216 results on '"Byrne, JP"'
Search Results
2. ‘Everything was just getting worse and worse’: deteriorating job quality as a driver of doctor emigration from Ireland
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Humphries, Niamh, McDermott, Aoife M., Conway, Edel, Byrne, JP, Prihodova, Lucia, Costello, Richard, Matthews, Anne, Humphries, Niamh, McDermott, Aoife M., Conway, Edel, Byrne, JP, Prihodova, Lucia, Costello, Richard, and Matthews, Anne
- Abstract
Background: Medicine is a high-status, high-skill occupation which has traditionally provided access to good quality jobs and relatively high salaries. In Ireland, historic underfunding combined with austerity-related cutbacks have negatively impacted job quality to the extent that hospital medical jobs have begun to resemble extreme jobs. Extreme jobs combine components of a good quality job – high pay, high job control, challenging demands, with those of a low-quality job – long working hours, heavy workloads. Deteriorating job quality and the normalisation of extreme working is driving doctor emigration from Ireland, and deterring return. Methods: Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 40 Irish emigrant doctors in Australia who had emigrated from Ireland post-2008. Interviews were held in July-August 2018. Results: Respondents described hospital workplaces in Ireland that were understaffed, overstretched and within which extreme working had become normalised, particularly in relation to long working hours, fast working pace, doing more with less and fighting a climate of negativity. Drawing on Hirschman’s work on exit, voice and loyalty (1970), the authors consider doctor emigration-as-exit and present respondent experiences of voice prior to emigration. Only 14/40 respondent emigrant doctors intend to return to work in Ireland. Discussion: The deterioration in medical job quality and the normalisation of extreme working is driving doctor emigration from Ireland, and deterring return. Irish trained hospital doctors emigrate to access good quality jobs in Australia and are increasingly likely to remain abroad once they have secured them. Health systems and employers must mitigate the emergence of extreme work in healthcare to improve doctor retention. Employee voice (about working conditions, about patient safety, etc.) should be encouraged and should be used to inform health system improvement.
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- 2019
3. Early Benefits From Weight-Loss Surgery Reply
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Rider, OJ, Francis, JM, Ali, MK, Petersen, SE, Robinson, M, Robson, MD, Byrne, JP, Clarke, K, and Neubauer, S
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- 2016
4. Population-based cohort study of outcomes following cholecystectomy for benign gallbladder diseases
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Vohra, RS, Pasquali, S, Kirkham, AJ, Marriott, P, Johnstone, M, Spreadborough, P, Alderson, D, Griffiths, EA, Fenwick, S, Elmasry, M, Nunes, Q, Kennedy, D, Khan, RB, Khan, MAS, Magee, CJ, Jones, SM, Mason, D, Parappally, CP, Mathur, P, Saunders, M, Jamel, S, Ul Haque, S, Zafar, S, Shiwani, MH, Samuel, N, Dar, F, Jackson, A, Lovett, B, Dindyal, S, Winter, H, Fletcher, T, Rahman, S, Wheatley, K, Nieto, T, Ayaani, S, Youssef, H, Nijjar, RS, Watkin, H, Naumann, D, Emeshi, S, Sarmah, PB, Lee, K, Joji, N, Heath, J, Teasdale, RL, Weerasinghe, C, Needham, PJ, Welbourn, H, Forster, L, Finch, D, Blazeby, JM, Robb, W, McNair, AGK, Hrycaiczuk, A, Kadirkamanathan, S, Tang, C-B, Jayanthi, NVG, Noor, N, Dobbins, B, Cockbain, AJ, Nilsen-Nunn, A, de Siqueira, J, Pellen, M, Cowley, JB, Ho, W-M, Miu, V, White, TJ, Hodgkins, KA, Kinghorn, A, Tutton, MG, Al-Abed, YA, Menzies, D, Ahmad, A, Reed, J, Khan, S, Monk, D, Vitone, LJ, Murtaza, G, Joel, A, Brennan, S, Shier, D, Zhang, C, Yoganathan, T, Robinson, SJ, McCallum, IJD, Jones, MJ, Elsayed, M, Tuck, L, Wayman, J, Carney, K, Aroori, S, Hosie, KB, Kimble, A, Bunting, DM, Fawole, AS, Basheer, M, Dave, RV, Sarveswaran, J, Jones, E, Kendal, C, Tilston, MP, Gough, M, Wallace, T, Singh, S, Downing, J, Mockford, KA, Issa, E, Shah, N, Chauhan, N, Wilson, TR, Forouzanfar, A, Wild, JRL, Nofal, E, Bunnell, C, Madbak, K, Rao, STV, Devoto, L, Siddiqi, N, Khawaja, Z, Hewes, JC, Gould, L, Chambers, A, Rodriguez, DU, Sen, G, Robinson, S, Bartlett, F, Rae, DM, Stevenson, TEJ, Sarvananthan, K, Dwerryhouse, SJ, Higgs, SM, Old, OJ, Hardy, TJ, Shah, R, Hornby, ST, Keogh, K, Frank, L, Al-Akash, M, Upchurch, EA, Frame, RJ, Hughes, M, Jelley, C, Weaver, S, Roy, S, Sillo, TO, Galanopoulos, G, Cuming, T, Cunha, P, Tayeh, S, Kaptanis, S, Heshaishi, M, Eisawi, A, Abayomi, M, Ngu, WS, Fleming, K, Bajwa, DS, Chitre, V, Aryal, K, Ferris, P, Silva, M, Lammy, S, Mohamed, S, Khawaja, A, Hussain, A, Ghazanfar, MA, Bellini, MI, Ebdewi, H, Elshaer, M, Gravante, G, Drake, B, Ogedegbe, A, Mukherjee, D, Arhi, C, Iqbal, LGN, Watson, NF, Aggarwal, SK, Orchard, P, Villatoro, E, Willson, PD, Wa, K, Mok, J, Woodman, T, Deguara, J, Garcea, G, Babu, BI, Dennison, AR, Malde, D, Lloyd, D, Satheesan, S, Al-Taan, O, Boddy, A, Slavin, JP, Jones, RP, Ballance, L, Gerakopoulos, S, Jambulingam, P, Mansour, S, Sakai, N, Acharya, V, Sadat, MM, Karim, L, Larkin, D, Amin, K, Khan, A, Law, J, Jamdar, S, Smith, SR, Sampat, K, O'Shea, KM, Manu, M, Asprou, FM, Malik, NS, Chang, J, Lewis, M, Roberts, GP, Karavadra, B, Photi, E, Hewes, J, Rodriguez, D, O'Reilly, DA, Rate, AJ, Sekhar, H, Henderson, LT, Starmer, BZ, Coe, PO, Tolofari, S, Barrie, J, Bashir, G, Sloane, J, Madanipour, S, Halkias, C, Trevatt, AEJ, Borowski, DW, Hornsby, J, Courtney, MJ, Seymour, K, Hawkins, H, Bawa, S, Gallagher, PV, Reid, A, Wood, P, Finch, JG, Parmar, J, Stirland, E, Gardner-Thorpe, J, Al-Muhktar, A, Peterson, M, Majeed, A, Bajwa, FM, Martin, J, Choy, A, Tsang, A, Pore, N, Andrew, DR, Al-Khyatt, W, Taylor, C, Bhandari, S, Subramanium, D, Toh, SKC, Carter, NC, Mercer, SJ, Knight, B, Tate, S, Pearce, B, Wainwright, D, Vijay, V, Alagaratnam, S, Sinha, S, El-Hasani, SS, Hussain, AA, Bhattacharya, V, Kansal, N, Fasih, T, Jackson, C, Siddiqui, MN, Chishti, IA, Fordham, IJ, Siddiqui, Z, Bausbacher, H, Geogloma, I, Gurung, K, Tsavellas, G, Basynat, P, Shrestha, AK, Basu, S, Harilingam, ACM, Rabie, M, Akhtar, M, Kumar, P, Jafferbhoy, SF, Hussain, N, Raza, S, Haque, M, Alam, I, Aseem, R, Patel, S, Asad, M, Booth, MI, Ball, WR, Wood, CPJ, Pinho-Gomes, AC, Kausar, A, Obeidallah, MR, Varghase, J, Lodhia, J, Bradley, D, Rengifo, C, Lindsay, D, Gopalswamy, S, Finlay, I, Wardle, S, Bullen, N, Iftikhar, SY, Awan, A, Ahmed, J, Leeder, P, Fusai, G, Bond-Smith, G, Psica, A, Puri, Y, Hou, D, Noble, F, Szentpali, K, Broadhurst, J, Date, R, Hossack, MR, Goh, YL, Turner, P, Shetty, V, Riera, M, Macano, CAW, Sukha, A, Preston, SR, Hoban, JR, Puntis, DJ, Williams, SV, Krysztopik, R, Kynaston, J, Batt, J, Doe, M, Goscimski, A, Jones, GH, Hall, C, Carty, N, Panteleimonitis, S, Gunasekera, RT, Sheel, ARG, Lennon, H, Hindley, C, Reddy, M, Kenny, R, Elkheir, N, McGlone, ER, Rajaganeshan, R, Hancorn, K, Hargreaves, A, Prasad, R, Longbotham, DA, Vijayanand, D, Wijetunga, I, Ziprin, P, Nicolay, CR, Yeldham, G, Read, E, Gossage, JA, Rolph, RC, Ebied, H, Phull, M, Khan, MA, Popplewell, M, Kyriakidis, D, Henley, N, Packer, JR, Derbyshire, L, Porter, J, Appleton, S, Farouk, M, Basra, M, Jennings, NA, Ali, S, Kanakala, V, Ali, H, Lane, R, Dickson-Lowe, R, Zarsadias, P, Mirza, D, Puig, S, Al Amari, K, Vijayan, D, Sutcliffe, R, Marudanayagam, R, Hamady, Z, Prasad, AR, Patel, A, Durkin, D, Kaur, P, Bowen, L, Byrne, JP, Pearson, KL, Delisle, TG, Davies, J, Tomlinson, MA, Johnpulle, MA, Slawinski, C, Macdonald, A, Nicholson, J, Newton, K, Mbuvi, J, Farooq, A, Mothe, BS, Zafrani, Z, Brett, D, Francombe, J, Barnes, J, Cheung, M, Al-Bahrani, AZ, Preziosi, G, Urbonas, T, Alberts, J, Mallik, M, Patel, K, Segaran, A, Doulias, T, Sufi, PA, Yao, C, Pollock, S, Manzelli, A, Wajed, S, Kourkulos, M, Pezzuto, R, Wadley, M, Hamilton, E, Jaunoo, S, Padwick, R, Sayegh, M, Newton, RC, Hebbar, M, Farag, SF, Spearman, J, Hamdan, MF, D'Costa, C, Blane, C, Giles, M, Peter, MB, Hirst, NA, Hossain, T, Pannu, A, El-Dhuwaib, Y, Morrison, TEM, Taylor, GW, Thompson, RLE, McCune, K, Loughlin, P, Lawther, R, Byrnes, CK, Simpson, DJ, Mawhinney, A, Warren, C, Mckay, D, McIlmunn, C, Martin, S, MacArtney, M, Diamond, T, Davey, P, Jones, C, Clements, JM, Digney, R, Chan, WM, McCain, S, Gull, S, Janeczko, A, Dorrian, E, Harris, A, Dawson, S, Johnston, D, McAree, B, Ghareeb, E, Thomas, G, Connelly, M, McKenzie, S, Cieplucha, K, Spence, G, Campbell, W, Hooks, G, Bradley, N, Hill, ADK, Cassidy, JT, Boland, M, Burke, P, Nally, DM, Khogali, E, Shabo, W, Iskandar, E, McEntee, GP, O'Neill, MA, Peirce, C, Lyons, EM, O'Sullivan, AW, Thakkar, R, Carroll, P, Ivanovski, I, Balfe, P, Lee, M, Winter, DC, Kelly, ME, Hoti, E, Maguire, D, Karunakaran, P, Geoghegan, JG, Martin, ST, McDermott, F, Cross, KS, Cooke, F, Zeeshan, S, Murphy, JO, Mealy, K, Mohan, HM, Nedujchelyn, Y, Ullah, MF, Ahmed, I, Giovinazzo, F, Milburn, J, Prince, S, Brooke, E, Buchan, J, Khalil, AM, Vaughan, EM, Ramage, MI, Aldridge, RC, Gibson, S, Nicholson, GA, Vass, DG, Grant, AJ, Holroyd, DJ, Jones, MA, Sutton, CMLR, O'Dwyer, P, Nilsson, F, Weber, B, Williamson, TK, Lalla, K, Bryant, A, Carter, CR, Forrest, CR, Hunter, DI, Nassar, AH, Orizu, MN, Knight, K, Qandeel, H, Suttie, S, Belding, R, McClarey, A, Boyd, AT, Guthrie, GJK, Lim, PJ, Luhmann, A, Watson, AJM, Richards, CH, Nicol, L, Madurska, M, Harrison, E, Boyce, KM, Roebuck, A, Ferguson, G, Pati, P, Wilson, MSJ, Dalgaty, F, Fothergill, L, Driscoll, PJ, Mozolowski, KL, Banwell, V, Bennett, SP, Rogers, PN, Skelly, BL, Rutherford, CL, Mirza, AK, Lazim, T, Lim, HCC, Duke, D, Ahmed, T, Beasley, WD, Wilkinson, MD, Maharaj, G, Malcolm, C, Brown, TH, Shingler, GM, Mowbray, N, Radwan, R, Morcous, P, Wood, S, Kadhim, A, Stewart, DJ, Baker, AL, Tanner, N, Shenoy, H, Hafiz, S, De Marchi, JA, Singh-Ranger, D, Hisham, E, Ainley, P, O'Neill, S, Terrace, J, Napetti, S, Hopwood, B, Rhys, T, Kanavati, O, Coats, M, Aleksandrov, D, Kallaway, C, Yahya, S, Templeton, A, Trotter, M, Lo, C, Dhillon, A, Heywood, N, Aawsaj, Y, Hamdan, A, Reece-Bolton, O, McGuigan, A, Shahin, Y, Ali, A, Luther, A, Nicholson, JA, Rajendran, I, Boal, M, Ritchie, J, Grp, CS, and Collaborative, WMR
