19 results on '"Tahir, Rizwan A"'
Search Results
2. Quantification of pial collateral pressure in acute large vessel occlusion stroke: basic concept with patient outcomes.
- Author
-
Tahir, Rizwan A., Affan, Muhammad, Marin, Horia, Haider, Sameah A., Alsrouji, Owais Khadem, Ahmad, Ayesha, Chebl, Alex Bou, Katramados, Angelos, Van Harn, Meredith, and Kole, Max
- Subjects
- *
ARTERIAL occlusions , *EVALUATION of medical care , *STROKE , *PRESSURE , *ACUTE diseases - Abstract
Purpose: Pial collateral perfusion to the ischemic penumbra plays a critical role in determining patient outcomes in acute stroke. We aimed to assess the validity and reliability of an intra-procedural technique for measuring and quantifying the pial collateral pressure (QPCP) to ischemic brain tissue during acute stroke secondary to LVO. QPCP measurements were correlated with standard computed tomography angiography (CTA) and digital subtraction angiography imaging assessments of pial collateral perfusion and outcomes after mechanical endovascular revascularization (MER). Methods: This prospective cohort study included 60 consecutive patients with middle cerebral artery (MCA)–M1 and proximal M2 occlusions. QPCP measurements were obtained during MER. The validity of QPCP measurements was evaluated using four widely accepted collateral grading scales. QPCP measurements were also analyzed as a predictor of patient outcomes utilizing National Institute of Health Stroke Scale reduction at 24 h and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) scores at 30 days. Results: QPCP measurements and QPCP ratio (QPCP/systemic mean arterial blood pressure) showed a statistically significant association with single-phase pretreatment CTA Maas and American Society of Interventional and Therapeutic Neuroradiology/Society of Interventional Radiology binary grading scales. Patient outcomes demonstrated for every 10-unit increase in QPCP, the odds of mRS 0-2 at 30 days increased by 76% (p = 0.019). Conclusion: QPCP measurements related best with the pretreatment CTA Maas collateral grading scale but were more strongly associated with patient outcomes than any of the four widely accepted collateral grading scales. Greater QPCP was significantly associated with better overall patient outcomes as defined by mRS at 30 days. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Corrigendum to “Intracranial Hemorrhage in Patients with a Left Ventricular Assist Device” [World Neurosurgery 113 (2018) e714–e721].
- Author
-
Tahir, Rizwan A., Rotman, Lauren E., Davis, Matthew C., Dupépé, Esther B., Kole, Maximillian K., Rahman, Mehnaz, Williams, Celeste T., Pamboukian, Salpy V., Bazydlo, Michael, and Walters, Beverly C.
- Subjects
- *
INTRACRANIAL aneurysms , *HEMORRHAGE , *HEART assist devices - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Intracranial Hemorrhage in Patients with a Left Ventricular Assist Device.
- Author
-
Tahir, Rizwan A., Rotman, Lauren E., Davis, Matthew C., Dupépé, Esther B., Kole, Maximillian K., Rehman, Mahnaz, Williams, Celeste T., Pamboukian, Salpy V., Bazydlo, Michael, and Walters, Beverly C.
- Subjects
- *
CEREBRAL hemorrhage , *HEART assist devices , *HEART failure , *MORTALITY , *PROGNOSIS , *PATIENTS - Abstract
Background There is a dearth of literature regarding management and outcomes of patients with a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) for advanced heart failure who develop intracranial hemorrhage (ICH). We conducted a case series from 2 centers highlighting patient outcomes and prognostic factors to help clinicians better understand and care for these high-risk patients. Methods A case series from 2 large-volume institutions (defined as large by the Nationwide Inpatient Sample hospital size, i.e., >500 beds both with Departments of Neurosurgery and Advanced Heart Failure–Cardiology) was conducted to clarify the prognosis of patients with an LVAD and ICH. We included patients who were being treated with an LVAD who developed ICH. Patient-specific demographics and data regarding heart failure and intracranial hemorrhage characteristics were collected and analyzed to determine which factors contributed to overall survival. Results We analyzed 59 unique ICHs in patients being treated with an LVAD for heart failure. Initial Glasgow Coma Scale score, presence of midline shift, and ICH size were factors found to be predictive of mortality. One institution had a sicker patient population including patients with ICH with lower Glasgow Coma Scale score, presence of midline shift, and greater hemorrhage size, which led to overall higher mortality compared with the second institution. Conclusions Patients being treated with an LVAD who develop ICH have poor outcomes. Predictive factors for same-admission mortality are lower initial Glasgow Coma Scale score, presence of midline shift, and greater ICH volume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Nano-Silica Bubbled Structure Based Durable and Flexible Superhydrophobic Electrospun Nanofibrous Membrane for Extensive Functional Applications.
