43 results on '"Gorham G"'
Search Results
2. Digital Health Transformation in the Northern Territory as an Enabler for Virtual Cardio-Renal Care for Remote Indigenous Australians
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Kangaharan, N., Abeyaratne, A., and Gorham, G.
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- 2024
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3. POS-301 IMPROVING THE IDENTIFICATION AND MANAGEMENT OF KIDNEY DISEASE THROUGH AN INTEGRATED CLINICAL INFORMATION PLATFORM AND DECISION SUPPORT TOOL
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GORHAM, G., primary, Abeyaratne, A., additional, George, P., additional, Kamler, P., additional, Connelly, H., additional, and Cass, A., additional
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- 2021
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4. Reading the Book of Nature: The Ontological and Epistemological Underpinnings of Galileo's Mathematica Realism'
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Palmerino, C.R., Gorham, G., Hill, B., Slowik, E, Waters, K., Gorham, G., Hill, B., Slowik, E, and Waters, K.
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Center for History of Philosophy and Science (CHPS) - Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
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- 2016
5. Reading the Book of Nature: The Ontological and Epistemological Underpinnings of Galileo's Mathematica Realism'
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Gorham, G., Hill, B., Slowik, E, Waters, K., Palmerino, C.R., Gorham, G., Hill, B., Slowik, E, Waters, K., and Palmerino, C.R.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
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- 2016
6. The comb waveform as an efficient method for wideband transducer measurements
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Kenneth M. Walsh, Kim C. Benjamin, Walter H. Boober, and Gorham G. Lau
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Transducer ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Interdigital transducer ,Computer science ,Acoustics ,Bandwidth (signal processing) ,Broadband ,Physics::Optics ,Device under test ,Waveform ,Wideband ,Comb filter - Abstract
An efficient acoustic calibration technique based on a uniformly weighted comb waveform is presented. The method takes advantage of the linear, time invariant nature of the measurement configuration and the comb’s wide bandwidth to capture all spectral components of interest for a device under test in a single ping. Measured results comparing single ping comb measurements with conventionally obtained tonal measurements are presented. The examples given illustrate the accuracy and utility of this technique for the calibration of broadband systems.
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- 2004
7. Remote indigenous peritoneal dialysis patients have higher risk of peritonitis, technique failure, all-cause and peritonitis-related mortality
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Lim, W. H., primary, Boudville, N., additional, McDonald, S. P., additional, Gorham, G., additional, Johnson, D. W., additional, and Jose, M., additional
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- 2011
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8. The comb waveform as an efficient method for wideband measurements
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Kenneth M. Walsh, Gorham G. Lau, Walter H. Boober, and Kim C. Benjamin
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LTI system theory ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Computer science ,Acoustics ,Bandwidth (signal processing) ,Physics::Optics ,Waveform ,Wideband ,Comb filter - Abstract
An efficient acoustic calibration technique based on a uniformly‐weighted comb waveform is presented. The method takes advantage of the linear, time invariant nature of the measurement configuration and the comb’s wide bandwidth to capture all spectral components of interest for a device under test in a single ping. Results comparing single ping comb measurements with conventionally obtained CW measurements are presented. The examples given illustrate the accuracy and utility of this technique for the calibration of broadband systems.
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- 2003
9. North American Market Forecast for Thermal Spray Coatings, Powders, and Equipment: Part II
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Gorham, G., primary and Nyce, Andrew, additional
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- 1991
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10. The comb waveform as an efficient method for wideband transducer measurements.
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Boober, Walter H., Lau, Gorham G., Benjamin, Kim C., and Walsh, Kenneth M.
- Subjects
- *
SOUND , *ACOUSTICAL engineering , *BROADBAND communication systems , *BANDWIDTHS , *CALIBRATION - Abstract
An efficient acoustic calibration technique based on a uniformly weighted comb waveform is presented. The method takes advantage of the linear, time invariant nature of the measurement configuration and the comb's wide bandwidth to capture all spectral components of interest for a device under test in a single ping. Measured results comparing single ping comb measurements with conventionally obtained tonal measurements are presented. The examples given illustrate the accuracy and utility of this technique for the calibration of broadband systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2004
- Full Text
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11. Nationalism and the Right Wing in Japan. A Study of Post-War Trends Ivan I. Morris
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Gorham, G. V.
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- 1962
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12. Altar-rails
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Gorham, G. C., primary
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- 1856
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13. THE EFFECT OF CHLORPROMAZINE ON THE BEHAVIOR OF DISTURBED CHILDREN
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LANE, GORHAM G., primary, HUBER, WILLIAM G., additional, and SMITH, F. LOREN, additional
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- 1958
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14. Book Review: Nationalism and the Right Wing in Japan
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Gorham, G. V., primary
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- 1962
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15. STILL THEY COME.