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Male ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030230 surgery ,outcomes ,0302 clinical medicine ,Postoperative Complications ,80 and over ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Middle Aged ,Conversion to Open Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Treatment Outcome ,Cholecystectomy, Laparoscopic ,Centre for Surgical Research ,Elective Surgical Procedures ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cohort ,Female ,Elective Surgical Procedure ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Gallbladder disease ,Gallbladder Diseases ,Aged ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Cholecystectomy ,Emergency Treatment ,Humans ,Ireland ,Patient Readmission ,Time-to-Treatment ,United Kingdom ,Surgery ,benign disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Laparoscopic ,medicine ,education ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Gallbladder ,medicine.disease ,business ,Complication - Abstract
Background The aim was to describe the management of benign gallbladder disease and identify characteristics associated with all-cause 30-day readmissions and complications in a prospective population-based cohort. Methods Data were collected on consecutive patients undergoing cholecystectomy in acute UK and Irish hospitals between 1 March and 1 May 2014. Potential explanatory variables influencing all-cause 30-day readmissions and complications were analysed by means of multilevel, multivariable logistic regression modelling using a two-level hierarchical structure with patients (level 1) nested within hospitals (level 2). Results Data were collected on 8909 patients undergoing cholecystectomy from 167 hospitals. Some 1451 cholecystectomies (16·3 per cent) were performed as an emergency, 4165 (46·8 per cent) as elective operations, and 3293 patients (37·0 per cent) had had at least one previous emergency admission, but had surgery on a delayed basis. The readmission and complication rates at 30 days were 7·1 per cent (633 of 8909) and 10·8 per cent (962 of 8909) respectively. Both readmissions and complications were independently associated with increasing ASA fitness grade, duration of surgery, and increasing numbers of emergency admissions with gallbladder disease before cholecystectomy. No identifiable hospital characteristics were linked to readmissions and complications. Conclusion Readmissions and complications following cholecystectomy are common and associated with patient and disease characteristics.
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- 2016
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5. Contamination-free preparation of geological samples for ultra-trace gold and platinum-group element analysis
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Evans, NJ, Davis, JJ, Byrne, JP, and French, D
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Geochemistry & Geophysics - Published
- 2003
6. Duodenogastric reflux of bile: A range of normal values in healthy controls using the Bilitec 2000
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Byrne, Jp, Romagnoli, Renato, Bechi, P., Sea, Attwood, Fuchs, Kh, and Collard, Jm
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duodenogastric reflux ,Bilitec 2000 - Published
- 1997
7. Fluorite (U-Th)/He thermochronology: Constraints on the low temperature history of Yucca Mountain, Nevada
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Evans, NJ, Wilson, NS, Cline, JS, Mcinnes, BI, Byrne, JP, Evans, NJ, Wilson, NS, Cline, JS, Mcinnes, BI, and Byrne, JP
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Fluorite is one of the secondary minerals precipitated in pore spaces at the future nuclear waste repository site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. The authors have conducted (U-Th)/He dating of this fluorite in an attempt to constrain the temperature and timin
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- 2005
8. Duodenogastric reflux of bile: A range of normal values in healthy controls using the Bilitec 2000
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UCL, Byrne, JP, Romagnoli, R., Bechi, P, Attwood, SEA, Fuchs, KH, Collard, Jean-Marie, UCL, Byrne, JP, Romagnoli, R., Bechi, P, Attwood, SEA, Fuchs, KH, and Collard, Jean-Marie
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- 1997
9. Site and histological type of oesophageal and gastric cancer: Retrospective population-based case note survey of over 1,000 cases
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Byrne, JP, primary, Mathers, J, additional, Parry, J, additional, Woodman, CBJ, additional, and Attwood, SEA, additional
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- 1998
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10. A Mechanism for Non-Flame Atomization in Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy
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Byrne, JP
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A mechanism for atom formation in non-flame atomizers, used in atomic absorption spectrophotometry, is presented. The model assumes that gas-phase metal atoms are produced by the direct thermal reduction of metallic oxides, produced as intermediates in the carbon furnace. This mechanism does not assume that carbon is involved in the reduction step. The minimum appearance temperatures for 15 elements are calculated from equilibrium atom concentrations and free energy data. The calculated appearance temperatures are found to correlate with the experimentally determined values for these elements.
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- 1979
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11. Dental dysplasia in incontinentia pigmenti achromians (Ito). An unusual form
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Browne, RM and Byrne, JP
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- 1976
12. Electronic relaxation as a cause of diffuseness in electronic spectra.
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Byrne, JP and Ross, IG
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- 1971
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13. Internal conversion in aromatic and N-heteroaromatic molecules.
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Byrne, JP, McCoy, EF, and Ross, IG
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A previous semi-empirical approach to the calculation of the rate of internal conversion, regarded as a tunnelling process, is reformulated on a sounder theoretical basis. Following Robinson and Frosch, tunnelling rates are correlated with Franck-Condon factors for the associated transition. The total Franck-Condon factor, S2max, is a product of three terms, associated respectively with skeletal stretching, CH stretching, and skeletal angle bending vibrations. The value of S2max may be controlled by one term only of the product, or by two or more (mixed tunnelling). Tunnelling rates should be slowed down by deuteration only when CH vibrations participate significantly; specific predictions are made here. Skeletal-angle bending vibrations are of negligible importance in internal conversion in aromatic molecules, but they are very significant in transitions between states of π,π* and n,π* type in heteroaromatics. Correlation between S2max and estimated tunnelling rates is encouraging for four aromatic molecules and certain monocyclic azines; but the failure of pyridine and pyridazine to show luminescence is still unexplained. The case of pyrazine is discussed in detail.
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- 1965
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14. Response to "Weight loss, blood pressure reduction, and aortic stiffness: an old dilemma revisited".
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Rider OJ, Tayal U, Francis JM, Ali MK, Robinson M, Byrne JP, Clarke K, Neubauer S, Rider, Oliver J, Tayal, Upasana, Francis, Jane M, Ali, Mohammed K, Robinson, Monique, Byrne, James P, Clarke, Kieran, and Neubauer, Stefan
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- 2011
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15. Impact of integrated PET/CT in the staging of oesophageal cancer: a UK population-based cohort study.
