6 results on '"Caruso, Thomas J."'
Search Results
2. Publication misrepresentation among pediatric anesthesiology fellowship applicants: A retrospective single-center cohort study.
- Author
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Mehta A, Patel P, Caruso TJ, and Anderson TA
- Subjects
- Child, Cohort Studies, Fellowships and Scholarships, Humans, Retrospective Studies, United States, Anesthesiology, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
Background: Many medical specialties have found publication misrepresentation in residency and fellowship applications, but pediatric anesthesia fellowship application data is lacking., Aims: We sought to determine the prevalence of publication misrepresentation among pediatric anesthesia fellowship applications., Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, fellowship applications to Stanford University's pediatric anesthesiology fellowship program from 2009 to 2019 were reviewed. Only peer-reviewed journal articles listed as accepted or published were included. Nine additional variables were collected: applicant age, gender, citizenship status, American vs. international medical school, public vs. private medical school, allopathic doctor versus osteopathic doctor, number of years between college and medical school, additional degrees, and application year. The primary outcome was the rate of publication misrepresentation, defined as peer-reviewed journal citations listed on the application that could not be verified or on which the applicant was not listed as an author. Secondary outcomes were the associations between publication misrepresentation and the additional collected variables., Results: 1280 peer-reviewed journal publications from 877 applicants were reviewed. 3.4% of all citations listed as peer-reviewed journal articles were misrepresented and 9.0% of all applicants with at least 1 publication had ≥1 misrepresented publications. 30.2% of publications labelled "misrepresented" were located in our search of databases but did not have the applicant as an author, and 69.8% could not be located using the search databases. Only one of the 9 collected variables (public vs private medical school) was significantly associated with publication misrepresentation., Conclusions: In this single-center retrospective study, publication misrepresentation was found to occur in one out of 11 pediatric anesthesia fellowship applications with at least one publication. Since residency and fellowship applicant publications may be heavily weighted during the application process, programs may want to include additional inquiries into the accuracy of applicant publications., (© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Augmented Reality Improves Pediatric Mask Induction: A Prospective, Matched Case-Control Study.
- Author
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Yun, Romy, He, Emily M, Zuniga, Michelle, Guo, Nan, Wang, Ellen Y, Ho, Florence, Pearson, Molly, Rodriguez, Samuel T, and Caruso, Thomas J
- Subjects
COMPUTER simulation ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,T-test (Statistics) ,INHALATION anesthesia ,FISHER exact test ,ANXIETY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,MANN Whitney U Test ,CHI-squared test ,PEDIATRICS ,LONGITUDINAL method ,DELIRIUM ,CASE-control method ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,GENERAL anesthesia ,AUGMENTED reality ,ANESTHESIA ,PERIOPERATIVE care ,COOPERATIVENESS ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Introduction: Pediatric perioperative anxiety is a significant problem during mask induction for general anesthesia. Immersive technologies, such as extended reality headsets, are a promising strategy for alleviating anxiety. Our primary aim was to investigate mask acceptance during inhalational induction utilizing augmented reality (AR). Methods: This was a prospective, matched case-control study at a quaternary academic hospital. Fifty pediatric patients using AR for mask induction were matched to 150 standard-of-care (SOC) controls. The primary outcome was measured with the Mask Acceptance Scale (MAS). Secondary outcomes of cooperation and emergent delirium (ED) were assessed. Results: MAS scores ≥2 occurred at 4% (95% CI [0, 9.4%]) with AR versus 19.3%, (95% CI [13%, 25.7%]) with SOC (RR 0.21, 95% CI [0.05, 0.84], P =.027). Ninety-eight percent of AR patients were cooperative versus 91.3% with SOC (P =.457). Zero percent had ED with AR versus 0.7% with SOC (P = 1.000). Conclusions: AR during mask induction improved mask acceptance compared to SOC. No relationship was observed between AR and cooperation or ED. Future research will investigate the integration of AR into clinical practice as a nonpharmacologic intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Assessing pediatric perioperative affect: A concise review of research and clinically relevant scales.
- Author
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Yun, Romy, Hess, Olivia, Kennedy, Kristin, Stricker, Paul A., Blake, Lindsay, and Caruso, Thomas J.