- Author
-
Batool, Misbah, B. Albargi, Hasan, Ahmad, Adnan, Sarwar, Zahid, Khaliq, Zubair, Qadir, Muhammad Bilal, Arshad, Salman Noshear, Tahir, Rizwan, Ali, Sultan, Jalalah, Mohammed, Irfan, Muhammad, and Harraz, Farid A.
- Subjects
- *
CONTACT angle , *COMPOSITE structures , *STRAINS & stresses (Mechanics) , *SURFACE roughness , *HYDROSTATIC pressure , *SILICA fibers - Abstract
Nanoscale surface roughness has conventionally been induced by using complicated approaches; however, the homogeneity of superhydrophobic surface and hazardous pollutants continue to have existing challenges that require a solution. As a prospective solution, a novel bubbled-structured silica nanoparticle (SiO2) decorated electrospun polyurethane (PU) nanofibrous membrane (SiO2@PU-NFs) was prepared through a synchronized electrospinning and electrospraying process. The SiO2@PU-NFs nanofibrous membrane exhibited a nanoscale hierarchical surface roughness, attributed to excellent superhydrophobicity. The SiO2@PU-NFs membrane had an optimized fiber diameter of 394 ± 105 nm and was fabricated with a 25 kV applied voltage, 18% PU concentration, 20 cm spinning distance, and 6% SiO2 nanoparticles. The resulting membrane exhibited a water contact angle of 155.23°. Moreover, the developed membrane attributed excellent mechanical properties (14.22 MPa tensile modulus, 134.5% elongation, and 57.12 kPa hydrostatic pressure). The composite nanofibrous membrane also offered good breathability characteristics (with an air permeability of 70.63 mm/s and a water vapor permeability of 4167 g/m2/day). In addition, the proposed composite nanofibrous membrane showed a significant water/oil separation efficiency of 99.98, 99.97, and 99.98% against the water/xylene, water/n-hexane, and water/toluene mixers. When exposed to severe mechanical stresses and chemicals, the composite nanofibrous membrane sustained its superhydrophobic quality (WCA greater than 155.23°) up to 50 abrasion, bending, and stretching cycles. Consequently, this composite structure could be a good alternative for various functional applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. ARRESTED BY NITRO: ASYSTOLE WITH CARDIAC ARREST INDUCED BY SUBLINGUAL NITROGLYCERIN.
- Author
-
SIRAJ, ABUZAR, SHAH, NEIL, RAYAROTH, SWETHA, and TAHIR, RIZWAN
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nonwoven/Nanomembrane Composite Functional Sweat Pads.
- Author
-
Qadir, Muhammad Bilal, Jalalah, Mohammed, Shoukat, Muhammad Usman, Ahmad, Adnan, Khaliq, Zubair, Nazir, Ahsan, Anjum, Muhammad Naveed, Rahman, Abdul, Khan, Muhammad Qamar, Tahir, Rizwan, Faisal, M., Alsaiari, Mabkhoot, Irfan, Muhammad, Alsareii, Saeed A., and Harraz, Farid A.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Long-term seizure and psychosocial outcomes after resective surgery for intractable epilepsy.