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CRAWFORD, M. A., GORHAM, G. W., MUDGETT, S., NYE, AMANDA M., and R., JENNIE F.
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- 1870
16. Understanding modelled economic evaluations: a reader's guide for clinicians.
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Chen W, Howell M, Cass A, Gorham G, and Howard K
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- 2024
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17. Costs and healthcare use of patients with chronic kidney disease in the Northern Territory, Australia.
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Chen W, Howard K, Gorham G, Abeyaratne A, Zhao Y, Adegboye O, Kangaharan N, Talukder MRR, Taylor S, and Cass A
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- Humans, Northern Territory epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Aged, Risk Factors, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic economics, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: The burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is high in the Northern Territory (NT), Australia. This study aims to describe the healthcare use and associated costs of people at risk of CKD (e.g. acute kidney injury, diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease) or living with CKD in the NT, from a healthcare funder perspective., Methods: We included a retrospective cohort of patients at risk of, or living with CKD, on 1 January 2017. Patients on kidney replacement therapy were excluded from the study. Data from the Territory Kidney Care database, encompassing patients from public hospitals and primary health care services across the NT was used to conduct costing. Annual healthcare costs, including hospital, primary health care, medication, and investigation costs were described over a one-year follow-up period. Factors associated with high total annual healthcare costs were identified with a cost prediction model., Results: Among 37,398 patients included in this study, 23,419 had a risk factor for CKD while 13,979 had CKD (stages 1 to 5, not on kidney replacement therapy). The overall mean (± SD) age was 45 years (± 17), and a large proportion of the study cohort were First Nations people (68%). Common comorbidities in the overall cohort included diabetes (36%), hypertension (32%), and coronary artery disease (11%). Annual healthcare cost was lowest in those at risk of CKD (AUD$7,958 per person) and highest in those with CKD stage 5 (AUD$67,117 per person). Inpatient care contributed to the majority (76%) of all healthcare costs. Predictors of increased total annual healthcare cost included more advanced stages of CKD, and the presence of comorbidities. In CKD stage 5, the additional cost per person per year was + $53,634 (95%CI 32,769 to 89,482, p < 0.001) compared to people in the at risk group without CKD., Conclusion: The total healthcare costs in advanced stages of CKD is high, even when patients are not on dialysis. There remains a need for effective primary prevention and early intervention strategies targeting CKD and related chronic conditions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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18. Correction: Developing an integrated clinical decision support system for the early identification and management of kidney disease-building cross-sectoral partnerships.
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Gorham G, Abeyaratne A, Heard S, Moore L, George P, Kamler P, Majoni SW, Chen W, Balasubramanya B, Talukder MR, Pascoe S, Whitehead A, Sajiv C, Maple-Brown L, Kangaharan N, and Cass A
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- 2024
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19. Developing an integrated clinical decision support system for the early identification and management of kidney disease-building cross-sectoral partnerships.
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Gorham G, Abeyaratne A, Heard S, Moore L, George P, Kamler P, Majoni SW, Chen W, Balasubramanya B, Talukder MR, Pascoe S, Whitehead A, Sajiv C, Maple-Brown L, Kangaharan N, and Cass A
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- Humans, Delivery of Health Care, Northern Territory, Hospitals, Risk Assessment, Decision Support Systems, Clinical
- Abstract
Background: The burden of chronic conditions is growing in Australia with people in remote areas experiencing high rates of disease, especially kidney disease. Health care in remote areas of the Northern Territory (NT) is complicated by a mobile population, high staff turnover, poor communication between health services and complex comorbid health conditions requiring multidisciplinary care., Aim: This paper aims to describe the collaborative process between research, government and non-government health services to develop an integrated clinical decision support system to improve patient care., Methods: Building on established partnerships in the government and Aboriginal Community-Controlled Health Service (ACCHS) sectors, we developed a novel digital clinical decision support system for people at risk of developing kidney disease (due to hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease) or with kidney disease. A cross-organisational and multidisciplinary Steering Committee has overseen the design, development and implementation stages. Further, the system's design and functionality were strongly informed by experts (Clinical Reference Group and Technical Working Group), health service providers, and end-user feedback through a formative evaluation., Results: We established data sharing agreements with 11 ACCHS to link patient level data with 56 government primary health services and six hospitals. Electronic Health Record (EHR) data, based on agreed criteria, is automatically and securely transferred from 15 existing EHR platforms. Through clinician-determined algorithms, the system assists clinicians to diagnose, monitor and provide guideline-based care for individuals, as well as service-level risk stratification and alerts for clinically significant events., Conclusion: Disconnected health services and separate EHRs result in information gaps and a health and safety risk, particularly for patients who access multiple health services. However, barriers to clinical data sharing between health services still exist. In this first phase, we report how robust partnerships and effective governance processes can overcome these barriers to support clinical decision making and contribute to holistic care., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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20. Improving outcomes for hospitalised First Nations peoples though greater cultural safety and better communication: the Communicate Study Partnership study protocol.
