117 results on '"Cykert S"'
Search Results
2. Overall Survival From a Prospective Multi-Institutional Trial to Resolve Black-White Disparities in the Treatment of Early Stage Breast and Lung Cancer
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Manning, M., primary, Yongue, C., additional, Garikipati, A., additional, Cykert, S., additional, Eng, E., additional, Schaal, J., additional, Lightfoot, A., additional, Jones, N., additional, and Robertson, L., additional
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- 2021
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3. DISPARITIES AND HEALTH EQUITY
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Samuel, C.A., primary, Elkins, W., additional, Tan, X., additional, Corbie‐Smith, G., additional, Cykert, S., additional, Mbah, O., additional, Padilla, N., additional, Bensen, J.T., additional, Farnan, L., additional, Bennett, A.V., additional, Rosenstein, D., additional, Sanoff, H., additional, and Reeve, B.B., additional
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- 2020
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4. A Controlled Trial of Dissemination and Implementation of a Cardiovascular Risk Reduction Strategy in Small Primary Care Practices
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Cykert, S., primary, Keyserling, T., additional, DeWalt, D., additional, Pignone, M., additional, Cene, C., additional, and Trogdon, J., additional
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- 2020
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5. Reducing cardiovascular disease in a rural community
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Samuel-Hodge, C., Cykert, S., Allgood, S.D., Ammerman, A.S., Rosemond, C.A., and Leeman, J.
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In this case report, we describe the one-year formative phase of a five-year study to develop, implement, and test a community health worker (CHW)-delivered cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention intervention. The purpose of the formative phase was to engage community partners in the adaptation of an existing evidence-based CVD prevention intervention to fit the needs and preferences of a rural, predominantly African-American community. The formative work was guided by a framework for adapting evidence-based interventions and involved engaging stakeholders in assessing the intervention's fit with the local context and then applying assessment findings to iteratively adapt the intervention's contents, materials, and delivery methods. Findings from the formative work were then applied to develop CHW position descriptions, workflow diagrams, and a training plan. Findings also were applied to adapt intervention materials and protocols to fit the needs of the community. This case report illustrates how community-engaged formative work can be applied to adapt an evidence-based intervention to fit community needs and resources.
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- 2019
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6. THE ASSOCIATION OF ASTHMA AND A WORSENING LEG ULCER: A CASE OF VASCULITIS IN PRIMARY CARE.
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Cykert, S., Cakir, B., and Talbot, D.
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- 2002
7. A Prospective Multi-Institutional Trial to Resolve Black-White Disparities in the Treatment of Early Stage Lung Cancer
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Manning, M., primary, Cykert, S., additional, Eng, E., additional, Walker, P., additional, Robertson, L., additional, Arya, R., additional, Jones, N., additional, and Heron, D.E., additional
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- 2019
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8. MECHANICAL VENTILATION FOR ACUTE RESPIRATORY FAILURE: PREDICTORS OF PATIENT PREFERENCES
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Cykert, S., Hansen, C., Joines, J., and Phifer, N.
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- 1998
9. SURGICAL DECISIONS IN PATIENTS WITH SOLITARY LUNG NODULES AND CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE LUNG DISEASE: A DECISION ANALYTIC APPROACH
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Cykert, S and Joines, J.
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- 1998
10. PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIANS' ATTITUDES TOWARD CAPITATED PAYMENT
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Cykert, S., Layson, R., Hansen, C., and Joines, J.
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- 1996
11. OA03.02 An Intervention Study to Reduce Black-White Treatment Disparities in Early Stage Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer
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Walker, P.R., primary, Cykert, S., additional, Edwards, L., additional, Arya, R., additional, and Dilworth-Anderson, P., additional
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- 2017
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12. Meaningful Use in Chronic Care: Improved Diabetes Outcomes Using a Primary Care Extension Center Model
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Cykert, S., primary, Lefebvre, A., additional, Bacon, T., additional, and Newton, W., additional
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- 2016
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13. Reducing Racial Disparities in Treatment for Early-Stage Lung Cancer With a Multimodal Intervention
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Manning, M., primary, Cykert, S., additional, Eng, E., additional, Yee, M.K., additional, Robertson, L., additional, Hardy, C., additional, Schaal, J., additional, Heron, D.E., additional, Jones, N., additional, Foley, K., additional, Smith, B., additional, Alexandra, L., additional, Samuel, C., additional, and Gizlice, Z., additional
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- 2016
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14. The Benefits and Concerns Surrounding the Automation of Clinical Guidelines
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Cykert, S., primary
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- 2015
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15. Practice-based Research Networks (PBRNs) in the Era of Integrated Delivery Systems
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Carey, T. S., primary, Halladay, J. R., additional, Donahue, K. E., additional, and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2015
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16. When race matters: disagreement in pain perception between patients and their physicians in primary care
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Staton, L. J., Panda, M., Chen, I., Genao, I., Kurz, J., Pasanen, M., Mechaber, A. J., Menon, M., O Rorke, J., Wood, J., Eric Rosenberg, Faeslis, C., Carey, T., Calleson, D., and Cykert, S.
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Male ,Academic Medical Centers ,Analgesics ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Primary Health Care ,Pain ,Hispanic or Latino ,Middle Aged ,Dissent and Disputes ,United States ,White People ,Black or African American ,Analgesics, Opioid ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Chronic Disease ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Female ,Perception ,Research Article ,Pain Measurement - Abstract
Patients and physicians often disagree in their assessment of pain intensity. This study explores the impact of patient factors on underestimation of pain intensity in chronic noncancer pain. We surveyed patients and their physicians in 12 primary care centers. To measure pain intensity, patients completed an 11-point numeric rating scale for which pain scores range from 0 (no pain) to 10 (unbearable pain). Physicians rated patients' pain on the same scale. We defined disagreement of pain intensity as underestimation or overestimation by 22 points. Of 601 patients approached, 463 (77%) completed the survey. The majority of participants were black (39%) or white (47%), 67% were female, and the mean age was 53 years. Physicians underestimated pain intensity relative to their patients 39% of the time. Forty-six percent agreed with their patients' pain perception, and 15% of physicians overestimated their patients' pain levels by > or =2 points. In both the bivariate and multivariable models, black race was a significant variable associated with underestimation of pain by physicians (p < 0.05; OR = 1.92; 95% CI: 1.31-2.81). This study finds that physicians are twice as likely to underestimate pain in blacks patients compared to all other ethnicities combined. A qualitative study exploring why physicians rate blacks patients' pain low is warranted.
