12 results on '"DeBar, Lynn L"'
Search Results
2. RESEARCH “I really had somebody in my corner.” Patient experiences with a pharmacist-led opioid tapering program.
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Schneider, Jennifer L., Firemark, Alison J., Papajorgji-Taylor, Dea, Reese, Katherine R., Thorsness, Lou Ann, Sullivan, Mark D., DeBar, Lynn L., Smith, David H., and Kuntz, Jennifer L.
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PATIENTS' attitudes ,MEDICAL personnel ,INTEGRATED health care delivery ,OPIOIDS ,COMPARATIVE method - Abstract
Background: Opioid tapering has been identified as an effective strategy to prevent the dangers associated with long-term opioid therapy for patients with chronic pain. However, many patients are resistant to tapering, and conversations about tapering can be challenging for health care providers. Pharmacists can play a role in supporting both providers and patients with the process of opioid tapering. Objective: Qualitatively describe patient experiences with a unique phone-based and pharmacy-led opioid tapering program implemented within an integrated health care system. Methods: In-depth telephone interviews with patients who completed the programwere recorded, transcribed, and analyzed. Themeswere identified through a constant comparative approach. Results: We completed 25 interviews; 80% of patients were women (20), with a mean age of 58 years, and 72% (18) had been using opioids for pain management for 10 or moreyears. Most (60%) described a positive and satisfying experience with the tapering program. Strengths of the program reported by patients included a patient-centered and compassionate taper approach, flexible taper pace, easy access to knowledgeable pharmacist advocates, and resultant improvements in quality of life (e.g., increased energy). Challenges reported included: unhelpful or difficult-to-access nonpharmacological pain management options, negative quality of life impacts (e.g., inability to exercise), and lack of choice in the taper process. At the end of tapering, most patients (72%) described their pain as reduced or manageable rather than worse and expressed willingness to use the program in the future if a need should arise. Conclusions: Patients in a pharmacist-led opioid tapering program appreciated the program’s individualized approach to care and access to pharmacist’ expertise. Most interviewed patients successfully reduced their opioid use and recommended that the program should continue as an offered service. To improve the program, patients suggested increased personalization of the taper process and additional support for withdrawal symptoms and nonpharmacological pain management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Treating Persistent Pain: A Nurse Co-Led, Interdisciplinary Model for Primary Care.
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Benes, Lindsay L., Keefe, Frank J., and DeBar, Lynn L.
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The public health crisis of chronic pain has only increased in recognition since the Institute of Medicine's (IOM) Relieving Pain in America (2011) called for a cultural transformation in the way pain is viewed, treated, and put forward specific recommendations for action. The National Pain Strategy (NPS) provides a roadmap for putting these recommendations into practice. We implemented a program that placed nurses and behavioral specialists at the head of an interdisciplinary team utilizing best practices. In this program, nurses enacted the NPS recommendations to advance care for patients with persistent pain on long-term opioid treatment. This program promoted professional growth in nurses along with fostering success for patients. Compared with patients receiving usual care, patients in the program achieved greater reductions in pain severity, pain-related disability, and pain-related functional interference and reported greater satisfaction with pain-related care and primary care services. This article will detail the NPS-aligned practice approaches these nurses and their teams used, describe the training for the nurses, and speak to opportunities to enhance the nurse's capacity for this role in hopes of providing a model for the future implementation of an NPS-based approach by nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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4. Development and Assessment of a Crosswalk Between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM to Identify Patients with Common Pain Conditions.
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Mayhew, Meghan, DeBar, Lynn L., Deyo, Richard A., Kerns, Robert D., Goulet, Joseph L., Brandt, Cynthia A., and Von Korff, Michael
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Effective management of patients with pain requires accurate information about the prevalence, outcomes, and co-occurrence of common pain conditions. However, the transition from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM diagnostic coding in 2015 left researchers without methods for comparing the prevalence of pain conditions before and after the transition. In this study, we developed and assessed a diagnostic framework to serve as a crosswalk between ICD-9-CM and ICD-10-CM diagnosis codes for common pain-related health conditions. We refined existing ICD-9-CM definitions for diagnostic clusters of common pain conditions consistent with the US National Pain Strategy and developed corresponding ICD-10-CM definitions. We then assessed the stability of prevalence estimates and associated patient socio-demographic features of each diagnostic cluster during 1-year periods before and after the transition to ICD-10-CM in 3 US health care systems using electronic health records data for in-person encounters. Prevalence estimates and socio-demographic characteristics were similar before and after the transition. The Pain Condition ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM Crosswalk includes a full spectrum of common pain conditions to enable prevalence estimates of multiple and chronic overlapping pain conditions. This allows the tool to serve as a foundation for a broad array of pain-related health services research utilizing electronic databases. PERSPECTIVE: This article details the development and assessment of the Pain Condition ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM Crosswalk, a diagnostic framework for assessing pain condition prevalence across the ICD-9-CM to ICD-10-CM transition. This framework can serve as a standardized tool for research on pain conditions, including health services and epidemiologic research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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5. Acupuncture for chronic low back pain in older adults: Design and protocol for the BackInAction pragmatic clinical trial.
