P
Paul J. Jenkins
Researcher at Glasgow Royal Infirmary
Publications - 67
Citations - 2735
Paul J. Jenkins is an academic researcher from Glasgow Royal Infirmary. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carpal tunnel syndrome & Patient satisfaction. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 67 publications receiving 2149 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul J. Jenkins include Queen Margaret Hospital & University of Glasgow.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
IMPACT-Restart: the influence of COVID-19 on postoperative mortality and risk factors associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection after orthopaedic and trauma surgery.
Nicholas D. Clement,Andrew J Hall,Navnit Makaram,Patrick G. Robinson,Robyn F L Patton,Matthew D. Moran,Gavin J. Macpherson,Andrew D. Duckworth,Paul J. Jenkins +8 more
TL;DR: Perioperative CO VID-19 nearly doubled the background postoperative mortality risk following surgery and patients at risk of developing COVID-19 postoperatively (patients aged > 77 years, increasing morbidity, sustaining a hip or periprosthetic fracture) may benefit from perioperative shielding.
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Effect of a redesigned fracture management pathway and ‘virtual’ fracture clinic on ED performance
Janette L. Vardy,Paul J. Jenkins,K Clark,M Chekroud,K Begbie,Iain Anthony,L A Rymaszewski,A J Ireland +7 more
TL;DR: The pathway reduced unnecessary reattendance of patients at face-to-face fracture clinics for a review of stable, self-limiting injuries and brought significant benefits to the ED as treatment pathways were agreed.
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Socioeconomic deprivation and the epidemiology of carpal tunnel syndrome
TL;DR: An association between socioeconomic deprivation and carpal tunnel syndrome is reported, with the disease being more likely to be bilateral and have a poorer DASH score in the most deprived patients.
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Epidemiology of glenohumeral dislocation and subsequent instability in an urban population.
TL;DR: A previously unreported burden of dislocation in older age groups is demonstrated and a rate of recurrence lower than previously reported in the United Kingdom is suggested.
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Fracture clinic redesign reduces the cost of outpatient orthopaedic trauma care
TL;DR: The virtual fracture clinic system was associated with less overall use of staff resources in comparison to national cost data and adoption of this system nationally may have the potential to achieve significant cost savings.