which these departments can hire and compensate such writers. To begin addressing this lack of information, the Association of Departments of Family Medicine hosted an online discussion and a subsequent webinar in which we obtained input from three departments of family medicine in the United States regarding their use of academic writers. This discussion revealed three basic models by which academic writers have benefitted these departments: (1) grant writing support, (2) research and academic support for clinical faculty, and (3) departmental communication support. Drawing on specific examples from these institutions, the purpose of this paper is to describe the key support activities, advantages, disadvantages, and funding opportunities for each model for other departments to consider and adapt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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6. Integration of social determinants of health information within the primary care electronic health record: a systematic review of patient perspectives and experiences.
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Caicedo, Nicolle Marianne Arroyave, Parry, Emma, Arslan, Nazan, and Park, Sophie
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CLINICAL medicine ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,SELF-evaluation ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,HUMAN services programs ,FAMILY medicine ,RESEARCH funding ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HEALTH ,PRIMARY health care ,CINAHL database ,INFORMATION resources ,EXPERIENCE ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,THEMATIC analysis ,MEDLINE ,ELECTRONIC health records ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,MEDICAL records ,ACQUISITION of data ,MEDICAL databases ,LITERATURE reviews ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,RESOURCE-limited settings ,MEDICAL screening ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Background: Social determinants of health (SDOH) are the non-medical factors that impact health. Although geographical measures of deprivation are used, individual measures of social risk could identify those most at risk and generate more personalised care and targeted referrals to community resources. We know SDOH are important to health care, but it is not yet known whether their collection via the electronic health record (EHR) is acceptable and useful from the patient perspective. Aim: To synthesise relevant literature to explore patient perspectives on integrating information about SDOH into primary care EHRs, and the opportunities and challenges of its implementation in a general practice setting. Design & setting: Systematic review of primary care-based qualitative and mixed-method studies using thematic framework analysis. Method: Key databases were searched for articles reporting patient perspectives of SDOH collection within the primary care EHR. Qualitative and mixed-methods studies written in English were included. A framework analysis was conducted to identify themes. Results: From 14 included studies, the following five main themes were identified: rationale for SDOH screening and the anticipated outcomes; impact of the provider-patient relationship on patient perceptions; data, which included privacy concerns; screening process and referral; and recommendations for future research. Conclusion: Integration of information on SDOH into the EHR appears acceptable to patients. This review has added to the discussion of whether and how to implement SDOH screening and referral programmes into UK primary care systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. A research roundup of recent papers relevant to wound care.
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MILNE, JEANETTE
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DOCUMENTATION ,ULCER treatment ,RESEARCH evaluation ,LEG ulcers ,WOUND care ,SERIAL publications ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CHRONIC diseases ,CURRICULUM planning ,MEDICAL care costs ,ONLINE information services ,SCIENCE ,WOUND healing ,WOUNDS & injuries ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,ACCESS to information ,CITATION analysis ,ELECTRONIC health records ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
The article presents abstracts on the topic of wound healing research including chronic venous leg ulcer treatment, would healing in medical school curricula in the U.S., and burden of chronic wounds in Great Britain.
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- 2014
8. 2018 Curriculum Study Part B: Accreditation and Curriculum/Internship Characteristics Research Study I Abstract.
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Zahl, Melissa, Stumbo, Norma, Greenwood, Janell, Carter, Marcia Jean, and Wilder, Allison
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MEDICAL education standards ,ACCREDITATION ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,RESEARCH evaluation ,MEDICAL students ,CURRICULUM ,RECREATIONAL therapy ,QUANTITATIVE research ,INTERNSHIP programs ,SURVEYS ,UNDERGRADUATES ,QUALITATIVE research ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MASTERS programs (Higher education) ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CURRICULUM planning ,DATA analysis software ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
This paper is the second in a two-part series reporting results from the 2018 Curriculum Study. The 2018 study is the fifth installment of a decades-long research project that captures descriptive snapshots-in-time of TR curricula. The intent of this curriculum study was to capture an in-depth, descriptive snapshot of TR educational programs in the U.S. and Canada as of 2018. The study results described TR curricula in five areas: (a) accreditation, (b) curriculum/internship, (c) university and unit, (d) faculty, and (e) student characteristics. This paper, Part B, reports on: (a) accreditation and (b) curriculum/ internship characteristics portions of the research. A 64-item online survey was sent to 91 TR program directors with 67 usable surveys returned (73.6% return rate). Half of the responding TR educational programs were accredited by either COAPRT or CARTE. The National Council for Therapeutic Recreation Certification (NCTRC™) standards continued to be the most important driver of curricular changes. Curriculum changes included adding more TR specific courses, more assignments with courses, more TR credit hours, and more internship requirements and assignments, in addition to assessing specific student outcomes. Recommendations are made for future curricular studies and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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9. Assessing the Impact of the NIH CTSA Program on Clinical Trials Registered With ClinicalTrials.gov.
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Berg A
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- Academic Medical Centers economics, Clinical Trials as Topic economics, Research Support as Topic economics, Translational Research, Biomedical economics, United States, Academic Medical Centers statistics & numerical data, Clinical Trials as Topic statistics & numerical data, National Institutes of Health (U.S.) economics, Research Support as Topic statistics & numerical data, Translational Research, Biomedical statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Since 2006, the US Congress has appropriated ~ 7 billion dollars in total toward the (CTSA) program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), representing ~ 1.5% of the NIH total budget. There is no doubt this investment has led to substantial improvements in clinical and translational research, but the impact of these large NIH-sponsored awards to academic medical centers have largely been documented by anecdotal accomplishments. This paper provides a purely quantitative assessment of the impact of these awards on clinical trials registered on ClinicalTrials.gov. In particular, we find a dramatic increase in the number of registered clinical trials and clinical trial enrollment associated with the CTSA grant award. Additionally, the impact is shown to be magnified with the number of years of receiving CTSA funding., (© 2020 The Author. Clinical and Translational Science published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of the American Society of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics.)
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- 2020
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10. Barriers and Facilitators Experienced by Undergraduate Nursing Faculty Teaching Clinical Judgment: A Qualitative Study.
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Kerns, Carolyn and Wedgeworth, Monika
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PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,MEDICAL logic ,WORK ,CLINICAL medicine ,SCHOOL environment ,NURSING school faculty ,QUALITATIVE research ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,PATIENT safety ,NATIONAL Council Licensure Examination for Registered Nurses ,INTERVIEWING ,STATISTICAL sampling ,RESEARCH evaluation ,TEACHING methods ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH methodology ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SCHOOL orientation ,CLINICAL education ,MEDICAL preceptorship ,TEACHER-student relationships ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,NURSING students ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,CRITICAL thinking ,TIME - Abstract
Background: Clinical judgment is declining in new graduate nurses, which affects patient safety and is therefore tested on the Next Generation NCLEX. There is limited research describing barriers and facilitators impacting nursing faculty's experiences teaching clinical judgment. Aims: The purpose of this study was to explore barriers and facilitators affecting undergraduate nursing faculty's clinical judgment teaching methods. Methods: Sixteen qualitative interviews were conducted with full-time nursing faculty at seven universities in the Northeast and Southeast regions of the United States. Results: The findings revealed program, student, and faculty factors affecting clinical judgment teaching methods. Subthemes included time, class size, students' class preparation, critical thinking, task orientation, professional development, and faculty resistance. Conclusion: Minimizing barriers and strengthening facilitators based on participants' practices and previous research can support more effective clinical judgment pedagogy, which has the potential to achieve Next Generation NCLEX success and potentially increase patient safety. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Birthing Parent Experiences of Postpartum at-Home Blood Pressure Monitoring Versus Office-Based Follow up After Diagnosis of Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy.
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Tully, Kristin P., Tharwani, Sonum, Venkatesh, Kartik K., Lapat, Laarni, Farahi, Narges, Glover, Angelica, and Stuebe, Alison M.
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,QUALITATIVE research ,T-test (Statistics) ,STATISTICAL significance ,RESEARCH funding ,PUERPERIUM ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PARENT attitudes ,TERTIARY care ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HYPERTENSION in pregnancy ,TELEMEDICINE ,MEDICAL consultation ,AMBULATORY blood pressure monitoring ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TEXT messages ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are a leading cause of pregnancy-related morbidity and mortality. The primary objective of this study was to compare the frequency of documentation of postpartum blood pressure through remote blood pressure monitoring with text-message delivered reminders versus office-based follow-up 7–10 days postpartum. The secondary objective was to examine barriers and facilitators of both care strategies from the perspectives of individuals who experienced a hypertensive disorder of pregnancy. We conducted a randomized controlled trial at a tertiary care academic medical center in the southeastern US with 100 postpartum individuals (50 per arm) from 2018 to 2019. Among 100 trial participants, blood pressure follow-up within 7–10 days postpartum was higher albeit not statistically significant between postpartum individuals randomized to the remote assessment intervention versus office-based standard care (absolute risk difference 18.0%, 95% CI −0.1 to 36.1%, p = 0.06). Patient-reported facilitators for remote blood pressure monitoring were maternal convenience, clarity of instructions, and reassurance from the health assessments. These positive aspects occurred alongside barriers, which included constraints due to newborn needs and the realities of daily postpartum life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Identification of Pulse Onset on Cerebral Blood Flow Velocity Waveforms: A Comparative Study.
