Institution
Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt
Healthcare•
About: Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 1046 authors who have published 1262 publications receiving 28063 citations. The organization is also known as: Vanderbilt Children's Hospital.
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TL;DR: Intravenous zanamivir was administered on a compassionate-use basis to a profoundly immunosuppressed pediatric patient with severe oseltamiviral-resistant novel H1N1 pneumonia, and the regimen was well tolerated and was associated with a decrease in viral burden.
Abstract: Immunosuppressed patients receiving oseltamivir for 2009 novel H1N1 influenza A infection may develop drug resistance, leading to treatment failure. Intravenous zanamivir was administered on a compassionate-use basis to a profoundly immunosuppressed pediatric patient with severe oseltamivir-resistant novel H1N1 pneumonia. The regimen was well tolerated and was associated with a decrease in viral burden.
69 citations
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TL;DR: In this institution, a CPG that standardized practice patterns was associated with reduced resource use and improved patient outcomes and most surgeons had very high compliance with the CPG.
Abstract: Importance Complicated appendicitis is a common condition in children that causes substantial morbidity. Significant variation in practice exists within and between centers. We observed highly variable practices within our hospital and hypothesized that a clinical practice guideline (CPG) would standardize care and be associated with improved patient outcomes. Objective To determine whether a CPG for complicated appendicitis could be associated with improved clinical outcomes. Design, Setting, and Participants A comprehensive CPG was developed for all children with complicated appendicitis at Monroe Carell Jr Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt, a freestanding children’s hospital in Nashville, Tennessee, and was implemented in July 2013. All patients with complicated appendicitis who were treated with early appendectomy during the study period were included in the study. Patients were divided into 2 cohorts, based on whether they were treated before or after CPG implementation. Clinical characteristics and outcomes were recorded for 30 months prior to and 16 months following CPG implementation. Exposure Clinical practice guideline developed for all children with complicated appendicitis at Monroe Carell Jr Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt. Main Outcomes and Measures The primary outcome measure was the occurrence of any adverse event such as readmission or surgical site infection. In addition, resource use, practice variation, and CPG adherence were assessed. Results Of the 313 patients included in the study, 183 were boys (58.5%) and 234 were white (74.8%). Complete CPG adherence occurred in 78.7% of cases (n = 96). The pre-CPG group included 191 patients with a mean (SD) age of 8.8 (4.0) years, and the post-CPG group included 122 patients with a mean (SD) age of 8.7 (4.1) years. Compared with the pre-CPG group, patients in the post-CPG group were less likely to receive a peripherally inserted central catheter (2.5%, n = 3 vs 30.4%, n = 58; P P = .001), and length of hospital stay was significantly reduced (4.6 days post-CPG vs 5.1 days pre-CPG, P Conclusions and Relevance Significant practice variation exists among surgeons in the management of pediatric complicated appendicitis. In our institution, a CPG that standardized practice patterns was associated with reduced resource use and improved patient outcomes. Most surgeons had very high compliance with the CPG.
69 citations
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TL;DR: The study supported the hypothesis that external demands negatively impacted medication safety and employee well-being outcomes, but increasing levels of internal demands were not associated with greater perceived likelihood of error, adverse drug events, or burnout and even had a positive effect on job satisfaction.
Abstract: Background Pharmacy workload is a modifiable work system factor believed to affect both medication safety outcomes and employee outcomes, such as job satisfaction. Objectives This study sought to measure the effect of workload on safety and employee outcomes in 2 pediatric hospitals and to do so using a novel approach to pharmacy workload measurement. Methods Rather than measuring prescription volume or other similar indicators, this study measured the type and intensity of mental demands experienced during the medication dispensing tasks. The effects of external (interruptions, divided attention, and rushing) and internal (concentration and effort) task demands on perceived medication error likelihood, adverse drug event likelihood, job dissatisfaction, and burnout were statistically estimated using multiple linear and logistic regression. Results Pharmacists and pharmacy technicians reported high levels of external and internal mental demands during dispensing. The study supported the hypothesis that external demands (interruptions, divided attention, and rushing) negatively impacted medication safety and employee well-being outcomes. However, as hypothesized, increasing levels of internal demands (concentration and effort) were not associated with greater perceived likelihood of error, adverse drug events, or burnout and even had a positive effect on job satisfaction. Conclusions Replicating a prior study in nursing, this study shows that new conceptualizations and measures of workload can generate important new findings about both detrimental and beneficial effects of workload on patient safety and employee well-being. This study discusses what those findings imply for policy, management, and design concerning automation, cognition, and staffing.
69 citations
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TL;DR: A household approach to decolonization is more effective than measures performed by individuals alone for the prevention of recurrent SSTI.
69 citations
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TL;DR: A review of the role that viruses play in asthma exacerbation and inception with particular focus on clinical and epidemiologic investigations of influenza, rhinovirus, bocavirus, respiratory syncytial virus, and metapneumovirus.
68 citations
Authors
Showing all 1056 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Dan M. Roden | 132 | 859 | 67578 |
Kathryn M. Edwards | 102 | 628 | 39467 |
Agnes B. Fogo | 98 | 578 | 38840 |
James E. Crowe | 83 | 430 | 22045 |
Luc Van Kaer | 79 | 261 | 26242 |
John A. Phillips | 69 | 270 | 16980 |
Louis J. Muglia | 68 | 254 | 15777 |
Douglas B. Johnson | 65 | 331 | 18439 |
Keith T. Wilson | 63 | 238 | 13002 |
Michael R. DeBaun | 62 | 369 | 14812 |
Simon W. Hayward | 61 | 191 | 13131 |
Wendy L. Stone | 61 | 150 | 17231 |
Arnold W. Strauss | 60 | 209 | 10792 |
Dominique Delbeke | 59 | 170 | 14652 |
Thomas B. Newman | 58 | 239 | 11638 |