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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
Can we learn anything from small trials
David L. Sackett,Deborah J. Cook +1 more
TL;DR: Small clinical trials, even when individually inconclusive, can serve as the basis for convincingly conclusive overviews and meta-analyses that carry, and deserve, greater credibility than a single large trial of similar size to their sum.
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Prognosis in anoxic and traumatic coma
John Attia,Deborah J. Cook +1 more
TL;DR: Electroencephalogram (EEG) and evoked potentials (i.e., auditory and somatosensory) detect additional patients with poor prognosis and clinical examination is not as helpful in the case of traumatic coma.
Journal ArticleDOI
Discrimination and abuse experienced by general internists in Canada.
TL;DR: Abuse, discrimination, and homophobia are prevalent in the internal medicine workplace and a direct, progressive, multidisciplinary approach is necessary to label and address these problems.
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InFACT: a global critical care research response to H1N1
John Marshall,Edward Abraham,N. K. Adikhari,Naoki Aikawa,H. al Rahma,Pravin Amin,Derek C. Angus,Djillali Annane,A. Argent,Gordon R. Bernard,Gladson Ricardo Flor Bertolini,Satish Bhagwanjee,Karen E. A. Burns,Thierry Calandra,D. Ceraso,K. Chan,Jean-Daniel Chiche,J. Cobb,Deborah J. Cook,Brian H Cuthbertson,E. da Silva +20 more
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Fluid resuscitation in the management of early septic shock (FINESS): a randomized controlled feasibility trial.
Lauralyn McIntyre,Dean Fergusson,Deborah J. Cook,Nigel Rankin,Vinay Dhingra,John Granton,Sheldon Magder,Ian G. Stiell,Monica Taljaard,Paul C. Hébert +9 more
TL;DR: Methods to improve recruitment are required to enhance the feasibility of conducting a multicentre fluid resuscitation trial in early septic shock, and resuscitation algorithms were acceptable to most physicians.