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DeBar, Lynn L., Justice, Morgan, Avins, Andrew L., Cook, Andrea, Eng, Carolyn M., Herman, Patricia M., Hsu, Clarissa, Nielsen, Arya, Pressman, Alice, Stone, Katie L., Teets, Raymond Y., and Wellman, Robert
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CHRONIC pain , *OLDER people , *ACUPUNCTURE , *CLINICAL trials - Abstract
Back pain prevalence and burden increase with age; approximately one-third of U.S. adults 65 years of age and older experience lower back pain (LBP). For chronic low back pain (cLBP), typically defined as lasting three months or longer, many treatments for younger adults may be inappropriate for older adults given their greater prevalence of comorbidities with attendant polypharmacy. While acupuncture has been demonstrated to be safe and effective for cLBP in adults overall, few studies of acupuncture have either included or focused on adults ≥65 years old. The BackInAction study is a pragmatic, multi-site, three-arm, parallel-groups randomized controlled trial designed to test the effectiveness of acupuncture needling for improving back pain-related disability among 807 older adults ≥65 years old with cLBP. Participants are randomized to standard acupuncture (SA; up to 15 treatment sessions across 12 weeks), enhanced acupuncture (EA; SA during first 12 weeks and up to 6 additional sessions across the following 12 weeks), and usual medical care (UMC) alone. Participants are followed for 12 months with study outcomes assessed monthly with the primary outcome timepoint at 6 months. The BackInAction study offers an opportunity to further understand the effectiveness, dose-dependence, and safety of acupuncture in a Medicare population. Additionally, study results may encourage broader adoption of more effective, safer, and more satisfactory options to the continuing over-reliance on opioid- and invasive medical treatments for cLBP among older adults. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04982315. Clinical trial registration date: July 29, 2021. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. A patient-centered nurse-supported primary care-based collaborative care program to treat opioid use disorder and depression: Design and protocol for the MI-CARE randomized controlled trial.
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DeBar, Lynn L., Bushey, Michael A., Kroenke, Kurt, Bobb, Jennifer F., Schoenbaum, Michael, Thompson, Ella E., Justice, Morgan, Zatzick, Douglas, Hamilton, Leah K., McMullen, Carmit K., Hallgren, Kevin A., Benes, Lindsay L., Forman, David P., Caldeiro, Ryan M., Brown, Ryan P., Campbell, Noll L., Anderson, Melissa L., Son, Sungtaek, Haggstrom, David A., and Whiteside, Lauren
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OPIOID abuse , *INTEGRATED health care delivery , *TRANSCRANIAL magnetic stimulation , *COGNITIVE therapy , *MOTIVATIONAL interviewing , *ELECTRONIC health records , *DRUG-eluting stents , *NURSING informatics - Abstract
Opioid use disorder (OUD) contributes to rising morbidity and mortality. Life-saving OUD treatments can be provided in primary care but most patients with OUD don't receive treatment. Comorbid depression and other conditions complicate OUD management, especially in primary care. The MI-CARE trial is a pragmatic randomized encouragement (Zelen) trial testing whether offering collaborative care (CC) to patients with OUD and clinically-significant depressive symptoms increases OUD medication treatment with buprenorphine and improves depression outcomes compared to usual care. Adult primary care patients with OUD and depressive symptoms (n ≥ 800) from two statewide health systems: Kaiser Permanente Washington and Indiana University Health are identified with computer algorithms from electronic Health record (EHR) data and automatically enrolled. A random sub-sample (50%) of eligible patients is offered the MI-CARE intervention: a 12-month nurse-driven CC intervention that includes motivational interviewing and behavioral activation. The remaining 50% of the study cohort comprise the usual care comparison group and is never contacted. The primary outcome is days of buprenorphine treatment provided during the intervention period. The powered secondary outcome is change in Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-9 depression scores. Both outcomes are obtained from secondary electronic healthcare sources and compared in "intent-to-treat" analyses. MI-CARE addresses the need for rigorous encouragement trials to evaluate benefits of offering CC to generalizable samples of patients with OUD and mental health conditions identified from EHRs, as they would be in practice, and comparing outcomes to usual primary care. We describe the design and implementation of the trial, currently underway. Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05122676. Clinical trial registration date: November 17, 2021. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Cognitive Behavioral Treatment for Recurrent Binge Eating in Adolescent Girls: A Pilot Trial.