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Noble F, Bailey D, Tung K, Byrne JP, SWCIS Upper Gastrointestinal Tumour Panel, Noble, F, Bailey, D, Tung, K, and Byrne, J P
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Aim: To document the impact of integrated positron-emission tomography and computed tomography (PET/CT) on the management of a cohort of UK patients undergoing PET/CT as part of their staging investigations for potentially curable oesophageal cancer.Materials and Methods: A multicentre, prospective study of newly diagnosed patients with oesophageal cancer undergoing PET/CT was set up across five cancer networks covering a total population of 6.6 million. Data were prospectively collected for cases diagnosed between 1 November 2006 and 31 October 2007.Results: One hundred and ninety-one patients underwent PET/CT, with 31 (16%) positive for possible metastatic disease. Amongst the 31 positive examinations, 18 (9.4%) were confirmed to have metastatic disease, and 13 (6.5%) patients had no subsequent evidence of metastatic disease, although in three (1.6%) of these a second previously unsuspected pathology was diagnosed. Two patients had false-negative PET/CT and were found to have metastatic disease. The results of the PET/CT examination down-staged 10 (5%) patients thought to have coeliac/M1a node involvement on CT. Fifteen of 110 (13%) patients with stage 3 or 4 disease at CT and endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) had confirmed metastatic disease at PET/CT, compared with none of 18 with stage 2b, three of 52 (6%) with stage 2a, and none of 10 with stage 1 disease.Conclusion: This study confirms the role of PET/CT in a multicentre UK setting in the management of patients with potentially curable carcinoma of the oesophagus, improving the accuracy of pre-treatment staging compared with CT and EUS alone. Early tumours infrequently show evidence of metastasis on PET/CT, although further data are required to confidently determine the stage of tumours where PET/CT has no additional value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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16. Incarceration is associated with higher mortality after trauma: An unreported health care disparity.
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Newman-Plotnick H, Byrne JP, Haut ER, and Hultman CS
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Background: While the United States has the highest incarceration rate worldwide, at nearly 1% of the adult population (more than 2 million people), insights regarding health disparities in this population remain limited. This retrospective cohort study represents the largest national database analysis of incarcerated trauma patients to date and investigates whether incarceration status is an independent risk factor for poor outcomes after trauma for US adults., Methods: We analyzed data from the National Trauma Data Bank from 2017 to 2018. Using multilevel logistic regression, we measured risk-adjusted associations between incarceration status (assessed by International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, location codes) and trauma outcomes: mortality, any in-hospital complications, aggregate major complications, and failure to rescue. We report odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals, adjusting for demographics, transfer status, insurance, comorbidities, injury mechanism, injury severity, and presenting vitals. A secondary analysis was performed using nearest neighbor matching with a 2:1 ratio of nonincarcerated to incarcerated patients, followed by multilevel logistic regression., Results: There were 12,888 incarcerated patients and 1,654,254 nonincarcerated patients. Incarcerated patients were younger (median, 36 vs. 55 years), more likely to be male (94.9% vs. 60.5%), Black (27.9% vs. 13.9%), and Hispanic (15.7% vs. 11.5%) and presented more frequently with minor injuries (Injury Severity Score, <9; 65.4% vs. 48.9%) and with stabbings and other blunt events as mechanisms of injury. Although unadjusted mortality was lower for incarcerated patients, after adjustment, they were significantly more likely to die (adjusted odds ratio (AOR), 1.42 [1.19-1.68]), which was consistent in the matched analysis (AOR, 1.19 [1.03-1.36]). Incarcerated patients were, conversely, less likely to suffer any in-hospital complication (AOR, 0.76 [0.68-0.85]; matched AOR, 0.88 [0.81-0.97])., Conclusion: Our study redemonstrated that incarcerated trauma patients' demographics and injuries differ significantly from nonincarcerated patients. Furthermore, incarceration was an independent risk factor for mortality, a previously unreported disparity. This highlights the need for improved data collection regarding incarceration status and national prospective investigations., Level of Evidence: Prognostic and Epidemiological; Level III., (Copyright © 2025 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2025
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17. GP emigration from Ireland: an analysis of data from key destination countries.
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Hanlon HR, Shé ÉN, Byrne JP, Smith SM, Murphy AW, Barrett A, O'Callaghan M, and Humphries N
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- Ireland, Humans, Australia, New Zealand, United Kingdom, Professional Practice Location statistics & numerical data, Foreign Medical Graduates statistics & numerical data, Emigration and Immigration statistics & numerical data, General Practitioners statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Ireland is experiencing a general practitioner (GP) workforce crisis, facing an ageing workforce, a growing population with increased life expectancy, and increased complexity of patients. The GP crisis threatens access to primary care in Ireland, as well as Ireland's aim to transform into a primary-care centred system of universal healthcare via the proposed "Sláintecare" healthcare reforms. The challenges faced are common to many countries as health systems seek to expand their medical workforce post-pandemic. In addition Ireland has a legacy of austerity policies which impacted the health system, and triggered/generated largescale doctor emigration. However, little is known specifically about GP emigration and the role it potentially plays in the GP workforce crisis. This paper aims to address the gap in knowledge about the level of GP emigration from Ireland and consider the implications for the Irish health system and health systems internationally., Methods: As Ireland does not formally collect routine data on GP emigration, this paper presents routinely collected secondary data from four key destination countries; Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and Canada, in order to gain an initial picture of GP emigration from Ireland to these countries, from 2012-2021. The data were in the form of medical registration and immigration (visa) data and both stock (the total number of GPs registered in a country in a given year) and flow data (the number of GPs entering a country in a given year) were collated, where available., Results: The stock data shows a substantial cohort of Irish-trained doctors working in general practice in key destination countries. The flow data suggests a relatively small annual emigration flow of GPs from Ireland to individual countries. However when compared with the total numbers of GPs trained in Ireland each year, the numbers are notable., Conclusions: The available data suggests a mixed picture regarding GP emigration from Ireland. There is a significant stock of Irish-trained GPs abroad which perhaps represents a potential cohort of GPs who could be encouraged to return to practice in Ireland as part of Ireland's strategy for addressing the GP workforce crisis. The annual flow of GPs from Ireland to key destination countries, while small, should be monitored and factored into GP workforce planning. As global demand for GPs increases, countries will inevitably compete with each other to attract and retain GPs (see for example Australia's recent move to attract and recruit Irish trained GPs). The paper highlights the need for improved routine data on the GP workforce in Ireland, including the need for a national GP workforce dataset, in order to ensure that national workforce planning efforts are informed by the latest evidence on GP emigration., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: No ethical review process was required for this paper as it used routinely collected, anonymised aggregate data which was publicly available. Consent for publication: Not applicable. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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18. Machine Learning Reveals Demographic Disparities in Palliative Care Timing Among Patients With Traumatic Brain Injury Receiving Neurosurgical Consultation.
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Aude CA, Vattipally VN, Das O, Ran KR, Giwa GA, Rincon-Torroella J, Xu R, Byrne JP, Muehlschlegel S, Suarez JI, Mukherjee D, Huang J, Azad TD, and Bettegowda C
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Background: Timely palliative care (PC) consultations offer demonstrable benefits for patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI), yet their implementation remains inconsistent. This study employs machine learning methods to identify distinct patient phenotypes and elucidate the primary drivers of PC consultation timing variability in TBI management, aiming to uncover disparities and inform more equitable care strategies., Methods: Data on admission, hospital course, and outcomes were collected for a cohort of 232 patients with TBI who received both PC consultations and neurosurgical consultations during the same hospitalization. Patient phenotypes were uncovered using principal component analysis and K-means clustering; time-to-PC consultation for each phenotype was subsequently compared by Kaplan-Meier analysis. An extreme gradient boosting model with Shapley Additive Explanations identified key factors influencing PC consultation timing., Results: Three distinct patient clusters emerged: cluster A (n = 86), comprising older adult White women (median 87 years) with mild TBI, received the earliest PC consultations (median 2.5 days); cluster B (n = 108), older adult White men (median 81 years) with mild TBI, experienced delayed PC consultations (median 5.0 days); and cluster C (n = 38), middle-aged (median: 46.5 years), severely injured, non-White patients, had the latest PC consultations (median 9.0 days). The clusters did not differ by discharge disposition (p = 0.4) or inpatient mortality (p > 0.9); however, Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a significant difference in time-to-PC consultation (p < 0.001), despite no differences in time-to-mortality (p = 0.18). Shapley Additive Explanations analysis of the extreme gradient boosting model identified age, sex, and race as the most influential drivers of PC consultation timing., Conclusions: This study unveils crucial disparities in PC consultation timing for patients with TBI, primarily driven by demographic factors rather than clinical presentation or injury characteristics. The identification of distinct patient phenotypes and quantification of factors influencing PC consultation timing provide a foundation for developing for standardized protocols and decision support tools to ensure timely and equitable palliative care access for patients with TBI., Competing Interests: Conflicts of interest: Financial Disclosures: Personal Financial Interests: SM has received speaking honoraria from the American Academy of Neurology and serves as a paid member of the Endpoint adjudication committee for Acasti Pharma Inc. Prior Research Funding: SM has received grant funding from R21NR020231 and U01NS119647. The authors have no other competing interest to disclose. Ethical Approval: The Johns Hopkins Medicine Institutional Review Board approved this study (IRB00309385). Informed consent was waived by the institutional review board for this study as it only involved a retrospective review of medical records., (© 2024. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature and Neurocritical Care Society.)
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- 2024
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19. Satiety Hormone LEAP2 After Low-Calorie Diet With/Without Endobarrier Insertion in Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
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Emini M, Bhargava R, Aldhwayan M, Chhina N, Rodriguez Flores M, Aldubaikhi G, Al Lababidi M, Al-Najim W, Miras AD, Ruban A, Glaysher MA, Prechtl CG, Byrne JP, Teare JP, and Goldstone AP
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Context: The liver/foregut satiety hormone liver-expressed antimicrobial peptide 2 (LEAP2) is an inverse agonist at the acyl ghrelin receptor (GHSR), increasing after food intake and decreasing after bariatric surgery and short-term nonsurgical weight loss, but effects of long-term dietary weight loss are unknown., Objective: The objective of this study was to examine and compare the effects of these interventions on fasting and postprandial plasma LEAP2 and investigate potential metabolic mediators of changes in plasma LEAP2., Methods: Plasma LEAP2 was measured in a previously published 2-year trial comparing standard medical management (SMM) (including 600-kcal/day deficit) with duodenal-jejunal bypass liner (DJBL, Endobarrier) insertion (explanted after 1 year) in adults with obesity and inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus., Results: In the SMM group (n = 25-37), weight decreased by 4.3%, 8.1%, 7.8%, and 6.4% at 2, 26, 50, and 104 weeks and fasting plasma LEAP2 decreased from baseline mean ± SD 15.3 ± 0.9 ng/mL by 1.7, 3.8, 2.1, and 2.0 ng/mL, respectively. Absolute/decreases in fasting plasma LEAP2 positively correlated with absolute/decreases in body mass index, glycated hemoglobin A
1c , fasting plasma glucose, serum insulin, homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance, and serum triglycerides. Despite greater weight loss in the DJBL group (n = 23-30) at 26 to 50 weeks (10.4%-11.4%), the decrease in fasting plasma LEAP2 was delayed and attenuated (vs SMM), which may contribute to greater weight loss by attenuating GHSR signaling. Plasma LEAP2 did not increase with weight regain from 50 to 104 weeks after DJBL explant, suggesting a new set point with weight loss maintenance. Increases in plasma LEAP2 after a 600-kcal meal (10.8%-16.1% at 1-2 hours) were unaffected by weight loss, improved glucose metabolism, or DJBL insertion (n = 9-25), suggesting liver rather than duodenum/jejunum may be the primary source of postprandial LEAP2 secretion., Conclusion: These findings add to our understanding of the regulation and potential physiological role of plasma LEAP2., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society.)- Published
- 2024
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20. Venous thromboembolism chemoprophylaxis after severe polytrauma: timing and type of prophylaxis matter.
