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Deborah J. Cook
Researcher at McMaster University
Publications - 942
Citations - 165225
Deborah J. Cook is an academic researcher from McMaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Intensive care & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 173, co-authored 907 publications receiving 148928 citations. Previous affiliations of Deborah J. Cook include McMaster University Medical Centre & Queen's University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Multidisciplinary Education for Oxygen Prescription: A Continuous Quality Improvement Study
TL;DR: Oxygen prescribing and monitoring practices were suboptimal on a busy medical teaching ward and practice guidelines based on best available evidence are needed to increase the efficiency of oxygen use.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vasopressor administration and sepsis: A survey of Canadian intensivists
Francois Lamontagne,Deborah J. Cook,Neill K. J. Adhikari,Matthias Briel,Matthias Briel,Mark Duffett,Michelle E. Kho,Karen E. A. Burns,Gordon H. Guyatt,Alexis F. Turgeon,Qi Zhou,Maureen O. Meade +11 more
TL;DR: Self-reported vasopressor use for the treatment of septic shock is relatively uniform among Canadian intensivists; however, practice is variable in patients with chronic comorbidities or acute concurrent illnesses.
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Barriers and facilitators of thromboprophylaxis for medical-surgical intensive care unit patients: A multicenter survey
Deborah J. Cook,Mark Duffett,François Lauzier,Chenglin Ye,Peter Dodek,Bojan Paunovic,Rob Fowler,Michelle E. Kho,Denise Foster,Tom Stelfox,Taz Sinuff,Nicole Zytaruk,Gordon Wood,Michael J Cox,Jim Kutsiogiannis,Michael J. Jacka,Marios Roussos,Hari Kumar,Gordon H. Guyatt +18 more
TL;DR: This multicenter survey found several barriers to use of LMWH including cost, concern about bleeding, and lack of resident knowledge of effectiveness, which suggests that large scale programs may address generic barriers but also need site-specific interprofessional knowledge translation activities.
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Critical Care Nurses' Experiences With Spiritual Care: The SPIRIT Study.
TL;DR: A qualitative descriptive study using in‐person, semistructured interviews in a 21‐bed medical‐surgical intensive care unit in a teaching hospital to understand nurses’ experiences when they make a referral to the Spiritual Care Department.
Journal ArticleDOI
Organization and management I
R. G. Hulsebos,F. W. Bellman,D. Reis Miranda,J. Ruiz,Lorena García,Y. González,A. Boix,M. A. Asenjo,Fabienne Saulnier,J. M. Descamps,G. de Pouvourville,Alain Durocher,B. Blettery,Jean Carlet,F. Fraisse,F. Nicolas,Ph. Lardet,Hervé Hubert,S. Loyez,D. Sion,Deborah J. Cook +20 more
TL;DR: In 29 pts undergoing OLT simultaneous measurement of blood lactate levels, mVO2 (indirect calorimetry-Deltatrac), DO2 (thermodilution) and 02 extraction ratio (EO2r) were performed within the first 48 postoperative hours.