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DeBar, Lynn L., Wilson, G. Terence, Yarborough, Bobbi Jo, Burns, Beryl, Oyler, Barbara, Hildebrandt, Tom, Clarke, Gregory N., Dickerson, John, and Striegel, Ruth H.
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COGNITIVE therapy ,BULIMIA ,TEENAGE girls ,FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) ,PILOT projects ,EATING disorders in adolescence ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,HEALTH outcome assessment - Abstract
Abstract: There is a need for treatment interventions to address the high prevalence of disordered eating throughout adolescence and early adulthood. We developed an adolescent-specific manualized CBT protocol to treat female adolescents with recurrent binge eating and tested its efficacy in a small, pilot randomized controlled trial. We present lessons learned in recruiting adolescents, a description of our treatment approach, acceptability of the treatment for teens and parents, as well as results from the pilot trial. Participants in the CBT group had significantly fewer posttreatment eating binges than those in a treatment as usual/delayed treatment (TAU-DT) control group; 100% of CBT participants were abstinent at follow-up. Our results provide preliminary support for the efficacy of this adolescent adaptation of evidence-based CBT for recurrent binge eating. The large, robust effect size estimate observed for the main outcome (NNT=2) places this among the larger effects observed for any mental health intervention. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2013
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8. Severe Obesity and Selected Risk Factors in a Sixth Grade Multiracial Cohort: The HEALTHY Study.
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Marcus, Marsha D., Baranowski, Tom, DeBar, Lynn L., Edelstein, Sharon, Kaufman, Francine R., Schneider, Margaret, Siega-Riz, Anna Maria, Staten, Myrlene A., Virus, Amy, and Yin, Zenong
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to document the prevalence of severe obesity and associated risk in the HEALTHY cohort. A total of 6,365 students were assessed at school-based screenings. Results showed that 6.9% of students were severely obese. Severe obesity was associated with elevated cardiometabolic risk and race/ethnicity. Severe obesity is common and requires preventive intervention. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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9. Recruitment for a guided self-help binge eating trial: Potential lessons for implementing programs in everyday practice settings
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DeBar, Lynn L., Yarborough, Bobbi Jo, Striegel-Moore, Ruth H., Rosselli, Francine, Perrin, Nancy, Wilson, G. Terence, Kraemer, Helena C., Green, Rory, and Lynch, Frances
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CLINICAL trials , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *COMPULSIVE eating , *CLINICAL medicine - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To explore effects of various recruitment strategies on randomized clinical trial (RCT)-entry characteristics for patients with eating disorders within an everyday health-plan practice setting. Methods: Randomly selected women, aged 25–50, in a Pacific Northwest HMO were invited to complete a self-report binge-eating screener for two treatment trials. We publicized the trials within the health plan to allow self-referral. Here, we report differences on eating-disorder status by mode and nature of recruitment (online, mail, self-referred) and assessment (comprehensive versus abbreviated) and on possible differences in enrollee characteristics between those recruited by strategy (self-referred versus study-outreach efforts). Results: Few differences emerged among those recruited through outreach who responded by different modalities (internet versus mail), early-versus-late responders, and those enrolling under more comprehensive or abbreviated assessment. Self-referred were more likely to meet binge-eating thresholds and reported higher average BMI than those recruited by outreach and responding by mail; however, in most respects the groups were more similar than anticipated. Fewer than 1% of those initially contacted through outreach enrolled. Conclusions: Aggressive outreach and screening is likely not feasible for broader dissemination in everyday practice settings and recruits individuals with more similar demographic and clinical characteristics to those recruited through more abbreviated and realistic screening procedures than anticipated. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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10. Factors associated with opioid-tapering success: A mixed methods study.
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Kuntz, Jennifer L., Dickerson, John F., Schneider, Jennifer L., Firemark, Alison J., Papajorgji-Taylor, Dea, Slaughter, Matthew, Reese, Katherine R., Thorsness, Lou Ann, Sullivan, Mark D., Debar, Lynn L., and Smith, David H.