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Ralph AP, McGrath SY, Armstrong E, Herdman RM, Ginnivan L, Lowell A, Lee B, Gorham G, Taylor S, Hefler M, and Kerrigan V
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- Humans, Allied Health Personnel, Health Personnel, Hospitals, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Communication, Delivery of Health Care
- Abstract
Background: The Communicate Study is a partnership project which aims to transform the culture of healthcare systems to achieve excellence in culturally safe care for First Nations people. It responds to the ongoing impact of colonisation which results in First Nations peoples experiencing adverse outcomes of hospitalisation in Australia's Northern Territory. In this setting, the majority of healthcare users are First Nations peoples, but the majority of healthcare providers are not. Our hypotheses are that strategies to ensure cultural safety can be effectively taught, systems can become culturally safe and that the provision of culturally safe healthcare in first languages will improve experiences and outcomes of hospitalisation., Methods: We will implement a multicomponent intervention at three hospitals over 4 years. The main intervention components are as follows: cultural safety training called 'Ask the Specialist Plus' which incorporates a locally developed, purpose-built podcast, developing a community of practice in cultural safety and improving access to and uptake of Aboriginal language interpreters. Intervention components are informed by the 'behaviour change wheel' and address a supply-demand model for interpreters. The philosophical underpinnings are critical race theory, Freirean pedagogy and cultural safety. There are co-primary qualitative and quantitative outcome measures: cultural safety, as experienced by First Nations peoples at participating hospitals, and proportion of admitted First Nations patients who self-discharge. Qualitative measures of patient and provider experience, and patient-provider interactions, will be examined through interviews and observational data. Quantitative outcomes (documentation of language, uptake of interpreters (booked and completed), proportion of admissions ending in self-discharge, unplanned readmission, hospital length of stay, costs and cost benefits of interpreter use) will be measured using time-series analysis. Continuous quality improvement will use data in a participatory way to motivate change. Programme evaluation will assess Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance ('RE-AIM')., Discussion: The intervention components are innovative, sustainable and have been successfully piloted. Refinement and scale-up through this project have the potential to transform First Nations patients' experiences of care and health outcomes., Trial Registration: Registered with ClinicalTrials.gov Protocol Record 2008644., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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21. Development and validation of algorithms to identify patients with chronic kidney disease and related chronic diseases across the Northern Territory, Australia.
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Chen W, Abeyaratne A, Gorham G, George P, Karepalli V, Tran D, Brock C, and Cass A
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- Algorithms, Humans, Northern Territory epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases complications, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Hypertension complications, Hypertension diagnosis, Hypertension epidemiology, Kidney Failure, Chronic complications, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic complications, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic diagnosis, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Electronic health records can be used for population-wide identification and monitoring of disease. The Territory Kidney Care project developed algorithms to identify individuals with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and several commonly comorbid chronic diseases. This study aims to describe the development and validation of our algorithms for CKD, diabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. A secondary aim of the study was to describe data completeness of the Territory Kidney Care database., Methods: The Territory Kidney Care database consolidates electronic health records from multiple health services including public hospitals (n = 6) and primary care health services (> 60) across the Northern Territory, Australia. Using the database (n = 48,569) we selected a stratified random sample of patients (n = 288), which included individuals with mild to end-stage CKD. Diagnostic accuracy of the algorithms was tested against blinded manual chart reviews. Data completeness of the database was also described., Results: For CKD defined as CKD stage 1 or higher (eGFR of any level with albuminuria or persistent eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73
2 , including renal replacement therapy) overall algorithm sensitivity was 93% (95%CI 89 to 96%) and specificity was 73% (95%CI 64 to 82%). For CKD defined as CKD stage 3a or higher (eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.732 ) algorithm sensitivity and specificity were 93% and 97% respectively. Among the CKD 1 to 5 staging algorithms, the CKD stage 5 algorithm was most accurate with > 99% sensitivity and specificity. For related comorbidities - algorithm sensitivity and specificity results were 75% and 97% for diabetes; 85% and 88% for hypertension; and 79% and 96% for cardiovascular disease., Conclusions: We developed and validated algorithms to identify CKD and related chronic diseases within electronic health records. Validation results showed that CKD algorithms have a high degree of diagnostic accuracy compared to traditional administrative codes. Our highly accurate algorithms present new opportunities in early kidney disease detection, monitoring, and epidemiological research., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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22. Design, effectiveness, and economic outcomes of contemporary chronic disease clinical decision support systems: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Chen W, Howard K, Gorham G, O'Bryan CM, Coffey P, Balasubramanya B, Abeyaratne A, and Cass A