- Author
-
Wasade, Vibhangini S., Elisevich, Kost, Tahir, Rizwan, Smith, Brien, Schultz, Lonni, Schwalb, Jason, and Spanaki-Varelas, Marianna
- Subjects
- *
EPILEPSY surgery , *SURGICAL excision , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *ELECTRONIC health records - Abstract
Resective surgery is considered an effective treatment for refractory localization-related epilepsy. Most studies have reported seizure and psychosocial outcomes of 2–5 years postsurgery and a few up to 10 years. Our study aimed to assess long-term (up to 15 years) postsurgical seizure and psychosocial outcomes at our epilepsy center. The Henry Ford Health System Corporate Data Store was accessed to identify patients who had undergone surgical resection for localization-related epilepsy from 1993 to 2011. Demographics including age at epilepsy onset and surgery, seizure frequency before surgery, and pathology were gathered from electronic medical records. Phone surveys were conducted from May 2012 to January 2013 to determine patients' current seizure frequency and psychosocial metrics including driving and employment status and use of antidepressants. Surgical outcomes were based on Engel's classification (classes I and II = favorable outcomes). McNemar's tests, chi-square tests, two sample t-tests, and Wilcoxon two sample tests were used to analyze the relationships of psychosocial and surgical outcomes with demographic and surgical characteristics. A total of 470 patients had resective epilepsy surgery, and of those, 50 (11%) had died since surgery. Of the remaining, 253 (60%) were contacted with mean follow-up of 10.6 ± 5.0 years (27% of patients had follow-up of 15 years or longer). Of the patients surveyed, 32% were seizure-free and 75% had a favorable outcome (classes I and II). Favorable outcomes had significant associations with temporal resection (78% temporal vs 58% extratemporal, p = 0.01) and when surgery was performed after scalp EEG only (85% vs 65%, p < 0.001). Most importantly, favorable and seizure-free outcome rates remained stable after surgery over long-term follow-up [i.e., < 5 years (77%, 41%), 5–10 years (67%, 29%), 10–15 years (78%, 38%), and > 15 years (78%, 26%)]. Compared to before surgery, patients at the time of the survey were more likely to be driving (51% vs 35%, p < 0.001) and using antidepressants (30% vs 22%, p = 0.013) but less likely to be working full-time (23% vs 42%, p < 0.001). A large majority of patients (92%) considered epilepsy surgery worthwhile regardless of the resection site, and this was associated with favorable outcomes (favorable = 98% vs unfavorable = 74%, p < 0.001). The findings suggest that resective epilepsy surgery yields favorable long-term postoperative seizure and psychosocial outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Predictors of aneurysm occlusion following treatment with the WEB device: systematic review and case series.
- Author
-
Al Saiegh, Fadi, Velagapudi, Lohit, Khanna, Omaditya, Sweid, Ahmad, Mouchtouris, Nikolaos, Baldassari, Michael P., Theofanis, Thana, Tahir, Rizwan, Schunemann, Victoria, Andrews, Carrie, Philipp, Lucas, Chalouhi, Nohra, Tjoumakaris, Stavropoula I., Hasan, David, Gooch, M. Reid, Herial, Nabeel A., Rosenwasser, Robert H., and Jabbour, Pascal
- Subjects
- *
ANEURYSMS , *PATIENT decision making , *TOBACCO use , *INTRACRANIAL aneurysms - Abstract
The Woven EndoBridge (WEB) device is becoming increasingly popular for treatment of wide-neck aneurysms. As experience with this device grows, it is important to identify factors associated with occlusion following WEB treatment to guide decision making and screen patients at high risk for recurrence. The aim of this study was to identify factors associated with adequate aneurysm occlusion following WEB device treatment in the neurosurgical literature and in our case series. A systematic review of the present literature was conducted to identify studies related to the prediction of WEB device occlusion. In addition, a retrospective review of our institutional data for patients treated with the WEB device was performed. Demographics, aneurysm characteristics, procedural variables, and 6-month follow-up angiographic outcomes were recorded. Seven articles totaling 450 patients with 456 aneurysms fit our criteria. Factors in the literature associated with inadequate occlusion included larger size, increased neck width, partial intrasaccular thrombosis, irregular shape, and tobacco use. Our retrospective review identified 43 patients with 45 aneurysms. A total of 91.1% of our patients achieved adequate occlusion at a mean follow-up time of 7.32 months. Increasing degree of contrast stasis after WEB placement on the post-deployment angiogram was significantly associated with adequate occlusion on follow-up angiogram (p = 0.005) and with Raymond-Roy classification (p = 0.048), but not with retreatment (p = 0.617). In our systematic review and case series totaling 450 patients with 456 aneurysms, contrast stasis on post-deployment angiogram was identified as a predictor of adequate aneurysm occlusion, while morphological characteristics such as larger size and wide neck negatively impact occlusion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Exploring Emotional-Eating Patterns in Different Cultures: Toward a Conceptual Framework Model.
