21 results on '"David Dan"'
Search Results
2. Survey of Canadian urology programs: Which aspects of the Canadian Residency Matching Service (CaRMS) application are the most important?
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Nguyen, David-Dan, Lee, Jason Y., Domes, Trustin, El-Sherbiny, Mohamed, Andonian, Sero, Franc-Guimond, Julie, Letendre, Julien, Perrotte, Paul, and Bhojani, Naeem
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MEDICAL students , *UROLOGY , *VOCATIONAL guidance , *EMPLOYMENT references , *LIKERT scale - Abstract
Introduction: For medical students, determining which aspects of the Canadian Residency Matching Service (CaRMS) application are the most important when applying to residency programs can be challenging. Due to the lack of current and reliable information on the selection criteria of Canadian urology residency programs, we surveyed each program about which criteria are the most important when selecting future residents in order to provide medical students with more transparency and programs with a better idea of how their criteria compare to those of others. Methods: An electronic survey was sent to all 13 Canadian urology residency programs (both program directors and selection committee members). It asked respondents to rate each aspect of the application on a five-point Likert scale. Following a 100% response rate from program directors, the same survey was sent to selection committee members. A numeric mean score was calculated for each individual aspect surveyed to create an overall rank list of the components. Independent samples t-tests (two groups) were used to compare the scores of program directors vs. program committee members and of francophone programs vs. anglophone programs. Results: Forty-three urologists involved in the application process answered. The three most important aspects were rotation performance at the respondent's institution (4.95±0.21), quality of reference letters from a urologist (4.60±0.62), and interview performance (4.49±0.63). There were no statistically significant differences between program directors and committee members for mean score of any aspect surveyed. Compared to anglophone programs, francophone programs gave statistically more significant importance to French proficiency (p<0.001) and pre-clinical academic performance (p=0.0272), while giving less importance to English proficiency (p<0.001). Conclusions: Canadian urology residency programs are similar in that they rank "clinical performance during a rotation at their school" as the most important selection criteria when choosing a future urology trainee. Graduate degrees, career plans, and reference letters from non-urologists have less impact when choosing future urology residents. Francophone schools and anglophone schools differ in the importance of language proficiency and preclinical grades as selection criteria for urology residency. This study will provide future urology applicants with more information and transparency when applying to urology programs in Canada and be of use to urology residency programs that must now publish their selection criteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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3. First Nations women’s mental health: results from an Ontario survey.
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MacMillan, Harriet L., Jamieson, Ellen, Walsh, Christine A., Wong, Maria Y.-Y., Faries, Emily J., McCue, Harvey, MacMillan, Angus B., and Offord, David (Dan) R.
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NATIVE Americans ,WOMEN'S mental health ,MENTAL depression ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,WOMEN ,ALCOHOL drinking - Abstract
The mental health of Canada’s Aboriginal women has received little scholarly attention. This paper describes the mental health of First Nations women living on reserve in Ontario and compares these findings with results from the National Population Health Survey (NPHS). Reserve communities were randomly selected within urban, rural, remote and special access regions. Depression was measured by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Alcohol use and health services utilization questions were identical to those used in the NPHS. Compared with NPHS women, First Nations women reported significantly higher rates of depression (18% vs 9%) but significantly lower rates of alcohol use (55% vs 74% reported drinking in the last year), although significantly greater proportions reported having 5+ drinks on one occasion (43% vs 24%). Given the burden of suffering associated with depression and the twofold risk found here, it is important to examine risk and protective factors specific to First Nations women. The findings of a higher proportion of abstainers, but also a higher proportion of consumers of 5+ drinks among First Nations women relative to NPHS women indicate the need for a more careful investigation, based on community rather than clinical data, of patterns of alcohol use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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4. Analyzing the influence of expanding multispecialty adoption of robotic surgery on robotic urologic care: A decade-long assessment of two Canadian academic hospitals.
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Ibrahim, Ahmed, Matta, Imad, Zakaria, Ahmed S., Khogeer, Abdulghani, Lee, Nick, Elseherbini, Tawfik, Nguyen, David-Dan, Corsi, Nicholas J., Bouhadana, David, Arezki, Adel, Chakraborty, Anindyo, Meskawi, Malek, Elhakim, Assaad, and Zorn, Kevin C.
