T
Thomas McGinn
Researcher at Hofstra University
Publications - 128
Citations - 12974
Thomas McGinn is an academic researcher from Hofstra University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health care. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 123 publications receiving 10091 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas McGinn include Mount Sinai Hospital & Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Let Sleeping Patients Lie, avoiding unnecessary overnight vitals monitoring using a clinically based deep-learning model.
Viktor Tóth,Marsha Meytlis,Douglas P. Barnaby,Douglas P. Barnaby,Kevin Bock,Michael I. Oppenheim,Yousef Al-Abed,Yousef Al-Abed,Thomas McGinn,Thomas McGinn,Karina W. Davidson,Karina W. Davidson,Lance B Becker,Lance B Becker,Jamie S. Hirsch,Jamie S. Hirsch,Theodoros P. Zanos,Theodoros P. Zanos +17 more
TL;DR: This work presents a model that incorporates past values of a small set of vital signs and predicts overnight stability for any given patient-night, and enables safe avoidance of overnight monitoring for ~50% of patient-nights, while only misclassifying 2 out of 10,000 patient-Nights as stable.
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Internists Training Medical Residents in Pelvic Examination: Impact of an Educational Program
TL;DR: This program, in which internists trained medical residents in pelvic examination, utilized real patients, improved participants self-assessed competency, and may increase the likelihood of residents performing pelvic examination in primary care.
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Developing a Clinical Prediction Rule for First Hospital-Onset Clostridium difficile Infections: A Retrospective Observational Study.
TL;DR: This study successfully derived a clinical prediction rule that will help identify patients at high risk for primary CDI and will allow for early interventional strategies.
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Longitudinal adoption rates of complex decision support tools in primary care
TL;DR: Over time and prolonged exposure to CDS tools, providers are less likely to utilise the tool, and it is not clear if it is fatigue with the CDS tool, acquired knowledge of the clinical prediction rule, or gained clinical experience and gestalt that are influencing adoption rates.
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The effects of hypertension and body mass index on diffusion tensor imaging in schizophrenia
Cheuk Y. Tang,Joseph I. Friedman,Joseph I. Friedman,David Carpenter,Vladan Novakovic,Emily Eaves,Johnny Ng,Yingwei Wu,Stephanie Gottlieb,Sylvan Wallenstein,Erin Moshier,Michael Parrella,Leonard White,Stephanie Bowler,Thomas McGinn,Lauren Flanagan,Kenneth L. Davis +16 more
TL;DR: Hypertension-induced compensatory mechanisms in the brains of non-schizophrenic patients with hypertension which may be impaired in persons with schizophrenia are suggested.