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- Chronic Disease, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Decision Support Systems, Clinical
- Abstract
Objectives: Electronic health record-based clinical decision support (CDS) has the potential to improve health outcomes. This systematic review investigates the design, effectiveness, and economic outcomes of CDS targeting several common chronic diseases., Material and Methods: We conducted a search in PubMed (Medline), EBSCOHOST (CINAHL, APA PsychInfo, EconLit), and Web of Science. We limited the search to studies from 2011 to 2021. Studies were included if the CDS was electronic health record-based and targeted one or more of the following chronic diseases: cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, hypertension, and hypercholesterolemia. Studies with effectiveness or economic outcomes were considered for inclusion, and a meta-analysis was conducted., Results: The review included 76 studies with effectiveness outcomes and 9 with economic outcomes. Of the effectiveness studies, 63% described a positive outcome that favored the CDS intervention group. However, meta-analysis demonstrated that effect sizes were heterogenous and small, with limited clinical and statistical significance. Of the economic studies, most full economic evaluations (n = 5) used a modeled analysis approach. Cost-effectiveness of CDS varied widely between studies, with an estimated incremental cost-effectiveness ratio ranging between USD$2192 to USD$151 955 per QALY., Conclusion: We summarize contemporary chronic disease CDS designs and evaluation results. The effectiveness and cost-effectiveness results for CDS interventions are highly heterogeneous, likely due to differences in implementation context and evaluation methodology. Improved quality of reporting, particularly from modeled economic evaluations, would assist decision makers to better interpret and utilize results from these primary research studies., Registration: PROSPERO (CRD42020203716)., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Medical Informatics Association.)
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- 2022
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23. Important lack of difference in tacrolimus and mycophenolic acid pharmacokinetics between Aboriginal and Caucasian kidney transplant recipients.
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Barraclough KA, Metz D, Staatz CE, Gorham G, Carroll R, Majoni SW, Cherian S, Swaminathan R, and Holford N
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- Australia epidemiology, Bayes Theorem, Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A genetics, Cytochrome P-450 CYP3A metabolism, Humans, Kidney Failure, Chronic ethnology, Kidney Failure, Chronic genetics, Kidney Failure, Chronic therapy, Models, Biological, Prospective Studies, Transplant Recipients, Immunosuppressive Agents pharmacokinetics, Kidney Transplantation adverse effects, Mycophenolic Acid pharmacokinetics, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander ethnology, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander genetics, Tacrolimus pharmacokinetics, White People ethnology, White People genetics
- Abstract
Aim: To examine whether differences in tacrolimus and mycophenolic acid (MPA) pharmacokinetics contribute to the poorer kidney transplant outcomes experienced by Aboriginal Australians., Methods: Concentration-time profiles for tacrolimus and MPA were prospectively collected from 43 kidney transplant recipients: 27 Aboriginal and 16 Caucasian. Apparent clearance (CL/F) and distribution volume (V/F) for each individual were derived from concentration-time profiles combined with population pharmacokinetic priors, with subsequent assessment for between-group difference in pharmacokinetics. In addition, population pharmacokinetic models were developed using the prospective dataset supplemented by previously developed structural models for tacrolimus and MPA. The change in NONMEM objective function was used to assess improvement in goodness of model fit., Results: No differences were found between Aboriginal and Caucasian groups or empirical Bayes estimates, for CL/F or V/F of MPA or tacrolimus. However, a higher prevalence of CYP3A5 expressers (26% compared with 0%) and wider between-subject variability in tacrolimus CL/F (SD = 5.00 compared with 3.25 L/h/70 kg) were observed in the Aboriginal group, though these differences failed to reach statistical significance (p = .07 and p = .08)., Conclusion: There were no differences in typical tacrolimus or MPA pharmacokinetics between Aboriginal and Caucasian kidney transplant recipients. This means that Bayesian dosing tools developed to optimise tacrolimus and MPA dosing in Caucasian recipients may be applied to Aboriginal recipients. In turn, this may improve drug exposure and thereby transplant outcomes in this group. Aboriginal recipients appeared to have greater between-subject variability in tacrolimus CL/F and a higher prevalence of CYP3A5 expressers, attributes that have been linked with inferior outcomes., (© 2022 Asian Pacific Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2022
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24. Barriers and enablers to implementing and using clinical decision support systems for chronic diseases: a qualitative systematic review and meta-aggregation.