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Asgari, Shadnaz, Canac, Nicolas, Hamilton, Robert, and Scalzo, Fabien
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,BLOOD flow measurement ,CEREBRAL circulation ,COMPARATIVE studies ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,HEMODYNAMICS ,PULSE (Heart beat) ,SIGNAL processing ,TRANSCRANIAL Doppler ultrasonography ,WAVE analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The low cost, simple, noninvasive, and continuous measurement of cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) by transcranial Doppler is becoming a common clinical tool for the assessment of cerebral hemodynamics. CBFV monitoring can also help with noninvasive estimation of intracranial pressure and evaluation of mild traumatic brain injury. Reliable CBFV waveform analysis depends heavily on its accurate beat-to-beat delineation. However, CBFV is inherently contaminated with various types of noise/artifacts and has a wide range of possible pathological waveform morphologies. Thus, pulse onset detection is in general a challenging task for CBFV signal. In this paper, we conducted a comprehensive comparative analysis of three popular pulse onset detection methods using a large annotated dataset of 92,794 CBFV pulses—collected from 108 subarachnoid hemorrhage patients admitted to UCLA Medical Center. We compared these methods not only in terms of their accuracy and computational complexity, but also for their sensitivity to the selection of their parameters' values. The results of this comprehensive study revealed that using optimal values of the parameters obtained from sensitivity analysis, one method can achieve the highest accuracy for CBFV pulse onset detection with true positive rate (TPR) of 97.06% and positive predictivity value (PPV) of 96.48%, when error threshold is set to just less than 10 ms. We conclude that the high accuracy and low computational complexity of this method (average running time of 4ms/pulse) makes it a reliable algorithm for CBFV pulse onset detection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on breast cancer screening in a large midwestern United States academic medical center.
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Johnson, Kimberly J., O'Connell, Caitlin P., Waken, R. J., and Barnes, Justin M.
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ACADEMIC medical centers ,EARLY detection of cancer ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BREAST cancer ,MEDICAL screening ,MAMMOGRAMS - Abstract
Background: Access to breast screening mammogram services decreased during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our objectives were to estimate: 1) the COVID-19 affected period, 2) the proportion of pandemic-associated missed or delayed screening encounters, and 3) pandemic-associated patient attrition in screening encounters overall and by sociodemographic subgroup. Methods: We included screening mammogram encounter EPIC data from 1-1-2019 to 12-31-2022 for females ≥40 years old. We used Bayesian State Space models to describe weekly screening mammogram counts, modeling an interruption that phased in and out between 3-1-2020 and 9-1-2020. We used the posterior predictive distribution to model differences between a predicted, uninterrupted process and the observed screening mammogram counts. We estimated associations between race/ethnicity and age group and return screening mammogram encounters during the pandemic among those with 2019 encounters using logistic regression. Results: Our analysis modeling weekly screening mammogram counts included 231,385 encounters (n = 127,621 women). Model-estimated screening mammograms dropped by >98% between 03-15-2020 and 05-24-2020 followed by a return to pre-pandemic levels or higher with similar results by race/ethnicity and age group. Among 79,257 women, non-Hispanic (NH) Asians, NH Blacks, and Hispanics had significantly (p <.05) lower odds of screening encounter returns during 2020–2022 vs. NH Whites with odds ratios (ORs) from 0.70 to 0.91. Among 79,983 women, those 60–69 had significantly higher odds of any return screening encounter during 2020–2022 (OR = 1.28), while those ≥80 and 40–49 had significantly lower odds (ORs 0.77, 0.45) than those 50–59 years old. A sensitivity analysis suggested a possible pre-existing pattern. Conclusions: These data suggest a short-term pandemic effect on screening mammograms of ~2 months with no evidence of disparities. However, we observed racial/ethnic disparities in screening mammogram returns during the pandemic that may be at least partially pre-existing. These results may inform future pandemic planning and continued efforts to eliminate mammogram screening disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Use and Utility of Patient After‐Visit Instructions at a University Rheumatology Outpatient Clinic: Status and Randomized Prospective Pilot Intervention Study.
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Joseph, Dijo, Hu, Rong, Min, Robert, Jolly, Meenakshi, and Hassan, Sobia
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PATIENT education ,HEALTH literacy ,PATIENT compliance ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,RESEARCH funding ,T-test (Statistics) ,MEDICAL quality control ,SATISFACTION ,HEALTH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,PILOT projects ,TEACHING aids ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,INFORMATION resources ,EVALUATION of medical care ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL appointments ,ELECTRONIC health records ,TELEPHONES ,RHEUMATOLOGY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENT satisfaction ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,PATIENT aftercare ,MEDICAL referrals - Abstract
Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of after‐visit instructions (AVIs) in an academic rheumatology clinic and assess the impact of standardized AVIs (sAVIs) and teach‐back (TB) on comprehension of health information. Methods: A retrospective review of adult patients seen between October 1 and 8, 2021, at the rheumatology clinic collected data on patient demographics, clinical features, and the presence, content, and readability of AVIs. During a subsequent prospective proof‐of‐concept study, routinely scheduled patients seen at the rheumatology clinic were randomized into three groups: control (received standard of care), received sAVIs only, and received sAVIs plus TB. Patients completed a health literacy questionnaire, satisfaction survey, and a one‐ to two‐week postvisit telephone survey to assess AVI comprehension. Results: Out of 316 retrospective patient visits, 82 (25.9%) received AVIs. Among 210 of 316 patients (66.5%) with management changes, 76 (36.1%) received AVI, with 74.2% of the instructions considered concordant with the provider's note. Use of AVIs was higher with management changes, new patient visits, and medical trainee/teaching clinics. AVIs were written at a median 6.8 grade level. A total of 75 patients completed the prospective study: 31 (41.3%) were in the control group, 19 (25.3%) were in the group that received sAVIs only, and 25 (33.3%) were in the group that received AVIs with TB. There were no differences in overall postvisit survey comprehension/retention scores among the three patient groups evaluated. Conclusion: Although a lack of AVI use was identified, implementation of sAVIs did not appear to impact patient retention or comprehension of discharge health information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Association between chiropractic spinal manipulation and cauda equina syndrome in adults with low back pain: Retrospective cohort study of US academic health centers.
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Trager, Robert J., Baumann, Anthony N., Perez, Jaime A., Dusek, Jeffery A., Perfecto, Romeo-Paolo T., and Goertz, Christine M.
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CAUDA equina syndrome ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SPINAL adjustment ,LUMBAR pain ,CHIROPRACTIC - Abstract
Background: Cauda equina syndrome (CES) is a lumbosacral surgical emergency that has been associated with chiropractic spinal manipulation (CSM) in case reports. However, identifying if there is a potential causal effect is complicated by the heightened incidence of CES among those with low back pain (LBP). The study hypothesis was that there would be no increase in the risk of CES in adults with LBP following CSM compared to a propensity-matched cohort following physical therapy (PT) evaluation without spinal manipulation over a three-month follow-up period. Methods: A query of a United States network (TriNetX, Inc.) was conducted, searching health records of more than 107 million patients attending academic health centers, yielding data ranging from 20 years prior to the search date (July 30, 2023). Patients aged 18 or older with LBP were included, excluding those with pre-existing CES, incontinence, or serious pathology that may cause CES. Patients were divided into two cohorts: (1) LBP patients receiving CSM or (2) LBP patients receiving PT evaluation without spinal manipulation. Propensity score matching controlled for confounding variables associated with CES. Results: 67,220 patients per cohort (mean age 51 years) remained after propensity matching. CES incidence was 0.07% (95% confidence intervals [CI]: 0.05–0.09%) in the CSM cohort compared to 0.11% (95% CI: 0.09–0.14%) in the PT evaluation cohort, yielding a risk ratio and 95% CI of 0.60 (0.42–0.86; p =.0052). Both cohorts showed a higher rate of CES during the first two weeks of follow-up. Conclusions: These findings suggest that CSM is not a risk factor for CES. Considering prior epidemiologic evidence, patients with LBP may have an elevated risk of CES independent of treatment. These findings warrant further corroboration. In the meantime, clinicians should be vigilant to identify LBP patients with CES and promptly refer them for surgical evaluation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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16. Standardizing default electronic health record tools to improve safety for hospitalized patients with Parkinson's disease.
- Author
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Wu, Allan D., Walter, Benjamin L., Brooks, Anne, Buetow, Emily, Amodeo, Katherine, Richard, Irene, Mundth, Kelly, and Azmi, Hooman
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MEDICATION error prevention ,ELECTRONIC health record standards ,EVALUATION of medical care ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MOVEMENT disorders ,ORDER entry ,MEDICAL protocols ,PARKINSON'S disease ,HOSPITAL care ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,AMERICAN Recovery & Reinvestment Act of 2009 ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,PATIENT safety ,MEDICAL societies - Abstract
Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems are often configured to address challenges and improve patient safety for persons with Parkinson's disease (PWP). For example, EHR systems can help identify Parkinson's disease (PD) patients across the hospital by flagging a patient's diagnosis in their chart, preventing errors in medication and dosing through the use of clinical decision support, and supplementing staff education through care plans that provide step-by-step road maps for disease-based care of a specific patient population. However, most EHR-based solutions are locally developed and, thus, difficult to scale widely or apply uniformly across hospital systems. In 2020, the Parkinson's Foundation, a national and international leader in PD research, education, and advocacy, and Epic, a leading EHR vendor with more than 35% market share in the United States, launched a partnership to reduce risks to hospitalized PWP using standardized EHR-based solutions. This article discusses that project which included leadership from physician informaticists, movement disorders specialists, hospital quality officers, the Parkinson's Foundation and members of the Parkinson's community. We describe the best practice solutions developed through this project. We highlight those that are currently available as standard defaults or options within the Epic EHR, discuss the successes and limitations of these solutions, and consider opportunities for scalability in environments beyond a single EHR vendor. The Parkinson's Foundation and Epic launched a partnership to develop best practice solutions in the Epic EHR system to improve safety for PWP in the hospital. The goal of the partnership was to create the EHR tools that will have the greatest impact on outcomes for hospitalized PWP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. Validity of Computer-interpreted "Normal" and "Otherwise Normal" ECG in Emergency Department Triage Patients.