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- 2007
17. Physician's perspectives and racial disparity in the surgical treatment of early lung cancer.
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Walker, P. R., primary and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2010
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18. OSTEOPOROSIS SCREENING AND EFFECTS OF VARIOUS RISK FACTORS ON SCREENING.
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Jain, K., primary, Homayounrooz, F., additional, Zuleta, J., additional, and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2007
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19. OSTEOPOROSIS SCREENING AND EFFECT OF CHRONIC DISEASES AND COMORBID CONDITIONS ON SCREENING.
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Homayounrooz, F., primary, Jain, K., additional, Zuleta, J., additional, and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2007
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20. EFFECTS OF SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS AND CONTINUITY OF CARE ON OSTEOPOROSIS SCREENING.
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Abernathy, E., primary, Tullo, T., additional, Ravakhah, K., additional, and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2007
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21. 189 A NONINFECTIOUS ETIOLOGY OF MULTIORGAN DYSFUNCTION SYNDROME
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Butcher, E., primary and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2005
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22. A Noninfectious Etiology of Multiorgan Dysfunction Syndrome
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Butcher, E., primary and Cykert, S., additional
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- 2005
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23. Will universal health insurance assure universal access to ongoing primary care for adults?
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Cykert, S., primary
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- 1993
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24. Tamoxifen for breast cancer prevention: a framework for clinical decisions.
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Cykert S, Phifer N, and Hansen C
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- 2004
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25. Surgical decisions for early stage, non-small cell lung cancer: which racially sensitive perceptions of cancer are likely to explain racial variation in surgery?
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Cykert S and Phifer N
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OBJECTIVES: Twenty-three percent of white and 36% of African American patients who suffer from early stage non-small cell lung cancer do not undergo potentially curative surgery A simple decision model is presented to probe for elements of surgical decision making that could explain decisions against lung cancer surgery and racial variation in these decisions. METHODS: A survey of 181 diverse individuals to measure health utility scores for conditions relevant to lung cancer surgery was performed. These scores were inserted into a simple model that calculates quality-adjusted survival related to decisions for and against cancer surgery RESULTS: The health utility score (HUS) for progressive lung cancer, as determined by a survey using the standard gamble approach, is nearly twice as high in African Americans as whites (0.32 v. 0.18). However, in a model incorporating African American utility data, lung cancer surgery remains heavily favored compared to the no-surgery decision (2.32 v. 0.48 quality-adjusted life years). Sensitivity analysis shows that factors that lead to a belief of cancer 'cure' in the absence of surgical intervention are much more important than variations of HUS in directing model results away from surgery. CONCLUSION: This analysis illustrates that racial differences in quality-of-life ratings of progressive lung cancer as measured by HUS exist but may not explain decisions against surgery as much as other elements of patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
26. Telephone medicine for internists.
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Elnicki, D. Michael, Ogden, Paul, Flannery, Michael, Hannis, Mark, Cykert, Sam, Elnicki, D M, Ogden, P, Flannery, M, Hannis, M, and Cykert, S
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TELEPHONE in medicine ,INTERNISTS ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals - Abstract
The role of the telephone in medical practice is important, but often problematic. Mistakes in telephone diagnosis and triage can have severe consequences. An effective office system can reduce liability risks, and in some cases telephone contact can substitute for office visits. Internists feel unprepared to provide telephone care. Therefore, residency education needs to focus on documentation, consultant availability, and performance feedback. Research should focus on improving outcomes, reimbursement issues, and technologic advances. This article describes internists' telephone interactions with ambulatory patients, preparation for telephone medicine, and aspects of office telephone systems and makes comparisons with other primary care fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
27. Racial differences in patients' perceptions of debilitated health states.
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Cykert, Samuel, Joines, Jerry D., Kissling, Grace, Hansen, Charles J., Cykert, S, Joines, J D, Kissling, G, and Hansen, C J
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SENSORY perception ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Objective: To determine health utility scores for specific debilitated health states and to identify whether race or other demographic differences predict significant variation in these utility scores.Design: Utility analysis.Setting: A community hospital general internal medicine clinic, a private internal medicine practice, and a private pulmonary medicine practice.Participants: Sixty-four consecutive patients aged 50 to 75 years awaiting appointments. In order to participate, patients at the pulmonary clinic had to meet prespecified criteria of breathing impairment.Measurements: Individuals' strength of preference concerning specific states of limited physical function as measured by the standard gamble technique.Main Results: Mean utility scores used to quantitate limitations in physical function were extremely low. Using a scale for which 0 represented death and 1.0 represented normal health, limitation in activities of daily living was rated 0. 19 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.13, 0.25), tolerance of only bed-to-chair ambulation 0.17 (95% CI 0.11, 0.23), and permanent nursing home placement 0.16 (95% CI 0.10, 0.22). Bivariate analysis identified female gender and African-American race as predictors of higher utility scores ( p =.05). In multiple regression analysis, only race remained statistically significant ( p =.02 for all three outcome variables).Conclusion: Comparisons of African-American values with those of whites concerning defined states of debility demonstrate greater than threefold increases in utility scores. This finding suggests that racial differences need to be taken into account when studying the effects of medical interventions on quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1999
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28. Health insurance does not guarantee access to primary care: a national study of physicians' acceptance of publicly insured patients.
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Cykert, Samuel, Kissling, Grace, Layson, Rita, Hansen, Charles, Cykert, S, Kissling, G, Layson, R, and Hansen, C
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The roles of reimbursement and other predictors that affect physicians' willingness to accept publicly insured continuing care patients were examined in a national survey. The response rate was 47%. Eighty-eight percent of the respondents were accepting new patients. Forty-two percent of these physicians were willing to accept new continuing care patients insured by Medicaid, 70% reported accepting those paying by Medicare assignment, and 85% said they accept patients covered by Medicare plus balance-billing payments. Low reimbursement was the strongest predictor for lack of acceptance. The results suggest that systems of multitiered reimbursement are associated with diminished access for patients insured in the lower tiers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1995
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29. Attracting students to primary care.