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Chen W, O'Bryan CM, Gorham G, Howard K, Balasubramanya B, Coffey P, Abeyaratne A, and Cass A
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Background: Clinical decision support (CDS) is increasingly used to facilitate chronic disease care. Despite increased availability of electronic health records and the ongoing development of new CDS technologies, uptake of CDS into routine clinical settings is inconsistent. This qualitative systematic review seeks to synthesise healthcare provider experiences of CDS-exploring the barriers and enablers to implementing, using, evaluating, and sustaining chronic disease CDS systems., Methods: A search was conducted in Medline, CINAHL, APA PsychInfo, EconLit, and Web of Science from 2011 to 2021. Primary research studies incorporating qualitative findings were included if they targeted healthcare providers and studied a relevant chronic disease CDS intervention. Relevant CDS interventions were electronic health record-based and addressed one or more of the following chronic diseases: cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, hypertension, and hypercholesterolaemia. Qualitative findings were synthesised using a meta-aggregative approach., Results: Thirty-three primary research articles were included in this qualitative systematic review. Meta-aggregation of qualitative data revealed 177 findings and 29 categories, which were aggregated into 8 synthesised findings. The synthesised findings related to clinical context, user, external context, and technical factors affecting CDS uptake. Key barriers to uptake included CDS systems that were simplistic, had limited clinical applicability in multimorbidity, and integrated poorly into existing workflows. Enablers to successful CDS interventions included perceived usefulness in providing relevant clinical knowledge and structured chronic disease care; user confidence gained through training and post training follow-up; external contexts comprised of strong clinical champions, allocated personnel, and technical support; and CDS technical features that are both highly functional, and attractive., Conclusion: This systematic review explored healthcare provider experiences, focussing on barriers and enablers to CDS use for chronic diseases. The results provide an evidence-base for designing, implementing, and sustaining future CDS systems. Based on the findings from this review, we highlight actionable steps for practice and future research., Trial Registration: PROSPERO CRD42020203716., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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25. Dialysis attendance patterns and health care utilisation of Aboriginal patients attending dialysis services in urban, rural and remote locations.
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Gorham G, Howard K, Cunningham J, Lawton PD, Ahmed AMS, Barzi F, and Cass A
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- Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Northern Territory epidemiology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Rural Population, Renal Dialysis, Rural Health Services
- Abstract
Background: Aboriginal people in the Northern Territory (NT) suffer the heaviest burden of kidney failure in Australia with most living in remote areas at time of dialysis commencement. As there are few dialysis services in remote areas, many Aboriginal people are required to relocate often permanently, to access treatment. Missing dialysis treatments is not uncommon amongst Aboriginal patients but the relationship between location of dialysis service and dialysis attendance (and subsequent hospital use) has not been explored to date., Aim: To examine the relationships between location of dialysis service, dialysis attendance patterns and downstream health service use (overnight hospital admissions, emergency department presentations) among Aboriginal patients in the NT., Methods: Using linked hospital and dialysis registry datasets we analysed health service activity for 896 Aboriginal maintenance dialysis patients in the NT between 2008 and 2014. Multivariate linear regression and negative binomial regression analyses explored the associations between dialysis location, dialysis attendance and health service use., Results: We found missing two or more dialysis treatments per month was more likely for Aboriginal people attending urban services and this was associated with a two-fold increase in the rate of hospital admissions and more than three-fold increase in ED presentations. However, we found higher dialysis attendance and lower health service utilisation for those receiving care in rural and remote settings. When adjusted for age, time on dialysis, region, comorbidities and residence pre-treatment, among Aboriginal people from remote areas, those dialysing in remote areas had lower rates of hospitalisations (IRR 0.56; P < 0.001) when compared to those who relocated and dialysed in urban areas., Conclusion: There is a clear relationship between the provision and uptake of dialysis services in urban, rural and remote areas in the NT and subsequent broader health service utilisation. Our study suggests that the low dialysis attendance associated with relocation and care in urban models for Aboriginal people can potentially be ameliorated by access to rural and remote models and this warrants a rethinking of service delivery policy. If providers are to deliver effective and equitable services, the full range of intended and unintended consequences of a dialysis location should be incorporated into planning decisions., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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26. Comparison of free plasma versus saliva mycophenolic acid exposure following mycophenolate mofetil administration in adult kidney transplant recipients.
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Cossart AR, Staatz CE, Gorham G, and Barraclough KA
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Immunosuppressive Agents administration & dosage, Male, Middle Aged, Mycophenolic Acid administration & dosage, Drug Monitoring, Immunosuppressive Agents pharmacokinetics, Kidney Transplantation, Mycophenolic Acid pharmacokinetics, Saliva metabolism
- Abstract
Therapeutic monitoring (TDM) of mycophenolic acid (MPA) has the potential to improve drug inefficacy and toxicities in kidney transplantation. However, measurement of plasma MPA concentrations is laborious and invasive. This study examined the utility of saliva compared with plasma based TDM of MPA. Paired blood and saliva samples were collected from 47 adult kidney transplant recipients pre- and at 1-, 2-, and 4-hours post mycophenolate mofetil administration. No relationship was observed between saliva MPA concentrations and either total or free plasma MPA concentrations (p > 0.05). This suggests that saliva is a poor direct marker of plasma MPA concentrations and therefore should not be used for MPA TDM., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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27. Do remote dialysis services really cost more? An economic analysis of hospital and dialysis modality costs associated with dialysis services in urban, rural and remote settings.