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UROLOGY , *SURGICAL robots , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *RADICAL prostatectomy , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH , *DATA analysis software , *TIME ,SURGERY practice - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Most robot-assisted surgery (RAS) systems in Canada are donor-funded, with constraints on implementation and access due to significant costs, among other factors. Herein, we evaluated the impact of the growing multispecialty use of RAS on urologic RAS access and outcomes in the past decade. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective review of all RAS performed by different surgical specialties in two high-volume academic hospitals between 2010 and 2019 (prior to the COVID pandemic). The assessed outcomes included the effect of increased robot access over the years on annual robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) volumes, surgical waiting times (SWT), and pathologically positive surgical margins (PSM). Data were collected and analyzed from the robotic system and hospital databases. RESULTS: In total, six specialties (urology, gynecology, general, cardiac, thoracic, and otorhinolaryngologic surgery) were included over the study period. RAS access by specialty doubled since 2010 (from three to six). The number of active robotic surgeons tripled from seven surgeons in 2010 to 20 surgeons in 2019. Moreover, there was a significant drop in average case volume, from a peak of 40 cases in 2014 to 25 cases in 2019 (p=0.02). RARP annual case volume followed a similar pattern, reaching a maximum of 166 cases in 2014, then declining to 137 cases in 2019. The mean SWT was substantially increased from 52 days in 2014 to 73 days in 2019; however, PSM rates were not affected by the reduction in surgical volumes (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Over the last decade, RAS access by specialty has increased at two Canadian academic centers due to growing multispecialty use. As there was a fixed, single-robotic system at each of the hospital centers, there was a substantial reduction in the number of RAS performed per surgeon over time, as well as a gradual increase in the SWT. The current low number of available robots and unsustainable funding resources may hinder universal patient access to RAS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. The perceptions of Canadian urology residents and program directors on current genitourinary imaging training.
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Bouhadana, David, Elbaz, Sarah, Di Ioia, Rose, Anne Xuan-Lan Nguyen, Benea, Diana, Deyirmendjian, Claudia, Nguyen, David-Dan, Raizenne, Brendan, Hardy, Isabelle, Perotte, Paul, Lagabrielle, Samuel, Lee, Jason Y., Metcalfe, Peter D., Jaffer, Rehana, and Bhojani, Naeem
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HOSPITAL medical staff , *CROSS-sectional method , *SENSORY perception , *SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *UROLOGY , *GENITOURINARY organ radiography - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Competency in interpreting genitourinary (GU) imaging is an important skill for urologists; however, no nationally accredited GU imaging curriculum exists for Canadian urology residency training programs. The main objectives of our study were to 1) characterize GU imaging training in Canada; 2) evaluate residents' self-perceived competencies in interpreting GU imaging; and 3) explore program directors' (PD) and residents' perceptions regarding the current imaging curriculum and suggestions for future directions. METHODS: From November to December 2022, a survey examining current imaging education in residency, perceived resident imaging knowledge, avenues for improvement in imaging education, and the role of point-of-care ultrasound within urology was distributed to all Canadian urology PDs and residents. RESULTS: All PDs (13/13) and 40% (72/178) of residents completed the survey. Only two programs had a formal GU imaging curriculum. PDs and residents reported trainees were least comfortable interpreting Doppler ultrasound of renal, gonadal, and penile vessels. PDs reported that residents were most comfortable with non-contrast computed tomography (CT) scans (9.5/10), CT urogram (9.3/10), and retrograde pyelography (9.3/10). All but one PD favored increasing imaging training in their program. PDs highlighted the lack of time in the curriculum (n=3) and lack of educators (n=3) as the primary barriers to increasing imaging training in their program. CONCLUSIONS: Most PDs and residents believe there needs to be more imaging training offered at their institution; however, addressing this is challenging due to the limited time in the curriculum and the need for available educators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. Evaluation of Canadian urology residency and fellowship program websites.
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Siron, Nicolas, Bouhadana, David, Schwartz, Ryan, Deyermendjian, Claudia, Lafontaine, Marie-Lyssa, Cossette, François, Jain, Mehr, Nguyen, David-Dan, Zorn, Kevin C., Khosa, Faisal, Elterman, Dean S., Chughtai, Bilal, and Bhojani, Naeem
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LANGUAGE & languages , *INTERNSHIP programs , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *UROLOGY , *MEDICAL education , *WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
The article presents the discussion on growing use of online resources in the postgraduate medical education application process. Topics include suspension of visiting electives during the COVID-19 pandemic has made it such that program websites becoming even more critical for applicants to identify the programs; and evaluating the comprehensiveness of Canadian urology residency and fellowship program websites.
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- 2023
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7. UroBOT: A national survey of Canadian urology residents and fellows on robotassisted surgery.
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Boblea Podasca, Teodora, Desjardins, Audrey, Couture, Félix, Bhojani, Naeem, Lee, Jason Y., Matsumoto, Edward D., Nguyen, David-Dan, Wallis, Christopher J. D., and Richard, Patrick O.
