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Jay Magaziner

Researcher at University of Maryland, Baltimore

Publications -  273
Citations -  19552

Jay Magaziner is an academic researcher from University of Maryland, Baltimore. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hip fracture & Population. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 251 publications receiving 17885 citations. Previous affiliations of Jay Magaziner include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & University of Maryland, College Park.

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Liberal or Restrictive Transfusion in High-Risk Patients after Hip Surgery

TL;DR: A liberal transfusion strategy, as compared with a restrictive strategy, did not reduce rates of death or inability to walk independently on 60-day follow-up or reduce in-hospital morbidity in elderly patients at high cardiovascular risk.
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Meta-analysis: Excess Mortality After Hip Fracture Among Older Women and Men

TL;DR: Older adults have a 5- to 8-fold increased risk for all-cause mortality during the first 3 months after hip fracture, and excess annual mortality after hip fractures is higher in men than in women.
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Predictors of functional recovery one year following hospital discharge for hip fracture: a prospective study.

TL;DR: It is found that those who are older, have longer hospital stays, and are rehospitalized, exhibit poorer recovery, as do those displaying chronic or acute cognitive deficits and depressive symptomatology while hospitalized.
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Relationship Between Pain and Opioid Analgesics on the Development of Delirium Following Hip Fracture

TL;DR: Using admission data, clinicians can identify patients at high risk for delirium following hip fracture and undertreated pain and inadequate analgesia appear to be risk factors forDelirium in frail older adults.
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Association of timing of surgery for hip fracture and patient outcomes.

TL;DR: Early surgery was not associated with improved function or mortality, but it was associated with reduced pain and LOS and probably major complications among patients medically stable at admission, and patients with hip fracture who are medically stable should receive early surgery when possible.