218 results on '"Hirshon, Jon Mark"'
Search Results
202. Epidemiology of Knife Injuries at Ain Shams University Hospital Emergency Department from 2018 to 2019: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Ellaban MM, Afifi E, El Houssinie M, Hirshon JM, El-Shinawi M, and El-Setouhy M
- Abstract
Purpose: For knife-related injuries (KRI), a comprehensive understanding of the incidence, mechanism, and pattern of injury is required for the development of prevention strategies. Unfortunately, reliable data on knife-related injuries are difficult to obtain. In Egypt, there is no national routine surveillance system for all knife injuries. The aim was to examine the epidemiologic characteristics of knife-related injuries at the Ain Shams University Hospital (ASUH) emergency department (ED)., Patients and Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted on 140 patients who presented with knife injuries at the ASUH ED. Data collection was done during a randomly selected period of seven days each month from October 2018 to September 2019. The sociodemographic characteristics, injury-related variables, and outcomes of the injury were recorded on a structured worksheet., Results: Knife-related injuries represented 22.9% of all injury cases that presented to the ED. Majority of the knife-related injuries (87.86%) were accidental, 7.9% were assault, and 4.3% were self-inflicted. Home was the most reported place of injury. Most of the victims were discharged from the ED (87.1%), and 84.3% recovered completely. The mean hospital stay was 3.6 ± 1.3 days., Conclusion: Majority of the knife-related injuries were accidental, and the most common pattern was isolated chest injury with contusions. Cases that were not severe and had favorable prognosis (ie, complete recovery) comprised the largest proportion. Recommendations include development of a surveillance system may result in the effective control and prevention of this growing problem of knife-related injuries., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work., (© 2021 Ellaban et al.)
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- 2021
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203. Delay in hospital discharge of trauma patients in a University Hospital in Egypt: A prospective observational study.
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El-Abbassy I, Mohamed W, El-Hariri HM, El-Setouhy M, Hirshon JM, and El-Shinawi M
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Introduction: "Delayed discharge" is defined as patients who remain hospitalised beyond the time of being fit for discharge after a decision of discharge has been made by the managing team. There is no standardised amount of time defining delayed discharge documented in the literature, and there is a lack of evidence about this topic in Egypt. This study is a quality improvement project aiming to identify the factors associated with discharge delays at a single centre in Egypt in order to address this issue., Methods: A prospective observational study included all trauma patients admitted to a University Hospital in Egypt over two months. The time of the decision of discharge and actual discharge time were recorded by reviewing patients' medical records. The patients and their caregivers were asked to fill in a questionnaire about the reasons for delayed discharge. Potential reasons for the delayed discharge were classified into system-related, medical and family-related factors., Results: The study included 498 patients with a median age of 41 years (9-72). The median time from discharge decision until actual discharge was 3 h. System-related factors were documented in 48.8% of cases, followed by medical factors (36.3%), and family-related factors (28.1%). When controlling for age, gender and injury severity score using a logistic regression analysis, longer time to discharge (≥3 h) showed a stronger association with medical factors [adjusted OR (95% CI) = 5.44 (2.73-10.85)] and family-related factors [adjusted OR (95% CI) = 7.94 (3.40-18.54)] compared to system-related factors [adjusted OR (95% CI) = 2.20 (1.12-4.29)]., Discussion: Although system-related factors were more prevalent, medical and family-related factors appear to be associated with longer discharge delays compared to system-related factors., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (© 2018 Published by Elsevier Ltd. CC BY 4.0.)
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- 2021
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204. Patient Satisfaction with a Tertiary Hospital in Egypt using a HCAHPS-Derived Survey.
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Farghaly M, Kamal A, El-Setouhy M, Hirshon JM, and El-Shinawi M
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Study Design: Retrograde cross-sectional study., Objective: To assess patient satisfaction and outcomes in polytraumatized patients in EL-Demerdash hospital., Background: This is the first study that assessed patient satisfaction with a tertiary hospital in Egypt. Ain Shams University Surgery Hospital, which is one of the largest hospitals in Egypt and serves millions of patients each year, was the site of the study., Methods: A version of the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) survey was used to query 361 patients from November 2015 until July 2018 Survey questions were divided into the following categories: communication with doctors, responsiveness of hospital staff, cleanliness of the hospital environment, quietness of the hospital environment, pain management, communication about medicines, discharge information, overall rating of the hospital, and willingness to recommend the hospital., Results: A total of 361 patients were interviewed. The results showed both positive and negative levels of satisfaction. The positive results included no delay in admission, friendly staff including nurses and doctors, better patient outcomes regarding pain management and adverse side effects, and the overall rating of the hospital was good, which reflected patient satisfaction. The negative findings were lack of proper communication between the medical staff and patients. Patients indicated they did not get a satisfactory explanation of their prescribed drug doses and drug adverse effects. In addition, they did not get enough instruction on what to do after being released from the hospital., Conclusion: The medical staff at Ain Shams University Surgery Hospital should focus more on the patient's own preferences and communicate better with patients. We recommended that the hospital organize regular communication skills courses for medical students, physicians, and nurses. Patients should understand the discharge report and indications and side effects of the medications before leaving the hospital., Competing Interests: Jon Mark Hirshon reports grants from NIH Fogarty International Center, during the conduct of the study. The authors report no other potential conflicts of interest for this work., (© 2021 Farghaly et al.)