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Saver BG, Poplin CM, Cykert S, Fleming M, Johnson MS, South-Paul J, Rustin TA, Whitcomb ME, Cohen JJ, and Fincher RE
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- 2005
30. Investigating Unconscious Race Bias and Bias Awareness Among Vascular Surgeons.
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Howard KA, Witrick B, Clark A, Morse A, Atkinson K, Kapoor P, McGinigle KL, Minc S, Alabi O, Hicks CW, Gonzalez A, Cené CW, Cykert S, and Kalbaugh CA
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Background: Implicit bias can influence behavior and decision-making. In clinical settings, implicit bias may influence treatment decisions and contribute to health disparities. Given documented Black-White disparities in vascular care, the purpose of this study was to examine the prevalence and degree of unconscious bias and awareness of bias among vascular surgeons treating peripheral artery disease (PAD)., Methods: The sampling frame included all vascular surgeons who participate in the Vascular Quality Initiative (VQI). Participants completed a survey which included demographic questions, the race implicit association test (IAT) to measure magnitude of unconscious bias, and six bias awareness questions to measure conscious bias. The magnitude of unconscious bias was no preference; or slight, moderate, or strong in the direction of pro-White or pro-Black. Data from participants were weighted to account for nonresponse bias and known differences in the characteristics of surgeons who chose to participate compared to the full registry. We stratified unconscious and conscious findings by physician race/ethnicity, physician sex, and years of experience. Finally, we examined the relationship between unconscious and conscious bias., Results: There were 2,512 surgeons in the VQI registry, 304 of whom completed the survey, including getting IAT results. Most participants (71.6%) showed a pro-White bias with 73.0% of this group in the moderate and strong categories. While 77.5% of respondents showed conscious awareness of bias, of those whose conscious results showed lack of awareness, 67.8% had moderate or strong bias, compared to 55.7% for those with awareness. Bias magnitude varied based on physician race/ethnicity and years of experience. Women were more likely than men to report awareness of biases and potential impact of bias on decision-making., Conclusions: Most people have some level of unconscious bias, developed from early life reinforcements, social stereotypes, and learned experiences. Regarding health disparities, however, these are important findings in a profession that takes care of patients with PAD due to heavy burden of comorbid conditions and high proportion of individuals from structurally vulnerable groups. Given the lack of association between unconscious and conscious awareness of biases, awareness may be an important first step in mitigation to minimize racial disparities in healthcare.
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- 2024
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31. Investigating the impact of suboptimal prescription of preoperative antiplatelets and statins on race and ethnicity-related disparities in major limb amputation.
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Kalbaugh CA, Witrick B, Howard KA, Sivaraj LB, McGinigle KL, Robinson WP 3rd, Cykert S, Hicks CW, and Lesko CR
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- Humans, Black or African American, Ethnicity, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, White, Hispanic or Latino, Racial Groups, Amputation, Surgical, Healthcare Disparities, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors adverse effects, Peripheral Arterial Disease diagnosis, Peripheral Arterial Disease drug therapy, Peripheral Arterial Disease surgery
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Background: Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic patients with symptomatic PAD may receive different treatments than White patients with symptomatic PAD. The delivery of guideline-directed medical treatment may be a modifiable upstream driver of race and ethnicity-related disparities in outcomes such as limb amputation. The purpose of our study was to investigate the prescription of preoperative antiplatelets and statins in producing disparities in the risk of amputation following revascularization for symptomatic peripheral artery disease (PAD)., Methods: We used data from the Vascular Quality Initiative, a vascular procedure-based registry in the United States (2011-2018). We estimated the probability of preoperative antiplatelet and statin prescriptions and 1-year incidence of amputation. We then estimated the amputation risk difference between race/ethnicity groups that could be eliminated under a hypothetical intervention., Results: Across 100,579 revascularizations, the 1-year amputation risk was 2.5% (2.4%, 2.6%) in White patients, 5.3% (4.9%, 5.6%) in Black patients, and 5.3% (4.7%, 5.9%) in Hispanic patients. Black (57.5%) and Hispanic patients (58.7%) were only slightly less likely than White patients (60.9%) to receive antiplatelet and statin therapy. However, the effect of antiplatelets and statins was greater in Black and Hispanic patients such that, had all patients received these medications, the estimated risk difference comparing Black to White patients would have reduced by 8.9% (-2.9%, 21.9%) and the risk difference comparing Hispanic to White patients would have been reduced by 17.6% (-0.7%, 38.6%)., Conclusion: Even though guideline-directed care appeared evenly distributed by race/ethnicity, increasing access to such care may decrease health care disparities in major limb amputation., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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32. Estimating the Cardiovascular Disease Risk Reduction of a Quality Improvement Initiative in Primary Care: Findings from EvidenceNOW.
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Lindner SR, Balasubramanian B, Marino M, McConnell KJ, Kottke TE, Edwards ST, Cykert S, and Cohen DJ
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- Humans, Quality Improvement, Nutrition Surveys, Primary Health Care, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Hypertension, Atherosclerosis
- Abstract
Background: This study estimates reductions in 10-year atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk associated with EvidenceNOW, a multi-state initiative that sought to improve cardiovascular preventive care in the form of (A)spirin prescribing for high-risk patients, (B)lood pressure control for people with hypertension, (C)holesterol management, and (S)moking screening and cessation counseling (ABCS) among small primary care practices by providing supportive interventions such as practice facilitation., Design: We conducted an analytic modeling study that combined (1) data from 1,278 EvidenceNOW practices collected 2015 to 2017; (2) patient-level information of individuals ages 40 to 79 years who participated in the 2015 to 2016 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ( n = 1,295); and (3) 10-year ASCVD risk prediction equations., Measures: The primary outcome measure was 10-year ASCVD risk., Results: EvidenceNOW practices cared for an estimated 4 million patients ages 40 to 79 who might benefit from ABCS interventions. The average 10-year ASCVD risk of these patients before intervention was 10.11%. Improvements in ABCS due to EvidenceNOW reduced their 10-year ASCVD risk to 10.03% (absolute risk reduction: -0.08, P ≤ .001 ). This risk reduction would prevent 3,169 ASCVD events over 10 years and avoid $150 million in 90-day direct medical costs., Conclusion: Small preventive care improvements and associated reductions in absolute ASCVD risk levels can lead to meaningful life-saving benefits at the population level., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare., (© Copyright by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
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- 2023
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33. Examining ACCURE's Nurse Navigation Through an Antiracist Lens: Transparency and Accountability in Cancer Care.