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Byrne JP and Schellenberg M
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- Humans, Brain Injuries, Traumatic complications, Drug Administration Schedule, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Multiple Trauma complications, Venous Thromboembolism etiology, Venous Thromboembolism prevention & control
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In this review, we provide recommendations as well as summarize available data on the optimal time to initiate venous thromboembolism chemoprophylaxis after severe trauma. A general approach to the severe polytrauma patient is provided as well as in-depth reviews of three high-risk injury subgroups: patients with traumatic brain injury, solid organ injury, and pelvic fractures., Competing Interests: Declarations. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)
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- 2024
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21. Association of pediatric firearm injury with neighborhood social deprivation in Philadelphia.
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Kauffman J, Nance M, Cannon JW, Sakran JV, Haut ER, Scantling DR, Rozycki G, and Byrne JP
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Background: Firearm-related injury is the leading cause of death among children and adolescents. There is a need to clarify the association of neighborhood environment with gun violence affecting children. We evaluated the relative contribution of specific social determinants to observed rates of firearm-related injury in children of different ages., Methods: This was a population-based study of firearm injury in children (age <18 years) that occurred in Philadelphia census tracts (2015-2021). The exposure was neighborhood Social Deprivation Index (SDI) quintile. The outcome was the rate of pediatric firearm injury due to interpersonal violence stratified by age, sex, race, and year. Hierarchical negative binomial regression measured the risk-adjusted association between SDI quintile and pediatric firearm injury rate. The relative contribution of specific components of the SDI to neighborhood risk of pediatric firearm injury was estimated. Effect modification and the role of specific social determinants were evaluated in younger (<15 years old) versus older children., Results: 927 children were injured due to gun violence during the study period. Firearm-injured children were predominantly male (87%), of black race (89%), with a median age of 16 (IQR 15-17). Nearly one-half of all pediatric shootings (47%) occurred in the quintile of highest SDI (Q5). Younger children represented a larger proportion of children shot in neighborhoods within the highest (Q5), compared with the lowest (Q1), SDI quintile (25% vs 5%; p<0.007). After risk adjustment, pediatric firearm-related injury was strongly associated with increasing SDI (Q5 vs Q1; aRR 14; 95% CI 6 to 32). Specific measures of social deprivation (poverty, incomplete schooling, single-parent homes, and rented housing) were associated with significantly greater increases in firearm injury risk for younger, compared with older, children. Component measures of the SDI explained 58% of observed differences between neighborhoods., Conclusions: Neighborhood measures of social deprivation are strongly associated with firearm-related injury in children. Younger children appear to be disproportionately affected by specific adverse social determinants compared with older children. Root cause evaluation is required to clarify the interaction with other factors such as the availability of firearms and interpersonal conflict that place children at risk in neighborhoods where gun violence is common., Level of Evidence: Level III - Observational Study., Competing Interests: None declared., (Copyright © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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22. Quantifying the Association Between Surgical Spine Approach and Tracheostomy Timing After Traumatic Cervical Spinal Cord Injury.
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Essa A, Shakil H, Malhotra AK, Byrne JP, Badhiwala J, Yuan EY, He Y, Jack AS, Mathieu F, Wilson JR, and Witiw CD
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Retrospective Studies, Time Factors, Postoperative Complications epidemiology, Postoperative Complications etiology, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Aged, Cervical Cord injuries, Cervical Cord surgery, Cohort Studies, Respiration, Artificial statistics & numerical data, Respiration, Artificial methods, Time-to-Treatment statistics & numerical data, Spinal Cord Injuries surgery, Tracheostomy methods, Tracheostomy adverse effects, Tracheostomy statistics & numerical data, Cervical Vertebrae surgery
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Background and Objectives: Recent evidence suggests earlier tracheostomy is associated with fewer complications in patients with complete cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). This study aims to evaluate the influence of spine surgical approach on the association between tracheostomy timing and in-hospital adverse events treating patients with complete cervical SCI., Methods: This retrospective cohort study was performed using Trauma Quality Improvement Program data from 2017 to 2020. All patients with acute complete (American Spinal Injury Association-A) cervical SCI who underwent tracheostomy and spine surgery were included. Tracheostomy timing was dichotomized to early (within 1 week after surgery) and delayed (more than 1 week after surgery). Primary outcome was the occurrence of major in-hospital complications. Secondary outcomes included occurrences of immobility-related complications, surgical-site infection, hospital and intensive care unit length of stay, and time on mechanical ventilation., Results: The study included 1592 patients across 358 trauma centers. Mean time to tracheostomy from surgery was 8.6 days. A total of 495 patients underwent anterior approach, 670 underwent posterior approach, and 427 underwent combined anterior and posterior approach. Patients who underwent anterior approach were significantly more likely to have delayed tracheostomy compared with posterior approach (53% vs 40%, P < .001). Early tracheotomy significantly reduced major in-hospital complications (odds ratio 0.67, 95% CI 0.53-0.84) and immobility complications (odds ratio = 0.78, 95% CI 0.6-1.0). Those undergoing early tracheostomy spent 6.0 (95% CI -8.47 to -3.43) fewer days in hospital, 5.7 (95% CI -7.8 to -3.7) fewer days in the intensive care unit, and 5.9 (95% CI -8.2 to -3.7) fewer days ventilated. Surgical approach had no significant negative effect on the association between tracheostomy timing and the outcomes of interest., Conclusion: Earlier tracheostomy for patients with cervical SCI is associated with reduced complications, length of stay, and ventilation time. This relationship appears independent of the surgical approach. These findings emphasize that tracheostomy need not be delayed because of the SCI treatment approach., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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23. Association between geospatial access to trauma center care and motor vehicle crash mortality in the United States.
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Patel VR, Rozycki G, Jopling J, Subramanian M, Kent A, Manukyan M, Sakran JV, Haut E, Levy M, Nathens AB, Brown C, and Byrne JP
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- Humans, United States epidemiology, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Wounds and Injuries mortality, Wounds and Injuries therapy, Adolescent, Aged, Trauma Centers statistics & numerical data, Accidents, Traffic mortality, Accidents, Traffic statistics & numerical data, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Motor vehicle crashes (MVCs) are a leading cause of preventable trauma death in the United States. Access to trauma center care is highly variable nationwide. The objective of this study was to measure the association between geospatial access to trauma center care and MVC mortality., Methods: This was a population-based study of MVC-related deaths that occurred in 3,141 US counties (2017-2020). American College of Surgeons and state-verified Level I to III trauma centers were mapped. Geospatial network analysis estimated the ground transport time to the nearest trauma center from the population-weighted centroid for each county. In this way, the exposure was the predicted access time to trauma center care for each county population. Hierarchical negative binomial regression measured the risk-adjusted association between predicted access time and MVC mortality, adjusting for population demographics, rurality, access to trauma resources, and state traffic safety laws., Results: We identified 92,398 crash fatalities over the 4-year study period. Trauma centers mapped included 217 Level I, 343 Level II, and 495 Level III trauma centers. The median county predicted access time was 47 minutes (interquartile range, 26-71 minutes). Median county MVC mortality was 12.5 deaths/100,000 person-years (interquartile range, 7.4-20.3 deaths/100,000 person-years). After risk-adjustment, longer predicted access times were significantly associated with higher rates of MVC mortality (>60 minutes vs. <15 minutes; mortality rate ratio 1.36; 95% confidence interval, 1.31-1.40). This relationship was significantly more pronounced in urban/suburban vs. rural/wilderness counties ( p for interaction, <0.001). County access to trauma center care explained 16% of observed state-level variation in MVC mortality., Conclusion: Geospatial access to trauma center care is significantly associated with MVC mortality and contributes meaningfully to between-state differences in road traffic deaths. Efforts to improve trauma system organization should prioritize access to trauma center care to minimize crash fatalities., Level of Evidence: Prognostic and Epidemiological, Level III., (Copyright © 2023 American Association for the Surgery of Trauma.)
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- 2024
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24. It is time for some deep learning: a statistical commentary on machine learning for clinical prediction models using imbalanced datasets.
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Stonko D, Jarman MP, and Byrne JP
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Competing Interests: None declared.
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- 2024
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25. Clinical impact of DVH uncertainties.
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Walker LS and Byrne JP
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Dose-volume histograms (DVH), along with dose and volume metrics, are central to radiotherapy planning. As such, errors have the potential to significantly impact the selection of appropriate treatment plans. Dose distributions that pass tests in one TPS may fail the same tests when transferred to another, even if using identical structures and dose grid information. This work shows the design and implementation of methods for assessing the accuracy of dose and volume computations performed by treatment planning systems (TPS), and other analytical tools. We demonstrate examples where differences in calculations between systems can change the assessment of a plan's clinical acceptability. Our work also provides a more detailed DVH analysis of single targets than earlier published studies. This is relevant for SRS plans and small structure dose assessments. Very small structures are a particular problem because of their coarse digital representation, and the impact of this is thoroughly examined. Reference DVH curves were derived mathematically, based on Gaussian dose distributions centered on spherical structures. The structures and dose distributions were generated synthetically, and imported into RayStation, MasterPlan, and ProKnow. Corresponding DVHs were analytically derived and taken as ground truth references, for comparison with the commercial DVH calculations. Two commonly used dose metrics PCI and MGI were used to determine the limit of calculation accuracy for small structures. In addition, to measure the DVH differences between a larger range of commercial DVH calculators, the D95 metric from a set of real clinical plans was compared across both the 3 DVH calculators under test, and across a further six TPSs from other hospitals. We show that even slight deviations between the results of DVH calculators can lead to plan check failures, and we illustrate this with the commonly used D95 planning metric. We present clinical data across eight planning systems that highlight instances where plan checks would pass in one software and fail in another due to DVH calculation differences. For the smallest volumes tested, errors of up to 20% were observed in the DVHs. RayStation was tested down to a 3 mm radius sphere (≈0.1 cc) and this showed close to 10% error, reducing to 1% for 10 mm radius (≈4.0 cc) and 0.1% for 20 mm radius (≈33 cc). In clinical plans, the variation in D95 was up to 9% for the smallest volumes, and typically around 2% in the range 0.5 cc-20 cc, and 1% in 20 cc-70 cc, falling to <0.1% for large volumes. Paddick Conformity Index (PCI) and Modified Gradient Index (MGI) are commonly used plan quality indicators for very small volumes. For volumes ≈0.1 cc we observed errors of up to 40% in PCI, and up to 75% in MGI. Our study extends the range of tested DVH calculators in published work, and shows their performance over a wider range of volume sizes. We provide quantitative evidence of the critical need to test the accuracy of DVH calculators in the TPS before clinical use. This work is particularly relevant for both stereotactic plan evaluation and for assessment of small volume doses in published dose constraint recommendations. We demonstrate that significant errors can occur in DVHs for volumes less than 1 cc, even if the volumes themselves are calculated accurately. Even for large structures, deviations between the outputs of DVH calculators can lead to indicated or reported plan check failures if they do not include appropriate tolerances. We urge caution in the use of DVH metrics for these very small volumes and recommend that appropriate DVH uncertainty tolerances are set in organ dose constraints when using them to evaluate clinical plans., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest None., (Copyright © 2024 American Association of Medical Dosimetrists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. Motor vehicle collision characteristics and hospitalization outcomes associated with mild traumatic brain injury and concomitant whiplash injury.
