184 results on '"Day CS"'
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2. Diversity based on race, ethnicity, and sex between academic orthopaedic surgery and other specialties: a comparative study.
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Day CS, Lage DE, Ahn CS, Day, Charles S, Lage, Daniel E, and Ahn, Christine S
- Abstract
Background: Previous studies have demonstrated a lack of diversity in orthopaedics; however, it is unclear whether this observation is unique to orthopaedics or similar to other surgical fields. The present study compares diversity in the field of orthopaedics with diversity in other surgical and nonsurgical fields. To our knowledge, no previous study has placed this issue in a comparative perspective between specialties at both the residency and faculty levels.Methods: Public registries from 2006 and 2007 were used to determine the composition (according to race, ethnicity, and sex) of the orthopaedic workforce in the United States, including medical students, orthopaedic residents, orthopaedic faculty, and full professors. The diversity of orthopaedic residents and faculty was then compared with that in five other specialties. In addition, the applicant pools to orthopaedic and general surgery residencies were compared.Results: Within the 2006 orthopaedic workforce, there was a significant decrease in the representation of African-Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, Asian-Americans, and women from medical schools to orthopaedic residencies (p < 0.001). African-Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, and Asian-Americans were underrepresented among orthopaedic faculty compared with their representation in orthopaedic residency programs (p < 0.05). Furthermore, women and Asian-Americans were disproportionately underrepresented as full professors compared with their presence on the faculty at academic orthopaedic institutions (p < 0.05). When compared with other surgical specialties, African-Americans and Hispanics/Latinos made up a significantly smaller proportion of orthopaedic residents than general surgery residents and neurological surgery. Orthopaedic surgery had the lowest representation of female residents and faculty (p < 0.05 for all comparisons). In examining the applicant pool, orthopaedic surgery was less diverse than general surgery (p < 0.001). Furthermore, African-American and Hispanic/Latino orthopaedic applicants also submitted a lower average number of applications than Whites or Asian-Americans.Conclusions: Our findings suggest that on a comparative basis, orthopaedic surgery lags behind general surgery and other surgical and nonsurgical fields in terms of the representation of minorities and women. Thus, given similar capabilities and qualifications of applicants, a concerted effort could be made to recruit more diverse residents and faculty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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3. Effects of workers' compensation on the diagnosis and surgical treatment of patients with hand and wrist disorders.
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Day CS, Alexander M, Lal S, Horton H, Ahn CS, Pauyo T, Rozental TD, Day, Charles S, Alexander, Marcus, Lal, Shalini, Horton, Henry, Ahn, Christine S, Pauyo, Thierry, and Rozental, Tamara D
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Background: Workers' Compensation differs from standard insurance, and it is unclear how or if Workers' Compensation insurance influences the diagnosis and treatment of hand and wrist disorders. The aim of this study was to compare the diagnosis and course of treatment of hand disorders between patients with Workers' Compensation insurance and patients with standard insurance.Methods: The complete medical records of patients who visited an academic orthopaedic hand clinic between January 2005 and January 2007 were reviewed, and information on patient history, utilization of diagnostic tests, diagnosis, surgery, and wait-time to surgery was collected. Patients with Workers' Compensation insurance and those with other, third-party coverage were analyzed and compared. Patients without insurance were excluded from this study.Results: 1413 patients (representing 2121 diagnoses) were included in the study. One hundred and sixteen patients (8%) had Workers' Compensation insurance and 1297 patients (92%) had standard insurance. Patients with Workers' Compensation insurance were younger than patients with standard insurance (mean age, forty-three years compared with fifty years, respectively; p < 0.05) and were also more likely to be male (50% compared with 40%, respectively; p = 0.04). Generally, Workers' Compensation patients more often had neurological conditions (p < 0.01), but there was no significant difference in the most common diagnoses between the two groups. Patients with Workers' Compensation underwent surgery slightly more often than did patients with standard insurance (44% compared with 35%, respectively; p = 0.07) and had a higher average number of visits before undergoing surgery (2.3 visits compared with 1.2 visits, respectively; p < 0.05). Twenty-three (45%) of the fifty-one patients with Workers' Compensation insurance who received a diagnosis indicating the need for surgery underwent surgery after the first visit, compared with 316 (69%) of 458 patients with standard insurance (p < 0.05). Patients with Workers' Compensation insurance were more likely than patients with standard insurance to undergo electrodiagnostic testing (26% compared with 15%, respectively; p < 0.01) or magnetic resonance imaging (16% compared with 9%, respectively; p = 0.02).Conclusions: Compared with patients receiving standard insurance, patients receiving Workers' Compensation insurance have a greater number of clinic visits before undergoing surgery and receive more diagnostic testing. More research is needed to explore these differences and their potential clinical and economic consequences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2010
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4. Functional outcomes for unstable distal radial fractures treated with open reduction and internal fixation or closed reduction and percutaneous fixation. A prospective randomized trial.
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Rozental TD, Blazar PE, Franko OI, Chacko AT, Earp BE, Day CS, Rozental, Tamara D, Blazar, Philip E, Franko, Orrin I, Chacko, Aron T, Earp, Brandon E, and Day, Charles S
- Abstract
Background: Despite the recent trend toward internal fixation of distal radial fractures, few randomized trials have examined whether volar plate fixation is superior to other stabilization techniques. The purpose of the present study was to compare (1) open reduction and internal fixation with use of a volar plate and early mobilization with (2) percutaneous fixation and casting or external fixation for the treatment of dorsally displaced unstable extra-articular and simple intra-articular fractures of the distal part of the radius, with a specific emphasis on early functional recovery.Methods: A prospective randomized study was performed at two institutions. Forty-five consecutive patients with a displaced, unstable fracture of the distal part of the radius were randomized to closed reduction and pin fixation (n = 22) or open reduction and internal fixation with a volar plate (n = 23). Clinical and radiographic assessments were conducted at six, nine, and twelve weeks after surgery and at one year. Outcome was measured on the basis of range of motion; grip and pinch strength; and Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand scores. A questionnaire was used to determine patient satisfaction, and a detailed analysis of complications was performed.Results: Patients in the open reduction and internal fixation group had superior Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand scores at six, nine, and twelve weeks. At six weeks, the average Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand score was 27 in the open reduction and internal fixation group as compared with 53 in the closed reduction and pin fixation group (p < 0.01). At nine and twelve weeks, patients in the open reduction and internal fixation group continued to have lower scores (17 compared with 39 [p < 0.01] and 11 compared with 26 [p = 0.01], respectively). At one year, there was no significant difference between the two groups in terms of the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand scores. Patients in the open reduction and internal fixation group had greater range of motion and strength than patients in the closed reduction and pin fixation group at six and nine weeks, and more patients in the open reduction and internal fixation group were very satisfied with the overall wrist function and motion. Eight complications occurred, two in the open reduction and internal fixation group and six in the closed reduction and pin fixation group.Conclusions: Both closed reduction with percutaneous pin fixation and open reduction with internal fixation with use of a volar plate are effective methods for the treatment of dorsally displaced, unstable, extra-articular or simple intra-articular fractures of the distal part of the radius. Better functional results can be expected in the early postoperative period in association with open reduction and internal fixation, and this form of treatment should be considered for patients requiring a faster return to function after the injury. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
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5. Evidence of educational inadequacies in region-specific musculoskeletal medicine.
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Day CS, Yeh AC, Day, Charles S, and Yeh, Albert C
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Recent studies suggest US medical schools are not effectively addressing musculoskeletal medicine in their curricula. We examined if there were specific areas of weakness by analyzing students' knowledge of and confidence in examining specific anatomic regions. A cross-sectional survey study of third- and fourth-year students at Harvard Medical School was conducted during the 2005 to 2006 academic year. One hundred sixty-two third-year students (88% response) and 87 fourth-year students (57% response) completed the Freedman and Bernstein cognitive mastery examination in musculoskeletal medicine and a survey eliciting their clinical confidence in examining the shoulder, elbow, hand, back, hip, knee, and foot on a one to five Likert scale. We specifically analyzed examination questions dealing with the upper extremity, lower extremity, back, and others, which included more systemic conditions such as arthritis, metabolic bone diseases, and cancer. Students failed to meet the established passing benchmark of 70% in all subgroups except for the others category. Confidence scores in performing a physical examination and in generating a differential diagnosis indicated students felt below adequate confidence (3.0 of 5) in five of the seven anatomic regions. Our study provides evidence that region-specific musculoskeletal medicine is a potential learning gap that may need to be addressed in the undergraduate musculoskeletal curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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6. Improving evaluation and treatment for osteoporosis following distal radial fractures. A prospective randomized intervention.