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Griesemer I, Lightfoot AF, Eng E, Bosire C, Guerrab F, Kotey A, Alexander KM, Baker S, Black KZ, Dixon C, Ellis KR, Foley K, Goettsch C, Moore A, Ryals CA, Smith B, Yongue C, Cykert S, and Robertson LB
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- Humans, White, Black or African American, Racism, Antiracism, Patient Advocacy, Neoplasms nursing, Neoplasms therapy, Patient Navigation, Social Responsibility
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There are persistent disparities in the delivery of cancer treatment, with Black patients receiving fewer of the recommended cancer treatment cycles than their White counterparts on average. To enhance racial equity in cancer care, innovative methods that apply antiracist principles to health promotion interventions are needed. The parent study for the current analysis, the Accountability for Cancer Care through Undoing Racism and Equity (ACCURE) intervention, was a system-change intervention that successfully eliminated the Black-White disparity in cancer treatment completion among patients with early-stage breast and lung cancer. The intervention included specially trained nurse navigators who leveraged real-time data to follow-up with patients during their treatment journeys. Community and academic research partners conducted thematic analysis on all clinical notes (n = 3,251) written by ACCURE navigators after each contact with patients in the specialized navigation arm (n = 162). Analysis was informed by transparency and accountability, principles adapted from the antiracist resource Undoing Racism and determined as barriers to treatment completion through prior research that informed ACCURE. We identified six themes in the navigator notes that demonstrated enhanced accountability of the care system to patient needs. Underlying these themes was a process of enhanced data transparency that allowed navigators to provide tailored patient support. Themes include (1) patient-centered advocacy, (2) addressing system barriers to care, (3) connection to resources, (4) re-engaging patients after lapsed treatment, (5) addressing symptoms and side effects, and (6) emotional support. Future interventions should incorporate transparency and accountability mechanisms and examine the impact on racial equity in cancer care.
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- 2023
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34. Use of Sociodemographic Information in Clinical Vignettes of Multiple-Choice Questions for Preclinical Medical Students.
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Carey-Ewend K, Feinberg A, Flen A, Williamson C, Gutierrez C, Cykert S, Beck Dallaghan GL, and Gilliland KO
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Purpose: This paper aims to characterize the use of demographic data in multiple-choice questions from a commercial preclinical question bank and determine if there is appropriate use of different distractors., Background: Multiple-choice questions for medical students often include vignettes describing a patient's presentation to help guide students to a diagnosis, but overall patterns of usage between different types of nonmedical patient information in question stems have yet to be determined., Methods: Three hundred eighty of 453 randomly selected questions were included for analysis after determining they contained a clinical vignette and required a diagnosis. The vignettes and following explanations were then examined for the presence/absence of 11 types of demographic information, including age, sex/gender, and socioeconomic status. We compared both the usage frequency and relevance between the 11 information types., Results: Most information types were present in less than 10% of clinical vignettes, but age and sex/gender were present in over 95% of question stems. Over 50% of questions included irrelevant information about age and sex/gender, but 75% of questions did not include any irrelevant information of other types. Patient weight and environmental exposures were significantly more likely to be relevant than age or sex/gender., Discussion: Students using the questions in this study will frequently gain practice incorporating age and sex/gender into their clinical reasoning while receiving little exposure to other demographic information. Based on our findings, we posit that questions could include more irrelevant information, outside age and sex/gender, to better approximate real clinical scenarios and ensure students do not overvalue certain demographic data., Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40670-023-01778-z., Competing Interests: Conflict of InterestThe authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) under exclusive licence to International Association of Medical Science Educators 2023. Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.)
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- 2023
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35. A Hybrid Implementation-Effectiveness Study of a Community Health Worker-Delivered Intervention to Reduce Cardiovascular Disease Risk in a Rural, Underserved Non-Hispanic Black Population: The CHANGE Study.
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Samuel-Hodge CD, Ziya Gizlice, Allgood SD, Bunton AJ, Erskine A, Leeman J, and Cykert S
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- Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Community Health Workers, Humans, Medically Underserved Area, Middle Aged, Rural Population, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Hypertension prevention & control
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of the Carolina Heart Alliance Networking for Greater Equity (CHANGE) Program, an adapted evidence-based cardiovascular disease risk reduction intervention delivered by Community Health Workers (CHW) to rural adults., Design: Hybrid implementation-effectiveness study with a pre-post design., Setting: North Carolina Federally Qualified Health Center and local health department in a rural, medically underserved area., Sample: Participants (n = 255) included 87% Non-Hispanic Black with a mean age of 57 years; 84% had diagnosed hypertension, 55% had diabetes, and 65% had hypercholesterolemia., Intervention: A CHW-delivered, low-intensity, 4-month behavioral lifestyle intervention promoting a southern-style Mediterranean dietary pattern and physical activity., Measures: We measured number and representativeness of participants reached and retained, intervention delivery fidelity, weight, blood pressure, and self-reported dietary and physical activity behaviors., Analysis: Pre-post changes at 4 months were analyzed using paired t-tests., Results: Study participants completed 90% of planned intervention contacts; 87% were retained. Intervention delivery fidelity measures showed participants receiving a mean of 3.5 counseling visits, 2.7 booster calls, and on average completing 1.7 modules, setting 1.8 goals, and receiving 1.3 referrals per visit. There were significant mean reductions in systolic (-2.5 mmHg, P < .05) and diastolic blood pressure (-2.1 mmHg, P < .01); the proportion of participants with systolic blood pressure <130 increased by 7 % points (P = .05), and diastolic pressure <80 by 9 percentage points (P < .01). Dietary behaviors improved significantly with average weekly servings of nuts increased by .5 serving (P < .0001), and fruits and vegetables by .8 daily serving (P < .0001). Physical activity also increased on average by 45 min./week (P < .001). Weight did not change significantly., Conclusions: The CHANGE program showed both implementation and program effectiveness and adds to the evidence supporting CHW-delivered lifestyle interventions to reduce CVD risk among rural, Non-Hispanic Black, and medically underserved populations.
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- 2022
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36. A Heart Healthy Intervention Improved Tobacco Screening Rates and Cessation Support in Primary Care Practices.
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Kowitt SD, Goldstein AO, and Cykert S
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- Health Behavior, Humans, Primary Health Care, Nicotiana, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Tobacco Use Cessation
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We examined whether an evidence-based cardiovascular disease risk reduction intervention (Heart Health Now) would improve rates for tobacco cessation screening and counseling in small primary care practices in North Carolina. Heart Health Now was a stepped wedge, stratified, cluster randomized trial for primary care practices that were staffed by 10 or fewer clinicians and had an electronic health record. The Heart Health Now intervention consisted of education tools, onsite practice facilitation for one year, and a practice-specific cardiovascular population management dashboard that included monthly, measure-specific run charts to help guide quality improvement. Our primary outcomes were practice-level rates of tobacco screening and tobacco cessation support-extracted from practices' electronic health records-and measured at pre-intervention and 6 months post-intervention. The 28 practices included in our analyses represented 78,120 patients and 17,687 smokers. Significant change occurred in practices' tobacco screening rates and cessation support rates over time. From pre- to post-intervention, screening rates significantly increased from 82.7 to 96.2% (p < 0.001). Similarly, cessation support rates significantly increased from 44.3 to 50.1% (p = 0.03). Several practice-level factors were associated with improvement including being in an academic health center or faculty practice, having more clinicians, and having a lower percentage of White patients. In conclusion, a multi-component intervention focused on multiple cardiovascular disease risk reduction in multiple small primary care practices successfully improved rates of tobacco screening and cessation support., (© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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37. Effect of an Antiracism Intervention on Racial Disparities in Time to Lung Cancer Surgery.
