4 results on '"McGahren, Eugene D."'
Search Results
2. Post-operative Opioid Reduction Protocol Reduces Racial Disparity in Clinical Outcomes in Children.
- Author
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Grabski, David F., Vavolizza, Rick D., Baumgarten, Heron D., Fleming II, Mark A., Moneme, Chioma, McGahren, Eugene D., Swanson, Jonathan R., Kabagambe, Sandra K., and Gander, Jeffrey W.
- Abstract
Racial disparities in health outcomes continue to exist for children requiring surgery. Previous investigations suggest that clinical protocols may reduce racial disparities. A post-operative opioid reduction protocol was implemented in children undergoing abdominal surgery who were less than 1 years old at a tertiary level hospital. The purpose of this investigation was to determine if the clinical protocol was associated with a reduction in racial disparity in post-operative opioid prescribing patterns and associated clinical outcomes. A post-operative opioid reduction protocol based on standing intravenous acetaminophen, educational sessions with nursing staff, and standardized post-operative sign-out between the surgical and NICU teams was implemented in children under 1 year old in 2016. A time series and before and after analysis was conducted using a historical pre-intervention cohort (Jan 2011–Dec 2015) and prospectively collected post-intervention cohort (Jan 2016–Jan 2021). Primary outcomes included post-operative opioid use and post-operative pain scores stratified by race. Secondary outcomes included associated clinical outcomes also stratified by race. A total of 249 children were included in the investigation, 117 in the pre-intervention group and 132 in the post intervention group. The majority of patients in both cohorts were either White or Black. The two cohorts were equally matched in terms of pre-operative clinical variables. In the pre-intervention cohort, the median post-operative morphine equivalents in White children was 2.1 mg/kg (IQR 0.2, 11.1) while in Black children it was 13.1 mg/kg (IQR 2.4, 65.3), p-value = 0.0352. In the post-intervention cohort, the median value for White children and Black children was statistically identical (0.05 mg/kg (IQR 0, 0.5) and 0.0 mg/kg (IQR 0, 0.3), respectively, p-value = 0.237). This pattern was also demonstrated in clinical variables including length of stay, intubation length and total parenteral nutrition use. In the pre-intervention cohort, the total length of stay for white children was 16 days while for black children it was 45 days (p = 0.007). In the postintervention cohort the length of stay for both White and Black children were identical at 8 days (p = 0.748). The use of a clinical opioid reduction protocol implemented at a tertiary medical center was associated with a reduction in racial disparity in opioid prescribing habits in children. Prior to the protocol, there was a racial disparity in clinical variables associated with prolonged opioid use including length of stay, TPN use, and intubation length. The clinical protocol reduced variability in opioid prescribing patterns in all racial groups which was associated with a reduction in variability in associated clinical variables. Level III. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Primary payer status is significantly associated with postoperative mortality, morbidity, and hospital resource utilization in pediatric surgical patients within the United States.
- Author
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Stone, Matthew L., LaPar, Damien J., Mulloy, Daniel P., Rasmussen, Sara K., Kane, Bartholomew J., McGahren, Eugene D., and Rodgers, Bradley M.
- Subjects
PEDIATRIC surgery ,MEDICARE ,POSTOPERATIVE period ,MORTALITY ,MEDICAL care use ,APPENDECTOMY - Abstract
Abstract: Purpose: Current healthcare reform efforts have highlighted the potential impact of insurance status on patient outcomes. The influence of primary payer status (PPS) within the pediatric surgical patient population remains unknown. The purpose of this study was to examine risk-adjusted associations between PPS and postoperative mortality, morbidity, and resource utilization in pediatric surgical patients within the United States. Methods: A weighted total of 153,333 pediatric surgical patients were evaluated using the national Kids'' Inpatient Database (2003 and 2006): appendectomy, intussusception, decortication, pyloromyotomy, congenital diaphragmatic hernia repair, and colonic resection for Hirschsprung''s disease. Patients were stratified according to PPS: Medicare (n=180), Medicaid (n=51,862), uninsured (n=12,539), and private insurance (n=88,753). Multivariable hierarchical regression modeling was utilized to evaluate risk-adjusted associations between PPS and outcomes. Results: Overall median patient age was 12years, operations were primarily non-elective (92.4%), and appendectomies accounted for the highest proportion of cases (81.3%). After adjustment for patient, hospital, and operation-related factors, PPS was independently associated with in-hospital death (p <0.0001) and postoperative complications (p <0.02), with increased risk for Medicaid and uninsured populations. Moreover, Medicaid PPS was also associated with greater adjusted lengths of stay and total hospital charges (p <0.0001). Importantly, these results were dependent on operation type. Conclusions: Primary payer status is associated with risk-adjusted postoperative mortality, morbidity, and resource utilization among pediatric surgical patients. Uninsured patients are at increased risk for postoperative mortality while Medicaid patients accrue greater morbidity, hospital lengths of stay, and total charges. These results highlight a complex interaction between socioeconomic and patient-related factors, and primary payer status should be considered in the preoperative risk stratification of pediatric patients. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Standing Intravenous Acetaminophen Is Associated With a Reduction of Post-operative Opioid Use in Infants Aged Less Than 1 Year Treated on the Acute Care Floor.
- Author
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Vavolizza, Rick D., Grabski, David F., Roecker, Zoe, Levin, Daniel, Swanson, Jonathan R., McGahren, Eugene D., and Gander, Jeffrey W.
- Subjects
- *
INFANTS , *ACETAMINOPHEN , *QUALITY control charts , *POSTOPERATIVE pain , *OPIOIDS , *ANALGESIA - Abstract
Given the negative clinical effects opiates can have, the search for alternative forms of analgesia to treat post-operative pain continues. We implemented an opiate reduction strategy using standing intravenous (IV) acetaminophen for infants aged less than 1 y who underwent abdominal or anorectal surgery and recovered on the acute care floor. Infants were administered standing IV acetaminophen every 6 h for a minimum of 48 h as the main form of post-operative analgesia. Pain severity was objectively scored using the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, and Consolability (FLACC) scale. A before-and-after retrospective cohort analysis was performed and process control charts were used to examine trends in post-operative opiate use in our pre-intervention (January 2012 to January 2016), roll-out (January 2016 to December 2016), and post-intervention (December 2016 to December 2020) cohorts. A total of 131 infants were included: 56 in the pre-intervention, 17 in the roll-out, and 58 in the post-intervention group. Patient demographics were equivalent. The intervention was associated with a 36-fold reduction in post-operative morphine equivalents (median 0.36 mg/kg in the pre-intervention group versus 0.0 mg/kg in the post-intervention group, P < 0.0001). The median and maximum FLACC pain scores along with clinical safety profiles were statistically equivalent between the groups. The intervention was associated with a 2-d reduction in post-operative length of stay (P < 0.0001). Standing IV acetaminophen is associated with a reduction of post-operative opioid use in infants being treated on the acute care floor while maintaining equivalent FLACC pain scores. Similar opiate reduction strategies may be of value at other institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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