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Rozental TD, Makhni EC, Day CS, Bouxsein ML, Rozental, Tamara D, Makhni, Eric C, Day, Charles S, and Bouxsein, Mary L
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Background: Fragility fractures are associated with a significant increase in the risk of future fracture, but the rates of evaluation to identify osteoporosis after such injuries are low. The purpose of this study was to determine the rates of evaluation and treatment of osteoporosis following distal radial fractures and to test two interventions in the outpatient clinic to improve evaluation and treatment rates.Methods: In the first part of the study, the medical records of 298 consecutive patients treated for a fragility fracture of the distal part of the radius were reviewed. Primary outcome measures were a bone mineral density examination and treatment with osteoporosis medication within six months after the fracture. In the second part of the study, fifty patients with a fragility fracture of the distal part of the radius were prospectively randomized to receive one of two interventions. These consisted of (1) the orthopaedic surgeon ordering a bone mineral density examination and forwarding the results to the primary care physician or (2) the orthopaedic surgeon sending a letter to the primary care physician outlining guidelines for osteoporosis screening. Patients were contacted at six months after the fracture to determine the rates of evaluation and treatment for osteoporosis.Results: The first part of the study revealed that, following a distal radial fracture, 21.3% of 240 patients had a bone mineral density examination and 78.7% were never screened. Osteopenia was the most common diagnosis among those screened (57%). Most (72.5%) of the 240 patients received no medication, whereas 6.7% received calcium and vitamin D; 11.3%, bisphosphonates; 2.5%, hormone replacement therapy; and 7.1%, a combination regimen. The treatment rate for the patients who had undergone a bone mineral density examination was 2.5-fold higher than the rate for those who had not had bone mineral density testing (53% compared with 21%, p < 0.001). In the second part of the study, the patients randomized to Intervention 1 had two to threefold greater rates of bone mineral density testing (93% compared with 30%, p < 0.001), discussion of osteoporosis with their primary care physician (89% compared with 35%, p < 0.001), and initiation of osteoporosis therapy (74% compared with 26%, p < 0.001) compared with patients randomized to Intervention 2.Conclusions: Rates of evaluation and treatment for osteoporosis after fragility fractures remain low (21.3% and 27.5%, respectively). Patients who undergo a bone mineral density examination are more likely to receive treatment. Ordering a bone mineral density examination in the orthopaedic clinic can dramatically improve osteoporosis evaluation and treatment rates following fragility fractures of the distal part of the radius. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2008
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7. Self-Reported Improvement After Carpal Tunnel Release in Patients with Motor Axonal Loss.
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Livingston N, Jiang E, Hansen L, Williams A, Wu M, Carrier J, and Day CS
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Purpose: Electrodiagnostic studies can identify evidence of sensory and motor axonal loss (AL) in carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) patients. However, the impact of sensory and motor AL on outcomes following carpal tunnel release (CTR) remains unclear. We hypothesize that patients with no evidence of sensory and motor AL will experience greater improvement following CTR compared to those with evidence of AL., Methods: Patients undergoing open and endoscopic CTR by four fellowship-trained orthopedic hand surgeons were identified. Sensory and motor AL were identified using preoperative electromyography and nerve conduction studies. Patients completed the following before surgery and 3-month postoperative patient-reported outcomes: Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Upper Extremity (UE) and Pain Interference (PI) as well as Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH [QD]). Preoperative and postoperative scores, changes in scores, and rates of achieving the minimally clinically important difference (MCID) were compared between patients with and without sensory and motor AL., Results: One hundred and seventy-five patients were included. Of these, 91 exhibited sensory AL and 98 exhibited motor AL. Demographic matched analysis of patients with and without sensory AL showed no differences in before surgery, after surgery, difference, or proportion meeting MCID for UE, PI, or QD. Matched analysis revealed no difference in preoperative PROMs between patients with and without motor AL. Patients with motor AL had increased postoperative UE (better function), decreased postoperative PI (less PI) and QD (less disability), increased changes in PI and QD, as well as a greater proportion meeting MCID for QD compared to those without motor AL., Conclusions: There was no difference in post-CTR improvement between patients with and without sensory AL. However, contrary to our hypothesis, motor AL patients experienced greater postoperative improvement according to QD. These findings suggest surgery should be recommended for severe CTS patients with evidence of AL. These results can better inform physicians and patients as they discuss expectations of CTR outcomes., Type of Study/level of Evidence: Prognosis II., Competing Interests: Conflicts of Interest No benefits in any form have been received or will be received related directly to this article., (Copyright © 2024 American Society for Surgery of the Hand. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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8. Complications of Volar Versus Low-Profile Dorsal Plating of Distal Radius Fractures.
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Jiang EX and Day CS
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Distal radius fractures are one of the most common injuries of the upper extremity. Although nonsurgical management is common, surgical intervention, particularly using volar and dorsal plate fixation, is essential in a subset of injuries. Historically, dorsal plates were avoided due to a high rate of extensor tendon irritation and rupture. Volar locking plates were developed in the early 1990s and first published in 2000 to avoid the complications associated with dorsal plating and have since become widely considered the workhorse for most distal radius fractures. Despite advancements, both fixation methods are still associated with complications, warranting careful selection based on fracture patterns. The purpose of this review is to summarize the most recent literature on the complications associated with the use of volar and low-profile dorsal distal radius plates., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.)
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- 2024
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9. Odds of Attaining Orthopaedic Leadership Based on Race, Ethnicity, and Sex.
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Smith TZ, DeYoung JK, Pum JM, Zurakowski D, Templeton K, and Day CS
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- Humans, Female, Male, United States, Faculty, Medical statistics & numerical data, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Sex Factors, Physicians, Women statistics & numerical data, Leadership, Orthopedics organization & administration
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Background: Despite widespread acceptance of the importance of diversity in leadership, systemic challenges in leadership attainment in orthopaedic surgery still exist for several groups. We hypothesize that women, underrepresented in medicine groups, and Asians have decreased odds of achieving program director and chairperson positions compared with peers., Methods: Demographic data were collected from the Association of American Medical Colleges for faculty, program directors, and chairpersons in orthopaedic surgery. Odds ratios were calculated treating race, ethnicity, or sex as the predictor variables and attainment of a leadership position as the outcome, comparing the composition of program directors in 2020 and chairpersons in 2019 with faculty in 2019., Results: Significantly decreased odds were found for women at 0.37 (0.264 to 0.51 [ P < 0.0001]) and the Other category at 0.16 (0.065 to 0.3864 [ P = 0.0001]) while significantly increased odds were found for White and Black/African American faculty at 1.32 (1.02 to 1.71 [ P = 0.0314]) and 1.95 (1.17 to 3.26 [ P = 0.011]), respectively, in holding program director positions. Significantly decreased odds of attaining chairpersonship were found for women at 0.17 (0.07 to 0.41 [ P = 0.0075]) and Asian faculty at 0.33 (0.14 to 0.75 [ P = 0.0062]) while White faculty demonstrated significantly increased odds at 2.43 (1.41 to 4.19 [ P = 0.0013])., Conclusions: Women showed markedly decreased odds of leadership attainment while Black/African American faculty had increased likelihood of becoming program directors but were not markedly more likely to become chairs. Asian faculty were less likely to become program directors and markedly less likely to become chairs. While decreased odds for women were expected based on current literature, decreased odds of Asians becoming chairs and an increased likelihood of Black/African American orthopaedic surgeons becoming program directors but not attaining the role of chairs at the same rate were novel findings, revealing concerning trends for these groups., (Copyright © 2024 by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.)
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- 2024
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10. How Did Black and Hispanic Orthopaedic Applicants and Residents Compare to General Surgery Between 2015 and 2022?
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Williams AJ, Malewicz JI, Pum JM, Zurakowski D, and Day CS
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- Humans, United States, Female, Male, General Surgery education, Orthopedics education, Education, Medical, Graduate, Personnel Selection trends, Cultural Diversity, Orthopedic Surgeons education, Orthopedic Surgeons trends, Orthopedic Surgeons statistics & numerical data, Internship and Residency statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Black or African American statistics & numerical data
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Background: Despite the heavy demand for and knowledge of the benefits of diversity, there is a persistent lack of racial, ethnic, and gender diversity in orthopaedic surgery. Since the implementation of diversity initiatives, data have shown that general surgery has been one of the top competitive surgical fields and has demonstrated growth in racial, ethnic, and gender diversity, making general surgery a good point of reference and comparison when analyzing racial and ethnic growth in orthopaedic surgery., Questions/purposes: (1) What were the growth rates for Black and Hispanic orthopaedic residency applicants and residents between 2015 and 2022? (2) How did the growth rates of Black and Hispanic individuals in orthopaedic surgery compare with those of general surgery? (3) How did applicant recruitment and resident acceptance differ between Black and Hispanic people in orthopaedic surgery?, Methods: Applicant data were obtained from historical specialty-specific data from the Association of American Medical Colleges Electronic Residency Application Service Statistics database between 2018 and 2022, and resident data were obtained from the Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education Data Resource Book between 2015 and 2021. Between 2018 and 2022, the number of residency applicants totaled 216,677, with 17,912 Black residency applicants and 20,413 Hispanic residency applicants. Between 2015 and 2021, the number of active residents totaled 977,877, with 48,600 Black residents and 62,605 Hispanic residents. Because the applicant and resident data do not overlap throughout all years of observation, a sensitivity analysis of overlapping years (between 2018 and 2021) was conducted to ensure observed trends were consistent and valid throughout the study. All datasets obtained were used to establish the different racial and ethnic proportions of Black and Hispanic residency applicants and residents in four nonsurgical primary care specialties and four surgical subspecialties. A reference slope was created using data from the Association of American Medical Colleges and Accreditation Council of Graduate Medical Education to represent the growth rate for total residency applicants and residents, independently, across all residency specialties reported in each database. This slope was used for comparison among the resident and applicant growth rates for all eight selected specialties. Datapoints were placed into a scatterplot with regression lines, using slope equations to depict rate of growth and R 2 values to depict linear fit. Applicant growth corresponded to applicant recruitment and resident growth corresponded to resident acceptance. Chi-square tests were used to compare residents and residency applicants for the Black and Hispanic populations, separately. Two-way analysis of variance with a time-by-specialty interaction term (F-test) was conducted to determine differences between growth slopes., Results: There was no difference in the growth rate of Black orthopaedic surgery applicants between 2018 and 2022, and there was no difference in the growth rate of Hispanic orthopaedic surgery applicants (R 2 = 0.43; p = 0.23 and R 2 = 0.63; p = 0.11, respectively). However, there was a very slight increase in the growth rate of Black orthopaedic surgery residents between 2015 and 2021, and a very slight increase in the growth rate of Hispanic orthopaedic surgery residents (R 2 = 0.73; p = 0.02 and R 2 = 0.79; p = 0.01, respectively). There were no differences in orthopaedic and general surgery rates of growth for Black applicants between 2018 and 2022 (0.004 applicants/year versus -0.001 applicants/year; p = 0.22), and no differences were found in orthopaedic and general surgery rates of growth for Black residents between 2015 and 2021 (0.003 residents/year versus 0.002 residents/year; p = 0.59). Likewise, Hispanic orthopaedic applicant growth rates did not differ between 2018 and 2022 from the rates of general surgery (0.004 applicants/year versus 0.005 applicants/year; p = 0.68), and there were no differences in orthopaedic and general surgery rates of growth for Hispanic residents (0.007 residents/year versus 0.01 residents/year; p = 0.35). Furthermore, growth rate comparisons between Black orthopaedic applicants and residents between 2018 and 2021 showed applicant growth was larger than resident growth, illustrating that the recruitment of Black applicants increased slightly more rapidly than resident acceptance. Growth rate comparisons between Hispanic applicants and residents showed a larger rate of resident growth, illustrating Hispanic resident acceptance increased slightly faster than applicant recruitment during that time., Conclusion: We found low acceptance of Black residents compared with the higher recruitment of Black applicants, as well as overall low proportions of Black and Hispanic applicants and residents. Future studies might explore the factors contributing to the higher acceptances of Hispanic orthopaedic residents than Black orthopaedic residents., Clinical Relevance: We recommend that more emphasis should be placed on increasing Black and Hispanic representation at the department level to ensure cultural considerations remain at the forefront of applicant recruitment. Internal or external reviews of residency selection processes should be considered, and more immersive, longitudinal orthopaedic surgery clerkships and research mentorship experiences should be targeted toward Black and Hispanic students. Holistic reviews of applications and selection processes should be implemented to produce an increased racially and ethnically diverse applicant pool and a diverse residency work force, and implicit bias training should be implemented to address potential biases and diversity barriers that are present in residency programs and leadership., Competing Interests: Each author certifies that there are no funding or commercial associations (consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article related to the author or any immediate family members. All ICMJE Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can be viewed on request., (Copyright © 2024 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.)