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Deutsch, Ashley, Poroksy, Kye, Westafer, Lauren, Visintainer, Paul, and Mader, Timothy
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CHEST pain diagnosis ,RESEARCH evaluation ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MEDICAL triage ,PREDICTIVE tests ,MYOCARDIAL ischemia ,PATIENTS ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,ST elevation myocardial infarction ,T-test (Statistics) ,ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY ,EMERGENCY medical services ,CHI-squared test ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,COMPUTER-aided diagnosis ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Introduction: Chest pain is the second most common chief complaint for patients undergoing evaluation in emergency departments (ED) in the United States. The American Heart Association recommends immediate physician interpretation of all electrocardiograms (ECG) performed for adults with chest pain within 10 minutes to evaluate for the finding of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). The ECG machines provide computerized interpretation of each ECG, potentially obviating the need for immediate physician analysis; however, the reliability of computer-interpreted findings of "normal" or "otherwise normal" ECG to rule out STEMI requiring immediate intervention in the ED is unknown. Methods: We performed a prospective cohort analysis of 2,275 ECGs performed in triage in the adultED of a single academic medical center, comparing the computerized interpretations of "normal" and "otherwise normal" ECGs to those of attending cardiologists. ECGs were obtained with a GE MAC 5500 machine and interpreted using Marquette 12SL. Results: In our study population, a triage ECGwith a computerized interpretation of "normal" or "otherwise normal" ECG had a negative predictive value of 100% for STEMI (one-sided, lower 97.5% confidence interval 99.6%). None of the studied patients with these ECG interpretations had a final diagnosis of STEMI, acute coronary syndrome, or other diagnosis requiring emergent cardiac catheterization. Conclusion: In our study population, ECG machine interpretations of "normal" or "otherwise normal" ECG excluded findings of STEMI. The ECGs with these computerized interpretations could safely wait for physician interpretation until the time of patient evaluation without delaying an acute STEMI diagnosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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18. Challenges facing early career academic cardiologists.
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Tong CW, Ahmad T, Brittain EL, Bunch TJ, Damp JB, Dardas T, Hijar A, Hill JA, Hilliard AA, Houser SR, Jahangir E, Kates AM, Kim D, Lindman BR, Ryan JJ, Rzeszut AK, Sivaram CA, Valente AM, and Freeman AM
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- Academic Medical Centers economics, Cardiology economics, Cardiology education, Humans, Mentors education, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (U.S.) economics, Physicians economics, United States, Academic Medical Centers trends, Cardiology trends, Career Choice, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (U.S.) trends, Physicians trends
- Abstract
Early career academic cardiologists currently face unprecedented challenges that threaten a highly valued career path. A team consisting of early career professionals and senior leadership members of American College of Cardiology completed this white paper to inform the cardiovascular medicine profession regarding the plight of early career cardiologists and to suggest possible solutions. This paper includes: 1) definition of categories of early career academic cardiologists; 2) general challenges to all categories and specific challenges to each category; 3) obstacles as identified by a survey of current early career members of the American College of Cardiology; 4) major reasons for the failure of physician-scientists to receive funding from National Institute of Health/National Heart Lung and Blood Institute career development grants; 5) potential solutions; and 6) a call to action with specific recommendations., (Copyright © 2014 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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19. Satellite clinics in academic ophthalmology programs: an exploratory study of successes and challenges.
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Kuo IC
- Subjects
- Academic Medical Centers economics, Community Health Centers economics, Delivery of Health Care economics, Education, Medical, Graduate organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Humans, Ophthalmology economics, Pilot Projects, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Community Health Centers organization & administration, Delivery of Health Care organization & administration, Ophthalmology organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Major academic ophthalmology departments have been expanding by opening multi-office locations ("satellites"). This paper offers a first glimpse into satellites of academic ophthalmology departments., Methods: Leaders of seven medium to large, geographically diverse departments agreed to participate. One- to two-hour phone interviews were conducted to assess the features of their satellite practices., Results: Success as clinical entities, profitability, and access to patients were stated goals for most satellites. In approximate descending order, refractive surgery, retina, oculoplastics, and pediatric ophthalmology were the most common subspecialties offered. Faculty staffing ranged from recruitment specifically for satellites to rotation of existing faculty. Except for a department with only one academic track, satellite doctors were a mix of tenure and mostly non-tenure track faculty. According to these department leaders, scholarly productivity of satellite faculty was similar to that of colleagues at the main campus, though research was more community-based and clinical in nature. Fellowship but little resident education occurred at satellites. Though it was agreed that satellite practices were integral to department finances, they accounted for a smaller percentage of revenues than of total departmental visits., Conclusions: Satellite offices have offered access to a better payor mix and have boosted the finances of academic ophthalmology departments. Challenges include maintaining collegiality with referring community physicians, integrating faculty despite geographic distance, preserving the department's academic "brand name," and ensuring consistent standards and operating procedures. Satellite clinics will likely help departments meet some of the challenges of health care reform.
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- 2013
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20. Dumpster Diving in the Emergency Department: Quantity and Characteristics of Waste at a Level I Trauma Center.
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Hsu, Sarah, Thiel, Cassandra L., Mello, Michael J., and Slutzman, Jonathan E.
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC medical centers , *AUDITING , *HEALTH facility administration , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *MEDICAL wastes , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PLASTICS , *TRAUMA centers , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TERTIARY care - Abstract
Introduction: Healthcare contributes 10% of greenhouse gases in the United States and generates two milion tons of waste each year. Reducing healthcare waste can reduce the environmental impact of healthcare and lower hospitals’ waste disposal costs. However, no literature to date has examined US emergency department (ED) waste management. The purpose of this study was to quantify and describe the amount of waste generated by an ED, identify deviations from waste policy, and explore areas for waste reduction. Methods: We conducted a 24-hour (weekday) ED waste audit in an urban, tertiary-care academic medical center. All waste generated in the ED during the study period was collected, manually sorted into separate categories based on its predominant material, and weighed. We tracked deviations from hospital waste policy using the hospital’s Infection Control Manual, state regulations, and Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act standards. Lastly, we calculated direct pollutant emissions from ED waste disposal activities using the M+Waste Care Calculator. Results: The ED generated 671.8 kilograms (kg) total waste during a 24-hour collection period. On a per-patient basis, the ED generated 1.99 kg of total waste per encounter. The majority was plastic (64.6%), with paper-derived products (18.4%) the next largest category. Only 14.9% of waste disposed of in red bags met the criteria for regulated medical waste. We identified several deviations from waste policy, including loose sharps not placed in sharps containers, as well as re-processable items and protected health information thrown in medical and solid waste. We also identified over 200 unused items. Pollutant emissions resulting per day from ED waste disposal include 3110 kg carbon dioxide equivalent and 576 grams of other criteria pollutants, heavy metals, and toxins. Conclusion: The ED generates significant amounts of waste. Current ED waste disposal practices reveal several opportunities to reduce total waste generated, increase adherence to waste policy, and reduce environmental impact. While our results will likely be similar to other urban tertiary EDs that serve as Level I trauma centers, future studies are needed to compare results across EDs with different patient volumes or waste generation rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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21. Evaluation of electronic health record implementation in ophthalmology at an academic medical center (an American Ophthalmological Society thesis).
- Author
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Chiang MF, Read-Brown S, Tu DC, Choi D, Sanders DS, Hwang TS, Bailey S, Karr DJ, Cottle E, Morrison JC, Wilson DJ, and Yackel TR
- Subjects
- Aged, Efficiency, Organizational standards, Electronic Health Records standards, Eye Diseases diagnosis, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Academic Medical Centers, Documentation methods, Electronic Health Records statistics & numerical data, Ophthalmology
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate three measures related to electronic health record (EHR) implementation: clinical volume, time requirements, and nature of clinical documentation. Comparison is made to baseline paper documentation., Methods: An academic ophthalmology department implemented an EHR in 2006. A study population was defined of faculty providers who worked the 5 months before and after implementation. Clinical volumes, as well as time length for each patient encounter, were collected from the EHR reporting system. To directly compare time requirements, two faculty providers who utilized both paper and EHR systems completed time-motion logs to record the number of patients, clinic time, and nonclinic time to complete documentation. Faculty providers and databases were queried to identify patient records containing both paper and EHR notes, from which three cases were identified to illustrate representative documentation differences., Results: Twenty-three faculty providers completed 120,490 clinical encounters during a 3-year study period. Compared to baseline clinical volume from 3 months pre-implementation, the post-implementation volume was 88% in quarter 1, 93% in year 1, 97% in year 2, and 97% in year 3. Among all encounters, 75% were completed within 1.7 days after beginning documentation. The mean total time per patient was 6.8 minutes longer with EHR than paper (P<.01). EHR documentation involved greater reliance on textual interpretation of clinical findings, whereas paper notes used more graphical representations, and EHR notes were longer and included automatically generated text., Conclusion: This EHR implementation was associated with increased documentation time, little or no increase in clinical volume, and changes in the nature of ophthalmic documentation.
- Published
- 2013
22. Pain as bad as you can imagine or extremely severe pain? A randomized controlled trial comparing two pain scale anchors.
- Author
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Tin, Amy L., Austria, Mia, Ogbennaya, Gabriel, Chimonas, Susan, Andréll, Paulin, Atkinson, Thomas M., Vickers, Andrew J., and Carlsson, Sigrid V.
- Subjects
CHRONIC pain ,PAIN measurement ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,FISHER exact test ,REGRESSION analysis ,SEVERITY of illness index ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,T-test (Statistics) ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Background: A common method of pain assessment is the numerical rating scale, where patients are asked to rate their pain on a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 is "no pain" and 10 is "pain as bad as you can imagine". We hypothesize such language is suboptimal as it involves a test of a cognitive skill, imagination, in the assessment of symptom severity. Methods: We used a large-scale online research registry, ResearchMatch, to conduct a randomized controlled trial to compare the distributions of pain scores of two different pain scale anchors. We recruited adults located in the United States who reported a chronic pain problem (> 3 months) and were currently in pain. Participants were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to receive pain assessment based on a modified Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), where the anchor for a score of 10 was either "extremely severe pain", or the original BPI, with the anchor "pain as bad as you can imagine". Participants in both groups also answered additional questions about pain, other symptomatology and creativity. Results: Data were obtained from 405 participants for the modified and 424 for the original BPI. Distribution of responses to pain questions were similar between groups (all p-values ≥ 0.12). We did not see evidence that the relationship between pain score and the anchor text differed based on self-perceived creativity (all interaction p-values ≥ 0.2). However, in the key analysis, correlations between current pain assessments and known correlates (fatigue, anxiety, depression, current pain compared to a typical day, pain compared to other people) were stronger for "extreme" vs. "imaginable" anchor text (p = 0.005). Conclusion: Pain rating scales should utilize the modified anchor text "extremely severe pain" instead of "pain as bad as you can imagine". Further research should explore the effects of anchors for other symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Associations between demographics and clinical ideology, beliefs, and practice patterns: a secondary analysis of a survey of randomly sampled United States chiropractors.