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HOSPITAL medical staff , *SURGICAL robots , *ATTITUDES of medical personnel , *SURVEYS , *HUMAN services programs , *UROLOGY - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Robot-assisted surgery (RAS) has a positive impact on the quality of care given to patients. Its increasing adoption in Canadian urology practice also influences the surgical training of residents and fellows. Currently, the lack of clear objectives makes RAS education challenging. The main objective of our study was to highlight how urology trainees perceive the importance of RAS and the standardization of its training. METHODS: In 2021, we conducted a survey of all the residents and fellows enrolled in a Canadian urology program. The questions assessed their opinion on the importance of RAS and on their robotic surgery training. RESULTS: The response rate was 29%. The majority of participants (67%) wished they would have a better exposure to RAS during their surgical training. Only 7% of respondents reported that their program had clear criteria to help them progress through the steps of RAS, and most trainees (81%) felt their residency program should provide them with a formal RAS training program. Seventy-six percent of respondents believed that RAS would become a core skill required by the Royal College in the future, although 32% feared it would hinder their ability to learn other important techniques, such as open surgery. CONCLUSIONS: Our study revealed that although most respondents are interested in RAS, their training lacks standardization. Moreover, the potential integration of RAS as a core skill of the Royal College faces some important challenges, mostly due to the perceived lack of time to learn a new surgical technique. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Aboriginal media just whistling Dixie.
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David, Dan
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SOCIAL conditions of indigenous peoples , *SOCIAL history , *ETHNIC groups , *HOUSING , *SOCIAL services - Abstract
This article presents information about the social conditions in Kanehsatake Mohawk Territory, Quebec as of May 2004. Kanehsatake Mohawk Territory is dysfunctional. It has a population of about 2,500. It's millions of dollars in debt. It has escalating legal bills in excess of $1 million, thanks to the endless court fights between various factions on band council. It can't afford the $1.5 million it takes to run the community. Services have been cut or cut back drastically. Teachers worry about jobs. The school is in jeopardy. Parents worry about their children. Families that should have had homes must wait because money earmarked for housing, education and social services has been diverted to cover the on-going mismanagement at the band office.
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- 2004
9. Optics: The power of image over substance.
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David, Dan
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VOYAGES & travels , *ETHNIC groups , *FINANCE ministers , *POWER (Social sciences) - Abstract
National news media has portrayed the Governor Generals travels to various Arctic countries as of April 2004. Much of the Canadian media portrayed Adrienne Clarkson's trips as too lavish, too expensive and a waste of money. In the midst of various scandals calling into question the former finance minister's ability to control spending now that he is prime minister, Paul Martin pulled the plug on Clarkson's northern initiative. Clarkson focused on the circumpolar nations and, in particular, upon the 150,000 Indigenous peoples that share the coast along the Arctic Ocean from Canada, Alaska and Greenland to Russia, Finland, Sweden and Nor- way. In many ways, the Inuit cultures and languages are similar.
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- 2004
10. So Phil, what were you thinking?
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David, Dan
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SOCIAL work with children , *CHILD welfare - Abstract
An AFN spokesperson, however, said Phil Fontaine's letter asks the judge to consider the children's heritage. Fontaine's error in judgment underscores all that is wrong with this child-welfare case. It is too much about politics, and too little about the children involved. At least they got that right. It is too much about politics, but also bureaucratic bumbling by child welfare authorities, but not because of anything Fontaine has or has not done.
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- 2003
11. Question the use of the dreaded "R" word.
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David, Dan
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RIGHT-wing extremists , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
The article focuses on tactics employed by white citizens of Canada against Aboriginals. They attacked against Aboriginal and treaty rights, indeed the entire system of Canadian Indian policy, because they said it gave an unfair advantage to a specific group of people. They used half-truth, distortion and myth to create the impression that white people were carrying an increasingly heavy tax burden so that Native people could enjoy their lives. When they said so, they were termed as right-wing extremists. Then they changed their tactics. The solution to the "Native problem, "they decided, was to dispense with so-called "special rights" for Aboriginal peoples.
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- 2003
12. Candidates dismiss public, cost APTN.
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David, Dan
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PUBLIC relations , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
This article focuses on the concept of public relations in Aboriginal politics in Canada as of August 1, 2003. It discusses whether it means to control the media meaning restrict access, to deny information and to answer questions. Credibility of organizations is the most important thing in public relations business and absolutely essential for Aboriginal and minority groups that need support of Canadian public for political advantage. Aboriginals need to maintain good relations with the media if they hope to gain public support. Without public support white politicians never want to listen to them.