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- 2021
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205. Non-operative management of blunt abdominal solid organ trauma in adult patients.
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Ibrahim W, Mousa G, Hirshon JM, El-Shinawi M, and Mowafi H
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Introduction: Despite agreement in the literature that "stable" blunt trauma patients may be managed conservatively, in Egypt many such patients receive operative management. This paper presents the results of a pragmatic, prospective, observational study to evaluate outcomes of non-operative (NOP) versus operative (OP) management of blunt abdominal solid organ trauma in hemodynamically stable adults admitted to Tanta University Emergency Hospital (TUH) in Egypt., Methods: A prospective observational study enrolled adult blunt abdominal trauma patients with solid organ injury at TUH over a 3-year period (June 2014-June 2017). Inclusion criteria were age ≥18 yr, mean arterial pressure >65 mm Hg, heart rate <110 bpm, hematocrit ≥7 mg/dl, and abdominal organ injury diagnosed by ultrasound or computed tomography (CT). Excluded patients were those with pelvis and femur fractures; patients with penetrating abdominal trauma; predominate burn injuries, children and pregnant women. All patients were assigned to non-operative or operative management based on clinician preference. Outcomes of interest were 30-day mortality, blood transfusion volume, and length of stay. Descriptive statistics and χ
2 were used to compare outcomes., Results: During the study period, 4254 trauma patients presented to TUH. Of these, 790 had blunt abdominal trauma and 111 (14.1%) met inclusion criteria. Injury severity scores for each group were comparable (24 ± 10 - NOP vs. 28 ± 11 - OP, p = 0.126). NOP received less transfused blood (213.41 ± 360.3 ml [NOP] vs.1155.17 ± 380.4 ml [OP] ( p < 0.0001)) but had a longer length of stay (8.29 ± 2.8 [NOP] vs. 6.45 ± 1.97 days [OP] ( p = 0.012)). There was no difference in mortality between groups ( p = 0.091)., Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that non-operative management in Egypt of blunt abdominal trauma was safe and resulted in fewer procedures, fewer units of blood transfused, and no increase in mortality. Longer length of stay for non-operative patients might reflect treating physician caution in their management., (© 2020 African Federation for Emergency Medicine. Publishing services provided by Elsevier.)- Published
- 2020
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206. EDSC 3 : Working to Improve Emergency Department Care of Individuals With Sickle Cell Disease.
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Kavanagh PL and Hirshon JM
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- Community-Institutional Relations, Humans, Patient Advocacy, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Societies, Medical, United States, Anemia, Sickle Cell therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Emergency Service, Hospital standards, Quality Improvement
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- 2020
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207. Inadequate Management of Patients with Acute Aortic Symptoms Before Transfer from Emergency Departments.
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Tran QK, Walker AM, Berman E, Vesselinov R, Rose M, Tiffany L, Bzhilyanskaya V, Naimi S, Alam Z, Abdalla N, Tanveer S, Yi JS, Lurie T, and Hirshon JM
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Competing Interests: There are no conflicts of interest.
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- 2020
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208. Zika Virus: Critical Information for Emergency Providers.
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Shastry S, Koenig KL, and Hirshon JM
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious diagnosis, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious pathology, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious prevention & control, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious therapy, Zika Virus Infection pathology, Zika Virus Infection prevention & control, Zika Virus Infection therapy, Zika Virus, Zika Virus Infection diagnosis
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Zika virus is an arbovirus of the Flaviviridae family. It is primarily a minimally symptomatic mosquito-borne infection. However, with Zika's 2015 to 2016 introduction into the Western Hemisphere and its dramatic and rapid spread, it has become a public health concern, in large part due to congenital abnormalities associated with infection in pregnant women. In early 2016, the World Health Organization declared the microcephaly and other neurologic conditions associated with Zika virus infection a public health emergency of international concern. This article discusses the current epidemiologic and clinical understanding of Zika virus, focusing on critical information needed by emergency providers., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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209. Drivers of ED efficiency: a statistical and cluster analysis of volume, staffing, and operations.