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Vattipally VN, Weber-Levine C, Jiang K, Bhimreddy M, Kramer P, Davidar AD, Hersh AM, Winkle M, Byrne JP, Azad TD, and Theodore N
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Brain Concussion epidemiology, Brain Concussion complications, Cohort Studies, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Glasgow Coma Scale, Accidents, Traffic statistics & numerical data, Whiplash Injuries epidemiology, Whiplash Injuries complications, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data
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Objective: Few large studies have investigated the factors and outcomes related to concomitant injuries occurring alongside mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) after motor vehicle collisions (MVCs). Thus, the objective of this study was to assess whether MVC characteristics predict which patients with mTBI will have concomitant whiplash injury, and whether concomitant whiplash injury affects care utilization for these patients., Methods: This retrospective cohort study included 22,213 patients with mTBI after MVC identified from the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Programs dataset. A hierarchical logistic regression model was constructed to investigate patient and MVC factors associated with concomitant whiplash injury. Propensity score matching on whiplash status, in conjunction with a multivariable logistic regression model, assessed if concomitant whiplash affected odds of hospitalization. In the subgroup of patients who were hospitalized, associations with hospital length of stay (LOS) and discharge disposition were investigated., Results: The median (IQR) age was 34 (24-51) years, with a median Glasgow Coma Scale score at presentation of 15 (15-15). Patients with concomitant whiplash were older (median 36 years vs 34 years, p = 0.03) and had higher rates of hospitalization (75% vs 64%, p < 0.001). In the hierarchical model for associations with concomitant whiplash injury, patients with blood alcohol content (BAC) greater than the federal driving limit had lower odds of concomitant whiplash (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.49-0.81) along with those who had airbag deployment (OR 0.80, 95% CI 0.68-0.95), but seatbelt use was associated with greater odds (OR 1.41, 95% CI 1.16-1.71). After matching, concomitant whiplash was independently associated with increased odds of hospitalization (OR 1.67, 95% CI 1.40-1.99) while seatbelt use was associated with decreased odds (OR 0.88, 95% CI 0.81-0.95). Among hospitalized patients, concomitant whiplash was not associated with hospital LOS or discharge disposition., Conclusions: MVC characteristics such as alcohol consumption and airbag deployment were protective toward development of concomitant whiplash for mTBI patients, while seatbelt use was associated with higher risk. Concomitant whiplash increases the odds of hospitalization for mTBI patients but does not affect hospital LOS or discharge disposition, while seatbelt use is associated with lower rates of hospitalization and a more favorable hospital course. These findings provide context to injury patterns and care provision after a common mechanism of injury.
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- 2024
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27. Examining the Influence of Historical Redlining on Firearm Injuries in Current Day Baltimore, Maryland.
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So M, El Baassiri MG, Price MD, Byrne JP, Haut ER, and Nasr IW
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Firearm injuries are a common and major public health problem in Baltimore, Maryland. The city is also one of the first U.S. cities in which the 1930s discriminatory practice of redlining first emerged. This study examines the association between current day firearm injuries and residence in these historically redlined areas at a neighborhood level using zip codes. Firearm injury outcomes in patients who presented to a hospital in Maryland from 2015 to 2020 were measured from the Health Services Cost Review Commission (HSCRC) in conjunction with both geospatial data from Richmond's Digital Scholarship Lab's Mapping Inequality project and population data from the U.S. Census. A redlining score was calculated to represent the extent of redlining in each zip code. Negative binomial regression models were utilized to measure the association between neighborhood zip codes and rate of firearm injuries. Our adjusted regression model shows that for every one-unit increase of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation (HOLC) redlining score, there is a 2.24-fold increase in the rate of firearm injuries (RR 2.24; 95% CI: 0.31, 1.31, p < 0.001). These findings suggest a strongassociation between historically redlined areas and population risk of firearm injury today. Further research is needed to investigate the underlying mechanisms that may contribute to this relationship, such as access to firearms or social and economic factors. Overall, our study highlights the potential impact of historical redlining policies on contemporary health outcomes in Baltimore.
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- 2024
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28. "They say they listen. But do they really listen?": A qualitative study of hospital doctors' experiences of organisational deafness, disconnect and denial.
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Creese J, Byrne JP, Conway E, O'Connor G, and Humphries N
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The sharing of information and feedback directly from service-providing staff to healthcare organisational management is vital for organisational culture and service improvement. However, hospital doctors report feeling unable to communicate effectively with management to provide evidence and affect improvement, and this can impact job satisfaction, workplace relations, service delivery and ultimately patient safety. In this paper, we draw on data elicited from a Mobile Instant Messaging Ethnography (MIME) study involving 28 hospital doctors working in Irish hospitals, to explore the barriers preventing them from speaking up and effecting change, and the impact of this on staff morale and services. We identify three major barriers, consistent with previous literature, to effective feedback and communication: (1) organisational deafness, (2) disconnect between managers and frontline staff, and (3) denial of the narratives and issues raised. We draw these together to identify key implications from these findings for healthcare managers, and suggest policy and practice improvements., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) 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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29. Evaluation of the Glasgow Coma Scale-Pupils score for predicting inpatient mortality among patients with traumatic subdural hematoma at United States trauma centers.
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Ran KR, Alfonzo Horowitz M, Liu J, Vattipally VN, Dardick JM, Williams JR, Rincon-Torroella J, Xu R, Mukherjee D, Haut ER, Suarez JI, Huang J, Bettegowda C, Azad TD, and Byrne JP
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, United States epidemiology, Aged, Adult, Prognosis, Aged, 80 and over, Hematoma, Subdural mortality, Brain Injuries, Traumatic mortality, Brain Injuries, Traumatic diagnosis, Predictive Value of Tests, Sensitivity and Specificity, Cohort Studies, Young Adult, Retrospective Studies, Glasgow Coma Scale, Hospital Mortality, Trauma Centers
- Abstract
Objective: The Glasgow Coma Scale-Pupils (GCS-P) score has been suggested to better predict patient outcomes compared with GCS alone, while avoiding the need for more complex clinical models. This study aimed to compare the prognostic ability of GCS-P versus GCS in a national cohort of traumatic subdural hematoma (SDH) patients., Methods: Patient data were obtained from the National Trauma Data Bank (2017-2019). Inclusion criteria were traumatic SDH diagnosis with available data on presenting GCS score, pupillary reactivity, and discharge disposition. Patients with severe polytrauma or nonsurvivable head injury at presentation were excluded. Sensitivity, specificity, and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of GCS-P versus GCS scores for inpatient mortality prediction were evaluated across the entire cohort, as well as in subgroups based on age and traumatic brain injury (TBI) type (blunt vs penetrating). Calibration curves were plotted based on predicted probabilities and actual outcomes., Results: A total of 196,747 traumatic SDH patients met the study inclusion criteria. Sensitivity (0.707 vs 0.702), specificity (0.821 vs 0.823), and AUC (0.825 vs 0.814, p < 0.001) of GCS-P versus GCS scores for prediction of inpatient mortality were similar. Calibration curve analysis revealed that GCS scores slightly underestimated inpatient mortality risk, whereas GCS-P scores did not. In patients > 65 years of age with blunt TBI (51.9%, n = 102,148), both GCS-P and GCS scores underestimated inpatient mortality risk. In patients with penetrating TBI (2.4%, n = 4,710), the AUC of the GCS-P score was significantly higher (0.902 vs 0.851, p < 0.001). In this subgroup, both GCS-P and GCS scores underestimated inpatient mortality risk among patients with lower rates of observed mortality and overestimated risk among patients with higher rates of observed mortality. This effect was more pronounced in the GCS-P calibration curve., Conclusions: The GCS-P score provides better short-term prognostication compared with the GCS score alone among traumatic SDH patients with penetrating TBI. The GCS-P score overestimates inpatient mortality risk among penetrating TBI patients with higher rates of observed mortality. For penetrating TBI patients, which comprised 2.4% of our SDH cohort, a low GCS-P score should not justify clinical nihilism or forgoing aggressive treatment.
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- 2024
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30. Machine Learning Identifies Variation in Timing of Palliative Care Consultations Among Traumatic Brain Injury Patients.
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Aude CA, Vattipally VN, Das O, Ran KR, Giwa GA, Rincon-Torroella J, Xu R, Byrne JP, Muehlschlegel S, Suarez JI, Mukherjee D, Huang J, Azad TD, and Bettegowda C
- Abstract
Background and Objective Timely palliative care involvement offers demonstrable benefits for traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients; however, palliative care consultations (PCCs) are used inconsistently during TBI management. This study aimed to employ advanced machine learning techniques to elucidate the primary drivers of PCC timing variability for TBI patients. Methods Data on admission, hospital course, and outcomes were collected for a cohort of 232 TBI patients who received both PCCs and neurosurgical consultations during the same hospitalization. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and K-means clustering were used to identify patient phenotypes, which were then compared using Kaplan-Meier analysis. An extreme gradient boosting model (XGBoost) was employed to determine drivers of PCC timing, with model interpretation performed using SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP). Results Cluster A (n = 86) consisted mainly of older (median [IQR] = 87 [78, 94] years), White females with mild TBIs and demonstrated the shortest time-to-PCC (2.5 [1.0, 7.0] days). Cluster B (n = 108) also sustained mild TBIs but comprised moderately younger (81 [75, 86] years) married White males with later PCC (5.0 [3.0, 10.8] days). Cluster C (n = 38) represented much younger (46.5 [29.5, 59.8] years), more severely injured, non-White patients with the latest PCC initiation (9.0 [4.2, 17.0] days). The clusters did not differ by discharge disposition (p = 0.4) or frequency inpatient mortality (p > 0.9); however, Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed a significant difference in the time from admission to PCC (p < 0.001), despite no differences in time from admission to mortality (p = 0.18). SHAP analysis of the XGBoost model identified age, sex, and race as the most influential drivers of PCC timing. Conclusions This study highlights crucial disparities in PCC timing for TBI patients and underscores the need for targeted strategies to ensure timely and equitable palliative care integration for this vulnerable population., Competing Interests: Declarations Other Competing Interests: The authors have no other competing interest to disclose.