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Gorham G, Howard K, Cunningham J, Barzi F, Lawton P, and Cass A
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- Health Services, Hospitals, Humans, Northern Territory, Rural Population, Renal Dialysis, Rural Health Services
- Abstract
Background: Rates of end-stage kidney disease in Australia are highest in the Northern Territory (NT), with the burden of disease heaviest in remote areas. However, the high cost of delivering dialysis services in remote areas has resulted in centralisation, requiring many people to relocate for treatment. Patients argue that treatment closer to home improves health outcomes and reduces downstream healthcare use. Existing dialysis cost studies have not compared total health care costs associated with treatment in different locations., Objective: To estimate and compare, from a payer perspective, the observed health service costs (all cause hospital admissions, emergency department presentations and maintenance dialysis) associated with different dialysis models in urban, rural and remote locations., Methods: Using cost weights attributed to diagnostic codes in the NT Department of Health's hospital admission data set (2008-2014), we calculated the mean (SD) total annual health service costs by dialysis model for 995 dialysis patients. Generalized linear modeling with bootstrapping tested the marginal cost differences between different explanatory variables to estimate 'best casemix'/'worst casemix' cost scenarios., Results: The mean annual patient hospital expenditure was highest for urban models at $97 928 (SD $21 261) and $43 440 (SD $5 048) and lowest for remote at $19 584 (SD $4 394). When combined with the observed maintenance dialysis costs, expenditure was the highest for urban models at $148 510 (SD $19 774). The incremental cost increase of dialysing in an urban area, compared with a rural area, for a relocated person from a remote area, was $5 648 more and increased further for those from remote and very remote areas to $10 785 and $15 118 respectively., Conclusions: This study demonstrates that dialysis treatment in urban areas for relocated people has health and cost implications that maybe greater than the cost of remote service delivery. The study emphasises the importance of considering all health service costs and cost consequences of service delivery models., Key Points for Decision Makers: Relocation for dialysis treatment has serious health and economic consequences. Relocated people have low dialysis attendance and high hospital costs in urban areas. While remote dialysis service models are more expensive than urban models, the comparative cost differences are significantly reduced when all health service costs are included. The delivery of equitable and accessible dialysis service models requires a holistic approach that incorporates the needs of the patient; hence dialysis cost studies must consider the full range of cost impacts beyond the dialysis treatments alone.
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- 2021
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28. Multilevel approaches to increase fruit and vegetable intake in low-income housing communities: final results of the 'Live Well, Viva Bien' cluster-randomized trial.
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Gans KM, Risica PM, Keita AD, Dionne L, Mello J, Stowers KC, Papandonatos G, Whittaker S, and Gorham G
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Demography, Diet, Healthy, Eating, Energy Intake, Female, Fruit, Health Education methods, Humans, Income, Male, Middle Aged, Program Evaluation, Rhode Island, Vegetables, Young Adult, Commerce, Diet, Feeding Behavior, Food Supply, Health Promotion methods, Housing, Poverty
- Abstract
Background: Fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake can reduce risks for chronic disease, but is much lower than recommended amounts in most Western populations, especially for those with low income levels. Rigorous research is needed on practical, cost-effective interventions that address environmental as well as personal determinants of F&V intake. This paper presents the results of a cluster randomized controlled trial evaluating the efficacy of 'Live Well, Viva Bien' (LWVB), a multicomponent intervention that included discount, mobile fresh F&V markets in conjunction with nutrition education., Methods: Fifteen subsidized housing sites in Providence County, Rhode Island (8 intervention and 7 control sites) were randomized using a random number generator. Of these, nine housed elderly and/or disabled residents and six housed families. A total of 1597 adult housing site residents (treatment n = 837; control n = 760) were enrolled (73% women, 54% Hispanic, 17% black, Mean age 54 years). A year-long multicomponent intervention including mobile F&V markets plus nutrition education (e.g. campaigns, DVDs, newsletters, recipes, and chef demonstrations) was implemented at intervention sites. Physical activity and stress interventions were implemented at control sites. Follow-up occurred at 6 and 12 months. The main outcome measure was F&V consumption measured by National Cancer Institute's 'Eating at America's Table All Day Screener'., Results: From baseline to 12 months, the intervention group increased total F&V intake by 0.44 cups with the control group decreasing intake by 0.08 cups (p < .02). Results also showed an increased frequency of F&V eating behaviors compared to the control group (p < .01). There was a clear dose response effect of the F&V markets with participants who reported attending all or most of the markets increasing F&V intake by 2.1 cups and 0.86 cups, respectively compared with less than half cup increases for lower levels of market attendance (p < .05). Use of the DVDs, recipes and taste-testings was also associated with greater increases in F&V intake; however, use of other educational components was not., Conclusions: LWVB is the first cluster, randomized controlled trial to demonstrate the efficacy of year-round F&V markets on improving F&V intake for low-income adults, which provides an evidence-base to bolster the mission of mobile produce markets. Further, the results more broadly support investment in environmental changes to alleviate disparities in F&V consumption and diet-related health inequities., Trial Registration Number: Clinicatrials.gov registration number: NCT02669472.