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- 2024
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11. Cutibacterium acnes Infection as a Cause of Nonunion After Ulnar-Shortening Osteotomy.
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Hansen LM, Lindahl AC, Eller EB, and Day CS
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- Humans, Ulna surgery, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections microbiology, Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections diagnosis, Fractures, Ununited surgery, Fractures, Ununited microbiology, Male, Surgical Wound Infection microbiology, Surgical Wound Infection drug therapy, Surgical Wound Infection diagnosis, Surgical Wound Infection etiology, Female, Reoperation, Adult, Propionibacteriaceae isolation & purification, Osteotomy adverse effects, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use
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Ulnar-shortening osteotomy is a reliable solution to treat ulnar impaction syndrome, but it has a significant rate of nonunion as a known complication. Generally nonunion after the procedure is attributed to noninfectious causes. When infections happen, they follow the microbiological trends of nonunions elsewhere in the body. We present a case of ulnar-shortening osteotomy using an oblique-cut osteotomy system that resulted in septic nonunion. At the time of revision surgery, Cutibacterium acnes and Staphylococcus hominis were isolated from the osteotomy site. The patient was successfully treated using intravenous antibiotics and the two-stage Masquelet technique and eventually went on to bony union. As C acnes is rarely encountered in this context, this report highlights the need to consider all possible pathogens in the workup of a potentially septic nonunion. Surgeons should consider bacteria such as C acnes that require prolonged incubation for isolation from cultures, which may not be part of many institutions' usual protocol. [ Orthopedics . 2024;47(4):e211-e213.].
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- 2024
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12. Orthopaedic Hand Patient Support Systems Have Valuable Insight to Patient Function and Pain.
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Washnock-Schmid EA, Livingston N, Latack K, Wrobel N, and Day CS
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Patient-reported outcome measures (PROs) are increasingly used in clinical assessment. Research on how patient support systems contribute to physician understanding of patient condition is limited. Thus, insights from significant others may provide value, especially when concerns exist regarding patient response validity. Patients recruited from the pre-operative environment undergoing orthopaedic hand procedures responded to PROMIS-Pain Interference (PI), PROMIS-Upper Extremity (UE), PROMIS-Depression (D), and QuickDASH. They then selected a significant other (SO) to do the same. Patients and SOs were also asked to complete the West Haven-Yale Multidimensional Pain Inventory (WHYMPI) as a measure of support-related responses. Patient and SO responses were compared, and support-related responses were added in subsequent analyses to examine their effect on SO PRO assessment., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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13. The Impact of Experience Versus Decision Aids on Patient Preference Toward Virtual Care.
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Prater AR, McConnell JT, Yedulla NR, Peterson EL, Banka TR, and Day CS
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Introduction: Virtual care utilization has increased in recent years bringing questions of how to best inform patients regarding their use. Decision aids (DAs) are tools created to assist patients in making informed decisions about their health care. This study seeks to determine whether a DA or previous experience could better educate and influence patient's preference on virtual care., Methods: One hundred fifty participants from an orthopedic clinic of a multi-hospital system were divided into three groups. Group 1 (Virtual Care Cohort) had at least one previous virtual care visit and was surveyed with the Telemedicine Satisfaction Questionnaire (TSQ). Group 2 (In-person with Decision Aid) and Group 3 (In-person without Decision Aid) had no virtual care experience. Group 2 received a validated virtual care DA with a knowledge test. Both groups were also administered the TSQ., Results: After the DA, patients improved their score on 3 of 4 virtual care knowledge questions. Each cohort demonstrated a positive perception of virtual care; however, the specific reasons for their favorable views varied. The DA cohort did not show increased preference toward virtual care compared with the non-DA group and only responded significantly higher regarding encounter comfort. Patients with previous experience in virtual care responded most favorably to the majority of survey questions regarding their virtual care preferences when compared with both virtual care naive cohorts., Discussion and Conclusion: We found that patient experience was the most important factor in influencing patient preference toward virtual care. Although the DA increased their virtual care knowledge it did not increase their preference; therefore, efforts should be placed at encouraging patient to experience virtual care., Competing Interests: No competing financial interests exist., (© Aaron R. Prater et al., 2024; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.)
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- 2024
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14. Patients With and Without Double Crush Syndrome Achieve Similar Rates of Clinical Improvement Following Carpal Tunnel Release.
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Hansen LM, Jiang EX, Hodson NM, Livingston N, Kazanjian A, Wu M, and Day CS
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Background: The purpose of this study is to compare outcomes of carpal tunnel release (CTR) in patients with and without double crush syndrome (DCS), defined as concurrent carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) and cervical radiculopathy at C5-T1 on preoperative nerve conduction studies., Methods: Patients with preoperative nerve conduction studies who underwent unilateral, isolated CTR were retrospectively identified. All patients completed preoperative and 3-month postoperative Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) upper extremity (UE) and pain interference (PI), and Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand (QuickDASH) questionnaires, and responded to the anchor question: "Since your treatment, how would you rate your overall function?" (much worse, worse, slightly worse, no change, slightly improved, improved, much improved). Preoperative, postoperative, and changes in scores for UE, PI, and QuickDASH were compared, as were the anchor question responses and rates of achieving the minimal clinically important difference (MCID)., Results: Sixty-three patients with DCS and 115 patients with CTS only were included. At 3- to 4-month follow-up, absolute and change in UE, PI, and QuickDASH scores were not statistically different between patients with DCS and CTS. Rates of anchor question response and MCID achievement were comparable for patients with CTS only and DCS on each questionnaire. The MCID achievement ranged from 48.4% to 68.8% in the unmatched cohort and 48.4% to 60% in the matched group., Conclusions: At 3 to 4 months, patients with DCS experience similar patient-reported symptomatic and functional improvement, and achieve MCID of outcome measures at comparable rates to patients with CTS only. For patients with nerve compression at the carpal tunnel and cervical spine, CTR is a reasonable first step prior to proceeding with cervical spine decompression., 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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15. Ligand effects, solvent cooperation, and large kinetic solvent deuterium isotope effects in gold(I)-catalyzed intramolecular alkene hydroamination.
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Lan R, Yager B, Jee Y, Day CS, and Jones AC
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Kinetic studies on the intramolecular hydroamination of protected variants of 2,2-diphenylpent-4-en-1-amine were carried out under a variety of conditions with cationic gold catalysts supported by phosphine ligands. The impact of ligand on gold, protecting group on nitrogen, and solvent and additive on reaction rates was determined. The most effective reactions utilized more Lewis basic ureas, and more electron-withdrawing phosphines. A DCM/alcohol cooperative effect was quantified, and a continuum of isotope effects was measured with low KIE's in the absence of deuterated alcoholic solvent, increasing to large solvent KIE's when comparing reactions in pure MeOH to those in pure MeOH- d
4 . The effects are interpreted both within the context of a classic gold π-activation/protodeauration mechanism and a general acid-catalyzed mechanism without intermediate gold alkyls., (Copyright © 2024, Lan et al.)- Published
- 2024
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16. Kinetically-Controlled Ni-Catalyzed Direct Carboxylation of Unactivated Secondary Alkyl Bromides without Chain Walking.
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Davies J, Lyonnet JR, Carvalho B, Sahoo B, Day CS, Juliá-Hernández F, Duan Y, Álvaro Velasco-Rubio, Obst M, Norrby PO, Hopmann KH, and Martin R
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Herein, we report the direct carboxylation of unactivated secondary alkyl bromides enabled by the merger of photoredox and nickel catalysis, a previously inaccessible endeavor in the carboxylation arena. Site-selectivity is dictated by a kinetically controlled insertion of CO
2 at the initial C(sp3 )-Br site by the rapid formation of Ni(I)-alkyl species, thus avoiding undesired β-hydride elimination and chain-walking processes. Preliminary mechanistic experiments reveal the subtleties of stereoelectronic effects for guiding the reactivity and site-selectivity.- Published
- 2024
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17. Revenue Generation and Follow-up for a Hand Trauma Program for Emergency Department Patients in an Inner-City Metropolitan Area.