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- 2024
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31. Robotic Technology in Emergency General Surgery Cases in the Era of Minimally Invasive Surgery.
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Lunardi N, Abou-Zamzam A, Florecki KL, Chidambaram S, Shih IF, Kent AJ, Joseph B, Byrne JP, and Sakran JV
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- Humans, Female, Male, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Adult, Emergencies, Aged, Colectomy methods, Hernia, Inguinal surgery, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Cholecystectomy methods, Cholecystectomy statistics & numerical data, Hernia, Ventral surgery, United States, Conversion to Open Surgery statistics & numerical data, Minimally Invasive Surgical Procedures, Acute Care Surgery, Robotic Surgical Procedures statistics & numerical data, Herniorrhaphy methods, Laparoscopy
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Importance: Although robotic surgery has become an established approach for a wide range of elective operations, data on its utility and outcomes are limited in the setting of emergency general surgery., Objectives: To describe temporal trends in the use of laparoscopic and robotic approaches and compare outcomes between robotic and laparoscopic surgery for 4 common emergent surgical procedures., Design, Setting, and Participants: A retrospective cohort study of an all-payer discharge database of 829 US facilities was conducted from calendar years 2013 to 2021. Data analysis was performed from July 2022 to November 2023. A total of 1 067 263 emergent or urgent cholecystectomies (n = 793 800), colectomies (n = 89 098), inguinal hernia repairs (n = 65 039), and ventral hernia repairs (n = 119 326) in patients aged 18 years or older were included., Exposure: Surgical approach (robotic, laparoscopic, or open) to emergent or urgent cholecystectomy, colectomy, inguinal hernia repair, or ventral hernia repair., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the temporal trend in use of each operative approach (laparoscopic, robotic, or open). Secondary outcomes included conversion to open surgery and length of stay (both total and postoperative). Temporal trends were measured using linear regression. Propensity score matching was used to compare secondary outcomes between robotic and laparoscopic surgery groups., Results: During the study period, the use of robotic surgery increased significantly year-over-year for all procedures: 0.7% for cholecystectomy, 0.9% for colectomy, 1.9% for inguinal hernia repair, and 1.1% for ventral hernia repair. There was a corresponding decrease in the open surgical approach for all cases. Compared with laparoscopy, robotic surgery was associated with a significantly lower risk of conversion to open surgery: cholecystectomy, 1.7% vs 3.0% (odds ratio [OR], 0.55 [95% CI, 0.49-0.62]); colectomy, 11.2% vs 25.5% (OR, 0.37 [95% CI, 0.32-0.42]); inguinal hernia repair, 2.4% vs 10.7% (OR, 0.21 [95% CI, 0.16-0.26]); and ventral hernia repair, 3.5% vs 10.9% (OR, 0.30 [95% CI, 0.25-0.36]). Robotic surgery was associated with shorter postoperative lengths of stay for colectomy (-0.48 [95% CI, -0.60 to -0.35] days), inguinal hernia repair (-0.20 [95% CI, -0.30 to -0.10] days), and ventral hernia repair (-0.16 [95% CI, -0.26 to -0.06] days)., Conclusions and Relevance: While robotic surgery is still not broadly used for emergency general surgery, the findings of this study suggest it is becoming more prevalent and may be associated with better outcomes as measured by reduced conversion to open surgery and decreased length of stay.
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- 2024
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32. What you don't know can hurt you: a statistical commentary on missing data in trauma research.
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Byrne JP and Jarman MP
- Abstract
Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared.
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- 2024
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33. Increasing Injury Intensity among 6,500 Violent Deaths in the State of Maryland.
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Sakran JV, Lunardi N, Mehta A, Ezzeddine HM, Chammas M, Fransman R, Byrne JP, Stevens K, and Efron D
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- Humans, Maryland epidemiology, Cause of Death, Population Surveillance, Homicide, Suicide, Wounds, Gunshot, Fractures, Bone
- Abstract
Background: Anecdotal evidence strongly suggests there has been a rise in violent crimes. This study sought to examine trends in injury characteristics of homicide victims in Maryland. We hypothesized that there would be an increase in the severity of wound characteristics., Study Design: The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner is a statewide agency designated by law to investigate all homicides, suicides, or unusual or suspicious circumstances. Using individual autopsy reports, we collected data among all homicides from 2005 to 2017, categorizing them into 3 time periods: 2005 to 2008 (early), 2009 to 2013 (mid), and 2014 to 2017 (late). Primary outcomes included the number of gunshots, stabs, and fractures from assaults. High-violence intensity outcomes included victims having 10 or more gunshots, 5 or more stabs, or 5 or more fractures from assaults., Results: Of 6,500 homicides (annual range 403 to 589), the majority were from firearms (75%), followed by stabbings (14%) and blunt assaults (10%). Most homicide victims died in the hospital (60%). The average number of gunshots per victim was 3.9 (range 1 to 54), stabs per victim was 9.4 (range 1 to 563), and fractures from assaults per victim was 3.7 (range 0 to 31). The proportion of firearm victims with at least 10 gunshots nearly doubled from 5.7% in the early period to 10% (p < 0.01) in the late period. Similarly, the proportion with 5 or more stabbings increased from 39% to 50% (p = 0.02) and assault homicides with 5 or more fractures increased from 24% to 38% (p < 0.01)., Conclusions: In Maryland, the intensity of violence increased across all major mechanisms of homicide. Further follow-up studies are needed to elucidate the root causes underlying this escalating trend., (Copyright © 2024 by the American College of Surgeons. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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34. Impact of Antithrombotic Medications and Reversal Strategies on the Surgical Management and Outcomes of Traumatic Acute Subdural Hematoma.
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Vattipally VN, Ran KR, Giwa GA, Myneni S, Dardick JM, Rincon-Torroella J, Ye X, Byrne JP, Suarez JI, Lin SC, Jackson CM, Mukherjee D, Gallia GL, Huang J, Weingart JD, Azad TD, and Bettegowda C
- Subjects
- Humans, Fibrinolytic Agents therapeutic use, Hematoma, Subdural surgery, Hematoma, Subdural drug therapy, Anticoagulants therapeutic use, Retrospective Studies, Hematoma, Subdural, Acute surgery, Hematoma, Subdural, Acute drug therapy, Hematoma, Subdural, Intracranial drug therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Careful hematologic management is required in surgical patients with traumatic acute subdural hematoma (aSDH) taking antithrombotic medications. We sought to compare outcomes between patients with aSDH taking antithrombotic medications at admission who received antithrombotic reversal with patients with aSDH not taking antithrombotics., Methods: Retrospective review identified patients with traumatic aSDH requiring surgical evacuation. The cohort was divided based on antithrombotic use and whether pharmacologic reversal agents or platelet transfusions were administered. A 3-way comparison of outcomes was performed between patients taking anticoagulants who received pharmacologic reversal, patients taking antiplatelets who received platelet transfusion, and patients not taking antithrombotics. Multivariable regressions, adjusted for injury severity, further investigated associations with outcomes., Results: Of 138 patients who met inclusion criteria, 13.0% (n = 18) reported taking anticoagulants, 16.7% (n = 23) reported taking antiplatelets, and 3.6% (n = 5) reported taking both. Patients taking antiplatelets who received platelet transfusion had longer intraoperative times (P = 0.040) and higher rates of palliative care consultations (P = 0.046) compared with patients taking anticoagulants who received pharmacologic reversal and patients not taking antithrombotics. Across groups, no significant differences were found in frequency of in-hospital intracranial hemorrhage and venous thromboembolism, length of hospital stay, rate of inpatient mortality, or follow-up health status. In multivariable analysis, intraoperative time remained longest for the antiplatelets with platelet transfusion group. Other outcomes were not associated with patient group., Conclusions: Among surgical patients with traumatic aSDH, those taking antiplatelet medications who receive platelet transfusions experience longer intraoperative procedure times and higher rates of palliative care consultation. Comparable outcomes were observed between patients receiving antithrombotic reversal and patients not taking antithrombotics., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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35. Surgeon Supply by County-Level Rurality and Social Vulnerability From 2010 to 2020.
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Patel VR, Liu M, Byrne JP, Haynes AB, and Ibrahim AM
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- Humans, United States, Workforce, Rural Population, Social Vulnerability, Surgeons
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- 2024
- Full Text
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36. Concomitant Traumatic Brain Injury Delays Surgery in Patients With Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury.
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Azad TD, Raj D, Ran KR, Vattipally VN, Warman A, Raad M, Williams JR, Lubelski D, Haut ER, Suarez JI, Bydon A, Witham TF, Witiw CD, Theodore N, and Byrne JP
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Growing evidence supports prompt surgical decompression for patients with traumatic spinal cord injury (tSCI). Rates of concomitant tSCI and traumatic brain injury (TBI) range from 10% to 30%. Concomitant TBI may delay tSCI diagnosis and surgical intervention. Little is known about real-world management of this common injury constellation that carries significant clinical consequences. This study aimed to quantify the impact of concomitant TBI on surgical timing in a national cohort of patients with tSCI., Methods: Patient data were obtained from the National Trauma Data Bank (2007-2016). Patients admitted for tSCI and who received surgical intervention were included. Delayed surgical intervention was defined as surgery after 24 hours of admission. Multivariable hierarchical regression models were constructed to measure the risk-adjusted association between concomitant TBI and delayed surgical intervention. Secondary outcome included favorable discharge status., Results: We identified 14 964 patients with surgically managed tSCI across 377 North American trauma centers, of whom 2444 (16.3%) had concomitant TBI and 4610 (30.8%) had central cord syndrome (CCS). The median time to surgery was 20.0 hours for patients without concomitant TBI and 24.8 hours for patients with concomitant TBI. Hierarchical regression modeling revealed that concomitant TBI was independently associated with delayed surgery in patients with tSCI (odds ratio [OR], 1.3; 95% CI, 1.1-1.6). Although CCS was associated with delayed surgery (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.4-1.7), we did not observe a significant interaction between concomitant TBI and CCS. In the subset of patients with concomitant tSCI and TBI, patients with severe TBI were significantly more likely to experience a surgical delay than patients with mild TBI (OR, 1.4; 95% CI, 1.0-1.9)., Conclusion: Concomitant TBI delays surgical management for patients with tSCI. This effect is largest for patients with tSCI with severe TBI. These findings should serve to increase awareness of concomitant TBI and tSCI and the likelihood that this may delay time-sensitive surgery., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2024. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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37. Craniotomy versus craniectomy for traumatic acute subdural hematoma-coarsened exact matched analysis of outcomes.