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- 2003
13. Too many sheep, not enough shepherds.
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David, Dan
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INDIGENOUS peoples , *PRESS , *JOURNALISTS - Abstract
The author suspects that Aboriginal people in Canada get most of their news from mainstream newspapers, radio and TV, despite alternatives, such as Aboriginal newspapers and APTN News. However, the author also suspects most mainstream journalists are ill-prepared, ill-equipped or unwilling to cover most Aboriginal stories. Aboriginal issues are too complicated. Stories are often in hard-to-reach, remote communities. People are mistrustful, even antagonistic, of reporters. Non-Aboriginal reporters risk accusations of racism by their subjects or charges of bias from their peers.
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- 2003
14. Extreme parliamentary hearings make for good TV.
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David, Dan
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LEGISLATIVE hearings , *TELEVISION broadcasting , *CABLE television - Abstract
The article presents opinion of the author that televised parliamentary hearings in Canada make for good television programs. Cable television network CPAC, the Cable Public Affairs Channel, broadcasts the proceedings of the Canada parliament. The author says that these hearings are like reality television programs. According to the author, these televised hearings have a strong plot, good characters, a surprising hero, a mysterious villain and lots of dramatic tension. The network broadcasts unedited version of these parliamentary hearings.
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- 2003
15. The silence is deafening from Native media.
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David, Dan
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NEWSPAPERS , *INDIGENOUS peoples - Abstract
This article focuses on the status of aboriginal newspapers in Canada. These newspapers take very little initiative to publish details of various events such as the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack in the U.S., the invasion of Afghanistan and the invasion of Iraq. For these newspapers it seems that these events never happened. To read them one would think that none of it affects Aboriginal peoples in Canada. Aboriginal peoples who routinely cross the U.S. and Canada border for work, to attend conferences, take part in ceremonies, report dramatic changes. One woman mentioned at a conference thather cross-border rights no longer existed.
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- 2003
16. Doublespeak: Recognize it when you hear it Medium Rare.
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David, Dan
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LANGUAGE & languages , *POLITICAL science , *WAR (International law) , *INDIGENOUS peoples of the Americas - Abstract
Deals with the prevalence of doublespeak, the language deliberately constructed to disguise its actual meaning, in politics. Words and phrases used by journalists in the war in the Middle East; Role of Instability Units in South Africa; Doublespeak in the First Nations Governance Act for Indians in Canada.
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- 2003
17. The utility of the MD extension program in Canadian medical education.
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Ruparelia S, Nguyen DD, and Nguyen AX
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- Canada, Curriculum, Education, Medical
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Competing Interests: No conflicting relationship exists for any author.
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- 2024
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18. Litigation associated with 5-alpha-reductase-inhibitor use: A Canadian legal database review.
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Nguyen DD, Fellouah M, Nguyen AV, Kazu DC, Baltzan I, Labban M, De S, Zorn KC, Chughtai B, Elterman DS, Trinh QD, and Bhojani N
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- Humans, Male, Canada, Pharmaceutical Preparations, Oxidoreductases, 5-alpha Reductase Inhibitors adverse effects, Erectile Dysfunction chemically induced, Erectile Dysfunction drug therapy
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Introduction: 5α-reductase inhibitors (5ARI) are commonly prescribed medications. There is ongoing controversy about the adverse events of these medications. The aim of this study is to characterize lawsuits in Canada involving medical complications of 5ARIs use., Materials and Methods: Legal cases were queried from CanLII. Cases were included if they involved a party taking a 5ARI who alleged an adverse event. Relevant full cases were retained, and pertinent characteristics were extracted with the help of a legal expert., Results: Our deduplicated search yielded 67 unique legal documents from December 2013 to February 2019. Twelve of these documents met the inclusion criteria (representing 3 cases, considering each case had several hearings). The medical complaints filed by the plaintiffs were all related to medication side effects (n = 3, 100%). The plaintiffs were commonly patients themselves. Defendants were exclusively pharmaceutical companies. Persistent erectile dysfunction after stopping the medication was cited as a side effect in all complaints. The prescriptions were made for male pattern hair loss (n = 3, 100%) in all cases. All cases represent class actions brought by the plaintiffs, and they have been certified by their respective court. However, the cases are still ongoing., Conclusion: While 5ARI use has been linked to undesired sexual side effects, there have been few litigations on this issue in Canada. Persisting sexual dysfunction after stopping the medication is the only complaint presented in legal action. To date, no judgment against a physician or pharmaceutical company was identified. Cases are still ongoing.