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Anderson D, Pimentel L, Golden B, Wasil E, and Hirshon JM
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- Cluster Analysis, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Retrospective Studies, United States, Waiting Lists, Workforce, Efficiency, Organizational, Emergency Service, Hospital organization & administration, Workload
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Study Objective: The percentage of patients leaving before treatment is completed (LBTC) is an important indicator of emergency department performance. The objective of this study is to identify characteristics of hospital operations that correlate with LBTC rates., Methods: The Emergency Department Benchmarking Alliance 2012 and 2013 cross-sectional national data sets were analyzed using multiple regression and k-means clustering. Significant operational variables affecting LBTC including annual patient volume, percentage of high-acuity patients, percentage of patients admitted to the hospital, number of beds, academic status, waiting times to see a physician, length of stay (LOS), registered nurse (RN) staffing, and physician staffing were identified. LBTC was regressed onto these variables. Because of the strong correlation between waiting times measured as door to first provider (DTFP), we regressed DTFP onto the remaining predictors. Cluster analysis was applied to the data sets to further analyze the impact of individual predictors on LBTC and DTFP., Results: LOS and the time from DTFP were both strongly associated with LBTC rate (P<.001). Patient volume is not significantly associated with LBTC rate (P=.16). Cluster analysis demonstrates that physician and RN staffing ratios correlate with shorter DTFP and lower LBTC., Conclusion: Volume is not the main driver of LBTC. DTFP and LOS are much more strongly associated. We show that operational factors including LOS and physician and RN staffing decisions, factors under the control of hospital and physician executives, correlate with waiting time and, thus, in determining the LBTC rate., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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210. Epidemiology of acute poisoning in children presenting to the poisoning treatment center at Ain Shams University in Cairo, Egypt, 2009-2013.
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Azab SM, Hirshon JM, Hayes BD, El-Setouhy M, Smith GS, Sakr ML, Tawfik H, and Klein-Schwartz W
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- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Drug Overdose diagnosis, Drug Overdose mortality, Drug Overdose therapy, Egypt epidemiology, Female, Hospitalization, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Poisoning diagnosis, Poisoning mortality, Poisoning therapy, Prognosis, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Accidents, Home mortality, Drug Overdose epidemiology, Poison Control Centers, Poisoning epidemiology, Suicide, Attempted, Universities
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Introduction: Pediatric poisonings represent a major and preventable cause of morbidity and mortality throughout the world. Epidemiologic information about poisoning among children in many lower- and middle-income countries is scarce. This study describes the epidemiology of acute poisonings in children presenting to Ain Shams University's Poisoning Treatment Center (ASU-PTC) in Cairo and determines the causative agents and characteristics of acute poisoning in several pediatric age groups., Methods: This retrospective study involved acutely poisoned patients, 0-18 years of age, who presented to the ASU-PTC between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2013. Data were extracted from electronic records maintained by the ASU-PTC. Collected data included demographics, substance of exposure, circumstances of the poisoning, patient disposition, and outcome., Results: During the 5-year study period, 38 470 patients meeting our criteria were treated by the ASU-PTC; 19 987 (52%) were younger than 6 years of age; 4196 (11%) were 6-12 years; and 14 287 (37%) were >12 years. Unintentional poisoning accounted for 68.5% of the ingestions, though among adolescents 84.1% of ingestions were with self-harm intent. In all age groups, the most frequent causative drugs were non-opioid analgesics, antipyretics, and antirheumatics. The most common nonpharmaceutical agents were corrosives in preschool children and pesticides in adolescents. Most patients had no/minor effects (29 174 [75.8%]); hospitalization rates were highest among adolescents. There were 119 deaths (case fatality rate of 0.3), primarily from pesticide ingestion., Conclusion: Poisoning in preschool children is mainly unintentional and commonly due to nonpharmaceutical agents whereas poisoning in adolescents is mainly intentional (self-harm). Pesticides, mainly organophosphorous compounds and carbamates, were the most frequent agents leading to morbidity and mortality.
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- 2016
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211. Developing sustainable trauma care education in Egypt: sequential trauma education program, steps to success.
