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Julie A. Freischlag

Researcher at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center

Publications -  324
Citations -  16854

Julie A. Freischlag is an academic researcher from Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: First rib resection & Thoracic outlet syndrome. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 303 publications receiving 14539 citations. Previous affiliations of Julie A. Freischlag include University of Michigan & Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital.

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Burnout and medical errors among American surgeons.

TL;DR: Major medical errors reported by surgeons are strongly related to a surgeon's degree of burnout and their mental QOL, and Burnout and depression remained independent predictors of reporting a recent major medical error on multivariate analysis that controlled for other personal and professional factors.
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Outcomes Following Endovascular vs Open Repair of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: A Randomized Trial

TL;DR: Perioperative mortality was low for both procedures and lower for endovascular than open repair in this report of short-term outcomes after elective AAA repair, and the early advantage of endov vascular repair was not offset by increased morbidity or mortality in the first 2 years after repair.
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Burnout and career satisfaction among American surgeons.

TL;DR: Burnout is common among American surgeons and is the single greatest predictor of surgeons’ satisfaction with career and specialty choice, according to a survey of members of the American College of Surgeons.
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Immediate repair compared with surveillance of small abdominal aortic aneurysms.

TL;DR: The rate of death from any cause, the primary outcome, was not significantly different in the two groups (relative risk in the immediate-repair group as compared with the surveillance group), and the rate of repair had been performed in 92.6 percent of the patients in the immediately- Repair group and 61.6% of those in the Surveillance group.
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Operating Room Teamwork among Physicians and Nurses: Teamwork in the Eye of the Beholder

TL;DR: Considerable discrepancies in perceptions of teamwork exist in the operating room, with physicians rating the teamwork of others as good, but at the same time, nurses perceive teamwork as mediocre.