- Published
- 2023
19. Age-stratified continence outcomes of robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy.
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Sadri I, Arezki A, Zakaria AS, Couture F, Nguyen DD, Bousmaha N, Karakiewicz P, and Zorn KC
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- Canada epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Quality of Life, Recovery of Function, Treatment Outcome, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Robotic Surgical Procedures adverse effects, Urinary Incontinence epidemiology, Urinary Incontinence etiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Incontinence after robot-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP) significantly impacts quality of life. This study aims to compare the age-stratified continence outcomes in Canadian men undergoing RARP., Materials and Methods: A retrospective review was performed on a prospectively maintained database of 1737 patients who underwent RARP for localized prostate cancer between 2007 and 2019. Patients were stratified into five groups based on age: group 1, ≤ 54 years (n = 245); group 2, 55-59 years (n = 302) ; group 3, 60-64 years (n = 386); group 4, 65-69 years (n = 348); and group 5, ≥ 70 years (n = 116). Functional outcomes were assessed up to 36 months. Log-rank and multivariable Cox regression analyses were performed to compare the time to recovery of pad-free continence by age group., Results: Continence rates of groups 1 to 5 were respectively 90.2%, 79.1%, 80.4%, 71.4%, and 59.8% at 1-year follow up (p < 0.001). After 3 years, groups 1 through 5 had continence rates of 97%, 91.7%, 89.3%, 81.4%, and 77.6%, respectively (p < 0.001). Median time to recovery of continence was 58, 135, 140, 152 and 228 days, respectively. Among men who remained incontinent, older patients consistently required more pads. In Cox proportional hazard model, groups 2, 3, 4 and 5 were respectively 33% (p < 0.001), 34% (p < 0.001), 33% (p = 0.001), and 41% (p = 0.005) more likely to remain incontinent compared to group 1., Conclusions: Age is associated with significantly lower rates of continence recovery, longer time to recovery of continence, and more severe cases of incontinence after RARP.
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- 2022
20. Impact of surgical wait times during summer months on the oncological outcomes following robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy: 10 years' experience from a large Canadian academic center.
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Zakaria AS, Couture F, Nguyen DD, Tholomier C, Shahine H, Stolzenbach F, Meskawi M, Karakiewicz PI, El-Hakim A, and Zorn KC
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- Aged, Biopsy methods, Biopsy statistics & numerical data, Canada epidemiology, Health Services Accessibility organization & administration, Health Services Accessibility standards, Health Services Needs and Demand, Humans, Male, Neoplasm Staging, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Risk Assessment, Robotic Surgical Procedures methods, Robotic Surgical Procedures statistics & numerical data, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local diagnosis, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local epidemiology, Prostatectomy adverse effects, Prostatectomy methods, Prostatectomy statistics & numerical data, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Prostatic Neoplasms surgery, Seasons, Time-to-Treatment trends, Waiting Lists
- Abstract
Purpose: Most Canadian hospitals face significant reductions in operating room access during the summer. We sought to assess the impact of longer wait times on the oncological outcomes of localized prostate cancer patients following robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy (RARP)., Methods: We conducted a retrospective review of a prospectively maintained RARP database in two high-volume academic centers, between 2010 and 2019. Assessed outcomes included the difference between post-biopsy UCSF-CAPRA and post-surgical CAPRA-S scores, Gleason score upgrade and biochemical recurrence rates (BCR). Multivariable regression analyses (MVA) were used to evaluate the effect of wait times., Results: A total of 1057 men were included for analysis. Consistent over a 10 year period, summer months had the lowest surgical volumes despite above average booking volumes. The lowest surgical volume occurred during the month of July (7.1 cases on average), which was 35% less than the cohort average. The longest average wait times occurred for patients booked in June (93 ± 69 days, p < 0.001). On MVA, patients booked in June had significantly more chance of having an increase in CAPRA score [HR (95% CI) 1.64 (1.02-2.63); p = 0.04] and in CAPRA risk group [HR (95% CI) 1.82 (1.04-3.19); p = 0.03]. Cohort analysis showed fair correlation between CAPRA-score difference and wait time (Pearson correlation: r = - 0.062; p = 0.044)., Conclusion: Our cohort results demonstrate that conventional RARP wait times are significantly and consistently prolonged during summer months over the past 10 years, with worse post-RARP oncological outcomes in terms of CAPRA scores. Other compensatory mechanisms to sustain consistent yearly operative output should be considered., (© 2020. Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2021
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21. Impact of COVID-19 on Canadian anesthesia resident matching: challenges and opportunities for applicants.
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Niburski K, Nguyen DD, Ingelmo P, and Buu N
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- Canada, Humans, School Admission Criteria, Anesthesia, COVID-19, Internship and Residency
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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