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Ran KR, Vattipally VN, Giwa GA, Myneni S, Raj D, Dardick JM, Rincon-Torroella J, Ye X, Byrne JP, Suarez JI, Lin SC, Jackson CM, Mukherjee D, Gallia GL, Huang J, Weingart JD, Azad TD, and Bettegowda C
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Craniotomy adverse effects, Hematoma, Subdural etiology, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Hematoma, Subdural, Acute surgery, Decompressive Craniectomy, Brain Injuries, Traumatic complications, Brain Injuries, Traumatic surgery, Brain Injuries complications, Hematoma, Subdural, Intracranial surgery
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Acute subdural hematoma (aSDH) after traumatic brain injury frequently requires emergent craniotomy (CO) or decompressive craniectomy (DC). We sought to determine the variables associated with either surgical approach and to compare outcomes between matched patients., Methods: A multi-center retrospective review was used to identify traumatic aSDH patients who underwent CO or DC. Patient variables independently associated with surgical approach were used for coarsened exact matching.Multivariate logistic regression and multivariate Cox proportional-hazards regression wereconducted on matched patients to determine independent predictors of mortality., Results: Seventy-six patients underwent CO and sixty-two underwent DC for aSDH evacuation. DC patients were21.4 years younger (P < 0.001), more likely to be male (80.6 % vs 60.5 %,P = 0.011), and present with GCS ≤ 8 (64.5 % vs 36.8 %,P = 0.001). Age (P < 0.001), epidural hematoma (P = 0.01), skull fracture (P = 0.001), and cisternal effacement (P = 0.02) were independently associated with surgical approach. After coarsened exact matching, DC (P = 0.008), older age (P = 0.007), male sex (P = 0.04), and intraventricular hemorrhage (P = 0.02), were independently associated with inpatient mortality. Multivariate Cox proportional-hazards regression demonstrated that DC was independently associated with mortality at 90-days (P = 0.001) and 1-year post-operation (P = 0.003)., Conclusion: aSDH patients who receive surgical evacuation via DC as opposed to CO are younger, more likely to be male, and have worse clinical exam. After controlling for patient differences via coarsened exact matching, DC is independently associated with mortality., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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38. Earlier Tracheostomy Reduces Complications in Complete Cervical Spinal Cord Injury in Real-World Practice: Analysis of a Multicenter Cohort of 2001 Patients.
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Balas M, Jaja BNR, Harrington EM, Jack AS, Hofereiter J, Malhotra AK, Jaffe RH, He Y, Byrne JP, Wilson JR, and Witiw CD
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Tracheostomy adverse effects, Respiration, Artificial, Cervical Cord, Spinal Cord Injuries complications, Spinal Cord Injuries epidemiology, Spinal Cord Injuries surgery, Neck Injuries surgery
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: It is believed that early tracheostomy in patients with traumatic cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) may lessen the risk of developing complications and reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation and critical care stay. This study aims to assess whether early tracheostomy is beneficial in patients with traumatic cervical SCI., Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using data from the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Program database from 2010 to 2018. Adult patients with a diagnosis of acute complete (ASIA A) traumatic cervical SCI who underwent surgery and tracheostomy were included. Patients were stratified into those receiving early (at or before 7 days) and delayed tracheostomy. Propensity score matching was used to assess the association between delayed tracheostomy and the risk of in-hospital adverse events. Risk-adjusted variability in tracheostomy timing across trauma centers was investigated using mixed-effects regression., Results: The study included 2001 patients from 374 North American trauma centers. The median time to tracheostomy was 9.2 days (IQR: 6.1-13.1 days), with 654 patients (32.7%) undergoing early tracheostomy. After matching, the odds of a major complication were significantly lower for early tracheostomy patients (OR: .90; 95% CI: .88-.98). Patients were also significantly less likely to experience an immobility-related complication (OR: .90; 95% CI: .88-.98). Patients in the early group spent 8.2 fewer days in the critical care unit (95% CI: -10.2 to -6.61) and 6.7 fewer days ventilated (95% CI: -9.44 to -5.23). There was significant variability in tracheostomy timeliness between trauma centers with a median odds ratio of 12.2 (95% CI: 9.7-13.7), which was not explained by case-mix and hospital-level characteristics., Conclusion: A 7-day threshold to implement tracheostomy seems to be associated with reduced in-hospital complications, time in the critical care unit, and time on mechanical ventilation., (Copyright © Congress of Neurological Surgeons 2023. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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39. Improving Access to High Pediatric Readiness Emergency Departments at US Trauma Centers-A Viable Systems Approach to Improve Pediatric Survival After Injury.
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Byrne JP and Crandall ML
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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40. Intubation of bleeding patients in the emergency department or the operating room: A medical decision to be justified-reply.
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Subramanian M, Jopling J, and Byrne JP
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- Humans, Intubation, Intratracheal, Operating Rooms, Emergency Service, Hospital
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors declare no funding or conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
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41. Predictors of initial management failure in traumatic hemothorax: A prospective multicenter cohort analysis.
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Beyer CA, Byrne JP, Moore SA, McLauchlan NR, Rezende-Neto JB, Schroeppel TJ, Dodgion C, Inaba K, Seamon MJ, and Cannon JW
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- Humans, Hemothorax diagnosis, Hemothorax etiology, Hemothorax surgery, Prospective Studies, Cohort Studies, Chest Tubes, Thoracic Injuries therapy, Thoracic Injuries surgery, Fractures, Bone complications
- Abstract
Background: Traumatic hemothorax is common, and management failure leads to worse outcomes. We sought to determine predictive factors and understand the role of trauma center performance in hemothorax management failure., Methods: We prospectively examined initial hemothorax management (observation, pleural drainage, surgery) and failure requiring secondary intervention in 17 trauma centers. We defined hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention as thrombolytic administration, tube thoracostomy, image-guided drainage, or surgery after failure of the initial management strategy at the discretion of the treating trauma surgeon. Patient-level predictors of hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention were identified for 2 subgroups: initial observation and immediate pleural drainage. Trauma centers were divided into quartiles by hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention rate and hierarchical logistic regression quantified variation., Results: Of 995 hemothoraces in 967 patients, 186 (19%) developed hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention. The frequency of hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention increased from observation to pleural drainage to surgical intervention (12%, 22%, and 35%, respectively). The number of ribs fractured (odds ratio 1.12 per fracture; 95% confidence interval 1.00-1.26) and pulmonary contusion (odds ratio 2.25, 95% confidence interval 1.03-4.91) predicted hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention in the observation subgroup, whereas chest injury severity (odds ratio 1.58; 95% confidence interval 1.17-2.12) and initial hemothorax volume evacuated (odds ratio 1.10 per 100 mL; 95% confidence interval 1.05-1.16) predicted hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention after pleural drainage. After adjusting for patient characteristics in the logistic regression model for hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention, patients treated at high hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention trauma centers were 6 times more likely to undergo an intervention after initial hemothorax management failure than patients treated in low hemothorax management failure requiring secondary intervention trauma centers (odds ratio 6.18, 95% confidence interval 3.41-11.21)., Conclusion: Failure of initial management of traumatic hemothorax is common and highly variable across trauma centers. Assessing patient selection for a given management strategy and center-level practices represent opportunities to improve outcomes from traumatic hemothorax., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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42. COVID-19 and healthcare worker mental well-being: Comparative case studies on interventions in six countries.
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Byrne JP, Humphries N, McMurray R, and Scotter C
- Subjects
- Humans, Mental Health, Pandemics prevention & control, Health Personnel psychology, Psychological Well-Being, COVID-19
- Abstract
Healthcare worker (HCW) mental well-being has become a global public health priority as health systems seek to strengthen their resilience in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. Analysing data from the Health System Response Monitor, we present six case studies (Denmark, Italy, Kyrgyzstan, Lithuania, Romania, and the United Kingdom) as a comparative review of policy interventions supporting HCW mental health during the pandemic. The results illustrate a wide range of interventions. While Denmark and the United Kingdom built on pre-existing structures to support HCW mental wellbeing during the pandemic, the other countries required new interventions. Across all cases, there was a reliance on self-care resources, online training tools, and remote professional support. Based on our analysis, we develop four policy recommendations for the future of HCW mental health supports. First, HCW mental health should be seen as a core facet of health workforce capacity. Second, effective mental health supports requires an integrated psychosocial approach that acknowledges the importance of harm prevention strategies and organisational resources (psychological first aid) alongside targeted professional interventions. Third, personal, professional and practical obstacles to take-up of mental health supports should be addressed. Fourth, any specific support or intervention targeting HCW's mental health is connected to, and dependent on, wider structural and employment factors (e.g. system resourcing and organisation) that determine the working conditions of HCWs., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. Feeling like the enemy: the emotion management and alienation of hospital doctors.
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Byrne JP, Creese J, McMurray R, Costello RW, Matthews A, and Humphries N
- Abstract
Introduction: Globally, an epidemic of psychological distress, burnout, and workforce attrition signify an acute deterioration in hospital doctors' relationship with their work-intensified by COVID-19. This deterioration is more complicated than individual responses to workplace stress, as it is heavily regulated by social, professional, and organizational structures. Moving past burnout as a discrete "outcome," we draw on theories of emotion management and alienation to analyze the strategies through which hospital doctors continue to provide care in the face of resource-constraints and psychological strain., Methods: We used Mobile Instant Messaging Ethnography (MIME), a novel form of remote ethnography comprising a long-term exchange of digital messages to elicit "live" reflections on work-life experiences and feelings., Results: The results delineate two primary emotion-management strategies-acquiescence and depersonalization-used by the hospital doctors to suppress negative feelings and emotions (e.g., anger, frustration, and guilt) stemming from the disconnect between professional norms of expertise and self-sacrifice, and organizational realities of impotence and self-preservation., Discussion: Illustrating the continued relevant of alienation, extending its application to doctors who disconnect to survive, we show how the socio-cultural ideals of the medical profession (expertise and self-sacrifice) are experienced through the emotion-management and self-estrangement of hospital doctors. Practically, the deterioration of hospital doctors' relationship with work is a threat to health systems and organizations. The paper highlights the importance of understanding the social structures and disconnects that shape this deteriorating relationship and the broad futility of self-care interventions embedded in work contexts of unrealized professional ideals, organizational resource deficits and unhappy doctors, patients, and families., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Byrne, Creese, McMurray, Costello, Matthews and Humphries.)