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Nulty S, Fore J, Madison J, and Day CS
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- Adult, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Follow-Up Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hand Injuries epidemiology, Hand Injuries therapy
- Abstract
Background: Although hand trauma care has proved to be profitable, loss of trauma patients from a system may lead to revenue loss. Our study aimed to (1) elucidate the economic effect of hand trauma programs, (2) quantify the potential fiscal effect of loss of follow-up, and (3) determine factors contributing to leakage of patients from the healthcare system., Methods: Revenue data were retrospectively extracted for all adult hand trauma patients within a multicenter healthcare system from 2014 to 2018. Demographic and encounter factors were analyzed using Wilcoxon rank-sum test for differences in continuous variables, Pearson chi square test for categorical variables, and odds ratios. A follow-up model was created using logistic regression., Results: A total of 56,995 (31% new, 69% established) hand trauma encounters were recorded. Follow-up was markedly affected by many factors, including new vs. established patients. Of the 17,748 new patients, 8638 (48.6%) returned for subsequent care, generating $34M. The patients who did not return may have lost $176M for the system., Conclusions: Many factors lead to loss of follow-up. Understanding these factors can help target efforts to minimize leakage of hand trauma patients. Hand trauma introduces new patients to hospitals, generating notable revenue. Leakage of hand trauma patients has substantial revenue losses., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.)
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- 2023
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18. Do Orthopaedic Virtual Clinic Visits Demonstrate Cost and Time Efficiencies Compared With In-person Visits?
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Livingston N, Lindahl A, McConnell J, Chouman A, and Day CS
- Subjects
- Humans, Prospective Studies, Ambulatory Care, Orthopedics, Carcinoma, Renal Cell, Kidney Neoplasms
- Abstract
Background: There are numerous reasons for the increased use of telemedicine in orthopaedic surgery, one of which is the perception that virtual visits are more cost-effective than in-person visits. However, to our knowledge, no studies have compared the cost and time investment of virtual versus in-person visits using the time-driven activity-based costing (TDABC) method. Unlike methods that estimate cost based on charges for services rendered, TDABC provides a more precise measurement of costs, which is essential for assessing cost-effective innovations and moving to value-based healthcare., Questions/purposes: (1) Are virtual visits less costly than analogous in-person visits, as measured by TDABC? (2) Does TDABC yield cost estimates that are lower or higher than the ratio of costs to charges (RCC), which is a simple, frequently used costing method? (3) Do the total time commitments of healthcare personnel, and that of the surgeon specifically, vary between the virtual and in-person settings?, Methods: Patients for this prospective, observational study were recruited from the practices of the highest-volume virtual-visit surgeons of three subspecialties (joints, hand, and sports) in a multihospital, tertiary-care academic institution in a metropolitan area in the Midwestern United States. Each surgeon had at least 10 years of clinical practice. Between June 2021 and September 2021, we analyzed both in-person and virtual return visits with patients who had an established relationship with the surgeon, because this represented the most frequent type of virtual visits and enabled a direct comparison between the two settings. New patients were not included in the study because of the limited availability of new-patient virtual visits; such patients often benefit from in-person physical examinations and on-site imaging. Additionally, patients seen for routine postoperative care were excluded because they were primarily seen in person by a physician assistant. Data were acquired during this period until 90 in-person and 90 virtual visits were collected according to selection criteria; no patients were lost to follow-up. Distinct process maps, which represent the steps involved in a clinic visit used to measure healthcare personnel time invested, were constructed for in-person and virtual clinic visits and used to compare total personnel and surgeon time spent. To calculate TDABC-derived costs, time allocated by personnel to complete each step was measured and used to calculate cost based on each personnel member's yearly salary. From the accounting department of our hospital, we acquired RCC cost data according to the level of service for a return visit., Results: The total median cost, as measured by TDABC, was USD 127 (IQR USD 111 to 163) for an in-person visit and USD 140 (IQR USD 113 to 205) for a virtual visit (median difference USD 13; p = 0.16). RCC overestimated TDABC-calculated direct variable cost in five of six service levels (in-person levels 3, 4, and 5 and virtual levels 3 and 5) by a range of USD 25 to 88. Additionally, we found that virtual visits consumed 4 minutes less of total personnel time (in-person: 17 minutes [IQR 13.5 to 23.5 minutes], virtual: 13 minutes [IQR 11 to 19 minutes]; p < 0.001); however, this difference in personnel time did not equate to cost savings because surgeons spent 2 minutes longer on virtual visit activities than they did on in-person activities (in-person: 6 minutes [IQR 4.5 to 9.5 minutes], virtual: 8 minutes [IQR 5.5 to 13 minutes]; p = 0.003)., Conclusion: Orthopaedic virtual visits did not deliver cost savings compared with in-person visits because surgeons spent more time on virtual visits and participated in virtual visits at the clinical site. Additionally, as anticipated, RCC overestimated costs as calculated by TDABC. These findings suggest that cost is not a primary advantage of transitioning to virtual visits, and that factors such as patient preference and satisfaction should be considered instead., Level of Evidence: Level II, economic and decision analysis., Competing Interests: Each author certifies that there are no funding or commercial associations (consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article related to the author or any immediate family members. All ICMJE Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research ® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can be viewed on request., (Copyright © 2023 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.)
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- 2023
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19. Decision Aid on Orthopedic Virtual Care: Patient Preferences in Orthopedic Hand Clinic.
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Yedulla NR, Faraj MT, Hazime AA, Gong JH, Tang A, and Day CS
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- Humans, Patient Preference, Patients, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Decision Making, Patient Participation, Decision Support Techniques, Physicians
- Abstract
Introduction: The objectives of this study are to develop a decision aid for orthopedic patients to decide between virtual or in-person care and assess patient preferences for these modalities in hand clinic. Methods: An orthopedic virtual care decision aid was developed alongside orthopedic surgeons and a virtual care expert. Subject participation involved 5 steps: Orientation, Memory, and Concentration Test (OMCT), knowledge pretest, decision aid, postdecision aid questionnaire, and Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) assessment. Patients presenting to hand clinic were initially provided the OMCT to assess decision-making capacity, with those failing excluded. Subjects were then administered a pretest to assess their understanding of virtual and in-person care. Subsequently, the validated decision aid was provided to patients, after which a postdecision aid questionnaire and DCS assessment were administered. Results: This study enrolled 124 patients. Pre- to postdecision aid knowledge test scores increased by 15.3% ( p < 0.0001), and the average patient DCS score was 18.6. After reading the decision aid, 47.6% of patients believed that virtual and in-person care provided similar physician interaction, 46.0% felt little difference in effectiveness between the modalities, and 39.5% had no preference for either. Most patients understood their options (79.8%) and were ready to make a care modality decision (65.4%) following decision aid administration. Conclusion: Significant improvements in knowledge scores, strong DCS scores, and high levels of understanding and decision-making readiness support decision aid validity. Hand patients appear to have no consensus preferences for care modality, emphasizing the need for a decision aid to help determine individual care preferences.
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- 2023
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20. Development of Prodrug-Payloads for Targeted Therapeutic Applications of Platinum-Acridine Anticancer Agents.
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Mancera-Ortiz IY, Chen J, Slade TA, Yao X, Zhang S, Day CS, and Bierbach U
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- Humans, Platinum therapeutic use, Acridines pharmacology, Acridines therapeutic use, Prodrugs pharmacology, Prodrugs therapeutic use, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Antineoplastic Agents therapeutic use, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
A synthetic platform has been developed that provides access to platinum(IV) prodrugs of highly cytotoxic platinum-acridine anticancer agents and allows them to be incorporated into conjugation-ready prodrug-payloads (PPLs). The PPLs can be conveniently assembled in highly efficient microscale reactions utilizing strain-promoted azide-alkyne cycloaddition chemistry. Model reactions were performed to study the stability of the PPLs in buffers and media and to assess their compatibility with cysteine-maleimide Michael addition chemistry. Amide coupling was a successful strategy to generate a conjugate containing integrin-targeted cyclo [RGDfK] peptide. Reactions with ascorbate were performed to mimic the reductive activation of the PPLs and the latter conjugate, and a cyanine (Cy5) fluorophore-labeled PPL was used to probe the reduction of platinum(IV) in cancer cells by confocal microscopy. The PPL concept introduced here should be evaluated for treating solid tumors with PAs using cancer-targeting vehicles, such as antibody-drug conjugates.
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- 2023
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21. Comproportionation and disproportionation in nickel and copper complexes.
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Day CS and Martin R
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Disproportionation and comproportionation reactions have become increasingly important electron transfer events in organometallic chemistry and catalysis. The renewed interest in these reactions is in part attributed to the improved understanding of first-row metals and their ability to occupy odd and even oxidation states. Disproportionation and comproportionation reactions enable metal complexes to shuttle between various oxidation states, a matter of utmost relevance for controlling the speciation and catalytic turnover. In addition, these reactions have a direct impact in the thermodynamic and kinetic stability of the corresponding metal complexes. This review covers the relevance and impact of these processes in electron transfer reactions and provides valuable information about their non-negligible influence in Ni- and Cu-catalysed transformations.
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- 2023
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22. Racial, Ethnic, and Sex Diversity in Academic Medical Leadership.
