9 results on '"Cochrane DD"'
Search Results
2. A randomized clinical trial to compare selective posterior rhizotomy plus physiotherapy with physiotherapy alone in children with spastic diplegic cerebral palsy.
- Author
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Steinbok P, Reiner AM, Beauchamp R, Armstrong RW, Cochrane DD, Steinbok, P, Reiner, A M, Beauchamp, R, Armstrong, R W, Cochrane, D D, and Kestle, J
- Published
- 1997
3. Choosing Wisely Canada: Pediatric Neurosurgery Recommendations.
- Author
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Radic JAE and Cochrane DD
- Abstract
Objectives: Choosing Wisely Canada is an evidence-based, patient-focused, physician-led campaign to improve the delivery of medical care in Canada. The goal of this study was to produce Canadian recommendations for physicians treating patients with selected paediatric neurosurgery issues., Methods: Paediatric neurosurgeons practicing in Canada were invited to participate. Suggestions were obtained using an anonymous questionnaire, and then ranked anonymously by the participating surgeons. Suggestions that received consensus from participants were discussed at the 2016 annual Canadian Pediatric Neurosurgery Study Group meeting. Suggestions that were not evidence based, or that would not have a substantive population impact were eliminated. All remaining suggestions were anonymously ranked by the group and the top five recommendations were submitted to Choosing Wisely Canada., Results: The final five recommendations include: 1) don't order a computed tomography scan to investigate macrocephaly (order an ultrasound or magnetic resonance imaging scan); 2) don't image a midline dimple related to the coccyx in an asymptomatic infant or child; 3) don't use computed tomography scans for routine imaging of children with hydrocephalus. Fast sequence nonsedated magnetic resonance imaging scans or ultrasounds provide adequate information to assess patients without exposing them to radiation or an anesthetic; 4) don't recommend helmets for mild to severe positional flattening; 5) don't do routine surveillance imaging for incidentally discovered Chiari I malformation., Conclusions: Five Choosing Wisely Canada recommendations were produced to support care of patients with paediatric neurosurgical issues. While these recommendations will apply to the majority of children with the involved conditions, occasionally, deviation from these recommendations may be clinically indicated.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Improving diagnosis of pediatric central nervous system tumours: aiming for early detection.
- Author
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Goldman RD, Cheng S, and Cochrane DD
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Central Nervous System Neoplasms complications, Central Nervous System Neoplasms therapy, Child, Child, Preschool, Headache etiology, Humans, Infant, Lethargy etiology, Quality Improvement, Time-to-Treatment, Translational Research, Biomedical, Vomiting etiology, Central Nervous System Neoplasms diagnosis, Delayed Diagnosis, Early Detection of Cancer
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Identification by families of pediatric adverse events and near misses overlooked by health care providers.
- Author
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Daniels JP, Hunc K, Cochrane DD, Carr R, Shaw NT, Taylor A, Heathcote S, Brant R, Lim J, and Ansermino JM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, British Columbia epidemiology, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Retrospective Studies, Attitude of Health Personnel, Family, Health Personnel standards, Hospitals, Pediatric statistics & numerical data, Inpatients, Medical Errors statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Identifying adverse events and near misses is essential to improving safety in the health care system. Patients are capable of reliably identifying and reporting adverse events. The effect of a patient safety reporting system used by families of pediatric inpatients on reporting of adverse events by health care providers has not previously been investigated., Methods: Between Nov. 1, 2008, and Nov. 30, 2009, families of children discharged from a single ward of British Columbia's Children's Hospital were asked to respond to a questionnaire about adverse events and near misses during the hospital stay. Rates of reporting by health care providers for this period were compared with rates for the previous year. Family reports for specific incidents were matched with reports by health care providers to determine overlap., Results: A total of 544 familes responded to the questionnaire. The estimated absolute increase in reports by health care providers per 100 admissions was 0.5% (95% confidence interval -1.8% to 2.7%). A total of 321 events were identified in 201 of the 544 family reports. Of these, 153 (48%) were determined to represent legitimate patient safety concerns. Only 8 (2.5%) of the adverse events reported by families were also reported by health care providers., Interpretation: The introduction of a family-based system for reporting adverse events involving pediatric inpatients, administered at the time of discharge, did not change rates of reporting of adverse events and near misses by health care providers. Most reports submitted by families were not duplicated in the reporting system for health care providers, which suggests that families and staff members view safety-related events differently. However, almost half of the family reports represented legitimate patient safety concerns. Families appeared capable of providing valuable information for improving the safety of pediatric inpatients.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. A human factors and survey methodology-based design of a web-based adverse event reporting system for families.