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- 2023
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44. Modifiable Factors Related to Firearm Homicides: A Broader View of Our Lane.
- Author
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Scantling DR, Holena DN, Kaufman EJ, Hynes AM, Hatchimonji J, Byrne JP, Wiebe D, and Seamon MJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, United States epidemiology, Homicide, Cross-Sectional Studies, Risk Factors, Firearms, Wounds, Gunshot epidemiology, Suicide
- Abstract
Objective: This study aims to identify modifiable factors related to firearm homicide (FH)., Summary Background Data: Many socioeconomic, legislative and behavioral risk factors impact FH. Most studies have evaluated these risk factors in isolation, but they coexist in a complex and ever-changing American society. We hypothesized that both restrictive firearm laws and socioeconomic support would correlate with reduced FH rates., Methods: To perform our ecologic cross-sectional study, we queried the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Wide-ranging ONline Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) for 2013-2016 state FH data. We retrieved firearm access estimates from the RAND State-Level Firearm Ownership Database. Alcohol use and access to care data were captured from the CDC Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Detached youth rates, socioeconomic support data and poverty metrics were captured from US Census data for each state in each year. Firearm laws were obtained from the State Firearms Law Database. Variables with significant FH association were entered into a final multivariable panel linear regression with fixed effect for state., Results: A total of 49,610 FH occurred in 2013-2016 (median FH rate: 3.9:100,000, range: 0.07-11.2). In univariate analysis, increases in concealed carry limiting laws ( P =0.012), detached youth rates ( P <0.001), socioeconomic support ( P <0.001) and poverty rates ( P <0.001) correlated with decreased FH. Higher rates of heavy drinking ( P =0.036) and the presence of stand your ground doctrines ( P =0.045) were associated with increased FH. Background checks, handgun limiting laws, and weapon access were not correlated with FH. In multivariable regression, increased access to food benefits for those in poverty [β: -0.132, 95% confidence interval (CI): -0.182 to -0.082, P <0.001] and laws limiting concealed carry (β: -0.543, 95% CI: -0.942 to -0.144, P =0.008) were associated with decreased FH rates. Allowance of stand your ground was associated with more FHs (β: 1.52, 95% CI: 0.069-2.960, P <0.040)., Conclusions: The causes and potential solutions to FH are complex and closely tied to public policy. Our data suggests that certain types of socioeconomic support and firearm restrictive legislation should be emphasized in efforts to reduce firearm deaths in America., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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45. Switch-on luminescent sensing of unlabelled bacterial lectin by terbium(III) glycoconjugate systems.
- Author
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Wojtczak K, Zahorska E, Murphy IJ, Koppel F, Cooke G, Titz A, and Byrne JP
- Subjects
- Lectins chemistry, Luminescence, Glycoconjugates chemistry, Glycosides chemistry, Ligands, Bacterial Proteins chemistry, Terbium chemistry, Bacteria chemistry
- Abstract
Interactions of lectins with glycoconjugate-terbium(III) self-assembly complexes lead to sensing through enhanced lanthanide luminescence. This glycan-directed sensing paradigm detects an unlabelled lectin (LecA) associated with pathogen P. aeruginosa in solution, without any bactericidal activity. Further development of these probes could have potential as a diagnostic tool.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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46. Emergency department versus operating room intubation of patients undergoing immediate hemorrhage control surgery.
- Author
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Dunton Z, Seamon MJ, Subramanian M, Jopling J, Manukyan M, Kent A, Sakran JV, Stevens K, Haut E, and Byrne JP
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, Adult, Emergency Service, Hospital, Trauma Centers, Intubation, Intratracheal adverse effects, Retrospective Studies, Operating Rooms, Hemorrhage etiology, Hemorrhage therapy
- Abstract
Background: Hemorrhage control surgery is an essential trauma center function. Airway management of the unstable bleeding patient in the emergency department (ED) presents a challenge. Premature intubation in the ED can exacerbate shock and precipitate extremis. We hypothesized that ED versus operating room intubation of patients requiring urgent hemorrhage control surgery is associated with adverse outcomes at the patient and hospital-levels., Methods: Patients who underwent hemorrhage control within 60 minutes of arrival at level 1 or 2 trauma centers were identified (National Trauma Data Bank 2017-2019). To minimize confounding, patients dead on arrival, undergoing ED thoracotomy, or with clinical indications for intubation (severe head/neck/face injury or Glasgow Coma Scale score of ≤8) were excluded. Two analytic approaches were used. First, hierarchical logistic regression measured the risk-adjusted association between ED intubation and mortality. Secondary outcomes included ED dwell time, units of blood transfused, and major complications (cardiac arrest, acute respiratory distress syndrome, acute kidney injury, sepsis). Second, a hospital-level analysis determined whether hospital tendency ED intubation was associated with adverse outcomes., Results: We identified 9,667 patients who underwent hemorrhage control surgery at 253 trauma centers. Patients were predominantly young men (median age, 33 years) who suffered penetrating injuries (71%). The median initial Glasgow Coma Scale and systolic blood pressure were 15 and 108 mm Hg, respectively. One in five (20%) of patients underwent ED intubation. After risk-adjustment, ED intubation was associated with significantly increased odds of mortality, longer ED dwell time, greater blood transfusion, and major complications. Hospital-level analysis identified significant variation in use of ED intubation between hospitals not explained by patient case mix. After risk adjustment, patients treated at hospitals with high tendency for ED intubation (compared with those with low tendency) were significantly more likely to suffer in-hospital cardiac arrest (6% vs. 4%; adjusted odds ratio, 1.46; 95% confidence interval, 1.04-2.03)., Conclusion: Emergency department intubation of patients who require urgent hemorrhage control surgery is associated with adverse outcomes. Significant variation in ED intubation exists between trauma centers not explained by patient characteristics. Where feasible, intubation should be deferred in favor of rapid resuscitation and transport to the operating room., Level of Evidence: Therapeutic/Care Management; Level III., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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47. Whole Blood Resuscitation is Safe in Pediatric Trauma Patients: A Multicenter Study.
- Author
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Perea LL, Moore K, Docherty C, Nguyen U, Seamon MJ, Byrne JP, Jenkins DH, Braverman MA, Porter JM, Armento IG, Mentzer C, Leonard GC, Luis AJ, Noorbakhsh MR, Babowice JE, Kaafarani HMA, Mokhtari A, Martin MJ, Badiee J, Mains C, Madayag RM, Moore SA, Madden K, and Hazelton JP
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Child, Female, Prospective Studies, Blood Component Transfusion, Resuscitation, Trauma Centers, Injury Severity Score, Blood Transfusion, Wounds and Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Introduction: Whole blood (WB) resuscitation has been associated with a mortality benefit in trauma patients. Several small series report the safe use of WB in the pediatric trauma population. We performed a subgroup analysis of the pediatric patients from a large prospective multicenter trial comparing patients receiving WB or blood component therapy (BCT) during trauma resuscitation. We hypothesized that WB resuscitation would be safe compared to BCT resuscitation in pediatric trauma patients., Methods: This study included pediatric trauma patients (0-17 y), from ten level-I trauma centers, who received any blood transfusion during initial resuscitation. Patients were included in the WB group if they received at least one unit of WB during their resuscitation, and the BCT group was composed of patients receiving traditional blood product resuscitation. The primary outcome was in-hospital mortality with secondary outcomes being complications. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to assess for mortality and complications in those treated with WB vs BCT., Results: Ninety patients, with both penetrating and blunt mechanisms of injury (MOI), were enrolled in the study (WB: 62 (69%), BCT: 28 (21%)). Whole blood patients were more likely to be male. There were no differences in age, MOI, shock index, or injury severity score between groups. On logistic regression, there was no difference in complications. Mortality was not different between the groups ( P = .983)., Conclusion: Our data suggest WB resuscitation is safe when compared to BCT resuscitation in the care of critically injured pediatric trauma patients.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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48. A Pilot Machine Learning Study Using Trauma Admission Data to Identify Risk for High Length of Stay.
- Author
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Stonko DP, Weller JH, Gonzalez Salazar AJ, Abdou H, Edwards J, Hinson J, Levin S, Byrne JP, Sakran JV, Hicks CW, Haut ER, Morrison JJ, and Kent AJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Length of Stay, Retrospective Studies, Machine Learning
- Abstract
Introduction: Trauma patients have diverse resource needs due to variable mechanisms and injury patterns. The aim of this study was to build a tool that uses only data available at time of admission to predict prolonged hospital length of stay (LOS)., Methods: Data was collected from the trauma registry at an urban level one adult trauma center and included patients from 1/1/2014 to 3/31/2019. Trauma patients with one or fewer days LOS were excluded. Single layer and deep artificial neural networks were trained to identify patients in the top quartile of LOS and optimized on area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (AUROC). The predictive performance of the model was assessed on a separate test set using binary classification measures of accuracy, precision, and error., Results: 2953 admitted trauma patients with more than one-day LOS were included in this study. They were 70% male, 60% white, and averaged 47 years-old (SD: 21). 28% were penetrating trauma. Median length of stay was 5 days (IQR 3-9). For prediction of prolonged LOS, the deep neural network achieved an AUROC of 0.80 (95% CI: 0.786-0.814) specificity was 0.95, sensitivity was 0.32, with an overall accuracy of 0.79., Conclusion: Machine learning can predict, with excellent specificity, trauma patients who will have prolonged length of stay with only physiologic and demographic data available at the time of admission. These patients may benefit from additional resources with respect to disposition planning at the time of admission.
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- 2023
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49. Is Faster Transport Time Really Associated With Decreased Firearm Injury Mortality?-Reply.
- Author
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Byrne JP and Seamon MJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Databases, Factual, Firearms, Wounds, Gunshot
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Formation of lanthanide luminescent di-metallic helicates in solution using a bis-tridentate (1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)-picolinamide (tzpa) ligand.
- Author
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Hegarty IN, Barry DE, Byrne JP, Kotova O, and Gunnlaugsson T
- Abstract
The chiral bis-tridentate (1,2,3-triazol-4-yl)-picolinamide (tzpa) ligand 1 was used in the formation of lanthanide di- and triple stranded di-metallic helicates in acetonitrile solution, where the changes in the ground and the Tb(III) excited state properties were used to monitor the formation of these supramolecular structures in situ under kinetic control.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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