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Meadows AM, Skinner MM, Hazime AA, Day RG, Fore JA, and Day CS
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- Humans, Female, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Minority Groups, Internal Medicine, Leadership, Ethnicity
- Abstract
Importance: For the past 50 years, significant gaps have existed in gender and racial diversity across various medical specialties, despite the many benefits of a diverse physician workforce. One proposed approach to increasing diversity is top-down diversification, in which diverse leadership results in increased minority and female workforce representation., Objective: To investigate the changes in academic medical leadership diversity from 2007 to 2019 and to assess the recent leadership diversity of various specialties compared with the averages across all specialties., Design, Setting, and Participants: This was a cross-sectional analysis of physicians in varying academic roles in 2007, 2019, and 2020. Demographic data were collected via specialized reports from the Association of American Medical Colleges. Included were 4 primary care specialties (internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics/gynecology [OB/GYN] and 4 surgical specialties (orthopedic surgery, neurologic surgery, otolaryngology [ENT], general surgery). Study participants were faculty, program directors, and chairpersons. Data were analyzed for the years 2007, 2019, and 2020., Intervention: Self-reporting of demographic information to residency programs collected via the Graduate Medical Education Track Survey., Main Outcomes and Measures: Proportions of each race/ethnicity and sex among cohorts of participants and comparisons between them., Results: The total number of individuals investigated included 186 210 faculty from 2019 (79 441 female [42.7%]), 6417 program directors from 2020 (2392 female [37.3%]), 1016 chairpersons from 2007 (89 female [8.8%]), and 2424 chairpersons from 2019 (435 female [17.9%]). When comparing chairperson diversity from 2007 to 2019, only internal medicine and general surgery experienced significant increases in minority (aggregate category used throughout the investigation to refer to anyone who self-identified as anything other than non-Hispanic White) representation (90% increase [11.7 percentage points, from 13.0% in 2007 to 24.7% in 2019]; P = .01 and 96% increase [13.0 percentage points, from 13.5% in 2007 to 26.5% in 2019]; P < .001), respectively; meanwhile, several specialties saw significant increases in female representation during this period (family medicine by 107.4%, P =.002; pediatrics by 83.1%, P =.006; OB/GYN by 53.2%, P =.045; orthopedic surgery by +4.1 percentage points, P =.04; general surgery by 226.9%, P =.005). In general, surgical specialties had lower leadership diversity than the average diversity of all residency programs, whereas primary care specialties had similar or increased diversity., Conclusions and Relevance: Study results suggest that some specialties have made significant contributions toward bridging diversity gaps whereas others continue to lag behind. Our recommendations to improve academic medical leadership diversity include programs and institutions (1) publishing efforts and outcomes of diversity representation, (2) incorporating a representative demographic for leadership selection committees, and (3) actively promoting the importance of diversity throughout the selection process.
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- 2023
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23. Low Pressure Carbonylation of Benzyl Carbonates and Carbamates for Applications in 13 C Isotope Labeling and Catalytic CO 2 Reduction.
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Day CS, Ton SJ, Kaussler C, Vrønning Hoffmann D, and Skrydstrup T
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Herein, we report a methodology to access isotopically labeled esters and amides from carbonates and carbamates employing an oxygen deletion strategy. This methodology utilizes a decarboxylative carbonylation approach for isotope labeling with near stoichiometric, ex situ generated
12 C, or13 C carbon monoxide. This reaction is characterized by its broad scope, functional group tolerance, and high yields, which is showcased with the synthesis of structurally complex molecules. A complementary method that operates by the catalytic in situ generation of CO via the reduction of CO2 liberated during decarboxylation has also been developed as a proof-of-concept approach that CO2 -derived compounds can be converted to CO-containing frameworks. Mechanistic studies provide insight into the catalytic steps which highlight the impact of ligand choice to overcome challenges associated with low-pressure carbonylation methodologies, along with rational for the development of future methodologies., (© 2023 The Authors. Angewandte Chemie International Edition published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2023
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24. Patient-Reported Outcomes Can Serve as a Functional Substitute for Grip Strength.
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Cantu CA, Myhand M, Hazime AA, Yedulla NR, and Day CS
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Background Grip strength has traditionally been seen as an objective measurement of hand function, while the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System Upper Extremity (PROMIS UE) has emerged recently as a common patient-reported outcome metric for similar purposes. The primary objective of this study was to determine if a correlation exists between grip strength, PROMIS UE, and Quick Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder, and Hand (QuickDASH) scores in hand and upper extremity clinic patients. Methods PROMIS UE, Pain Interference (PI), and Depression (D), as well as QuickDASH were prospectively administered to patients from July 16 to September 3, 2020. A grip strength ratio (GSR), calculated by dividing the grip strength of the injured hand by that of the noninjured hand, was recorded for each individual to control for personal differences in grip strength. Data were analyzed using Spearman's correlation coefficients with the significance level at p < 0.05. Results Fifty patients participated in this study. The median GSR was 0.55. QuickDASH demonstrated strong correlations with both PROMIS UE and PI ( r (48) = -0.81, p < 0.05; r (48) = 0.86, p < 0.05). GSR correlated moderately with PROMIS UE ( r (48) = 0.63, p < 0.05). Finally, GSR and QuickDASH also exhibited moderate correlation with each other ( r (48) = -0.62, p < 0.05). Conclusion PROMIS UE and QuickDASH are shown to correlate moderately with GSR. This suggests the PROMIS UE forms as an effective measure of hand/wrist function in hand clinic patients and may be substituted for grip strength measurements., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest None declared., (Thieme. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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25. AOA Critical Issues: Gender Justice in Academic Medicine: What It Might Look Like in Orthopaedic Surgery.
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Day CS, Lattanza L, Van Heest A, Templeton K, Fore JA, and Ode GE
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- Humans, Male, Female, Sexism, Career Choice, Mentors, Orthopedics, Physicians, Women, Orthopedic Procedures
- Abstract
Abstract: As the number of women entering medicine has increased, so has the number of women entering orthopaedics; however, many orthopaedic programs struggle to create an equitable space for women, particularly in leadership. Struggles experienced by women include sexual harassment and gender bias, lack of visibility, lack of well-being, disproportionate family care responsibilities, and lack of flexibility in the criteria for promotions. Historically, sexual harassment and bias has been a problem faced by women physicians, and often the harassment continues even when the issue has been reported; many women find that reporting it results in negative consequences for their career and training. Additionally, throughout medical training, women are less exposed to orthopaedics and lack the mentorship that is given to their colleagues who are men. The late exposure and lack of support prevent women from entering and advancing in orthopaedic training. Typical surgery culture can also result in women orthopaedic surgeons avoiding help for mental wellness. Improving well-being culture requires systemic changes. Finally, women in academics perceive decreased equality in promotional considerations and face leadership that already lacks representation of women. This paper presents solutions to assist in developing equitable work environments for all academic clinicians., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article ( http://links.lww.com/JBJS/H485 )., (Copyright © 2023 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.)
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- 2023
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26. Platinum-Acridine Agents with High Activity in Cancers Expressing the Solute Carrier MATE1 ( SLC47A1 ).
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Zhang S, Wu H, Day CS, and Bierbach U
- Abstract
Platinum-acridine anticancer agents (PAs) containing acyclic ( 1 and 3 ) and heterocyclic ( R )-3-aminopiperidine ( 2 ) and 2-iminopyrrolidine ( 4 ) based linker moieties were studied. Similar to 1 , rigidified 2 shows a strong positive correlation between potency and SLC47A1 (multidrug and toxin extrusion protein 1, MATE1) gene expression levels across the NCI-60 panel of cancer cell lines. All derivatives show nanomolar activity in HepG2 (liver), NCI-H460 (lung), and MDA-MB-436 (breast), which express high levels of SLC47A1 (Cancer Cell Line Encyclopedia, CCLE). The PAs are up to 350-fold more potent than cisplatin. In a MATE1 inhibition assay, a significant reduction in activity is observed in the three cancer cell lines (4000-fold lower for HepG2). Molecular docking experiments provide insight into the compatibility of the structurally diverse set of PAs with MATE1-mediated transport. MATE1 is a predictive marker and actionable target that sensitizes cancer cells regardless of the tissue of origin to PAs., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 American Chemical Society.)
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- 2023
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27. Vanadyl as a Spectroscopic Probe of Tunable Ligand Donor Strength in Bimetallic Complexes.
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Dopp CM, Golwankar RR, Kelsey SR, Douglas JT, Erickson AN, Oliver AG, Day CS, Day VW, and Blakemore JD
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Incorporation of secondary metal ions into heterobimetallic complexes has emerged as an attractive strategy for rational tuning of compounds' properties and reactivity, but direct solution-phase spectroscopic interrogation of tuning effects has received less attention than it deserves. Here, we report the assembly and study of a series of heterobimetallic complexes containing the vanadyl ion, [VO]
2+ , paired with monovalent cations (Cs+ , Rb+ , K+ , Na+ , and Li+ ) and a divalent cation (Ca2+ ). These complexes, which can be isolated in pure form or generated in situ from a common monometallic vanadyl-containing precursor, enable experimental spectroscopic and electrochemical quantification of the influence of the incorporated cations on the properties of the vanadyl moiety. The data reveal systematic shifts in the V-O stretching frequency, isotropic hyperfine coupling constant for the vanadium center, and V(V)/V(IV) reduction potential in the complexes. These shifts can be interpreted as charge density effects parametrized through the Lewis acidities of the cations, suggesting broad potential for the vanadyl ion to serve as a spectroscopic probe in multimetallic species.- Published
- 2023
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28. Trifluoromethylation of Carbonyl and Unactivated Olefin Derivatives by C(sp 3 )-C Bond Cleavage.
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Cong F, Mega RS, Chen J, Day CS, and Martin R
- Abstract
Herein, we report a Cu-mediated trifluoromethylation of carbonyl-type compounds and unactivated olefins enabled by visible-light irradiation via σ C(sp
3 )-C bond-functionalization. The reaction is distinguished by its modularity, mild conditions and wide scope-even in the context of late-stage functionalization-thus offering a complementary approach en route to valuable C(sp3 )-CF3 architectures from easily accessible precursors., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2023
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29. What are the Minimum Clinically Important Difference Values for the PROMIS and QuickDASH After Carpal Tunnel Release? A Prospective Cohort Study.