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Charlot M, Stein JN, Damone E, Wood I, Forster M, Baker S, Emerson M, Samuel-Ryals C, Yongue C, Eng E, Manning M, Deal A, and Cykert S
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- Healthcare Disparities, Humans, Prospective Studies, Retrospective Studies, United States, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung surgery, Lung Neoplasms surgery
- Abstract
Purpose: Timely lung cancer surgery is a metric of high-quality cancer care and improves survival for early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer. Historically, Black patients experience longer delays to surgery than White patients and have lower survival rates. Antiracism interventions have shown benefits in reducing racial disparities in lung cancer treatment., Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of Accountability for Cancer Care through Undoing Racism and Equity, an antiracism prospective pragmatic trial, at five cancer centers to assess the impact on overall timeliness of lung cancer surgery and racial disparities in timely surgery. The intervention consisted of (1) a real-time warning system to identify unmet care milestones, (2) race-specific feedback on lung cancer treatment rates, and (3) patient navigation. The primary outcome was surgery within 8 weeks of diagnosis. Risk ratios (RRs) and 95% CIs were estimated using log-binomial regression and adjusted for clinical and demographic factors., Results: A total of 2,363 patients with stage I and II non-small-cell lung cancer were included in the analyses: intervention (n = 263), retrospective control (n = 1,798), and concurrent control (n = 302). 87.1% of Black patients and 85.4% of White patients in the intervention group ( P = .13) received surgery within 8 weeks of diagnosis compared with 58.7% of Black patients and 75.0% of White patients in the retrospective group ( P < .01) and 64.9% of Black patients and 73.2% of White patients ( P = .29) in the concurrent group. Black patients in the intervention group were more likely to receive timely surgery than Black patients in the retrospective group (RR 1.43; 95% CI, 1.26 to 1.64). White patients in the intervention group also had timelier surgery than White patients in the retrospective group (RR 1.10; 95% CI, 1.02 to 1.18)., Conclusion: Accountability for Cancer Care through Undoing Racism and Equity is associated with timelier lung cancer surgery and reduction of the racial gap in timely surgery., Competing Interests: Emily DamoneResearch Funding: Genentech/Roche Cleo Samuel-RyalsEmployment: Flatiron HealthUncompensated Relationships: Voluntis Matthew ManningStock and Other Ownership Interests: Fuse Oncology Samuel CykertConsulting or Advisory Role: PfizerNo other potential conflicts of interest were reported.
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- 2022
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38. A Path Toward Health Care Equity: System-Based Interventions for Change.
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Cykert S
- Subjects
- Black People, Healthcare Disparities, Humans, North Carolina, Black or African American, Health Equity
- Abstract
Despite documentation spanning decades, health care disparities across North Carolina have remained persistent for populations of color, especially for Black patients. This commentary reviews recent studies that used system-based interventions to reduce disparities and improve outcomes for everyone, and outlines how clinicians, partnering with NC AHEC, can apply results to practice., (©2022 by the North Carolina Institute of Medicine and The Duke Endowment. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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39. Considerations Before Selecting a Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trial Design for a Practice Improvement Study.
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Nguyen AM, Cleland CM, Dickinson LM, Barry MP, Cykert S, Duffy FD, Kuzel AJ, Lindner SR, Parchman ML, Shelley DR, and Walunas TL
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- Cluster Analysis, Humans, Research Design
- Abstract
Purpose: Despite the growing popularity of stepped-wedge cluster randomized trials (SW-CRTs) for practice-based research, the design's advantages and challenges are not well documented. The objective of this study was to identify the advantages and challenges of the SW-CRT design for large-scale intervention implementations in primary care settings., Methods: The EvidenceNOW: Advancing Heart Health initiative, funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, included a large collection of SW-CRTs. We conducted qualitative interviews with 17 key informants from EvidenceNOW grantees to identify the advantages and challenges of using SW-CRT design., Results: All interviewees reported that SW-CRT can be an effective study design for large-scale intervention implementations. Advantages included (1) incentivized recruitment, (2) staggered resource allocation, and (3) statistical power. Challenges included (1) time-sensitive recruitment, (2) retention, (3) randomization requirements and practice preferences, (4) achieving treatment schedule fidelity, (5) intensive data collection, (6) the Hawthorne effect, and (7) temporal trends., Conclusions: The challenges experienced by EvidenceNOW grantees suggest that certain favorable real-world conditions constitute a context that increases the odds of a successful SW-CRT. An existing infrastructure can support the recruitment of many practices. Strong retention plans are needed to continue to engage sites waiting to start the intervention. Finally, study outcomes should be ones already captured in routine practice; otherwise, funders and investigators should assess the feasibility and cost of data collection. VISUAL ABSTRACT ., (© 2022 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.)
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- 2022
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40. Development and Validation of the Trust in My Doctor, Trust in Doctors in General, and Trust in the Health Care Team Scales.
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Richmond J, Boynton MH, Ozawa S, Muessig KE, Cykert S, and Ribisl KM
- Subjects
- Adult, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Humans, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Patient Care Team, Trust psychology
- Abstract
Rationale: Historic and present-day racism and inequity in the United States (U.S.) have resulted in diminished trust in health care among many populations. A key barrier to improving trust in health care is a dearth of well-validated measures appropriate for diverse populations. Indeed, systematic reviews indicate a need to develop and test updated trust measures that are multidimensional and inclusive of relevant domains (e.g., fairness)., Objective: We developed three trust measures: the Trust in My Doctor (T-MD), Trust in Doctors in General (T-DiG), and Trust in the Health Care Team (T-HCT) scales., Methods: After developing an initial item pool, expert reviewers (n = 6) provided feedback on the face validity of each scale. We conducted cognitive interviews (n = 21) with a convenience sample of adults to ensure items were interpreted as intended. In 2020, we administered an online survey to a convenience sample of U.S. adults recruited through the Qualtrics Panel (n = 801) to assess scale reliability and validity., Results: Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses indicated acceptable model fit for second order latent factor models for each scale (root mean square error of approximation: <0.07, comparative fit index: ≥0.98, and standardized root mean square residual: ≤0.03). The T-MD contained 25 items and six subscales: communication competency, fidelity, systems trust, confidentiality, fairness, and global trust. The T-DiG and T-HCT each contained 29 items and seven subscales (the same subscales in the T-MD plus an additional subscale related to stigma-based discrimination). Each scale was strongly correlated with existing trust measures and perceived racism in health care and was significantly associated with delayed health care seeking and receipt of a routine health exam., Conclusions: The multidimensional T-MD, T-DiG, and T-HCT scales have sound psychometric properties and may be useful for researchers evaluating trust-related interventions or conducting studies where trust is an important construct or main outcome., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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41. Generating and Reporting Electronic Clinical Quality Measures from Electronic Health Records: Strategies from EvidenceNOW Cooperatives.