- Author
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Daniels JP, King AD, Cochrane DD, Carr R, Shaw NT, Lim J, and Ansermino JM
- Subjects
- Child, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Family, Humans, Medication Errors prevention & control, Risk Management, Safety Management, Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems organization & administration, Data Collection, Internet
- Abstract
Purpose: Adverse event reporting systems allow healthcare institutions to detect and prevent recurrence of avoidable patient harm. It is known that standard reporting systems, which are initiated by clinicians, detect only a minority of chart-documented adverse events. The objective of the study was to develop a web-based system, the Family Reporting System (FRS), to elicit adverse event reports from families of children admitted to hospital through survey methodology and human factors engineering techniques., Measurements: Face validity and usability were measured via standardized survey instruments. Utility was measured via the rate, typology, degree of harm, likelihood of recurrence, quality of information, and inter-rater agreement analysis of the reported events., Results: The FRS has good face validity, excellent usability, and good clinical utility., Conclusion: The application of survey and human factors methodologies to the design of an electronic system is an effective means of developing an electronic adverse event reporting system for the use of families of pediatric patients., (Copyright 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Cord untethering for lipomyelomeningocele: expectation after surgery.
- Author
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Cochrane DD
- Subjects
- Cauda Equina pathology, Humans, Lipoma complications, Meningomyelocele complications, Meningomyelocele pathology, Treatment Outcome, Urologic Diseases etiology, Urologic Diseases surgery, Cauda Equina surgery, Lipoma surgery, Meningomyelocele surgery
- Abstract
The natural history of cord tethering in transitional LMMC remains unclear. Not all children suffer deterioration,and, in a significant proportion, function is not normal at birth. Surgery, as it is currently practiced, is generally safe but does not confer long-term immunity from deterioration. The risk of deterioration, its pattern, and its timing are related in part to the morphology of the malformation. Patients with asymmetrical malformations may exhibit unilateral functional neurological or orthopedic abnormalities, which conspire with normal neurodevelopment to render these abnormalities apparent at an early age. Symmetrical malformations present later in childhood in association with bilateral and/or urinary dysfunction. The rate of functional deterioration in patients following surgery appears to be equal to or is slower than the rate of deterioration in patients who do not undergo surgery. Many patients will require more than one untethering procedure to address evolving functional impairment. Structural abnormalities require end organ-specific orthopedic or urological interventions. A formal structured multidisciplinary monitoring team is required to provide clinical and functional surveillance. Such monitoring is required following operative untethering and debulking for the life of the patient. The author reviewed current literature to define the timing and pattern of deterioration prior to and following initial cord untethering in patients with transitional LMMC, as well as the operative burden that these children bear in exchange for optimized function.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Pathological observation of brain arteries and spontaneous aneurysms in hypertensive rats.
- Author
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Zhang D, Zhao J, Sun Y, Wang S, Tai WH, Cochrane DD, and Li J
- Subjects
- Animals, Intracranial Aneurysm pathology, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred SHR, Rats, Inbred WKY, Cerebral Arteries pathology, Hypertension complications, Intracranial Aneurysm etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To investigate the role of hypertension in the pathogenesis of cerebral aneurysms in rats., Methods: Twenty spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR) and 10 Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY) were included in this observational study. Animals were fed with normal diet and drinking water. No experimental modifications were undertaken in either group. They were sacrificed at one year of age, the bifurcations of the circle of Willis were dissected and longitudinal serial sections were prepared for light microscopic and transmission electron microscopic study., Results: In the SHR group, 2 of the 20 rats formed an aneurysm respectively at the bifurcations of the basilar artery. As revealed by electron microscopy, injury at the bifurcation of the artery first occurred on the steeper side of the intimal pad. Furthermore, loss of endothelial cells, small depressions on the intima, disruptive internal elastic lamina and lymphocytes or red blood cells infiltration were noted at the steeper side of the intimal pad. No significant changes were observed in WKY group., Conclusions: Cerebral aneurysms can form spontaneously in SHR without ligation of the common carotid artery and without a diet containing beta-aminoproprionitrile. Long-standing systemic arterial hypertension is one of the etiological factors that contributes to aneurysm formation in SHR rats.
- Published
- 2003
9. The application of i.v. digital subtraction angiography to cranial disease in children.
- Author
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Mueller DL, Amundson GM, Wesenberg RL, Cochrane DD, Darwish HZ, Haslam RH, and Sarnat HB
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Brain Death, Brain Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Infarction diagnostic imaging, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Glioma diagnostic imaging, Humans, Infant, Intracranial Aneurysm diagnostic imaging, Intracranial Embolism and Thrombosis diagnostic imaging, Male, Subtraction Technique, Brain Diseases diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Angiography methods
- Abstract
All intracranial IV digital subtraction angiographic examinations performed over the past 2 years were reviewed retrospectively to ascertain the uses and limitations of this technique for the evaluation of pediatric intracranial disease. Of the various abnormalities studied, this imaging technique was particularly useful in diagnosing venous and dural sinus abnormalities; in screening for suspected large aneurysms, vascular malformations, and major arterial occlusive disease; and in preoperative vascular mapping. IV digital subtraction angiography has selected usefulness in confirming brain death, in evaluating cerebral ischemia, in identifying vascular abnormalities underlying intracranial hemorrhage, and in evaluating vascularity and sinus extension of masses. The IV route for digital subtraction angiography is not useful in diagnosing segmental arterial occlusive or small-vessel disease, nor is it useful in preoperative localization of specific arterial supply to arterial venous malformations, aneurysms, or neoplasms. IV digital subtraction angiography can be performed successfully in children of all ages with minimal patient morbidity. For most patients, the diagnostic information obtained was adequate without the need for standard cerebral arteriography.
- Published
- 1986
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