- Author
-
Luomala, HarriT., Sirieix, Lucie, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Subjects
- *
FOOD habits , *FOOD consumption , *EMOTIONS , *CULTURE , *CONSUMER preferences , *CONSUMER attitudes , *CONSUMER behavior , *CONSUMPTION (Economics) - Abstract
There exists a lack of understanding in food-consumption research concerning how people in different cultures regulate their emotional experiences through different forms of eating patterns. This paper integrates conceptual preunderstanding with the insights from empirical exploration to offer a tentative framework model that can be used in analyzing emotional eating in different cultures. The emotions of happiness, gratitude, irritation, and shame and their self-regulation through different emotional eating activities were compared across Finnish, French, and Pakistani cultures. There were strong differences among the three samples: Finnish students react to positive emotions with solitary eating patterns, and to negative emotions by social and luxurious eating patterns. On the contrary, French students associate social and luxurious eating patterns with positive emotions, and in the case of negative emotions, reject both social and luxurious eating activities. Pakistani students associate a social and everyday eating activity to both positive and negative emotions. Despite the cultural differences discovered, understanding these differences in terms of differences in cultural values is challenging. These challenges are discussed when a framework for analyzing emotional eating in different cultures is developed in the concluding section of the article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Toothed wheel needleless electrospinning: a versatile way to fabricate uniform and finer nanomembrane.
- Author
-
Ahmad, Adnan, Ali, Usman, Nazir, Ahsan, Shahzad, Amir, Khaliq, Zubair, Qadir, Muhammad Bilal, Khan, Muhammad Amir, Ali, Sultan, Aamir Hassan, M., Abid, Sharjeel, Tahir, Rizwan, and Mushtaq, Bushra
- Subjects
- *
ELECTROSPINNING , *FINITE element method , *ELECTRIC fields , *TENSILE strength , *NANOFIBERS - Abstract
Needleless electrospinning is an effective approach to fabricate the nanofibers at high throughput. However, the uniform distribution of nanofibers with finer diameter still needs improvement. In this study, optimization of needleless electrospun polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofibers was carried out using an effectively designed toothed wheel spinneret, which improved the nanofiber uniform distribution with finer diameter. Finite element method showed that the electric field norms were highly concentrated at toothed wheel edges. Optimized beadles PAN nanofibers with narrow diameter distribution were obtained at 6 w/v% polymer concentration, 50 kV applied voltage, and 23 cm collecting distance. Highest tensile strength of 100 cN at 7 w/v% concentration showed that the resultant membrane had good mechanical properties. The air permeability of 15 mm/s was obtained at 6 w/v% indicating good insulating behavior of the PAN nanofiber membrane. This study proved that the toothed wheel spinneret has the potential to improve the electrospinning process for the development of uniform nanofibrous membrane at a high production rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Predicting symptomatic cerebral vasospasm after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage with an artificial neural network in a pediatric population.