- Subjects
LITERATURE reviews ,GENERAL anesthesia ,CHILD patients ,ANXIETY ,SCALING (Social sciences) - Abstract
Perioperative anxiety and distress are common in pediatric patients undergoing general anesthesia and increase the risk for immediate and long‐term postoperative complications. This concise review outlines key research and clinically‐relevant scales that measure pediatric perioperative affect. Strengths and weaknesses of each scale are highlighted. A literature review identified 11 articles with the following inclusion criteria: patients less than or equal to 18 years, perioperative anxiety or distress, and original studies with reliability or validity data. Although robust research‐based assessment tools to measure anxiety have been developed, such as the Modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale, they are too complex and time‐consuming to complete by clinicians also providing anesthesia. Clinically‐based anxiety measurement scales tend to be easier to use, however they require further testing before widespread standard utilization. The HRAD ± scale (Happy, Relaxed, Anxious, Distressed, with a yes/no answer to cooperation) may be a promising observational anxiety scale that is efficient and includes an assessment of compliance. Further studies are needed to refine a clinically‐relevant anxiety assessment tool and appraise interventions that reduce perioperative distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A prospective, observational validation of HRAD±, a novel pediatric affect and cooperation scale.
- Author
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Yun, Romy, Qian, Daniel, Wang, Ellen, Zuniga, Michelle, Forbes, Ty, Li, Brian, Rodriguez, Samuel T., Jackson, Christian, and Caruso, Thomas J.
- Subjects
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HOSPITAL care of children , *CHILDREN'S hospitals , *PREDICTIVE validity , *DELIRIUM , *PEDIATRIC anesthesia , *COOPERATION - Abstract
HRAD± was developed to quickly assess pediatric perioperative affect and cooperation. HRAD± represents: Happy, Relaxed, Anxious, Distressed, with a yes/no answer to cooperativity. The primary aim of this study was to investigate the clinical utility of HRAD± as an affect and cooperation assessment tool for inhalational mask induction. Secondary aims examined inter-rater reliability (IRR) of HRAD± and predictive validity of induction HRAD± with emergence delirium. This was a prospective observational investigation. We conducted this investigation at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford, an academic, quaternary care children's hospital in Northern California. A total of 197 patients were included in this investigation. Children 1–14 years of age, who underwent daytime procedures with inhalational induction of anesthesia and American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status I-III were eligible. During mask induction, two trained research assistants (RAs) independently scored the patient's affect and cooperation. After extubation, the same investigators observed the patient's emergence. RAs scored each mask induction using the following scales: HRAD±, modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (mYPAS), Observation Scale of Behavioral Distress (OSBD), and Induction Compliance Checklist (ICC). Correlations were calculated to HRAD±. IRR of HRAD± between the RAs as well as predictive validity of HRAD± to Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium (PAED), Watcha and Cravero scales were calculated. HRAD± scores strongly correlated with mYPAS (r = 0.840, p < 0.0001) with moderate correlation to OSBD (r = 0.685, p < 0.0001) and ICC (−0.663, p < 0.0001). IRR was moderate for the affect and cooperation portion of the HRAD± scale, respectively (κ = 0.595 [p < 0.0001], κ = 0.478 [p < 0.0001]). A weak correlation was observed with PAED (r = 0.134 [ p = 0.0597]) vs HRAD±. No correlations were observed between Watcha (r = 0.013 [ p = 0.8559]) and Cravero and HRAD± scales (r = 0.002 [ p = 0.9767]). HRAD± is a clinically useful and simple scale for evaluating pediatric affect and cooperation during inhalational mask induction. Results demonstrate correlation with commonly utilized research assessment scales. • Pediatric perioperative anxiety is common with short- and long-term consequences. • Research scales that measure anxiety are complex to use in clinical settings. • HRAD± is a practical scale for evaluating affect & cooperation for mask induction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Successful directional thoracic erector spinae plane block after failed lumbar plexus block in hip joint and proximal femur surgery.
- Author
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Darling, Curtis E., Pun, Stephanie Y., Caruso, Thomas J., and Tsui, Ban C.H.
- Subjects
- *
ERECTOR spinae muscles , *CONGENITAL hip dislocation , *HIP surgery , *ANALGESIA , *COMPUTED tomography , *HIP joint , *NERVE block , *TOTAL hip replacement , *LUMBOSACRAL plexus - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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