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PHARMACIST-patient relationships ,ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents ,RESISTANCE to change ,MULTILEVEL models ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,NARCOTICS ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,PATIENT participation ,ANALGESICS ,RESEARCH methodology ,COMMUNICATION ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Objective: Opioid tapering is recommended when risks of chronic opioid use outweigh benefits. Little is known about patient characteristics or factors related to tapering success. We sought to identify characteristics that predict a 50% reduction in opioid use and qualitatively characterize factors that impact tapering success.Methods: We used multilevel hierarchical modeling to identify predictors of a 50% reduction in opioid use among Kaiser Permanente Northwest patients who underwent pharmacist-led tapering between 2012 and 2017. We conducted qualitative interviews among patients and pharmacists to identify factors influencing tapering success.Results: We identified 1384 patients who, on average, were dispensed 207 milligram morphine equivalents per day at baseline. After 12 months, 56% of patients reduced their opioid use by 50%. Increased odds of 50% reduction were associated with younger age 21-49 years (Odds ratio [OR] 1.32, P = 0.004); previous surgery (OR 2.24, P < 0.001); increased number of Addiction Medicine encounters (OR 1.25, P = 0.011); substance use disorder (OR 1.62, P = 0.001); anxiety (OR 1.32, P = 0.003); non-narcotic analgesic (OR 1.22, P = 0.025) or antipsychotic medication use (OR 1.53, P = 0.006); and opioid days supplied in the previous year (OR 1.08, P < 0.001). Patients and pharmacists noted that success was influenced by patients' willingness or resistance to change opioid use, the level of patient engagement achieved through communication with their provider, aspects of the tapering process such as pace, and external factors including health issues or caregiving responsibilities.Conclusions: Over one-half of patients who underwent tapering reduced their opioid use by 50%. Patient demographic and clinical characteristics were predictive of tapering success; however, patients and pharmacists noted that patient willingness, motivation, and personal circumstances also influence tapering outcome. Opioid tapering requires an individualized approach. Both clinical factors and personal circumstances should be considered when opioid tapering is being discussed as a possible solution for a patient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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11. Intervention delivery for embedded pragmatic clinical trials: Development of a tool to measure complexity.
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Staman, Karen L., Check, Devon K., Zatzick, Doug, Mor, Vincent, Fritz, Julie M., Sluka, Kathleen, DeBar, Lynn L., Jarvik, Jeffrey G., Volandes, Angelo, Coronado, Gloria D., Chambers, David A., Weinfurt, Kevin P., and George, Steven Z.
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CLINICAL trials , *MEASURING instruments , *WORKFLOW , *TELEPHONE calls , *PILOT projects , *DRUG delivery devices - Abstract
Conducting an embedded pragmatic clinical trial in the workflow of a healthcare system is a complex endeavor. The complexity of the intervention delivery can have implications for study planning, ability to maintain fidelity to the intervention during the trial, and/or ability to detect meaningful differences in outcomes. We conducted a literature review, developed a tool, and conducted two rounds of phone calls with NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Demonstration Project principal investigators to develop the Intervention Delivery Complexity Tool. After refining the tool, we piloted it with Collaboratory demonstration projects and developed an online version of the tool using the R Shiny application (https://duke-som.shinyapps.io/ICT-ePCT/). The 6-item tool consists of internal and external factors. Internal factors pertain to the intervention itself and include workflow, training, and the number of intervention components. External factors are related to intervention delivery at the system level including differences in healthcare systems, the dependency on setting for implementation, and the number of steps between the intervention and the outcome. The Intervention Delivery Complexity Tool was developed as a standard way to overcome communication challenges of intervention delivery within an embedded pragmatic trial. This version of the tool is most likely to be useful to the trial team and its health system partners during trial planning and conduct. We expect further evolution of the tool as more pragmatic trials are conducted and feedback is received on its performance outside of the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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12. Beliefs about eating and eating disorders
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Wilson, G. Terence, Perrin, Nancy A., Rosselli, Francine, Striegel-Moore, Ruth H., DeBar, Lynn L., and Kraemer, Helena C.
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INGESTION , *EATING disorders , *COMPULSIVE eating , *STATISTICAL sampling , *HEALTH maintenance organizations , *REPORTING of diseases , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Abstract: Beliefs about foods and binge eating may influence the development and maintenance of eating disorders and the likelihood that people will seek treatment. We found that the majority of a random sample of members of a large health maintenance organization considered binge eating a problem for which there are effective treatments. Self-reported binge eaters, however, were significantly less likely to agree that there are effective treatments. Two thirds of the sample reported that certain foods are addictive and also believed that strict dieting is an effective means of reducing binge eating. Therapeutic implications of these attitudes are discussed. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2009
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