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- 2018
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29. A multi-level intervention in worksites to increase fruit and vegetable access and intake: Rationale, design and methods of the 'Good to Go' cluster randomized trial.
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Risica PM, Gorham G, Dionne L, Nardi W, Ng D, Middler R, Mello J, Akpolat R, Gettens K, and Gans KM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Age Factors, Cooking methods, Costs and Cost Analysis, Cultural Competency, Exercise, Fruit, Occupational Health, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Sex Factors, Vegetables, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Diet methods, Health Education economics, Health Education organization & administration, Stress, Psychological therapy, Workplace organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: Fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption is an important contributor to chronic disease prevention. However, most Americans do not eat adequate amounts. The worksite is an advantageous setting to reach large, diverse segments of the population with interventions to increase F&V intake, but research gaps exist. No studies have evaluated the implementation of mobile F&V markets at worksites nor compared the effectiveness of such markets with or without nutrition education., Methods: This paper describes the protocol for Good to Go (GTG), a cluster randomized trial to evaluate F&V intake change in employees from worksites randomized into three experimental arms: discount, fresh F&V markets (Access Only arm); markets plus educational components including campaigns, cooking demonstrations, videos, newsletters, and a web site (Access Plus arm); and an attention placebo comparison intervention on physical activity and stress reduction (Comparison). Secondary aims include: 1) Process evaluation to determine costs, reach, fidelity, and dose as well as the relationship of these variables with changes in F&V intake; 2) Applying a mediating variable framework to examine relationships of psychosocial factors/determinants with changes in F&V consumption; and 3) Cost effectiveness analysis of the different intervention arms., Discussion: The GTG study will fill important research gaps in the field by implementing a rigorous cluster randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of an innovative environmental intervention providing access and availability to F&V at the worksite and whether this access intervention is further enhanced by accompanying educational interventions. GTG will provide an important contribution to public health research and practice. Trial registration number NCT02729675, ClinicalTrials.gov., (Copyright © 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Economic and quality of care evaluation of dialysis service models in remote Australia: protocol for a mixed methods study.
- Author
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Gorham G, Howard K, Togni S, Lawton P, Hughes J, Majoni SW, Brown S, Barnes S, and Cass A
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Humans, Information Storage and Retrieval, Kidney Diseases therapy, Northern Territory, Population Groups, Research Design, Retrospective Studies, Health Care Costs, Health Services, Indigenous economics, Health Services, Indigenous standards, Kidney Diseases ethnology, Quality of Health Care, Renal Dialysis economics
- Abstract
Background: Australia's Northern Territory (NT) has the country's highest incidence and prevalence of kidney disease. Indigenous people from remote areas suffer the heaviest disease burden. Concerns regarding cost and sustainability limit the provision of dialysis treatments in remote areas and most Indigenous people requiring dialysis relocate to urban areas. However, this dislocation of people from their family, community and support networks may prove more costly when the broader health, societal and economic consequences for the individual, family and whole of government are considered., Methods: The Dialysis Models of Care Study is a large cross organisation mixed methods study. It includes a retrospective (2000-2014) longitudinal data linkage study of two NT cohorts: Renal Cohort 1- comprising approximately 2000 adults who received dialysis and Renal Cohort 2- comprising approximately 400 children of those adults. Linkage of administrative data sets from the Australian and New Zealand Dialysis and Transplant Registry, NT Departments of Health, Housing and Education by a specialist third party (SA/NT Datalink) will enable extraction of activity, financial and outcome data. Interviews with patients, clinicians and service providers, using a snowball technique, will canvass relevant issues and assist in determining the full costs and impacts of the five most used dialysis Models of Care., Discussion: The study uses a mixed methods approach to investigate the quantitative and qualitative dimensions of the full costs and outcomes associated with the choice of particular dialysis models of care for any given patient. The study includes a large data linkage component that for the first time links health, housing and education data to fully analyse and evaluate the impact on patients, their families and the broader community, resulting from the relocation of people for treatment. The study will generate a large amount of activity, financial and qualitative data that will investigate health costs less directly related to dialysis treatment, costs to government such as housing and/or education and the health, social and economic outcomes experienced by patients. This approach fills an evidence gap critical to health service planners.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A multi-level intervention in subsidized housing sites to increase fruit and vegetable access and intake: Rationale, design and methods of the 'Live Well, Viva Bien' cluster randomized trial.
