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Institution

Hofstra University

EducationHempstead, New York, United States
About: Hofstra University is a education organization based out in Hempstead, New York, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 6341 authors who have published 11896 publications receiving 268028 citations.


Papers
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Journal Article
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted a review of the evidence-based literature supporting temperature management during adult cardiopulmonary bypass, and adopted the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association method for development clinical practice guidelines, and arrived at the following recommendation.
Abstract: To improve our understanding of the evidence-based literature supporting temperature management during adult cardiopulmonary bypass, The Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiology and the American Society of ExtraCorporeal Technology tasked the authors to conduct a review of the peer-reviewed literature, including 1) optimal site for temperature monitoring, 2) avoidance of hyperthermia, 3) peak cooling temperature gradient and cooling rate, and 4) peak warming temperature gradient and rewarming rate. Authors adopted the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association method for development clinical practice guidelines, and arrived at the following recommendation.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Challenges associated with such arbitrary cut-offs and opportunities for further refinement of understanding growth and nutritional needs of preterm neonates are highlighted.
Abstract: Preterm infants are increasingly diagnosed as having "extrauterine growth restriction" (EUGR) or "postnatal growth failure" (PGF). Usually EUGR/PGF is diagnosed when weight is <10th percentile at either discharge or 36-40 weeks postmenstrual age. The reasons why the phrases EUGR/PGF are unhelpful include, they: (i) are not predictive of adverse outcome; (ii) are based only on weight without any consideration of head or length growth, proportionality, body composition, or genetic potential; (iii) ignore normal postnatal weight loss; (iv) are usually assessed prior to growth slowing of the reference fetus, around 36-40 weeks, and (v) are usually based on an arbitrary statistical growth percentile cut-off. Focus on EUGR/PGF prevalence may benefit with better attention to nutrition but may also harm with nutrition delivery above infants' actual needs. In this paper, we highlight challenges associated with such arbitrary cut-offs and opportunities for further refinement of understanding growth and nutritional needs of preterm neonates.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is hypothesized that women exposed to peripartum synthetic oxytocin would have a reduced risk of postpartum depressive and anxiety disorders compared with those without any exposure.
Abstract: Background Due to its potent effects on social behavior, including maternal behavior, oxytocin has been identified as a potential mediator of postpartum depression and anxiety. The objective of this study was to examine the relationship between peripartum synthetic oxytocin administration and the development of depressive and anxiety disorders within the first year postpartum. We hypothesized that women exposed to peripartum synthetic oxytocin would have a reduced risk of postpartum depressive and anxiety disorders compared with those without any exposure. Methods Population-based data available through the Massachusetts Integrated Clinical Academic Research Database (MiCARD) were used to retrospectively (2005–2014) examine this relationship and calculate the relative risk of peripartum synthetic oxytocin for the development of postpartum depressive and anxiety disorders in exposed (n = 9,684) compared to unexposed (n = 37,048) deliveries. Results Among deliveries to women with a history of prepregnancy depressive or anxiety disorder, exposure to peripartum oxytocin increased the risk of postpartum depressive or anxiety disorder by 36% (relative risk (RR): 1.36; 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 1.20–1.55). In deliveries to women with no history of prepregnancy depressive or anxiety disorder, exposure to peripartum oxytocin increased the risk of postpartum depressive or anxiety disorder by 32% compared to those not exposed (RR: 1.32; 95% CI: 1.23-1.42). Conclusions Contrary to our hypothesis, results indicate that women with peripartum exposure to synthetic oxytocin had a higher relative risk of receiving a documented depressive or anxiety disorder diagnosis or antidepressant/anxiolytic prescription within the first year postpartum than women without synthetic oxytocin exposure.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Sudden cardiac death occurs at a 0.8% rate in a psychiatric hospital, well above general population rates, and early recognition and treatment of coronary artery disease must become a clinical priority for all adults with schizophrenia.

68 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Engaged Living in Youth Scale (ELYS) as mentioned in this paper was developed to measure the engagement of early and late adolescents in social integration and absorption, and it was found that youth high in engaged living tend to be more grateful, hopeful, happier, prosocial and report elevated life satisfaction, positive affect, and self-esteem and higher grade point averages.
Abstract: Across five studies and three samples of early and late adolescents from suburban areas (N = 2198), this research provides a theoretical and empirical examination of a new construct, engaged living, which consists of social integration and absorption. Engaged living, as we define it, is having a passion to help others and be completely immersed in activities. The development and psychometric properties of The Engaged Living in Youth Scale (ELYS) are described. Cross-sectional and longitudinal data, including self and other reports, then show that the ELYS is related to a variety of attributes, well-being, and academic achievement outcomes. Overall, the pattern of associations indicates that youth high in engaged living tend to be more grateful, hopeful, happier (via self, peer, and teacher reports), prosocial, and report elevated life satisfaction, positive affect, and self-esteem and higher grade point averages. Higher scorers also tend to be less depressed, envious, antisocial, and delinquent.

68 citations


Authors

Showing all 6443 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Kevin J. Tracey13856182791
David B. Allison12983669697
John M. Kane12575260886
Peter K. Gregersen12445160278
Daniel E. Singer12344564998
Kenneth L. Davis11362261120
Michael L. Blute11252745296
David B. Tanner11061172025
Bertram Pitt10775478458
John D. Reveille10251938105
Christoph U. Correll10075537523
Robert G. Maki10041639234
Louis R. Kavoussi9554431830
Howard Leventhal8926829144
Allan H. Young8970047369
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202336
2022131
20211,293
20201,215
2019927
2018838