- Author
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Cupler, Zachary A., Gliedt, Jordan A., Perle, Stephen M., Puhl, Aaron A., and Schneider, Michael J.
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CHIROPRACTORS ,WORK experience (Employment) ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,CHIROPRACTIC education ,CHIROPRACTIC ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,POPULATION geography ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,HEALTH attitudes ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,PHYSICIAN practice patterns ,MEDICAL practice ,STATISTICAL sampling ,DATA analysis software ,SECONDARY analysis - Abstract
Background: The chiropractic profession in the United States (US) has a long history of intra-professional discourse surrounding ideology and beliefs. Large-scale efforts have evaluated 3 distinctive subgroups of US chiropractors focused on these areas of practice: spine/neuromusculoskeletal, primary care, and vertebral subluxation. To our knowledge, there have not been any prior studies exploring the factors associated with these ideology and belief characteristics of these subgroups. The purpose of this study was to explore, describe, and characterize the association of US chiropractors' ideology, beliefs, and practice patterns with: 1) chiropractic degree program of graduation, 2) years since completion of chiropractic degree, and 3) US geographic region of primary practice. Methods: This was a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional survey of a random sample of US licensed chiropractors (n = 8975). A 10% random sample was extracted from each of the 50 states and District of Columbia chiropractic regulatory board lists. The survey was conducted between March 2018-January 2020. The survey instrument consisted of 7 items that were developed to elicit these differentiating ideologies, beliefs, and practice patterns: 1) clinical examination/assessment, 2) health conditions treated, 3) role of chiropractors in the healthcare system, 4) the impact of chiropractic adjustments [spinal manipulation] in treating patients with cancer, 5) vaccination attitudes, 6) detection of subluxation on x-ray, and 7) x-ray utilization rates. Multinomial regression was used to analyze associations between these 7 ideology and practice characteristic items from the survey (dependent variables) and the 3 demographic items listed above (independent variables). Results: Data from 3538 respondents (74.6% male) were collected with an overall response rate of 39.4%. Patterns of responses to the 7 survey items for ideologies, beliefs, and practice characteristics were significantly different based on chiropractic degree program of graduation, years since completion of chiropractic degree, and geographic region of primary practice. Conclusions: Among US chiropractors, chiropractic program of graduation, years since completion of chiropractic degree, and geographic region of primary practice are associated with variations in clinical ideology, beliefs, and practice patterns. The wide variation and inconsistent beliefs of US chiropractors could result in public confusion and impede interprofessional integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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24. Leadership of United States academic anesthesiology programs 2006: chairperson characteristics and accomplishments.
- Author
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Mets B, Galford JA, and Purichia HR
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- Adult, Aged, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, United States, Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Anesthesiology organization & administration, Faculty, Medical organization & administration, Leadership
- Abstract
Background/methods: We conducted an Internet-based survey of all current academic anesthesiology chairpersons to benchmark their characteristics and accomplishments, as well as to gain insights that might be useful to aspirant department chairs., Results: The response rate was 55%; chairs were predominantly male (92%), with a mean age of 55 yr and an average time in post of 6.5 yr. They were American medical graduates (82%), had undergone a research (31%) or a clinical fellowship (57%), were full professors (86%) and practiced most commonly as generalists and in intensive care. Chairs had a significant record of scholarship, including a median of 30 peer-reviewed papers, and an average of 11.0 industry and 2.7 federal grants. Thirty-two percent served as editors of peer-reviewed journals and 42% have served as president/chairman of national committees. Fully 30% of current chairs had previous experience as a chair. Sixty-eight percent of current chairs decided early in their career (at the resident/fellow or assistant professor level) that they wished to be a chair. In advising aspirant chairs, the most helpful experience to being a chair was that of having served as a vice chair, and the highest rated advice was to become a division director. Chairs were predominantly satisfied with their position (median 3 of 10) and 44% would return to clinical anesthesiology after chairmanship., Conclusions: The survey suggests that anesthesiology chairs value peer-reviewed research, scholarship, and academic achievement, but do not believe that significant research experience is of great benefit to functioning as a chair.
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- 2007
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25. What to do when faced with the closure of a family practice residency.
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Pugno PA
- Subjects
- Communication, Humans, Planning Techniques, United States, Academic Medical Centers organization & administration, Family Practice organization & administration, Health Facility Closure economics, Internship and Residency organization & administration
- Abstract
The turbulent health care environment, combined with recent reductions in federal support for graduate medical education, has threatened the viability of many residency programs. Several family practice programs are in the process of struggling for survival, while others have been forced to close. A new Residency Assistance Program (RAP) consultation has been developed to help programs "justify their existence " to sponsoring institutions. This paper discusses the signs that a program's viability may be in jeopardy and offers recommendations to reduce the risks of closure. For those residencies forced to cease operations, 11 recommendations are provided to minimize the negative impact of closure on the program's residents, faculty, and staff. Those include steps to assure that current residents receive full credit for the training time completed and the importance of notifications to the Residency Review Committee for Family Practice, the American Board of Family Practice, and the Association of Family Practice Residency Directors. Decisions must be made about whether the option exists to permit current residents to complete their training in the same facility or whether assistance is available to facilitate resident transfers to other programs. Open and honest communication among affected parties is emphasized to minimize the emotional consequences of such an important event.
- Published
- 2003
26. The Smoothing Artifact of Spatially Constrained Canonical Correlation Analysis in Functional MRI.
- Author
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Cordes, Dietmar, Mingwu Jin, Curran, Tim, and Nandy, Rajesh
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NOISE control ,MAGNETIC resonance imaging ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,RESEARCH funding - Abstract
A wide range of studies show the capacity of multivariate statistical methods for fMRI to improve mapping of brain activations in a noisy environment. An advanced method uses local canonical correlation analysis (CCA) to encompass a group of neighboring voxels instead of looking at the single voxel time course. The value of a suitable test statistic is used as a measure of activation. It is customary to assign the value to the center voxel; however, this is a choice of convenience and without constraints introduces artifacts, especially in regions of strong localized activation. To compensate for these deficiencies, different spatial constraints in CCA have been introduced to enforce dominance of the center voxel. However, even if the dominance condition for the center voxel is satisfied, constrained CCA can still lead to a smoothing artifact, often called the "bleeding artifact of CCA", in fMRI activation patterns. In this paper a new method is introduced to measure and correct for the smoothing artifact for constrained CCA methods. It is shown that constrained CCA methods corrected for the smoothing artifact lead to more plausible activation patterns in fMRI as shown using data from a motor task and a memory task. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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27. Mentorship of Women in Academic Medicine: a Systematic Review.
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Farkas, Amy H., Bonifacino, Eliana, Turner, Rose, Tilstra, Sarah A., and Corbelli, Jennifer A.
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MENTORING ,WOMEN in medicine ,WOMEN physicians ,META-analysis ,CAREER development ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,LABOR mobility ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDICAL school faculty ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,JOB satisfaction - Abstract
Background: Women remain underrepresented in academic medicine, particularly in leadership positions. This lack of women in leadership has been shown to have negative implications for both patient care and educational outcomes. Similarly, the literature demonstrates that female physicians are less likely to have mentors, despite the proven benefits of mentorship for career advancement. The objective of this review is to identify and describe models of mentorship for women in academic medicine.Methods: We searched PubMed, PsycINFO, Education Resources Information Center, and Cochrane Databases of Systematic Reviews following PRISMA guidelines in June 2017. We included original English language studies that described a mentorship program in the USA that involved academic medical doctorates and that were created for women or provided results stratified by gender.Results: Our search returned 3625 results; 3309 references remained after removal of duplicates. Twenty articles met inclusion criteria. The majority of the programs were designed for junior faculty and used the dyad model of mentoring (i.e., one mentor/one mentee). Frequently cited objectives of these programs were to improve scholarship, promotion, and retention of female faculty. Program evaluations were primarily survey-based, with participant-reported satisfaction being the most frequent measured outcome. Most results showed very high satisfaction. Gender concordance between mentor and mentee did not impact satisfaction. Eight articles reported objective outcomes, including publications, retention, and promotion, and each of these demonstrated an improvement after program implementation.Discussion: Our review suggests that mentorship programs designed for women, regardless of the model, are met with high satisfaction and can help promote and retain women in academic medicine. No clear best practices for mentorship emerged in the literature. Institutions, therefore, can individualize their mentorship programs and models to available resources and goals. These results demonstrate the importance of more widespread implementation of mentorship programs to more effectively facilitate professional development and success of women in academic medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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28. Academic emergency medicine's future. The SAEM Task Force on Emergency Medicine's Future. Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
- Author
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Iserson KV, Adams J, Cordell WH, Graff L, Halamka J, Ling L, Peacock WF 4th, Sklar D, and Stair T
- Subjects
- Academic Medical Centers economics, Emergency Medicine economics, Forecasting, Humans, Medical Records Systems, Computerized, Research Support as Topic, Telemedicine, United States, Academic Medical Centers trends, Emergency Medicine trends
- Abstract
Emergency medicine (EM) will change over the next 20 years more than any other specialty. Its proximity to and interrelationships with the community, nearly all other clinicians (physicians and nonphysicians), and scientific/technologic developments guarantee this. While emergency physicians (EPs) will continue to treat both emergent and nonemergent patients, over the next decades our interventions, methods, and place in the medical care system will probably become unrecognizable from the EM we now practice and deliver. This paper, developed by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (SAEM) Task Force on Academic Emergency Medicine's Future, was designed to promote discussions about and actions to optimize our specialty's future. After briefly discussing the importance of futures planning, it suggests "best-case," "worst-case," and most probable future courses for academic EM over the next decades. The authors predict that EPs will practice a much more technologic and accurate form of medicine, with diagnostic, patient, reference, and consultant information rapidly available to them. They will be at the center of an extensive consultation network stemming from major medical centers and the purveyors of a sophisticated home health system, very similar to or even more advanced than what is now delivered on hospital wards. The key to planning for our specialty is for EM organizations, academic centers, and individuals to act now to optimize our possible future.
