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Timothy G. Short

Researcher at Auckland City Hospital

Publications -  109
Citations -  5183

Timothy G. Short is an academic researcher from Auckland City Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perioperative & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 98 publications receiving 4101 citations. Previous affiliations of Timothy G. Short include University of Auckland & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.

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Global patient outcomes after elective surgery: Prospective cohort study in 27 low-, middle- and high-income countries

T. Ahmad, +2519 more
TL;DR: Despite lower baseline risk, outcomes were similar in low- and middle-income compared with high-income countries and should also address the need for safe perioperative care.
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Response surface model for anesthetic drug interactions.

TL;DR: Application of response-surface methodology permits characterization of the full concentration–response relation between combinations of anesthetic drugs and therefore can be used to develop practical guidelines for optimal drug dosing.
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Assessment of functional capacity before major non-cardiac surgery: an international, prospective cohort study

Duminda N. Wijeysundera, +180 more
- 30 Jun 2018 - 
TL;DR: Subjective assessment of functional capacity should not be used for preoperative risk evaluation, and Clinicians should instead consider a measure such as DASI for cardiac risk assessment.
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Drug error in anaesthetic practice: a review of 896 reports from the Australian Incident Monitoring Study database

TL;DR: The information gained suggests areas where improved guidelines are required to reduce the incidence of drug error, and contributing factors included inattention, haste, drug labelling error, communication failure and fatigue.
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Propofol and midazolam act synergistically in combination

TL;DR: Dose-response curves for propofol and midazolam alone and in combination for hypnosis and anaesthesia were determined and synergistic interaction was found, but the cause of the synergism was not clear, but may have been interaction at CNS GABAA receptors.