- Author
-
Skoch, Jesse, Abruzzo, Todd, Vadivelu, Sudhakar, Tahir, Rizwan, Taylor, John, and Zuccarello, Mario
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *CEREBRAL vasospasm , *SUBARACHNOID hemorrhage , *STROKE , *ANEURYSMS - Abstract
Purpose: Artificial neural networks (ANN) are increasingly applied to complex medical problem solving algorithms because their outcome prediction performance is superior to existing multiple regression models. ANN can successfully identify symptomatic cerebral vasospasm (SCV) in adults presenting after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH). Although SCV is unusual in children with aSAH, the clinical consequences are severe. Consequently, reliable tools to predict patients at greatest risk for SCV may have significant value. We applied ANN modeling to a consecutive cohort of pediatric aSAH cases to assess its ability to predict SCV. Methods: A retrospective chart review was conducted to identify patients < 21 years of age who presented with spontaneously ruptured, non-traumatic, non-mycotic, non-flow-related intracranial arterial aneurysms to our institution between January 2002 and January 2015. Demographics, clinical, radiographic, and outcome data were analyzed using an adapted ANN model using learned value nodes from the adult aneurysmal SAH dataset previously reported. The strength of the ANN prediction was measured between − 1 and 1 with − 1 representing no likelihood of SCV and 1 representing high likelihood of SCV. Results: Sixteen patients met study inclusion criteria. The median age for aSAH patients was 15 years. Ten underwent surgical clipping and 6 underwent endovascular coiling for definitive treatment. One patient experienced SCV and 15 did not. The ANN applied here was able to accurately predict all 16 outcomes. The mean strength of prediction for those who did not exhibit SCV was − 0.86. The strength for the one patient who did exhibit SCV was 0.93. Conclusions: Adult-derived aneurysmal SAH value nodes can be applied to a simple AAN model to accurately predict SCV in children presenting with aSAH. Further work is needed to determine if ANN models can prospectively predict SCV in the pediatric aSAH population in toto; adapted to include mycotic, traumatic, and flow-related origins as well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. TREATING LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY WITH ANTIBIOTICS: DISSEMINATED LYME DISEASE AS A SARCOIDOSIS MIMIC.
- Author
-
Mittal, Aastha, Namjouyan, Kamran, Qureshi, Maria, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Subjects
- *
LEFT ventricular hypertrophy , *LYME disease , *SARCOIDOSIS , *ANTIBIOTICS - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Development of De Novo Arteriovenous Malformation Following Ischemic Stroke: Case Report and Review of Current Literature.
- Author
-
Pabaney, Aqueel H., Rammo, Richard A., Tahir, Rizwan A., and Seyfried, Donald
- Subjects
- *
ARTERIOVENOUS malformation , *CEREBRAL infarction , *NEOVASCULARIZATION , *COMPUTED tomography , *ARTERIOVENOUS fistula , *DIGITAL subtraction angiography - Abstract
Background Arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are hypothesized to be static, congenital lesions developing as early as 4 weeks of fetal life. New literature has shown that AVMs may represent dynamic and reactive vascular lesions arising from cerebral infarction, inflammation, or trauma. A literature search reveals 17 previously reported cases of new AVM formation after previous negative imaging studies. This reactive development or “second hit” theory suggests that at a molecular level, growth factors may play a vital role in aberrant angiogenesis and maturation of an arteriovenous fistula into an AVM. Case Description A 52-year-old female presented with a ruptured left frontal AVM demonstrated by computed tomography angiography and digital subtraction angiography. The patient had suffered an acute ischemic stroke in the similar cerebral vascular territory 8 years prior due to left internal carotid artery occlusion. Detailed neuroimaging at that time failed to reveal any vascular malformation, suggesting that the AVM might have developed in response to initial vascular insult. Conclusions We believe that there might exist a subset of AVMs that display dynamic characteristics and could potentially appear, grow, or resolve spontaneously without intervention, especially in the presence of local growth factors and molecular signaling cascades. When combined with a previous cerebral insult such as stroke, trauma, or inflammation, de novo AVM formation may represent a “second hit” with abnormal angiogenesis and vessel formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Effects of assessing the productivity of faculty in academic medical centres: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Akl, Elie A., Meerpohl, Joerg J., Raad, Dany, Piaggio, Giulia, Mattioni, Manlio, Paggi, Marco G., Gurtner, Aymone, Mattarocci, Stefano, Tahir, Rizwan, Muti, Paola, and Schünemann, Holger J.