- Published
- 1999
29. Assessment of immigration law enforcement presence in a teaching hospital along the US/Mexico border.
- Author
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Lamneck, Claire, Alvarez, Alexander, Zaragoza, Cazandra, Rahimian, Rombod, Trejo, Mario Jesus, and Lebensohn, Patricia
- Subjects
IMMIGRATION law ,UNITED States emigration & immigration ,PRIVACY ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,PATIENT autonomy ,CROSS-sectional method ,MEDICAL students ,HEALTH facility administration ,PATIENTS ,QUANTITATIVE research ,HEALTH Insurance Portability & Accountability Act ,HOSPITAL admission & discharge ,SURVEYS ,QUALITATIVE research ,REFUGEES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PATIENTS' rights ,MEDICAL ethics ,THEMATIC analysis ,SOCIAL control - Abstract
Background: Over the past decade, the United States (US) has seen a spike in migration across the US-Mexico border with an increase in hospital admissions of migrants and asylum-seekers under the custody of immigration law enforcement (ILE). This study aimed to determine how the presence of ILE officials affects patient care and provider experience in a teaching hospital setting. Methods: This cross-sectional online survey solicited quantitative and qualitative feedback from medical students, residents, and attending physicians (n = 1364) at a teaching hospital system with two campuses in Arizona. The survey included participant demographics and addressed participants' experience caring for patients in ILE custody, including the perception of respect, violations of patients' privacy and autonomy, and the comfort level with understanding hospital policies and patient rights. Thematic analyses were also performed based on respondent comments. Results: 332 individuals (24%) responded to the survey. Quantitative analyses revealed that 14% of participants described disrespectful behaviors of ILE officials, mainly toward detained patients. Qualitative thematic analyses of respondent comments revealed details on such disrespectful encounters including ILE officers violating the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and using intimidation tactics with patients. Nearly half of the respondents did not have knowledge of policies about ILE detainees' medical care, detainees' privacy rights, or ILE's authority in patient care. Conclusions: This study points out the complexities, challenges, and ethical considerations of caring for patients in ILE custody in the hospital setting and the need to educate healthcare professionals on both patient and provider rights. It describes the lived experiences and difficulties that providers on the border face in trying to achieve equity in the care they provide to detained migrant patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
30. Education in health about spotted fever: an integrative literature review.
- Author
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Bragagnollo, Gabriela Rodrigues, Resende, Bianca, Porciúncula, Marcela das Neves Guimarães, Santos, Bruna Domingos dos, Camargo, Rosangela Andrade Aukar de, Araújo, Wallacy Jhon Silva, Monteiro, Estela Maria Leite Meirelles, and Ferreira, Beatriz Rossetti
- Subjects
PATIENT education ,CURRICULUM ,HEALTH attitudes ,INFECTION control ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CINAHL database ,MEDLARS ,DECISION making ,TEACHING methods ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ROCKY Mountain spotted fever ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,GAMES ,EPIDEMICS ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH education ,ONLINE information services ,PUBLIC health ,HEALTH promotion ,LEARNING strategies ,COLLEGE students ,NURSING students - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Nursing & Health is the property of Journal of Nursing & Health (JONAH) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
31. Gender and Inconsistent Evaluations: A Mixed-methods Analysis of Feedback for Emergency Medicine Residents.
- Author
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Brewer, Alexandra, Nelson, Laura, Mueller, Anna S., Ewert, Rebecca, O'Connor, Daniel M., Dayal, Arjun, and Arora, Vineet M.
- Subjects
HOSPITAL medical staff ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,RESEARCH methodology ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SEX distribution ,RESEARCH funding ,EMPLOYEE reviews ,EMERGENCY medicine ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Objectives: Prior research has demonstrated that men and women emergency medicine (EM) residents receive similar numerical evaluations at the beginning of residency, but that women receive significantly lower scores than men in their final year. To better understand the emergence of this gender gap in evaluations we examined discrepancies between numerical scores and the sentiment of attached textual comments. Methods: This multicenter, longitudinal, retrospective cohort study took place at four geographically diverse academic EM training programs across the United States from July 1, 2013-July 1, 2015 using a real-time, mobile-based, direct-observation evaluation tool. We used complementary quantitative and qualitative methods to analyze 11,845 combined numerical and textual evaluations made by 151 attending physicians (94 men and 57 women) during real-time, direct observations of 202 residents (135 men and 67 women). Results: Numerical scores were more strongly positively correlated with positive sentiment of the textual comment for men (r = 0.38, P < 0.001) compared to women (r = -0.26, P < 0.04); more strongly negatively correlated with mixed (r = -0.39, P < 0.001) and negative (r = -0.46, P < 0.001) sentiment for men compared to women (r = -0.13, P < 0.28) for mixed sentiment (r = -0.22, P < 0.08) for negative; and women were around 11% more likely to receive positive comments alongside lower scores, and negative or mixed comments alongside higher scores. Additionally, on average, men received slightly more positive comments in postgraduate year (PGY)-3 than in PGY-1 and fewer mixed and negative comments, while women received fewer positive and negative comments in PGY-3 than PGY-1 and almost the same number of mixed comments. Conclusion: Women EM residents received more inconsistent evaluations than men EM residents at two levels: 1) inconsistency between numerical scores and sentiment of textual comments; and 2) inconsistency in the expected career trajectory of improvement over time. These findings reveal gender inequality in how attendings evaluate residents and suggest that attendings should be trained to provide all residents with feedback that is clear, consistent, and helpful, regardless of resident gender. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Expanding the Lifestyle Medicine Inpatient Consultation Services at Loma Linda University Health: A Transformative Tool for Chronic Diseases Management in Tertiary Care Settings.
- Author
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Annam, Rachel, Florian, Rosemarie, Johnson, Sara, Mondala, Melisa, Wilson, April, and Rea, Brenda
- Subjects
PREVENTION of chronic diseases ,CHRONIC disease treatment ,LIFESTYLES ,MEDICINE ,HOSPITALS ,INSURANCE companies ,HOSPITAL patients ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HEALTH services accessibility ,TERTIARY care ,MEDICAL care ,DISEASES ,MEDICAL care costs ,COMPARATIVE studies ,MEDICAL referrals ,HEALTH behavior ,QUALITY of life ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DISEASE management ,LONGITUDINAL method ,HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Lifestyle Medicine (LM) is an emerging field dedicated to the prevention, management, and reversal of chronic diseases by promoting healthy lifestyle choices. LM utilizes six pillars targeting the root causes of diseases to promote health, improve clinical outcomes and significantly enhance overall quality of life. They include plant-based nutrition, physical activity, sleep health, tobacco cessation/managing risky alcohol use, and spiritual/emotional well-being. LM holds great promise as an evidence-based solution for the rising rates of chronic diseases and healthcare costs in the United States. Loma Linda University Health (LLUH), a pioneer of LM, has successfully implemented a phased expansion of its novel LM inpatient consultation services to positively impact the trajectory of morbidity and mortality among patients with chronic conditions and/risk factors admitted to the hospital. This was achieved by boosting awareness, hiring LM-trained providers to meet growing demand, and making consultations accessible hospital-wide. The service has been very well received and saw a 50-fold increase in consultations between 2016 and 2022. It is also reimbursed by all major insurers. LLUH's experience shows that establishing and growing an inpatient LM consultation service is a viable clinical and cost-effective chronic care model that can be utilized in a tertiary care setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Sex differences in guideline‐consistent diagnostic testing for acute pulmonary embolism among adult emergency department patients aged 18–49.
- Author
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Jarman, Angela F., Mumma, Bryn E., White, Richard, Dooley, Emily, Yang, Nuen Tsang, Taylor, Sandra L., Newgard, Craig, Morris, Cynthia, Cloutier, Jared, and Maughan, Brandon C.
- Subjects
HEMOPTYSIS ,SYNCOPE ,PULMONARY embolism ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,MEDICAL screening ,PATIENTS ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,SEX distribution ,MEDICAL protocols ,DYSPNEA ,RISK assessment ,EMERGENCY medical services ,RESEARCH funding ,CHEST pain ,PATIENT care ,ELECTRONIC health records ,ACUTE diseases ,LONGITUDINAL method ,FIBRIN fibrinogen degradation products ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Background: Pulmonary embolism (PE) is a frequent diagnostic consideration in emergency department (ED) patients, yet diagnosis is challenging because symptoms of PE are nonspecific. Guidelines recommend the use of clinical decision tools to increase efficiency and avoid harms from overtesting, including D‐dimer screening in patients not at high risk for PE. Women undergo testing for PE more often than men yet have a lower yield from testing. Our study objective was to determine whether patient sex influenced the odds of received guideline‐consistent care. Methods: We performed a retrospective cohort study at two large U.S. academic EDs from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2018. Nonpregnant patients aged 18–49 years were included if they presented with chest pain, shortness of breath, hemoptysis, or syncope and underwent testing for PE with D‐dimer or imaging. Demographic and clinical data were exported from the electronic medical record (EMR). Pretest risk scores were calculated using manually abstracted EMR data. Diagnostic testing was then compared with recommended testing based on pretest risk. The primary outcome was receipt of guideline‐consistent care, which required an elevated screening D‐dimer prior to imaging in all non–high‐risk patients. Results: We studied 1991 discrete patient encounters; 37% (735) of patients were male and 63% (1256) were female. Baseline characteristics, including revised Geneva scores, were similar between sexes. Female patients were more likely to receive guideline‐consistent care (70% [874/1256] female vs. 63% [463/735] male, p < 0.01) and less likely to be diagnosed with PE (3.1% [39/1256] female vs. 5.3% [39/735] male, p < 0.05). The most common guideline deviation in both sexes was obtaining imaging without a screening D‐dimer in a non–high‐risk patient (75% [287/382] female vs. 75% [205/272] male). Conclusions: In this cohort, females were more likely than males to receive care consistent with current guidelines and less likely to be diagnosed with PE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Exploring Sacred Moments in Hospitalized Patients: An Exploratory Qualitative Study.