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Jiang EX, Tang X, Korn MA, Fore J, Yoshida M, Kalkman J, and Day CS
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- Adult, Humans, Female, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Prospective Studies, Minimal Clinically Important Difference, Upper Extremity, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Pain, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome diagnosis, Carpal Tunnel Syndrome surgery
- Abstract
Background: To better define the clinical significance of patient-reported outcomes, the concept of a minimum clinically important difference (MCID) exists. The MCID is the minimum change that a patient will perceive as meaningful. Prior attempts to determine the MCID after carpal tunnel release are limited by methodologic concerns, including the lack of a true anchor-based MCID calculation., Questions/purposes: To address previous methodologic concerns in existing studies, as well as establish a clinically useful value for clinicians, we asked: What are the MCID values for the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Upper Extremity (UE), PROMIS Pain Interference (PI), and the QuickDASH after carpal tunnel release?, Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study at an urban, Midwest, multihospital, academic health system. One hundred forty-seven adult patients undergoing unilateral carpal tunnel release between September 2020 and February 2022 were identified. PROMIS UE, PI, and QuickDASH scores were collected preoperatively and 3 months postoperatively. We also collected responses to an anchor-based question: "Since your treatment, how would you rate your overall function?" (much worse, worse, slightly worse, no change, slightly improved, improved, or much improved). Patients who did not respond to the 3-month postoperative surveys were excluded. A total of 122 patients were included in the final analysis (83% response proportion [122 of 147]). The mean age was 57 years (range 23 to 87 years), and 68% were women. The MCID was calculated using both anchor-based and distribution-based methods. Although anchor-based calculations are generally considered more clinically relevant because they consider patients' perceptions of improvement, an estimation of the minimum detectable change (which represents measurement error) relies on a distribution-based calculation. We determined a range of MCID values to propose a final MCID value for all three instruments. A negative MCID value for the PROMIS PI instrument represents a decrease in pain, whereas a positive value for the PROMIS UE instrument represents an improvement in function. A negative value for the QuickDASH instrument represents an increase in function., Results: The final proposed MCID values were 6.2 (interquartile range [IQR] 5.4 to 9.0) for the PROMIS UE, -7.8 (IQR -6.1 to -8.5) for the PROMIS PI, and -18.2 (IQR -13.3 to -34.1) for the QuickDASH., Conclusion: We recommend that clinicians use the following values as the MCID after carpal tunnel release: 6 for the UE, -8 for the PI, and -18 for the QuickDASH. Surgeons may find these values useful when counseling patients postoperatively regarding improvement. Future studies could examine whether a single MCID (or small range) for PROMIS instruments is applicable to a variety of conditions and interventions., Level of Evidence: Level II, therapeutic study., Competing Interests: Each author certifies that there are no funding or commercial associations (consultancies, stock ownership, equity interest, patent/licensing arrangements, etc.) that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted article related to the author or any immediate family members. All ICMJE Conflict of Interest Forms for authors and Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® editors and board members are on file with the publication and can be viewed on request., (Copyright © 2022 by the Association of Bone and Joint Surgeons.)
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- 2023
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30. Corrigendum: Nickel-Catalyzed Site-Selective Intermolecular C(sp 3 )-H Amidation.
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Chen J, Wang H, Day CS, and Martin R
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- 2023
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31. Elucidating electron-transfer events in polypyridine nickel complexes for reductive coupling reactions.
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Day CS, Rentería-Gómez Á, Ton SJ, Gogoi AR, Gutierrez O, and Martin R
- Abstract
Polypyridine-ligated nickel complexes are widely used as privileged catalysts in a variety of cross-coupling reactions. The rapid adoption of these complexes is tentatively attributed to their ability to shuttle between different oxidation states and engage in electron-transfer reactions. However, these reactions are poorly understood in mechanistic terms. Here we investigate the reactivity of pseudohalide- and halide-ligated Ni(II) complexes, containing polypyridine ligands, in electron-transfer reactions. Specifically, Ni(II) halide complexes trigger comproportionation with Ni(0) with exceptional ease en route to Ni(I)L
n species, whereas the corresponding Ni(II) pseudohalide congeners are resistant to electron transfer, with Ni(I) pseudohalides being prone to disproportionation events. These observations are corroborated by electrochemical techniques and detailed quantum mechanical calculations. We also show that catalytically inactive Ni(II) pseudohalide complexes can be reactivated in the presence of exogeneous salts. From a broader perspective, this study provides rationalizations for overlooked and fundamental steps within the Ni-catalysed cross-coupling arena, thus offering blueprints for designing future Ni-catalysed reactions., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests.- Published
- 2023
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32. Remote Hydroamination of Disubstituted Alkenes by a Combination of Isomerization and Regioselective N-H Addition.
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Ma S, Fan H, Day CS, Xi Y, and Hartwig JF
- Abstract
Remote hydrofunctionalizations of alkenes incorporate functional groups distal to existing carbon-carbon double bonds. While remote carbonylations are well-known, remote hydrofunctionalizations are most common for addition of relatively nonpolar B-H, Si-H, and C-H bonds with alkenes. We report a system for the remote hydroamination of disubstituted alkenes to functionalize an alkyl chain selectively at the subterminal, unactivated, methylene position. Critical to the high regioselectivity and reaction rates are the electronic properties of the substituent on the amine and the development of the ligand DIP-Ad-SEGPHOS by evaluating the steric and electronic effects of ligand modules on reactivity and selectivity. The remote hydroamination is compatible with a broad scope of alkenes and aminopyridines and enables the regioconvergent synthesis of amines from an isomeric mixture of alkenes. The products can be derivatized by nucleophilic aromatic substitution on the amino substituent with a variety of nucleophiles.
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- 2023
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33. Rapid Access to Carbon-Isotope-Labeled Alkyl and Aryl Carboxylates Applying Palladacarboxylates.
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Ton SJ, Ravn AK, Hoffmann DV, Day CS, Kingston L, Elmore CS, and Skrydstrup T
- Abstract
Herein, we report a strategy for the formation of isotopically labeled carboxylic esters from boronic esters/acids using a readily accessible palladium carboxylate complex as an organometallic source of isotopically labeled functional groups. The reaction allows access to either unlabeled or full
13 C- or14 C-isotopically labeled carboxylic esters, and the method is characterized by its operational simplicity, mild conditions, and general substrate scope. Our protocol is further extended to a carbon isotope replacement strategy, involving an initial decarbonylative borylation procedure. Such an approach allows access to isotopically labeled compounds directly from the unlabeled pharmaceutical, which can have implications for drug discovery programs., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following competing financial interest(s): T.S. is co-owner of SyTracks A/S, which commercializes the two-chamber system (COware) and SilaCOgen., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2023
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34. AOA Critical Issues Symposium: Deficit Recovery for the Orthopaedic Service Line.
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Day CS, Goldfarb CA, Lattanza LL, Yoshida MT, and Levin LS
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- Humans, COVID-19 prevention & control, Pandemics prevention & control, United States, Orthopedics economics
- Abstract
Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic and the mandated cessation of surgical procedures for a substantial portion of the 2020 year placed tremendous strain, both clinically and financially, on the health-care system in the United States. As a surgical specialty that accounts for nearly a quarter of all hospital net income, the revenue recovery of orthopaedic service lines (OSLs) is of particular importance to the financial recovery of their broader health-care institutions. In this American Orthopaedic Association (AOA) symposium report, the OSL leaders from 4 major academic medical institutions explain and reflect on their approaches to address their revenue deficits. Cost-reduction strategies, such as tightening budgets, adopting remote-work models, and limiting costs of human capital, were vital to stabilizing departmental finances at the onset of the pandemic, while strategies that focused on expanding surgical volume, such as those that improve efficiency in clinical and surgical settings, were important in growing revenue once elective procedures resumed. Institutional policy, payer administrative procedures, and the overall context of an ongoing public health crisis all placed limitations on recovery efforts, but engaging relevant stakeholders and working with available resources helped OSLs overcome these limitations. Due to clear strategic actions that were taken to address their deficits, each OSL represented in this AOA symposium saw substantial improvement in its year-end financial performance compared with its financial status at the end of the period of mandatory cessation of elective surgical cases., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article ( http://links.lww.com/JBJS/H171 )., (Copyright © 2022 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.)
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- 2023
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35. Nickel-Catalyzed Site-Selective Intermolecular C(sp 3 )-H Amidation.
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Chen J, Wang H, Day CS, and Martin R
- Abstract
A nickel-catalyzed site-selective intermolecular amidation of saturated C(sp
3 )-H bonds is reported. This mild protocol exhibits a predictable reactivity pattern to incorporate amide functions at C(sp3 )-H sites adjacent to nitrogen and oxygen atoms in either cyclic or acyclic frameworks, thus offering a complementary reactivity profile to existing oxidative-type processes or metal-catalyzed C(sp3 )-N bond-forming reactions operating via two-electron manifolds., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2022
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36. Reductive Elimination from Sterically Encumbered Ni-Polypyridine Complexes.
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Day CS, Ton SJ, McGuire RT, Foroutan-Nejad C, and Martin R
- Abstract
Herein we disclose the synthesis of sterically encumbered dialkylnickel(II) complexes bearing 2,9-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline ligands. A comparison with their unsubstituted analogues by both X-ray crystallography and theoretical calculations revealed significant distortions in their molecular structures. Eyring plots along with stoichiometric and photoexcitation studies revealed that sterically encumbered dialkylnickel(II) complexes enable facile C( sp
3 )-C( sp3 ) reductive elimination, thus offering an improved understanding of Ni catalysis., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)- Published
- 2022
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37. Room-Temperature-Stable Magnesium Electride via Ni(II) Reduction.