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Richardson JE, Rasmussen LV, Dorr DA, Sirkin JT, Shelley D, Rivera A, Wu W, Cykert S, Cohen DJ, and Kho AN
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- Electronics, Primary Health Care, Quality Improvement, Electronic Health Records, Quality Indicators, Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Electronic clinical quality measures (eCQMs) from electronic health records (EHRs) are a key component of quality improvement (QI) initiatives in small-to-medium size primary care practices, but using eCQMs for QI can be challenging. Organizational strategies are needed to effectively operationalize eCQMs for QI in these practice settings., Objective: This study aimed to characterize strategies that seven regional cooperatives participating in the EvidenceNOW initiative developed to generate and report EHR-based eCQMs for QI in small-to-medium size practices., Methods: A qualitative study comprised of 17 interviews with representatives from all seven EvidenceNOW cooperatives was conducted. Interviewees included administrators were with both strategic and cooperative-level operational responsibilities and external practice facilitators were with hands-on experience helping practices use EHRs and eCQMs. A subteam conducted 1-hour semistructured telephone interviews with administrators and practice facilitators, then analyzed interview transcripts using immersion crystallization. The analysis and a conceptual model were vetted and approved by the larger group of coauthors., Results: Cooperative strategies consisted of efforts in four key domains. First, cooperative adaptation shaped overall strategies for calculating eCQMs whether using EHRs, a centralized source, or a "hybrid strategy" of the two. Second, the eCQM generation described how EHR data were extracted, validated, and reported for calculating eCQMs. Third, practice facilitation characterized how facilitators with backgrounds in health information technology (IT) delivered services and solutions for data capture and quality and practice support. Fourth, performance reporting strategies and tools informed QI efforts and how cooperatives could alter their approaches to eCQMs., Conclusion: Cooperatives ultimately generated and reported eCQMs using hybrid strategies because they determined neither EHRs alone nor centralized sources alone could operationalize eCQMs for QI. This required cooperatives to devise solutions and utilize resources that often are unavailable to typical small-to-medium-sized practices. The experiences from EvidenceNOW cooperatives provide insights into how organizations can plan for challenges and operationalize EHR-based eCQMs., Competing Interests: None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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42. Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic Patients Have Worse Outcomes Than White Patients Within Similar Stages of Peripheral Artery Disease.
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Kalbaugh CA, Witrick B, Sivaraj LB, McGinigle KL, Lesko CR, Cykert S, and Robinson WP
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- Aged, Amputation, Surgical, Female, Humans, Intermittent Claudication diagnosis, Intermittent Claudication surgery, Ischemia diagnosis, Ischemia surgery, Lower Extremity blood supply, Male, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Limb Salvage, Peripheral Arterial Disease diagnosis, Peripheral Arterial Disease surgery
- Abstract
Background Racial and ethnic disparities in outcomes following lower limb revascularization for peripheral artery disease have been ascribed to disease severity at presentation for surgery. Methods and Results We calculated 1-year risk of major adverse limb events (MALEs), major amputation, and death for patients undergoing elective revascularization for claudication or chronic limb-threatening ischemia in the Vascular Quality Initiative data (2011-2018). We report hazard ratios according to race and ethnicity using Cox (death) or Fine and Gray subdistribution hazards models (MALE and major amputation, treating death as a competing event), adjusted for patient, treatment, and anatomic factors associated with disease severity. Among 88 599 patients (age, 69 years; 37% women), 1-year risk of MALE (major amputation and death) was 12.8% (95% CI, 12.5-13.0) in 67 651 White patients, 16.5% (95% CI, 5.8-7.8) in 15 442 Black patients, and 17.2% (95% CI, 5.6-6.9) in 5506 Hispanic patients. Compared with White patients, we observed an increased hazard of poor limb outcomes among Black (MALE: 1.17; 95% CI, 1.12-1.22; amputation: 1.52; 95% CI, 1.39-1.65) and Hispanic (MALE: 1.22; 95% CI, 1.14-1.31; amputation: 1.45; 95% CI, 1.28-1.64) patients. However, Black and Hispanic patients had a hazard of death of 0.85 (95% CI, 0.79-0.91) and 0.71 (95% CI, 0.63-0.79) times the hazard among White patients, respectively. Worse limb outcomes were observed among Black and Hispanic patients across subcohorts of claudication and chronic limb-threatening ischemia. Conclusions Black and Hispanic patients undergoing infrainguinal revascularization for chronic limb-threatening ischemia and claudication had worse limb outcomes compared with White patients, even with similar disease severity at presentation. Additional investigation aimed at eliminating disparate limb outcomes is needed.
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- 2022
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43. The STUN (STop UNhealthy) Alcohol Use Now trial: study protocol for an adaptive randomized trial on dissemination and implementation of screening and management of unhealthy alcohol use in primary care.
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Jonas DE, Barclay C, Grammer D, Weathington C, Birken SA, DeWalt DA, Shoenbill KA, Boynton MH, Mackey M, Riley S, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Adult, Counseling, Humans, Mass Screening, Quality Improvement, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Alcohol Drinking therapy, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Background: Unhealthy alcohol use is a leading cause of preventable deaths in the USA and is associated with many societal and health problems. Less than a third of people who visit primary care providers in the USA are asked about or ever discuss alcohol use with a health professional., Methods/design: This study is an adaptive, randomized, controlled trial to evaluate the effect of primary care practice facilitation and telehealth services on evidence-based screening, counseling, and pharmacotherapy for unhealthy alcohol use in small-to-medium-sized primary care practices. Study participants will include primary care practices in North Carolina with 10 or fewer providers. All enrolled practices will receive a practice facilitation intervention that includes quality improvement (QI) coaching, electronic health record (EHR) support, training, and expert consultation. After 6 months, practices in the lower 50th percentile (based on performance) will be randomized to continued practice facilitation or provision of telehealth services plus ongoing facilitation for the next 6 months. Practices in the upper 50th percentile after the initial 6 months of intervention will continue to receive practice facilitation alone. The main outcome measures include the number (and %) of patients in the target population who are screened for unhealthy alcohol use, screen positive, and receive brief counseling. Additional measures include the number (and %) of patients who receive pharmacotherapy for AUD or are referred for AUD services. Sample size calculations determined that 35 practices are needed to detect a 10% increase in the main outcome (percent screened for unhealthy alcohol use) over 6 months., Discussion: A successful intervention would significantly reduce morbidity among adults from unhealthy alcohol use by increasing counseling and other treatment opportunities. The study will produce important evidence about the effect of practice facilitation on uptake of evidence-based screening, counseling, and pharmacotherapy for unhealthy alcohol use when delivered on a large scale to small and medium-sized practices. It will also generate scientific knowledge about whether embedded telehealth services can improve the use of evidence-based screening and interventions for practices with slower uptake. The results of this rigorously conducted evaluation are expected to have a positive impact by accelerating the dissemination and implementation of evidence related to unhealthy alcohol use into primary care practices., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04317989 . Registered on March 23, 2020., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2021
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44. Building Toward Antiracist Cancer Research and Practice: The Case of Precision Medicine.