- Author
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Quinn, Martha, Fowler, Karen E., Harrod, Molly, Ehrlinger, Rachel, Engle, Jason M., Houchens, Nathan, and Saint, Sanjay
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HOSPITAL patients ,MEDICAL personnel ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,HOSPITAL personnel - Abstract
Background: "Sacred moments" are brief periods of time in which people experience a deep interconnectedness that may possess spiritual qualities and emotions. This concept has been shown to have a positive impact on individuals' overall well-being and stress in mental health settings. The concept of sacred moments has not been studied in acute care hospital settings. Objective: To better understand the occurrence of sacred moments among hospitalized patients and their healthcare workers. Design: An exploratory qualitative study that included in-depth interviews with patients and healthcare workers at two academic medical centers in the Midwestern United States. Participants: Hospital healthcare workers (e.g., physicians, nurses, ancillary staff) and discharged patients with a recent hospital stay. Approach: Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with 30 participants between August 2020 and April 2021. Interviews were recorded and transcribed before conducting thematic analysis. Key Results: Both healthcare workers and patients reported having experienced at least one sacred moment. Interview findings were organized into three main domains including (1) several common elements described by participants as marking these moments; (2) benefits experienced by both patients and healthcare workers; and (3) suggestions for fostering sacred moments within the hospital setting. Conclusions: Among our participants, sacred moments were extremely common with the vast majority reporting to have experienced at least one in their lifetime. These moments were described as profound and important and shared many common elements. Our findings can be used to help recognize, understand, and promote sacred moments between hospitalized patients and healthcare workers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Prototyping an institutional IAIMS/UMLS information environment for an academic medical center.
- Author
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Miller PL, Paton JA, Clyman JI, and Powsner SM
- Subjects
- Computer Communication Networks, Computer Systems, Databases, Bibliographic, Databases, Factual, Information Storage and Retrieval, National Library of Medicine (U.S.), United States, Academic Medical Centers, Integrated Advanced Information Management Systems, Unified Medical Language System
- Abstract
The paper describes a prototype information environment designed to link network-based information resources in an integrated fashion and thus enhance the information capabilities of an academic medical center. The prototype was implemented on a single Macintosh computer to permit exploration of the overall "information architecture" and to demonstrate the various desired capabilities prior to full-scale network-based implementation. At the heart of the prototype are two components: a diverse set of information resources available over an institutional computer network and an information sources map designed to assist users in finding and accessing information resources relevant to their needs. The paper describes these and other components of the prototype and presents a scenario illustrating its use. The prototype illustrates the link between the goals of two National Library of Medicine initiatives, the Integrated Academic Information Management System (IAIMS) and the Unified Medical Language System (UMLS).
- Published
- 1992
36. THE AUTHORS REPLY.
- Author
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Stijnen, Pieter, Tuand, Krizia, Varga, Tibor V., Franks, Paul W., Aertgeerts, Bert, and Creemers, John W. M.
- Subjects
ACADEMIC medical centers ,AGE distribution ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,OBESITY ,GENOMICS ,DATA analysis - Abstract
The article presents the authors' reply to a letter from D. Meyre regarding their systematic review and meta-analysis on the associations of variants of proprotein convertase subtilisine/kexin type I gene (PCSKI) with obesity. The reply addresses Meyre's criticisms of what he perceives as errors in the paper including an assertion that meta-analysis included 2 overlapping cohorts and suggestion that the analysis was underpowered to find significant association of rs632 with body mass index.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The Healthy Democracy Kit: design, implementation, uptake, and impact of a novel voter registration toolkit for healthcare settings.
- Author
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Grade, Madeline M., Reardon, Alexander W. T., Ha, Yoonhee P., Steinhart, Adi, and Martin, Alister F.
- Subjects
VOTER registration ,POSTAL voting ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,MEDICAL personnel - Abstract
Background: Access to voting is increasingly recognized as a social determinant of health. Health equity could be improved if healthcare workers (HCWs) routinely assessed the voter registration status of patients during clinical encounters and helped direct them towards appropriate resources. However, little consensus exists on how to achieve these tasks efficiently and effectively in healthcare settings. Intuitive and scalable tools that minimize workflow disruptions are needed. The Healthy Democracy Kit (HDK) is a novel voter registration toolkit for healthcare settings, featuring a wearable badge and posters that display quick response (QR) and text codes directing patients to an online hub for voter registration and mail-in ballot requests. The objective of this study was to assess national uptake and impact of the HDK prior to the 2020 United States (US) elections. Methods: Between 19 May and 3 November 2020, HCWs and institutions could order and use HDKs to help direct patients to resources, free of cost. A descriptive analysis was conducted to summarize the characteristics of participating HCWs and institutions as well as the resultant total persons helped prepare to vote. Results: During the study period, 13,192 HCWs (including 7,554 physicians, 2,209 medical students, and 983 nurses) from 2,407 affiliated institutions across the US ordered 24,031 individual HDKs. Representatives from 604 institutions (including 269 academic medical centers, 111 medical schools, and 141 Federally Qualified Health Centers) ordered 960 institutional HDKs. Collectively, HCWs and institutions from all 50 US states and the District of Columbia used HDKs to help initiate 27,317 voter registrations and 17,216 mail-in ballot requests. Conclusions: A novel voter registration toolkit had widespread organic uptake and enabled HCWs and institutions to successfully conduct point-of-care civic health advocacy during clinical encounters. This methodology holds promise for future implementation of other types of public health initiatives. Further study is needed to assess downstream voting behaviors from healthcare-based voter registration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Emergency Department Preparedness to Care for Sexual Assault Survivors: A Nationwide Study.
- Author
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Chalmers, Kristen, Hollender, Meredith, Spurr, Liam, Parameswaran, Ramya, Dussault, Nicole, Farnan, Jeanne, Oyola, Sonia, and Carter, Keme
- Subjects
KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,HEALTH services accessibility ,PATIENT advocacy ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,RURAL conditions ,CROSS-sectional method ,SEXUAL assault nurse examiners ,MANN Whitney U Test ,SURVEYS ,MEDICAL care use ,SEX crimes ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEALTH equity ,METROPOLITAN areas ,THEMATIC analysis ,HOUSING ,TRANSPORTATION - Abstract
Introduction: Emergency departments (ED) provide trauma-informed care to sexual assault (SA) survivors and connect them with comprehensive services. Through surveying SA survivor advocates, we aimed to 1) document updated trends in the quality of care and resources offered to SA survivors and 2) identify potential disparities according to geographic regions in the US, urban vs rural clinic locations, and the availability of sexual assault nurse examiners (SANE). Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study between June-August 2021, surveying SA advocates who were dispatched from rape crisis centers to support survivors during ED care. Survey questions addressed two major themes in quality of care: staff preparedness to provide traumaresponse care; and available resources. Staff preparedness to provide trauma-informed care was assessed through observations of staff behaviors. We used Wilcoxon rank-sum and Kruskal-Wallis tests to analyze differences in responses according to geographic regions and SANE presence. Results: A total of 315 advocates from 99 crisis centers completed the survey. The survey had a participation rate of 88.7% and a completion rate of 87.9%. Advocates who indicated that a higher proportion of their cases were attended by SANEs were more likely to report higher rates of traumainformed staff behaviors. For example, the recalled rate of staff asking patients for consent at every step of the exam was significantly associated with SANE presence (P < 0.001). With respect to access to resources, 66.7% of advocates reported that hospitals often or always have evidence collection kits available; 30.6% reported that resources such as transportation and housing are often or always available, and 55.3% reported that SANEs are often or always part of the care team. The SANEs were reported to be more frequently available in the Southwest than in other US regions (P < 0.001) and in urban as opposed to rural areas (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Our study indicates that support from sexual assault nurse examiners is highly associated with trauma-informed staff behaviors and comprehensive resources. Urban-rural and regional disparities exist regarding access to SANEs, suggesting that elevating nationwide quality and equity in care of survivors of sexual assault requires increased investments in SANE training and coverage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Network Analysis of Academic Medical Center Websites in the United States.
- Author
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He, Shuhan, Chen, David, Black, Kameron Collin, Chong, Paul, Marzouk, Sammer, Yoon, Byung-Jun, Davis, Kendrick, and Lee, Jarone
- Subjects
ACADEMIC medical centers ,HEALTH websites ,DATA libraries ,WEBSITES ,HOSPITALS - Abstract
Healthcare resources are published annually in repositories such as the AHA Annual Survey Database
TM . However, these data repositories are created via manual surveying techniques which are cumbersome in collection and not updated as frequently as website information of the respective hospital systems represented. Also, this resource is not widely available to patients in an easy-to-use format. Network analysis techniques have the potential to create topological maps which serve to aid in pathfinding for patients in their search for healthcare services. This study explores the topological structure of forty United States academic health center websites. Network analysis is utilized to analyze and visualize 48,686 webpages. Several elements of network structure are examined including basic network properties, and centrality measures distributions. The Louvain community detection algorithm is used to examine the extent to which these techniques allow identification of healthcare resources within networks. The results indicate that websites with related healthcare services tend to form observable clusters useful in mapping key resources within a hospital system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
40. Pain interference mediates the association between epigenetic aging and grip strength in middle to older aged males and females with chronic pain.