- Subjects
- *
SYSTEMATIC reviews , *DATABASES , *PATIENT satisfaction , *EVALUATION of medical care - Abstract
Background: Many academic medical centres have introduced strategies to assess the productivity of faculty as part of compensation schemes. We conducted a systematic review of the effects of such strategies on faculty productivity. Methods: We searched the MEDLINE, Healthstar, Embase and PsycInfo databases from their date of inception up to October 2011. We included studies that assessed academic productivity in clinical, research, teaching and administrative activities, as well as compensation, promotion processes and satisfaction. Results: Of 531 full-text articles assessed for eligibility, we included 9 articles reporting on eight studies. The introduction of strategies for assessing academic productivity as part of compensation schemes resulted in increases in clinical productivity (in six of six studies) in terms of clinical revenue, the work component of relative-value units (these units are nonmonetary standard units of measure used to indicate the value of services provided), patient satisfaction and other departmentally used standards. Increases in research productivity were noted (in five of six studies) in terms of funding and publications. There was no change in teaching productivity (in two of five studies) in terms of educational output. Such strategies also resulted in increases in compensation at both individual and group levels (in three studies), with two studies re - porting a change in distribution of compensation in favour of junior faculty. None of the studies assessed effects on administrative productivity or promotion processes. The overall quality of evidence was low. Interpretation: Strategies introduced to assess productivity as part of a compensation scheme appeared to improve productivity in research activities and possibly improved clinical productivity, but they had no effect in the area of teaching. Compensation increased at both group and individual levels, particularly among junior faculty. Higher quality evidence about the benefits and harms of such assessment strategies is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. PUTTING THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE: USE OF VA ECMO FOR OPTIMIZATION PRIOR TO CARDIAC SURGERY.
- Author
-
McElroy, Chelsea, Shuey, Timothy, Durr, Brendan, Carter, Russell, Carry, Brendan, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Subjects
- *
CARDIAC surgery - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. PUTTING THE CART BEFORE THE HORSE: USE OF VA ECMO FOR OPTIMIZATION PRIOR TO CARDIAC SURGERY.
- Author
-
McElroy, Chelsea, Shuey, Timothy, Durr, Brendan, Carter, Russell, Carry, Brendan, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Subjects
- *
CARDIAC surgery - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. IN THE LYMELIGHT: A MYSTERIOUS CASE OF HEART BLOCK.
- Author
-
Eslami, Amir, Al-Salameh, Nizar, Shah, Parth, Kwon, Tae-Sung, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Subjects
- *
HEART block , *LYME disease , *ARRHYTHMIA - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Effects of assessing the productivity of faculty in academic medical centres: a systematic review.
- Author
-
Akl EA, Meerpohl JJ, Raad D, Piaggio G, Mattioni M, Paggi MG, Gurtner A, Mattarocci S, Tahir R, Muti P, Schünemann HJ, Akl, Elie A, Meerpohl, Joerg J, Raad, Dany, Piaggio, Giulia, Mattioni, Manlio, Paggi, Marco G, Gurtner, Aymone, Mattarocci, Stefano, and Tahir, Rizwan
- Abstract
Background: Many academic medical centres have introduced strategies to assess the productivity of faculty as part of compensation schemes. We conducted a systematic review of the effects of such strategies on faculty productivity.Methods: We searched the MEDLINE, Healthstar, Embase and PsycInfo databases from their date of inception up to October 2011. We included studies that assessed academic productivity in clinical, research, teaching and administrative activities, as well as compensation, promotion processes and satisfaction.Results: Of 531 full-text articles assessed for eligibility, we included 9 articles reporting on eight studies. The introduction of strategies for assessing academic productivity as part of compensation schemes resulted in increases in clinical productivity (in six of six studies) in terms of clinical revenue, the work component of relative-value units (these units are nonmonetary standard units of measure used to indicate the value of services provided), patient satisfaction and other departmentally used standards. Increases in research productivity were noted (in five of six studies) in terms of funding and publications. There was no change in teaching productivity (in two of five studies) in terms of educational output. Such strategies also resulted in increases in compensation at both individual and group levels (in three studies), with two studies reporting a change in distribution of compensation in favour of junior faculty. None of the studies assessed effects on administrative productivity or promotion processes. The overall quality of evidence was low.Interpretation: Strategies introduced to assess productivity as part of a compensation scheme appeared to improve productivity in research activities and possibly improved clinical productivity, but they had no effect in the area of teaching. Compensation increased at both group and individual levels, particularly among junior faculty. Higher quality evidence about the benefits and harms of such assessment strategies is needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.