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Stein JN, Charlot M, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Precision Medicine, Research, Neoplasms therapy, Racism
- Published
- 2021
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45. A Taxonomy for External Support for Practice Transformation.
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Solberg LI, Kuzel A, Parchman ML, Shelley DR, Dickinson WP, Walunas TL, Nguyen AM, Fagnan LJ, Cykert S, Cohen DJ, Balasubramanaian BA, Fernald D, Gordon L, Kho A, Krist A, Miller W, Berry C, Duffy D, and Nagykaldi Z
- Subjects
- Communication, Humans, Research Personnel, Primary Health Care, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
Background: There is no commonly accepted comprehensive framework for describing the practical specifics of external support for practice change. Our goal was to develop such a taxonomy that could be used by both external groups or researchers and health care leaders., Methods: The leaders of 8 grants from Agency for Research and Quality for the EvidenceNOW study of improving cardiovascular preventive services in over 1500 primary care practices nationwide worked collaboratively over 18 months to develop descriptions of key domains that might comprehensively characterize any external support intervention. Combining literature reviews with our practical experiences in this initiative and past work, we aimed to define these domains and recommend measures for them., Results: The taxonomy includes 1 domain to specify the conceptual model(s) on which an intervention is built and another to specify the types of support strategies used. Another 5 domains provide specifics about the dose/mode of that support, the types of change process and care process changes that are encouraged, and the degree to which the strategies are prescriptive and standardized. A model was created to illustrate how the domains fit together and how they would respond to practice needs and reactions., Conclusions: This taxonomy and its use in more consistently documenting and characterizing external support interventions should facilitate communication and synergies between 3 areas (quality improvement, practice change research, and implementation science) that have historically tended to work independently. The taxonomy was designed to be as useful for practices or health systems managing change as it is for research., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest: None., (© Copyright 2021 by the American Board of Family Medicine.)
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- 2021
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46. A Multi-faceted Intervention Aimed at Black-White Disparities in the Treatment of Early Stage Cancers: The ACCURE Pragmatic Quality Improvement trial.
- Author
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Cykert S, Eng E, Manning MA, Robertson LB, Heron DE, Jones NS, Schaal JC, Lightfoot A, Zhou H, Yongue C, and Gizlice Z
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Quality Improvement, Retrospective Studies, Black or African American, Healthcare Disparities, Lung Neoplasms therapy, White People
- Abstract
Background: Reports continue to show that Blacks with curable lung or breast cancer complete treatment less often than similar Whites contributing to worse survival. ACCURE is an intervention trial designed to address this problem., Patients and Methods: A pragmatic, quality improvement trial comparing an intervention group to retrospective and concurrent controls. Patients with early stage breast or lung cancer aged 18 to 85 were enrolled (N = 302) at 2 cancer centers between April 2013 and March 2015 for the intervention component. Data from patients seen between January 2007 and December 2012 with these diagnoses were obtained to establish control completion rates. Concurrent data for non-study patients were used to identify secular trends. The intervention included: a real time registry derived from electronic health records of participants to signal missed appointments or unmet care milestones, a navigator, and clinical feedback. The primary outcome was "Treatment Complete", a composite variable representing completion of surgery, recommended radiation and chemotherapy for each patient., Results: The mean age in the intervention group was 63.1 years; 37.1% of patients were Black. Treatment completion in retrospective and concurrent controls showed significant Black-White differences (Blacks (B) 79.8% vs. Whites (W) 87.3%, p < 0.001; 83.1% B vs. 90.1% W, p < 0.001, respectively). The disparity lessened within the intervention (B 88.4% and W 89.5%, p = 0.77). Multivariate analyses confirmed disparities reduction. OR for Black-White disparity within the intervention was 0.98 (95% CI 0.46-2.1); Black completion in the intervention compared favorably to Whites in retrospective (OR 1.6; 95% CI 0.90-2.9) and concurrent (OR 1.1; 95% CI 0.59-2.0) controls., Conclusion: A real time registry combined with feedback and navigation improved completion of treatment for all breast and lung cancer patients and narrowed disparities. Similar multi-faceted interventions could mitigate disparities in the treatment of other cancers and chronic conditions., (Copyright © 2019 National Medical Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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47. Practice level factors associated with enhanced engagement with practice facilitators; findings from the heart health now study.
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Halladay JR, Weiner BJ, In Kim J, DeWalt DA, Pierson S, Fine J, Lefebvre A, Mackey M, Bergmire D, Cené C, Henderson K, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Humans, Patient Care Team standards, Retrospective Studies, Primary Health Care standards, Quality Improvement
- Abstract
Background: Practice facilitation is a promising strategy to enhance care processes and outcomes in primary care settings. It requires that practices and their facilitators engage as teams to drive improvement. In this analysis, we explored the practice and facilitator factors associated with greater team engagement at the mid-point of a 12-month practice facilitation intervention focused on implementing cardiovascular prevention activities in practice. Understanding factors associated with greater engagement with facilitators in practice-based quality improvement can assist practice facilitation programs with planning and resource allocation., Methods: One hundred thirty-six ambulatory care small to medium sized primary care practices that participated in the EvidenceNow initiative's NC Cooperative, named Heart Health Now (HHN), fit the eligibility criteria for this analysis. We explored the practice and facilitator factors associated with greater team engagement at the mid-point of a 12-month intervention using a retrospective cohort design that included baseline survey data, monthly practice activity implementation data and information about facilitator's experience. Generalized linear mixed-effects models (GLMMs) identified variables associated with greater odds of team engagement using an ordinal scale for level of team engagement., Results: Among our practice cohort, over half were clinician-owned and 27% were Federally Qualified Health Centers. The mean number of clinicians was 4.9 (SD 4.2) and approximately 40% of practices were in Medically Underserved Areas (MUA). GLMMs identified a best fit model. The Model presented as odd ratios and 95% confidence intervals suggests greater odds ratios of higher team engagement with greater practice QI leadership 17.31 (5.24-57.19), [0.00], and practice location in a MUA 7.25 (1.8-29.20), [0.005]. No facilitator characteristics were independently associated with greater engagement., Conclusions: Our analysis provides information for practice facilitation stakeholders to consider when considering which practices may be more amendable to embracing facilitation services.