- Author
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Day CS, Do CD, Odena C, Benet-Buchholz J, Xu L, Foroutan-Nejad C, Hopmann KH, and Martin R
- Abstract
Herein, we report the synthesis of highly reduced bipyridyl magnesium complexes and the first example of a stable organic magnesium electride supported by quantum mechanical computations and X-ray diffraction. These complexes serve as unconventional homogeneous reductants due to their high solubility, modular redox potentials, and formation of insoluble, non-coordinating byproducts. The applicability of these reductants is showcased by accessing low-valent (bipy)
2 Ni(0) species that are challenging to access otherwise.- Published
- 2022
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38. Catalytic Hydrodifluoroalkylation of Unactivated Olefins.
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Yue WJ, Day CS, Brenes Rucinski AJ, and Martin R
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Alkenes, Hydrogen
- Abstract
Herein, we report a modular catalytic technique that streamlines the preparation of gem -difluoroalkanes from unactivated sp
3 precursors. The method is characterized by its simplicity, generality, and site selectivity, including the functionalization of advanced intermediates and olefin feedstocks. Our approach is enabled by a cooperative interplay of halogen- and hydrogen-atom transfer, thus offering a new entry point to difluorinated alkyl bioisosteres of interest in drug discovery.- Published
- 2022
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39. Synthesis and Optical Characterization of a Rhodamine B Spirolactam Dimer.
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Stratton BC, Pierre AJ, Riser EA, Grinalds NJ, Edwards CW, Wohlwend AM, Bauer JS, Spera RJ, Pferdmenges LS, Griffith KM, Hunter BW, Bobadova-Parvanova P, Day CS, Lundin PM, and Fogarty KH
- Abstract
Amide derivatives of xanthene dyes such as rhodamine B are useful in a variety of sensing applications due to their colorimetric responses to stimuli such as acidity changes and UV light. The optical properties of these molecules can be influenced by intermolecular associations into dimeric structures, but the exact impact can be hard to predict. We have designed a covalently linked intramolecular dimer of the dye rhodamine B utilizing p -phenylenediamine to link the two dyes via amide bonds. The doubly closed spirolactam version of this dimer, RSL
2 , is isolated as a colorless solid. Under acidic conditions or UV exposure, RSL2 solutions develop a pink color that is expected for the ring-opened form of the molecule. However, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and single-crystal diffraction data show that the equilibrium still prefers the closed dimer state. Interestingly, the emission profile of RSL2 shows solvatochromic blue fluorescence. Control studies of model compounds with similar structural motifs do not display similar blue fluorescence, indicating that this optical behavior is unique to the dimeric form. This behavior may lend itself to applications of such xanthene dimers to more sophisticated sensors beyond those with traditional binary on/off fluorescence profiles.- Published
- 2022
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40. Racial, Ethnic, and Gender Diversity in Academic Orthopaedic Surgery Leadership.
- Author
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Meadows AM, Skinner MM, Faraj MT, Hazime AA, Day RG, Fore JA, and Day CS
- Subjects
- Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Leadership, Racial Groups, United States, Orthopedic Procedures, Orthopedics
- Abstract
Background: Multiple investigations in the past 50 years have documented a lack of racial/ethnic and gender diversity in the orthopaedic surgery workforce when compared with other specialties. Studies in other industries suggest that diversification of leadership can help diversify the underlying workforce. This study investigates changes in racial/ethnic and gender diversity of orthopaedic surgery leadership from 2007 to 2019 and compares leadership diversity to that of other surgical and nonsurgical specialties, specifically in terms of chairpersons and program directors., Methods: Demographic data were collected from The Journal of the American Medical Association and the Association of American Medical Colleges. Aggregate data were utilized to determine the racial, ethnic, and gender composition of academic leadership for 8 surgical and nonsurgical specialties in 2007 and 2019. Comparative analysis was conducted to identify changes in diversity among chairpersons between the 2 years. Furthermore, current levels of diversity in orthopaedic leadership were compared with those of other specialties., Results: A comparative analysis of diversity among program directors revealed that orthopaedic surgery had significantly lower minority representation (20.5%) when compared with the nonsurgical specialties (adjusted p < 0.01 for all) and, with the exception of neurological surgery, had the lowest proportion of female program directors overall, at 9.0% (adjusted p < 0.001 for all). From 2007 to 2019, orthopaedic surgery experienced no change in minority representation among chairpersons (adjusted p = 0.73) but a significant increase in female representation among chairpersons, from 0.0% (0 of 102) to 4.1% (5 of 122) (adjusted p = 0.04). Lastly, a significant decrease in minority and female representation was observed when comparing the diversity of 2019 orthopaedic faculty to orthopaedic leadership in 2019/2020 (p < 0.05 for all)., Conclusions: Diversity in orthopaedic surgery leadership has improved on some key fronts, specifically in gender diversity among chairpersons. However, a significant decrease in minority and gender representation was observed between 2019 orthopaedic faculty and 2019/2020 orthopaedic leadership (p < 0.05), which was a trend shared by other specialties. These findings may suggest a more pervasive problem in diversity of medical leadership that is not only limited to orthopaedic surgery., Competing Interests: Disclosure: The Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest forms are provided with the online version of the article (http://links.lww.com/JBJS/H34)., (Copyright © 2022 by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated.)
- Published
- 2022
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41. Arylselenyl Radical-Mediated Cyclization of N -(2-Alkynyl)anilines: Access to 3-Selenylquinolines.
- Author
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Zhu C, Nurko M, Day CS, and Lukesh JC 3rd
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Cyclization, Aniline Compounds chemistry
- Abstract
An efficient and novel approach to accessing 3-selenylquinolines from diaryl diselenides and acyclic, selenium-free substrates is described. Preliminary mechanistic studies indicate that the combination of CuCl
2 and air affords an appropriate environment for producing arylselenyl radicals that initiate the cascade cyclization of N -(2-alkynyl)anilines, forming key Se-C and C-C bonds in a single step. Using this chemistry, a wide variety of 3-selenylquinolines were produced in moderate to excellent yield under mild conditions, highlighting the versatility and usefulness of this new method.- Published
- 2022
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42. Workplace-related musculoskeletal injury trends in the United States from 1992 to 2018.
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Yedulla NR, Battista EB, Koolmees DS, Montgomery ZA, and Day CS
- Subjects
- Humans, Pain, United States epidemiology, Upper Extremity injuries, Workplace, Contusions, Lacerations, Musculoskeletal Diseases, Sprains and Strains, Tendinopathy
- Abstract
Introduction: The purpose of our study is to assess workplace-related musculoskeletal (wrMSK) injury trends by utilizing Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data. We hypothesize that trunk injuries are the most commonly reported, injuries occur most frequently in the manufacturing sector, and that injury type occurrence differs according to body region affected., Methods: This study assessed wrMSK injury data provided by the BLS from 1992 to 2018. The three main body regions analyzed were lower extremity (LE), upper extremity (UE), and trunk. Injury data was also assessed by industrial sector (Agriculture, Manufacturing, Healthcare, and Construction) and injury type (fractures, multiple injuries, sprains/strains/tears, tendonitis, cuts/lacerations, pain/soreness, and bruises). Negative binomial regression and pairwise comparisons with a Benjamini-Hochberg adjustment were utilized to compare calculated incidence rate ratios for wrMSK injuries. Exponentiated beta estimates were used to calculate the estimated annual percent changes of wrMSK injuries within each industrial sector., Results: Occurrence of wrMSK injuries from 1992 to 2018 was significantly lower for LE when compared to both upper extremity and trunk (p < 0.001). Manufacturing is shown to be the industry with the most wrMSK injuries in each of UE, LE, and trunk. wrMSK injuries were shown to decrease in each industrial sector over the timespan assessed, with the greatest percent change occurring in the manufacturing sector. Lacerations and tendonitis were the most common diagnosis types in UE, while pain/soreness and strains/sprains/tears were most common in trunk and bruises were most common in LE., Discussion: From 1992 to 2018, trunk injuries were the most frequently occurring wrMSK injury, but not to a significantly higher degree than upper extremity injuries. wrMSK injury types that may require orthopedic surgical care affect specific body regions to different degrees, with cuts/lacerations and tendonitis most commonly affecting the upper extremity. Thus, it appears that wrMSK injuries in the upper extremity are of particular importance from an orthopedic care perspective., 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 © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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43. Effect of elective surgery cancellations during the COVID-19 pandemic on patients' activity, anxiety and pain.
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Sims BM, Patel AD, Garnica BG, Faraj MT, Tang A, Parsons T, Hoegler JJ, and Day CS
- Subjects
- COVID-19, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Midwestern United States epidemiology, Patient Preference, Surveys and Questionnaires, Activities of Daily Living, Anxiety epidemiology, Elective Surgical Procedures, Pain epidemiology, Pandemics
- Published
- 2021
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44. Mechanistic Investigation of the Iron-Catalyzed Azidation of Alkyl C( sp 3 )-H Bonds with Zhdankin's λ 3 -Azidoiodane.