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El-Shinawi M, McCunn M, Sisley AC, El-Setouhy M, and Hirshon JM
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- Curriculum, Developing Countries, Egypt, International Cooperation, United States, World Health Organization, Wounds and Injuries, Emergency Medicine education, Program Development methods, Program Evaluation methods
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Introduction: As one of the leading causes of death and disability in the world, human trauma and injury disproportionately affects individuals in developing countries. To meet the need for improved trauma care in Egypt, the Sequential Trauma Emergency/Education ProgramS (STEPS) course was created through the collaborative effort of U.S. and Egyptian physicians. The objective of course development was to create a high-quality, modular, adaptable, and sustainable trauma care course that could be readily adopted by a lower- or middle-income country., Methods: We describe the development, transition, and host nation sustainability of a trauma care training course between a high-income Western nation and a lower-middle-income Middle Eastern/Northern African country, including the number of physicians trained and the challenges to program development and sustainability., Results: STEPS was developed at the University of Maryland, based in part on World Health Organization's Emergency and Trauma Care materials, and introduced to the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population and Ain Shams University in May 2006. To date, 639 physicians from multiple specialties have taken the 4-day course through the Ministry of Health and Population or public/governmental universities. In 2008, the course transitioned completely to the leadership of Egyptian academic physicians. Multiple Egyptian medical schools and the Egyptian Emergency Medicine Board now require STEPS or its equivalent for physicians in training., Conclusions: Success of this collaborative educational program is demonstrated by the numbers of physicians trained, the adoption of STEPS by the Egyptian Emergency Medicine Board, and program continuance after transitioning to in-country leadership and trainers., (Copyright © 2015 Association of Program Directors in Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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212. Using antibiograms to improve antibiotic prescribing in skilled nursing facilities.
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Furuno JP, Comer AC, Johnson JK, Rosenberg JH, Moore SL, MacKenzie TD, Hall KK, and Hirshon JM
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Controlled Before-After Studies, Cross Infection epidemiology, Cross Infection microbiology, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug Resistance, Bacterial, Female, Humans, Male, Maryland epidemiology, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Cross Infection drug therapy, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Quality Improvement, Skilled Nursing Facilities
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Background: Antibiograms have effectively improved antibiotic prescribing in acute-care settings; however, their effectiveness in skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) is currently unknown., Objective: To develop SNF-specific antibiograms and identify opportunities to improve antibiotic prescribing., Design and Setting: Cross-sectional and pretest-posttest study among residents of 3 Maryland SNFs., Methods: Antibiograms were created using clinical culture data from a 6-month period in each SNF. We also used admission clinical culture data from the acute care facility primarily associated with each SNF for transferred residents. We manually collected all data from medical charts, and antibiograms were created using WHONET software. We then used a pretest-posttest study to evaluate the effectiveness of an antibiogram on changing antibiotic prescribing practices in a single SNF. Appropriate empirical antibiotic therapy was defined as an empirical antibiotic choice that sufficiently covered the infecting organism, considering antibiotic susceptibilities., Results: We reviewed 839 patient charts from SNF and acute care facilities. During the initial assessment period, 85% of initial antibiotic use in the SNFs was empirical, and thus only 15% of initial antibiotics were based on culture results. Fluoroquinolones were the most frequently used empirical antibiotics, accounting for 54.5% of initial prescribing instances. Among patients with available culture data, only 35% of empirical antibiotic prescribing was determined to be appropriate. In the single SNF in which we evaluated antibiogram effectiveness, prevalence of appropriate antibiotic prescribing increased from 32% to 45% after antibiogram implementation; however, this was not statistically significant ([Formula: see text])., Conclusions: Implementation of antibiograms may be effective in improving empirical antibiotic prescribing in SNFs.
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- 2014
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213. The impact of electronic health record implementation on emergency physician efficiency and patient throughput.
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Risko N, Anderson D, Golden B, Wasil E, Barrueto F, Pimentel L, and Hirshon JM
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Background: In emergency departments (EDs), the implementation of electronic health records (EHRs) has the potential to impact the rapid assessment and management of life threatening conditions. In order to quantify this impact, we studied the implementation of EHRs in the EDs of a two hospital system., Methods: using a prospective pre-post study design, patient processing metrics were collected for each ED physician at two hospitals for 7 months prior and 10 months post-EHR implementation. Metrics included median patient workup time, median length of stay, and the composite outcome indicator "processing time.", Results: median processing time increased immediately post-implementation and then returned to, and surpassed, the baseline level over 10 months. Overall, we see significant decreases in processing time as the number of patients treated increases., Conclusions: implementation of new EHRs into the ED setting can be expected to cause an initial decrease in efficiency. With adaptation, efficiency should return to baseline levels and may eventually surpass them., Implications: while EDs can expect long term gains from the implementation of EHRs, they should be prepared for initial decreases in efficiency and take preparatory measures to avert adverse effects on the quality of patient care., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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214. Clostridium difficile infection in outpatients, Maryland and Connecticut, USA, 2002-2007.