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- 2020
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48. The role of patient-physician relationship on health-related quality of life and pain in cancer patients.
- Author
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Samuel CA, Mbah O, Schaal J, Eng E, Black KZ, Baker S, Ellis KR, Guerrab F, Jordan L, Lightfoot AF, Robertson LB, Yongue CM, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Aged, Cancer Pain therapy, Decision Making, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Respect, Surveys and Questionnaires, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Cancer Pain psychology, Lung Neoplasms psychology, Physician-Patient Relations, Quality of Life psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) and pain are important supportive cancer care outcomes. The patient-provider relationship, a modifiable care experience, has been linked to healthcare outcomes; however, less is known about associations between patient-provider relationship and supportive care outcomes in cancer patients. We examined the role of multiple aspects of the patient-provider relationship in explaining patterns of HRQOL and pain among breast and lung cancer patients., Methods: Our analysis included 283 breast and lung cancer patients from two cancer centers. Clinical data and survey data on patient sociodemographic factors, physical and mental HRQOL, pain, and patient-physician relationship (i.e., doctor's respectfulness, time spent with doctors, patient involvement in decision-making, satisfaction with care, and following doctor's advice/treatment plan) were collected at baseline and during treatment. We estimated adjusted modified Poisson regression models to assess associations between patient-physician relationship factors and physical and mental HRQOL and pain., Results: Compared with patients reporting suboptimal respect from doctors, patients reporting optimal respect were less likely to report below average physical HRQOL (adjusted risk ratio (ARR), 0.73; 95%CI, 0.62-0.86), below average mental HRQOL (ARR, 0.71; 95%CI, 0.54-0.93), and moderate-to-severe pain (ARR, 0.53; 95%CI, 0.35-0.79). Patients reporting optimal involvement in care decision-making and patients who reported following their doctor's advice/treatment plan were less likely to report below average mental HRQOL than their respective counterparts (ARR, 0.64; 95%CI, 0.50-0.83; ARR, 0.65; 95%CI, 0.48-0.86)., Conclusion: Multiple patient-physician relationship factors account for variations in HRQOL and pain in cancer patients. These findings provide insight into potential targets for improving the patient-provider relationship and supportive cancer care outcomes.
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- 2020
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49. Strengthening community-clinical linkages to reduce cardiovascular disease risk in rural NC: feasibility phase of the CHANGE study.
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Samuel-Hodge CD, Gizlice Z, Allgood SD, Bunton AJ, Erskine A, Leeman J, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Aged, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, North Carolina, Risk, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Community Health Workers, Rural Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Community Health Workers (CHW) are recommended for delivery of interventions to prevent cardiovascular disease, but there is insufficient evidence to guide implementation of CHW interventions in rural, medically underserved areas., Methods: Using a hybrid implementation-effectiveness design, we evaluated the implementation and effectiveness of an adapted, evidence-based cardiovascular disease risk reduction intervention among rural high-risk adults. CHWs at a community health center and local health department recruited, enrolled and counseled participants during 4 monthly home visits and 3 brief phone contacts. Participant data collection included pre- and post-intervention measurements of blood pressure, weight, and dietary and physical activity behaviors. We evaluated implementation with measures of intervention reach and delivery fidelity. Statistical analyses included descriptive statistics and paired t-tests., Results: Study participants (n = 105) had a mean age of 62 years and included 88% Non-Hispanic Blacks and 82% females. Recruitment strategies resulted in the enrollment of 38% of interested and eligible participants who received 80% of the planned intervention visits and phone contacts. Mean differences in pre-/post-intervention measures showed significant mean reductions in blood pressure (- 5.4 mmHg systolic, p = .006; - 2.3 mmHg diastolic, p = .04) and body weight (- 3.8 lb., p = .02). Self-reported dietary and physical activity behaviors also improved significantly., Conclusion: This feasibility study demonstrated preliminary implementation and program effectiveness of a CHW-delivered intervention to reduce cardiovascular disease risk factors. Additionally, it identified areas for future refinements to strategies that strengthen community-clinical linkages with an integrated role of CHWs in rural health care delivery. If results from this feasibility study can be enhanced in a larger sample, there would be significant potential to positively impact the excess burden of chronic diseases that adversely impact rural, low-income, and medically underserved populations., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03582696.
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- 2020
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50. Applying machine learning to predict real-world individual treatment effects: insights from a virtual patient cohort.
- Author
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Fang G, Annis IE, Elston-Lafata J, and Cykert S
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Humans, Prognosis, Treatment Outcome, Computer Simulation, Machine Learning, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care methods, Precision Medicine
- Abstract
Objective: We aimed to investigate bias in applying machine learning to predict real-world individual treatment effects., Materials and Methods: Using a virtual patient cohort, we simulated real-world healthcare data and applied random forest and gradient boosting classifiers to develop prediction models. Treatment effect was estimated as the difference between the predicted outcomes of a treatment and a control. We evaluated the impact of predictors (ie, treatment predictors [X1], confounders [X2], treatment effects modifiers [X3], and other outcome risk factors [X4]) with known effects on treatment and outcome using real-world data, and outcome imbalance on predicting individual outcome. Using counterfactuals, we evaluated percentage of patients with biased predicted individual treatment effects., Results: The X4 had relatively more impact on model performance than X2 and X3 did. No effects were observed from X1. Moderate-to-severe outcome imbalance had a significantly negative impact on model performance, particularly among subgroups in which an outcome occurred. Bias in predicting individual treatment effects was significant and persisted even when the models had a 100% accuracy in predicting health outcome., Discussion: Inadequate inclusion of the X2, X3, and X4 and moderate-to-severe outcome imbalance may affect model performance in predicting individual outcome and subsequently bias in predicting individual treatment effects. Machine learning models with all features and high performance for predicting individual outcome still yielded biased individual treatment effects., Conclusions: Direct application of machine learning might not adequately address bias in predicting individual treatment effects. Further method development is needed to advance machine learning to support individualized treatment selection., (© The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
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