- Author
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Day CS, Fawcett A, Chatterjee R, and Hartwig JF
- Subjects
- Catalysis, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Molecular Structure, Organometallic Compounds chemistry, Iron chemistry, Organometallic Compounds chemical synthesis
- Abstract
An in-depth study of the mechanism of the azidation of C( sp
3 )-H bonds with Zhdankin's λ3 -azidoiodane reagent catalyzed by iron(II)(pybox) complexes is reported. Previously, it was shown that tertiary and benzylic C( sp3 )-H bonds of a range of complex molecules underwent highly site-selective azidation by reaction with a λ3 -azidoiodane reagent and an iron(II)(pybox) catalyst under mild conditions. However, the mechanism of this reaction was unclear. Here, a series of mechanistic experiments are presented that reveal critical features responsible for the high selectivity and broad scope of this reaction. These experiments demonstrate the ability of the λ3 -azidoiodane reagent to undergo I-N bond homolysis under mild conditions to form λ2 -iodanyl and azidyl radicals that undergo highly site-selective and rate-limiting abstraction of a hydrogen atom from the substrate. The resultant alkyl radical then combines rapidly with a resting state iron(III)-azide complex, which is generated by the reaction of the λ3 -azidoiodane with the iron(II)(pybox) complex, to form the C( sp3 )-N3 bond. This mechanism is supported by the independent synthesis of well-defined iron complexes characterized by cyclic voltammetry, X-ray diffraction, and EPR spectroscopy, and by the reaction of the iron complexes with alkanes and the λ3 -azidoiodane. Reaction monitoring and kinetic studies further reveal an unusual effect of the catalyst on the rate of formation of product and consumption of reactants and suggest a blueprint for the development of new processes leading to late-stage functionalization of C( sp3 )-H bonds.- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
45. Establishing Age-calibrated Normative PROMIS Scores for Hand and Upper Extremity Clinic.
- Author
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Yedulla NR, Wilmouth CT, Franovic S, Hazime AA, Hudson JT, and Day CS
- Abstract
The purpose of our study is to investigate differences in normative PROMIS upper extremity function (PROMIS-UE), physical function (PROMIS-PF), and pain interference (PROMIS-PI) scores across age cohorts in individuals without upper extremity disability., Methods: Individuals without upper extremity disability were prospectively enrolled. Subjects were administered PROMIS-UE, PROMIS-PF, and PROMIS-PI forms. Retrospective PROMIS data for eligible subjects were also utilized. The enrolled cohort was divided into age groups: 20-39, 40-59, and 60-79 years old. ANOVA, ceiling and floor effect analysis, and kurtosis and skewness statistics were performed to assess PROMIS scores trends with age., Results: This study included 346 individuals. In the 20-39 age group, mean PROMIS scores were 56.2 ± 6.1, 59.8 ± 6.9, and 43.1 ± 6.7 for PROMIS-UE, PROMIS-PF, and PROMIS-PI, respectively. In the "40-59" age group, mean PROMIS computer adaptive test scores were 53.3 ± 7.5, 55.3 ± 7.6, and 46.6 ± 7.8 for PROMIS-UE, PROMIS-PF, and PROMIS-PI, respectively. In the 60-79 age group, mean PROMIS scores were 48.4 ± 7.6, 48.5 ± 5.6, and 48.7 ± 6.9 for PROMIS-UE, PROMIS-PF, and PROMIS-PI, respectively. Differences in mean PROMIS scores were significant across all PROMIS domains and age cohorts ( P < 0.001)., Conclusion: Younger individuals without hand or upper extremity disability show higher normative PROMIS-UE and PROMIS-PF scores and lower PROMIS-PI scores, indicating greater function and less pain than older counterparts. A universal reference PROMIS score of 50 appears suboptimal for clinical assessment and decision-making in the hand and upper extremity clinic., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American Society of Plastic Surgeons.)
- Published
- 2021
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46. Are orthopaedic providers willing to work overtime to address COVID-19-related patient backlogs and financial deficits?
- Author
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Montgomery ZA, Yedulla NR, Koolmees D, Battista E, Parsons Iii TW, and Day CS
- Abstract
Aims: COVID-19-related patient care delays have resulted in an unprecedented patient care backlog in the field of orthopaedics. The objective of this study is to examine orthopaedic provider preferences regarding the patient care backlog and financial recovery initiatives in response to the COVID-19 pandemic., Methods: An orthopaedic research consortium at a multi-hospital tertiary care academic medical system developed a three-part survey examining provider perspectives on strategies to expand orthopaedic patient care and financial recovery. Section 1 asked for preferences regarding extending clinic hours, section 2 assessed surgeon opinions on expanding surgical opportunities, and section 3 questioned preferred strategies for departmental financial recovery. The survey was sent to the institution's surgical and nonoperative orthopaedic providers., Results: In all, 73 of 75 operative (n = 55) and nonoperative (n = 18) providers responded to the survey. A total of 92% of orthopaedic providers (n = 67) were willing to extend clinic hours. Most providers preferred extending clinic schedule until 6pm on weekdays. When asked about extending surgical block hours, 96% of the surgeons (n = 53) were willing to extend operating room (OR) block times. Most surgeons preferred block times to be extended until 7pm (63.6%, n = 35). A majority of surgeons (53%, n = 29) believe that over 50% of their surgical cases could be performed at an ambulatory surgery centre (ASC). Of the strategies to address departmental financial deficits, 85% of providers (n = 72) were willing to work extra hours without a pay cut., Conclusion: Most orthopaedic providers are willing to help with patient care backlogs and revenue recovery by working extended hours instead of having their pay reduced. These findings provide insights that can be incorporated into COVID-19 recovery strategies. Level of Evidence: III Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(7):562-568.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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47. Assessing Orthopedic Patient Preferences for Mandated Virtual Care During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Elective Virtual Care in Non-Pandemic Circumstances.
- Author
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Yedulla NR, Faraj MT, Koolmees DS, Battista EB, Montgomery ZA, and Day CS
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Pandemics, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19, Orthopedics, Patient Preference, Telemedicine
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to compare orthopedic patient preferences for mandated virtual care during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and elective virtual care during non-pandemic circumstances. An orthopedic virtual care questionnaire was administered to adult orthopedic patients undergoing their first orthopedic virtual visit between March 15, 2020, and May 18, 2020. The questionnaire had 13 items rated on a 1-to-5 Likert scale ("strongly agree" to "strongly disagree"). Responses were compared using Kruskal-Wallis and nonparametric Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. Patients showed higher preferences for mandated virtual care during the pandemic when compared with elective virtual care during non-pandemic circumstances (2.25±1.31 vs 4.10±1.25, P <.0001) and also preferred virtual visits in other specialties compared with orthopedics (2.17±1.35 vs 2.79±1.42, P <.0001). Patients older than 50 years were more likely to view virtual care as the best option during the pandemic (2.06±1.25 vs 2.48±1.35, P <.0165) and equally as effective as in-person visits in non-pandemic circumstances (2.45±1.36 vs 2.83±1.18, P <.0150). Female patients were more likely to pursue future orthopedic virtual visits (2.61±1.37 vs 3.07±1.45, P <.0203) and view their virtual visit as equally effective as an in-person visit (2.47±1.33 vs 2.87±1.18, P <.0181). Orthopedic patient preference for mandated virtual care during the COVID-19 pandemic seems to be higher than for elective virtual care during non-pandemic circumstances, and older and female patients appear to favor virtual care. [ Orthopedics . 2021;44(4):e471-e476.].
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Orthopaedic provider perceptions of virtual care : which providers prefer virtual care?
- Author
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Yedulla NR, Montgomery ZA, Koolmees DS, Battista EB, and Day CS
- Abstract
Aims: The purpose of our study was to determine which groups of orthopaedic providers favour virtual care, and analyze overall orthopaedic provider perceptions of virtual care. We hypothesize that providers with less clinical experience will favour virtual care, and that orthopaedic providers overall will show increased preference for virtual care during the COVID-19 pandemic and decreased preference during non-pandemic circumstances., Methods: An orthopaedic research consortium at an academic medical system developed a survey examining provider perspectives regarding orthopaedic virtual care. Survey items were scored on a 1 to 5 Likert scale (1 = "strongly disagree", 5 = "strongly agree") and compared using nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test., Results: Providers with less experience were more likely to recommend virtual care for follow-up visits (3.61 on the Likert scale (SD 0.95) vs 2.90 (SD 1.23); p = 0.006) and feel that virtual care was essential to patient wellbeing (3.98 (SD 0.95) vs 3.00 (SD 1.16); p < 0.001) during the pandemic. Less experienced providers also viewed virtual visits as providing a similar level of care as in-person visits (2.41 (SD 1.02) vs 1.76 (SD 0.87); p = 0.006) and more time-efficient than in-person visits (3.07 (SD 1.19) vs 2.34 (SD 1.14); p = 0.012) in non-pandemic circumstances. During the pandemic, most providers viewed virtual care as effective in providing essential care (83.6%, n = 51) and wanted to schedule patients for virtual care follow-up (82.2%, n = 50); only 10.9% (n = 8) of providers preferred virtual visits in non-pandemic circumstances., Conclusion: Orthopaedic providers with less clinical experience seem to favourably view virtual care both during the pandemic and under non-pandemic circumstances. Providers in general appear to view virtual care positively during the pandemic but are less accommodating towards it in non-pandemic circumstances. Cite this article: Bone Jt Open 2021;2(6):405-410.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. sp 3 Bis-Organometallic Reagents via Catalytic 1,1-Difunctionalization of Unactivated Olefins.
- Author
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Sun SZ, Talavera L, Spieß P, Day CS, and Martin R
- Abstract
A catalytic 1,1-difunctionalization of unactivated olefins en route to sp
3 bis-organometallic B,B(Si)-reagents is described. The protocol is characterized by exceptional reaction rates, mild conditions, wide scope, and exquisite selectivity pattern, constituting a new platform to access sp3 bis-organometallics., (© 2021 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Site-Selective Defluorinative sp 3 C-H Alkylation of Secondary Amides.
- Author
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Yue WJ, Day CS, and Martin R
- Abstract
A site-selective defluorinative sp
3 C-H alkylation of secondary amides that rapidly and reliably incorporates gem -difluoroalkene motifs into previously unfunctionalized sp3 sites is disclosed. This protocol is distinguished by its mild conditions, wide scope, and exquisite site-selectivity, thus unlocking a new platform to introduce carbonyl isosteres at saturated hydrocarbon sites.- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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