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Ivy N. Haskins
Researcher at George Washington University
Publications - 91
Citations - 1503
Ivy N. Haskins is an academic researcher from George Washington University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hernia & Perioperative. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 84 publications receiving 1079 citations. Previous affiliations of Ivy N. Haskins include George Washington University Hospital & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
A call for standardization of wound events reporting following ventral hernia repair.
Ivy N. Haskins,Charlotte M. Horne,David M. Krpata,Ajita S. Prabhu,Luciano Tastaldi,Arielle J. Perez,Steven Rosenblatt,Benjamin K. Poulose,Michael J. Rosen +8 more
TL;DR: Standardization of the definition of postoperative wound events to include SSI, SSO, and SSOPI following VHR will improve the ability of hernia surgeons to make evidence-based decisions regarding the management of ventral hernias.
Journal ArticleDOI
Per oral endoscopic pyloromyotomy for refractory gastroparesis: initial results from a single institution.
John Rodriguez,Ivy N. Haskins,Andrew T. Strong,Ryan L. Plescia,Matthew T. Allemang,Robert S. Butler,Michael Cline,Kevin El-Hayek,Jeffrey L. Ponsky,Jeffrey L. Ponsky,Matthew Kroh,Matthew Kroh +11 more
TL;DR: POP is a safe and feasible endoscopic intervention for medical refractory gastroparesis and additional follow-up is required to determine the long-term success of this approach in alleviating gastropareis symptoms.
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Robotic Inguinal vs Transabdominal Laparoscopic Inguinal Hernia Repair: The RIVAL Randomized Clinical Trial.
Ajita S. Prabhu,Alfredo M. Carbonell,William W. Hope,Jeremy A. Warren,Rana M. Higgins,Brian P. Jacob,Jeffrey A. Blatnik,Ivy N. Haskins,Ivy N. Haskins,Hemasat Alkhatib,Luciano Tastaldi,Luciano Tastaldi,Aldo Fafaj,Chao Tu,Michael J. Rosen +14 more
TL;DR: Results of this study showed no clinical benefit to the robotic approach to straightforward inguinal hernia repair compared with the laparoscopic approach, with added surgeon frustration and no ergonomic benefit to surgeons.
Journal ArticleDOI
The effect of smoking on bariatric surgical outcomes
TL;DR: It is suggested that smoking is a modifiable preoperative risk factor that significantly increases the incidence of postoperative morbidity but not mortality in both laparoscopic and open bariatric surgery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Preoperative hypoalbuminemia is associated with worse outcomes in colon cancer patients.
TL;DR: Preoperative hypoalbuminemia is associated with an increased risk of early patient morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing surgery for colon cancer and warrants further investigation.