- Author
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Peterson, Jessica A., Crow, Joshua A., Johnson, Alisa J., Meng, Lingsong, Rani, Asha, Zhiguang Huo, Foster, Thomas C., Fillingim, Roger B., and Cruz-Almeida, Yenisel
- Subjects
GRIP strength ,CHRONIC pain ,RESEARCH ,BIOMARKERS ,EXERCISE tests ,PAIN ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MUSCLE contraction ,INSTITUTIONAL review boards ,REGRESSION analysis ,PHYSICAL activity ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,AGING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,EPIGENOMICS ,ATTITUDES toward disabilities - Abstract
Introduction: Chronic pain is one of the leading causes of disability that may accelerate biological aging and reduce physical function. Epigenetic clocks provide an estimate of how the system ages and can predict health outcomes such as physical function. Physical function declines may be attributed to decreases in muscle quality due to disuse that can be measured quickly and noninvasively using grip strength. The purpose of this study was to explore the associations among self-reported pain, grip strength, and epigenetic aging in those with chronic pain. Methods: Participants (57.91 ± 8.04 years) completed pain questionnaires, a blood draw and hand grip strength task. We used an epigenetic clock previously associated with knee pain (DNAmGrimAge), and used the subsequent difference of predicted epigenetic age from chronological age (DNAmGrimAge-Difference). Results: Exploratory pathway analyses revealed that pain intensity mediated the association between DNAmGrimAge-difference and handgrip strength in males only (β = −0.1115; CI [−0.2929, −0.0008]) and pain interference mediated the association between DNAmGrimAge-difference and handgrip strength in males β = −0.1401; CI [−0.3400, −0.0222]), and females (β = −0.024; CI [−0.2918, −0.0020]). Discussion: Chronic knee pain may accelerate epigenetic aging processes that may influence handgrip strength in older age adults. Chronic pain could be a symptom of the aging body thus contributing to declines in musculoskeletal function in later life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Satisfaction with Customizable 3D-Printed Finger Orthoses Compared to Commercial SilverRing™ Splints.
- Author
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Irani, Natasha and Ozelie, Rebecca
- Subjects
MEDICAL equipment reliability ,FINGERS ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,RESEARCH evaluation ,CROSS-sectional method ,PATIENT satisfaction ,SPLINTS (Surgery) ,SURVEYS ,PRODUCT design ,RHEUMATOID arthritis ,COST effectiveness ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,THREE-dimensional printing ,PATIENT compliance ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,DATA analysis software ,ORTHOPEDIC apparatus ,HAND abnormalities - Abstract
Background: Emerging research primarily supports 3D-printing as a customizable, replicable orthosis option. However, more research emphasizing orthotic users' viewpoints is necessary to address challenges with orthotic wear adherence and satisfaction. Method: Forty persons were recruited at an academic medical center. After wearing each orthosis for 8 hr (or as long as tolerated), the participants completed post-satisfaction surveys to measure satisfaction with different aspects of both orthoses worn. Results: Forty participants (21 females, 19 males, mean age = 24.98 years) were enrolled in the study. Satisfaction scores (N = 40) were not statistically significant for 3D-printed orthoses compared to SilverRing™ Splints across all domains except for Affordability, which was rated significantly higher for 3Dprinted orthoses (M = 10.00, SD = 0.000) compared to SilverRing™ Splints (M = 5.28, SD = 2.35), t(39) = 12.70, p < .001. The mean difference in satisfaction scores was 4.72, with a 95% confidence interval ranging from 3.97 to 5.48. Conclusion: Findings provide novel evidence supporting the use of this customizable 3D-printed prototype as a cost-effective, alternative option to established commercial finger orthoses. This study has potential to assist clinicians' decision-making as they navigate best orthoses options for individuals with swanneck deformities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. A Nationwide Study of the "July Effect" Concerning Postpartum Hemorrhage and Its Risk Factors at Teaching Hospitals across the United States.
- Author
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Shahin, Zahra, Shah, Gulzar H., Apenteng, Bettye A., Waterfield, Kristie, and Samawi, Hani
- Subjects
POSTPARTUM hemorrhage ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,RISK assessment ,HOSPITAL care ,ODDS ratio ,DATA analysis software ,PATIENT safety ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Objective To assess the "July effect" and the risk of postpartum hemorrhage (PPH) and its risk factors across the U.S. teaching hospitals. Method This study used the 2018 Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) and included 2,056,359 of 2,879,924 single live-birth hospitalizations with low-risk pregnancies across the U.S. teaching hospitals. The International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) from the American Academy of Professional Coders (AAPC) medical coding was used to identify PPH and other study variables. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to compare the adjusted odds of PPH risk in the first and second quarters of the academic year vs. the second half of the academic year. Results Postpartum hemorrhage occurred in approximately 4.19% of the sample. We observed an increase in the adjusted odds of PPH during July through September (adjusted odds ratios (AOR), 1.05; confidence interval (CI), 1.02–1.10) and October through December (AOR, 1.07; CI, 1.04–1.12) compared to the second half of the academic year (January to June). Conclusions This study showed a significant "July effect" concerning PPH. However, given the mixed results concerning maternal outcomes at the time of childbirth other than PPH, more research is needed to investigate the "July effect" on the outcomes of the third stage of labor. This study's findings have important implications for patient safety interventions concerning MCH. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Impact of a switch to immediate release on the patient viewing of diagnostic test results in an online portal at an academic medical center.
- Author
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Wood, Kelly E., Pham, Hanh T., Carter, Knute D., Nepple, Kenneth G., Blum, James M., and Krasowski, Matthew D.
- Subjects
PATIENT portals ,MEDICAL records ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,DIAGNOSIS methods ,CHILD patients ,ELECTRONIC health records - Abstract
Patient portals allow patients to access their personal health information. The 21st Century Cures Act in the United States sought to eliminate ‘information blocking’, requiring timely release upon request of electronic health information including diagnostic test results. Some health systems, including the one in the present study, chose a systematic switch to immediate release of all or nearly all diagnostic test results to patient portals as part of compliance with the Cures Act. Our primary objective was to study changes in the time to view test results by patients before and after implementation of Cures Act-related changes. This retrospective pre-post study included data from two 10-month time periods before and after implementation of Cures Act-related changes at an academic medical center. The study included all patients (adult and pediatric) with diagnostic testing (laboratory and imaging) performed in the outpatient, inpatient, or emergency department settings. Between February 9, 2020 and December 9, 2021, there was a total of 3 809 397 diagnostic tests from 204 605 unique patients (3 320 423 tests for adult patients; 488 974 for pediatric patients). Overall, 56.5% (115 627) of patients were female, 84.1% (172 048) white, and 96.5% (197 517) preferred English as primary language. The odds of viewing test results within 1 and 30 days after portal release increased monthly throughout both time periods before and after the Cures Act for all patients. The rate of increase was significantly higher after implementation only in the subgroup of tests belonging to adult patients with active MyChart accounts. Immediate release shifted a higher proportion of result/report release to weekends (3.2% pre-Cures vs 15.3% post-Cures), although patient viewing patterns by day of week and time of day were similar before and after immediate release changes. The switch to immediate release of diagnostic test results to the patient portal resulted in a higher fraction of results viewed within 1 day across outpatient, inpatient, and emergency department settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Inpatient Rehabilitation After Acute Severe Stroke: Predictive Value of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale Among Other Potential Predictors for Discharge Destination.
- Author
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Tarvonen-Schröder, Sinikka, Niemi, Tuuli, and Koivisto, Mari
- Subjects
WHEELCHAIRS ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,HOSPITAL patients ,PREDICTIVE tests ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,FUNCTIONAL status ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,DEGLUTITION disorders ,FISHER exact test ,SEVERITY of illness index ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,STROKE rehabilitation ,STROKE patients ,PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,ENTERAL feeding ,BARTHEL Index ,ODDS ratio ,ACUTE diseases ,DISCHARGE planning - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research focusing on predictors for discharge destination after rehabilitation of inpatients recovering from severe stroke is scarce. The predictive value of rehabilitation admission NIHSS score among other potential predictors available on admission to rehabilitation has not been studied. AIm: The aim of this retrospective interventional study was to determine the predictive accuracy of 24 hours and rehabilitation admission NIHSS scores among other potential socio-demographic, clinical and functional predictors for discharge destination routinely collected on admission to rehabilitation. MATERIAL AND METHODS: On a university hospital specialized inpatient rehabilitation ward 156 consecutive rehabilitants with 24 hours NIHSS score >15 were recruited. On admission to rehabilitation, routinely collected variables potentially associated with discharge destination (community vs institution) were analyzed using logistic regression. RESULTS: 70 (44.9%) of rehabilitants were discharged to community, and 86 (55.1%) were discharged to institutional care. Those discharged home were younger and more often still working, had less often dysphagia/tube feeding or DNR decision in the acute phase, shorter time from stroke onset to rehabilitation admission, less severe impairment (NIHSS score, paresis, neglect) and disability (FIM score, ambulatory ability) on admission, and faster and more significant functional improvement during the in-stay than those institutionalized. CONCLUSION: The most influential independent predictors for community discharge on admission to rehabilitation were lower admission NIHSS score, ambulatory ability and younger age, NIHSS being the most powerful. The odds of being discharged to community decreased with 16.1% for every 1 point increase in NIHSS. The 3-factor model explained 65.7% of community discharge and 81.9% of institutional discharge, the overall predictive accuracy being 74.7%. The corresponding figures for admission NIHSS alone were 58.6%, 70.9% and 65.4%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Attitudes Toward Acupuncture Among Pain Fellowship Directors.
- Author
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Mann, Britton, Burch, Elizabeth, and Shakeshaft, Charol
- Subjects
- *
ACADEMIC medical centers , *ACUPUNCTURE , *AGE distribution , *ALTERNATIVE medicine , *ANALYSIS of variance , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *CHRONIC pain , *HEALTH services accessibility , *MEDICAL personnel , *PROBABILITY theory , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *T-test (Statistics) , *DATA analysis software ,STUDY & teaching of medicine - Abstract
Objectives. The purpose of this survey was to evaluate attitudes toward acupuncture among pain medicine fellowship directors. Additional goals were to assess the availability of acupuncture at academic medical centers and ascertain the inclusion of this modality in fellowship curricula. Methods. Electronic and paper surveys were distributed to the 97 American College of Graduate Medical Education pain medicine fellowship directors during January and February, 2014. Directors were queried about their referral patterns to acupuncture, as well as their perceptions of the utility of acupuncture for common pain conditions. They were asked about the availability of acupuncture at their institution, and whether acupuncture was included in the fellowship curriculum. Results. Sixty-seven percent of fellowship directors (65/97) completed the questionnaire. A majority of directors (83%) reported acupuncture is available to patients at their institution, and reported that acupuncture is a modality that they discuss with patients when creating a treatment plan for chronic pain (72%). The majority of programs include acupuncture as part of didactic (63%) and clinical (52%) education. Time constraints, lack of qualified teaching personnel, and cost to patients were cited as barriers to inclusion. The majority of fellowship directors considered acupuncture a safe and worthwhile option for common pain conditions. Conclusion. Results from this survey indicate that acupuncture is widely available to patients at academic medical centers, integrated into many pain fellowship curricula, and considered a useful modality by physician leaders in the field of pain medicine. This sentiment, paired with the flexibility of national guidelines for pain fellowship curricula, suggests a trend toward greater inclusion of this modality in academic medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The effect of electronic health records adoption on patient visit volume at an academic ophthalmology department.