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Hirshon JM, Thompson AD, Limbago B, McDonald LC, Bonkosky M, Heimer R, Meek J, Mai V, and Braden C
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- Adolescent, Adult, Ambulatory Care, Bacterial Toxins, Bacterial Typing Techniques, Child, Child, Preschool, Clostridioides difficile classification, Clostridium Infections diagnosis, Connecticut epidemiology, Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous diagnosis, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Maryland epidemiology, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Young Adult, Clostridioides difficile isolation & purification, Clostridium Infections epidemiology, Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous epidemiology
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Clostridium difficile, the most commonly recognized diarrheagenic pathogen among hospitalized persons, can cause outpatient diarrhea. Of 1,091 outpatients with diarrhea, we found 43 (3.9%) who were positive for C. difficile toxin. Only 7 had no recognized risk factors, and 3 had neither risk factors nor co-infection with another enteric pathogen.
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- 2011
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215. Disaster planning: potential effects of an influenza pandemic on community healthcare resources.
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Mareiniss DP, Hirshon JM, and Thibodeau BC
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- Humans, Influenza, Human virology, United States epidemiology, Community Health Services organization & administration, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Disease Outbreaks prevention & control, Influenza A virus physiology, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Influenza, Human prevention & control
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The federal government states that local communities are primarily responsible for public health planning and implementation during a severe pandemic. Accordingly, an assessment of the current healthcare capabilities in these communities and planning for deficiencies is required. This article assesses the impact and healthcare capabilities of a specific model local community in a mid-Atlantic state. Two statistical models demonstrate the likely impact of both mild and severe pandemics on local healthcare resources. Both models reveal significant deficiencies that local communities may face. In the event of a severe 1918-type pandemic influenza or a mild influenza pandemic, many local community healthcare systems will likely have inadequate resources to respond to the crisis; such a healthcare emergency would likely overwhelm local community resources and current public health practices. Proper planning at the community level is critical for being truly prepared for such a public health emergency.
- Published
- 2009
216. The National Report Card on the State of Emergency Medicine: evaluating the emergency care environment state by state 2009 edition.
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Epstein SK, Burstein JL, Case RB, Gardner AF, Herman SH, Hirshon JM, Jermyn JW, McKay MP, Mitchiner JC, Sullivan WP, Wagner MJ, Beer S, Tiberi L, Price C, Cunningham R, Wilkerson D, Bromley M, Geist M, Gore L, Singh CA, Wheeler G, Gleason SF, Decker J, Gwinner VM, and Schwalberg RH
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- Emergency Medicine economics, United States, Emergency Medicine statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 2009
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217. Elevated ambient air zinc increases pediatric asthma morbidity.
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Hirshon JM, Shardell M, Alles S, Powell JL, Squibb K, Ondov J, and Blaisdell CJ
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Geography, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Maryland epidemiology, Models, Theoretical, Urban Health statistics & numerical data, Air Pollutants analysis, Asthma epidemiology, Zinc analysis
- Abstract
Background: Recent studies indicate that the composition of fine particulate matter [PM
- Published
- 2008
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218. Extending injury prevention methodology to chemical terrorism preparedness: the Haddon Matrix and sarin.
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Varney S, Hirshon JM, Dischinger P, and Mackenzie C
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- Chemical Terrorism, Chemical Warfare Agents, Civil Defense methods, Models, Statistical, Sarin, Wounds and Injuries prevention & control
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The Haddon Matrix offers a classic epidemiological model for studying injury prevention. This methodology places the public health concepts of agent, host, and environment within the three sequential phases of an injury-producing incident-pre-event, event, and postevent. This study uses this methodology to illustrate how it could be applied in systematically preparing for a mass casualty disaster such as an unconventional sarin attack in a major urban setting. Nineteen city, state, federal, and military agencies responded to the Haddon Matrix chemical terrorism preparedness exercise and offered feedback in the data review session. Four injury prevention strategies (education, engineering, enforcement, and economics) were applied to the individual factors and event phases of the Haddon Matrix. The majority of factors identified in all phases were modifiable, primarily through educational interventions focused on individual healthcare providers and first responders. The Haddon Matrix provides a viable means of studying an unconventional problem, allowing for the identification of modifiable factors to decrease the type and severity of injuries following a mass casualty disaster such as a sarin release. This strategy could be successfully incorporated into disaster planning for other weapons attacks that could potentially cause mass casualties.
- Published
- 2006
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