F
Francis Dailey
Researcher at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Publications - 11
Citations - 421
Francis Dailey is an academic researcher from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inflammatory bowel disease & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications receiving 286 citations. Previous affiliations of Francis Dailey include Veterans Health Administration.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Virtual Reality for Management of Pain in Hospitalized Patients: Results of a Controlled Trial
Vartan C. Tashjian,Sasan Mosadeghi,Amber Howard,Mayra Lopez,Taylor Dupuy,Mark W. Reid,Bibiana Martinez,Shahzad Ahmed,Francis Dailey,Karen Robbins,Bradley T. Rosen,Garth Fuller,Itai Danovitch,Waguih William IsHak,Brennan Spiegel +14 more
TL;DR: Use of VR in hospitalized patients significantly reduces pain versus a control distraction condition and indicates that VR is an effective and safe adjunctive therapy for pain management in the acute inpatient setting.
Journal ArticleDOI
Virtual reality for management of pain in hospitalized patients: A randomized comparative effectiveness trial
Brennan Spiegel,Garth Fuller,Mayra Lopez,Taylor Dupuy,Benjamin Noah,Amber Howard,Michael Albert,Vartan C. Tashjian,Richard Lam,Joseph C. Ahn,Francis Dailey,Bradley T. Rosen,Mark S. Vrahas,Milton T.M. Little,John M. Garlich,Eldin Dzubur,Waguih William IsHak,Itai Danovitch +17 more
TL;DR: Therapeutic virtual reality significantly reduces pain versus an active control condition in hospitalized patients and is most effective for severe pain.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patient Understanding of the Risks and Benefits of Biologic Therapies in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Insights from a Large-scale Analysis of Social Media Platforms.
Bibiana Martinez,Francis Dailey,Christopher V. Almario,Michelle S. Keller,Mansee Desai,Taylor Dupuy,Sasan Mosadeghi,Cynthia B. Whitman,Karen Lasch,Lyann Ursos,Brennan Spiegel +10 more
TL;DR: Social media reveals a wide range of themes governing patients' experience and choice with IBD biologics, suggesting merit in creating online tailored decision tools to support IBD patients' decision-making with biologic therapies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Postoperative Gastrointestinal Telemetry with an Acoustic Biosensor Predicts Ileus vs. Uneventful GI Recovery
Marc Kaneshiro,Marc Kaneshiro,Marc Kaneshiro,William J. Kaiser,Jonathan Pourmorady,Jonathan Pourmorady,Phillip Fleshner,Marcia M. Russell,Karen Zaghiyan,Anne Lin,Bibiana Martinez,Anish Patel,Anish Patel,Amy P. Nguyen,Digvijay Singh,Vincent Zegarski,Mark W. Reid,Francis Dailey,Francis Dailey,Jason Xu,Jason Xu,Karen Robbins,Karen Robbins,Brennan Spiegel +23 more
TL;DR: Non-invasive, abdominal, acoustic monitoring prospectively predicts postoperative ileus development, and surgeons may use AGIS to rule out POI with over 80 % certainty; this offers added confidence to advance feeding earlier in those for whom it is safe.
Journal ArticleDOI
Computer versus physician identification of gastrointestinal alarm features
Christopher V. Almario,William D. Chey,Sentia Iriana,Francis Dailey,Karen Robbins,Anish Patel,Mark W. Reid,Cynthia B. Whitman,Garth Fuller,Roger Bolus,Buddy Dennis,Rey Encarnacion,Bibiana Martinez,Jennifer Soares,Rushaba Modi,Nikhil Agarwal,Nikhil Agarwal,Aaron Lee,Scott Kubomoto,Gobind Sharma,Sally Bolus,Lin Chang,Brennan Spiegel +22 more
TL;DR: The data indicate that physicians may under report alarm features and that computerized "checklists" could complement standard HPIs to bolster clinical care.