- Author
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Lam, Jocelyn G., Lee, Bryan S., and Chen, Philip P.
- Subjects
ELECTRONIC health records ,OPHTHALMOLOGY ,MEDICAL informatics ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL laws ,MEDICAL personnel ,PHYSICIAN services utilization ,REPEATED measures design ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CLINICS ,EYE diseases ,EYE examination ,WORKING hours ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MEDICAL appointments ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,QUALITY assurance - Abstract
Background: Electronic health records (EHRs) have become a mandated part of delivering health care in the United States. The purpose of this study is to report patient volume before and after the transition to EHR in an academic outpatient ophthalmology practice.Methods: Review of patient visits per half-day and number of support staff for established faculty ophthalmologists between July and October for five consecutive years beginning the year before EHR implementation.Results: Eight physicians met inclusion criteria for the study. The number of patient visits was lower in each year after EHR adoption compared to baseline p ≤ 0.027). Patient volume per provider was reduced an average of 16.9% over the 4 years (range 15.3-18.5%), and during the final year studied, no provider had returned to the pre-EHR number of patients per clinic session. Support staffing was unchanged (p > 0.2).Conclusions: Adoption of EHR was associated with a significantly reduced number of patient visits per clinic session in an academic setting in which support staffing remained stable. Maintaining clinic volume and access in similar settings may require use of additional staffing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Perspectives of Zambian Clinical Oncology Trainees in the MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program (MOZART).
- Author
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Diao, Kevin, Kizub, Darya A, Ausat, Noveen, Mwaba, Catherine K, Akinfenwa, Chidinma P Anakwenze, Cameron, Carrie A, Chiao, Elizabeth Y, Lombe, Dorothy C, Msadabwe, Susan C, and Lin, Lilie L
- Subjects
ONLINE education ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,HOSPITAL medical staff ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,RESEARCH methodology ,CLINICAL medicine research ,MENTORING ,INTERVIEWING ,HUMAN services programs ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,TELECONFERENCING ,SOUND recordings ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EDUCATORS ,THEMATIC analysis ,ONCOLOGY - Abstract
Background African countries are underrepresented in cancer research, partly because of a lack of structured curricula on clinical research during medical education. To address this need, the MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program (MOZART) was developed jointly by MD Anderson Cancer Center (MDA) and the Cancer Diseases Hospital in Zambia (CDH) for Zambian clinical oncology trainees. We explored participant perspectives to provide insight for implementation of similar efforts. Materials and Methods The MD Anderson and Zambia Virtual Clinical Research Training Program consisted of weekly virtual lectures and support of Zambian-led research protocols through longitudinal mentorship groups that included CDH faculty and MDA peer and faculty mentors. Participants were contacted via email to take part in semi-structured interviews, which were conducted via teleconference and audio-recorded, transcribed, and coded. Emergent themes were extracted and are presented with representative verbatim quotations. Results Thirteen of the 14 (93%) trainees were interviewed. Emergent themes included (1) participants having diverse educational backgrounds but limited exposure to clinical research, (2) importance of cancer research specific to a resource-constrained setting, (3) complementary roles of peer mentors and local and international faculty mentors, (4) positive impact on clinical research skills but importance of a longitudinal program and early exposure to clinical research, and (5) challenges with executing research protocols. Conclusion To our knowledge, this is the first qualitative study of African clinical oncology trainees participating in a virtual clinical research training program. The lessons learned from semi-structured interviews with participants in MOZART provided valuable insights that can inform the development of similar clinical research training efforts and scale-up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. A Pilot randomized trial to examine effects of a hybrid closed-loop insulin delivery system on neurodevelopmental and cognitive outcomes in adolescents with type 1 diabetes.
- Author
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Reiss, Allan L., Jo, Booil, Arbelaez, Ana Maria, Tsalikian, Eva, Buckingham, Bruce, Weinzimer, Stuart A., Fox, Larry A., Cato, Allison, White, Neil H., Tansey, Michael, Aye, Tandy, Tamborlane, William, Englert, Kimberly, Lum, John, Mazaika, Paul, Foland-Ross, Lara, Marzelli, Matthew, Mauras, Nelly, the Diabetes Research in Children Network (DirecNet) Consortium, and Tong, Gabby
- Subjects
TYPE 1 diabetes ,ADOLESCENCE ,VOXEL-based morphometry ,COGNITIVE testing ,TEENAGERS ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,INSULIN - Abstract
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is associated with lower scores on tests of cognitive and neuropsychological function and alterations in brain structure and function in children. This proof-of-concept pilot study (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT03428932) examined whether MRI-derived indices of brain development and function and standardized IQ scores in adolescents with T1D could be improved with better diabetes control using a hybrid closed-loop insulin delivery system. Eligibility criteria for participation in the study included age between 14 and 17 years and a diagnosis of T1D before 8 years of age. Randomization to either a hybrid closed-loop or standard diabetes care group was performed after pre-qualification, consent, enrollment, and collection of medical background information. Of 46 participants assessed for eligibility, 44 met criteria and were randomized. Two randomized participants failed to complete baseline assessments and were excluded from final analyses. Participant data were collected across five academic medical centers in the United States. Research staff scoring the cognitive assessments as well as those processing imaging data were blinded to group status though participants and their families were not. Forty-two adolescents, 21 per group, underwent cognitive assessment and multi-modal brain imaging before and after the six month study duration. HbA1c and sensor glucose downloads were obtained quarterly. Primary outcomes included metrics of gray matter (total and regional volumes, cortical surface area and thickness), white matter volume, and fractional anisotropy. Estimated power to detect the predicted treatment effect was 0.83 with two-tailed, α = 0.05. Adolescents in the hybrid closed-loop group showed significantly greater improvement in several primary outcomes indicative of neurotypical development during adolescence compared to the standard care group including cortical surface area, regional gray volumes, and fractional anisotropy. The two groups were not significantly different on total gray and white matter volumes or cortical thickness. The hybrid closed loop group also showed higher Perceptual Reasoning Index IQ scores and functional brain activity more indicative of neurotypical development relative to the standard care group (both secondary outcomes). No adverse effects associated with study participation were observed. These results suggest that alterations to the developing brain in T1D might be preventable or reversible with rigorous glucose control. Long term research in this area is needed. Children with type 1 diabetes (T1D) are at risk for reduced cognitive ability and atypical brain development. This study shows that brain and cognitive measures can be improved in adolescents with T1D using a semi-automated insulin delivery system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Use of a Doubly Robust Machine-Learning–Based Approach to Evaluate Body Mass Index as a Modifier of the Association Between Fruit and Vegetable Intake and Preeclampsia.
- Author
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Bodnar, Lisa M, Cartus, Abigail R, Kennedy, Edward H, Kirkpatrick, Sharon I, Parisi, Sara M, Himes, Katherine P, Parker, Corette B, Grobman, William A, Simhan, Hyagriv N, Silver, Robert M, Wing, Deborah A, Perry, Samuel, and Naimi, Ashley I
- Subjects
OBESITY risk factors ,VEGETABLES ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,MACHINE learning ,DIET ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,PREGNANT women ,PREECLAMPSIA ,RISK assessment ,FRUIT ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,BODY mass index ,OBESITY in women ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PREGNANCY - Abstract
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans rely on summaries of the effect of dietary pattern on disease risk, independent of other population characteristics. We explored the modifying effect of prepregnancy body mass index (BMI; weight (kg)/height (m)
2 ) on the relationship between fruit and vegetable density (cup-equivalents/1,000 kcal) and preeclampsia using data from a pregnancy cohort study conducted at 8 US medical centers (n = 9,412; 2010–2013). Usual daily periconceptional intake of total fruits and total vegetables was estimated from a food frequency questionnaire. We quantified the effects of diets with a high density of fruits (≥1.2 cups/1,000 kcal/day vs. <1.2 cups/1,000 kcal/day) and vegetables (≥1.3 cups/1,000 kcal/day vs. <1.3 cups/1,000 kcal/day) on preeclampsia risk, conditional on BMI, using a doubly robust estimator implemented in 2 stages. We found that the protective association of higher fruit density declined approximately linearly from a BMI of 20 to a BMI of 32, by 0.25 cases per 100 women per each BMI unit, and then flattened. The protective association of higher vegetable density strengthened in a linear fashion, by 0.3 cases per 100 women for every unit increase in BMI, up to a BMI of 30, where it plateaued. Dietary patterns with a high periconceptional density of fruits and vegetables appear more protective against preeclampsia for women with higher BMI than for leaner women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Physiotherapists' and Physiotherapy Assistants' Perspectives on Using Three Physical Function Measures in the Intensive Care Unit: A Mixed-Methods Study.
- Author
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Hiser, Stephanie, Mantheiy, Earl, Toonstra, Amy, Aronson Friedman, Lisa, Ramsay, Pam, and Needham, Dale M.
- Subjects
PHYSICAL therapy assistants ,INTENSIVE care units ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,FOCUS groups ,FUNCTIONAL status ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,EARLY ambulation (Rehabilitation) ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,CRITICAL care medicine ,JUDGMENT sampling ,THEMATIC analysis ,PHYSICAL therapists' attitudes - Abstract
Copyright of Physiotherapy Canada is the property of University of Toronto Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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