- Author
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Gans KM, Gorham G, Risica PM, Dulin-Keita A, Dionne L, Gao T, Peters S, and Principato L
- Subjects
- Cluster Analysis, Female, Financing, Government, Food Supply, Fruit supply & distribution, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Minority Groups, Pilot Projects, Poverty, Research Design, Rhode Island, Vegetables supply & distribution, Diet, Health Education, Housing
- Abstract
Background: Adequate fruit and vegetable (F&V) intake is important for disease prevention. Yet, most Americans, especially low-income and racial/ethnic minorities, do not eat adequate amounts. These disparities are partly attributable to food environments in low-income neighborhoods where residents often have limited access to affordable, healthful food and easy access to inexpensive, unhealthful foods. Increasing access to affordable healthful food in underserved neighborhoods through mobile markets is a promising, year-round strategy for improving dietary behaviors and reducing F&V intake disparities. However, to date, there have been no randomized controlled trials studying their effectiveness. The objective of the 'Live Well, Viva Bien' (LWVB) cluster randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the efficacy of a multicomponent mobile market intervention at increasing F&V intake among residents of subsidized housing complexes., Methods/design: One housing complex served as a pilot site for the intervention group and the remaining 14 demographically-matched sites were randomized into either the intervention or control group. The intervention group received bimonthly, discount, mobile, fresh F&V markets in conjunction with a nutrition education intervention (two F&V campaigns, newsletters, DVDs and cooking demonstrations) for 12 months. The control group received physical activity and stress reduction interventions. Outcome measures include F&V intake (measured by two validated F&V screeners at baseline, six-month and twelve-months) along with potential psychosocial mediating variables. Extensive quantitative and qualitative process evaluation was also conducted throughout the study., Discussion: Modifying neighborhood food environments in ways that increase access to affordable, healthful food is a promising strategy for improving dietary behaviors among low-income, racial and ethnic minority groups at increased risk for obesity and other food-related chronic diseases. Discount, mobile F&V markets address all the major barriers to eating more F&V (high cost, poor quality, limited access and limited time to shop and cook) and provide a year-round solution to limited access to healthful food in low-income neighborhoods. LWVB is the first randomized controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of mobile markets at increasing F&V intake. If proven efficacious at increasing F&V consumption, LWVB could be disseminated widely to neighborhoods that have low access to fresh F&V., Trials Registration: Clinicatrials.gov registration number: NCT02669472 First Received: January 19, 2016.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Effectiveness, cost effectiveness, acceptability and implementation barriers/enablers of chronic kidney disease management programs for Indigenous people in Australia, New Zealand and Canada: a systematic review of mixed evidence.
- Author
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Reilly R, Evans K, Gomersall J, Gorham G, Peters MD, Warren S, O'Shea R, Cass A, and Brown A
- Subjects
- Australia epidemiology, Canada epidemiology, Chronic Disease, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Disease Management, Disease Progression, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Promotion, Health Services Accessibility economics, Humans, New Zealand epidemiology, Program Development, Qualitative Research, Quality of Life, Renal Dialysis economics, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic economics, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic epidemiology, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Health Services, Indigenous economics, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Population Groups, Primary Health Care economics, Renal Dialysis statistics & numerical data, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy
- Abstract
Background: Indigenous peoples in Australia, New Zealand and Canada carry a greater burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) than the general populations in each country, and this burden is predicted to increase. Given the human and economic cost of dialysis, understanding how to better manage CKD at earlier stages of disease progression is an important priority for practitioners and policy-makers. A systematic review of mixed evidence was undertaken to examine the evidence relating to the effectivness, cost-effectiveness and acceptability of chronic kidney disease management programs designed for Indigenous people, as well as barriers and enablers of implementation of such programs., Methods: Published and unpublished studies reporting quantitative and qualitative data on health sector-led management programs and models of care explicitly designed to manage, slow progression or otherwise improve the lives of Indigenous people with CKD published between 2000 and 2014 were considered for inclusion. Data on clinical effectiveness, ability to self-manage, quality of life, acceptability, cost and cost-benefit, barriers and enablers of implementation were of interest. Quantitative data was summarized in narrative and tabular form and qualitative data was synthesized using the Joanna Briggs Institute meta-aggregation approach., Results: Ten studies were included. Six studies provided evidence of clinical effectiveness of CKD programs designed for Indigenous people, two provided evidence of cost and cost-effectiveness of a CKD program, and two provided qualitative evidence of barriers and enablers of implementation of effective and/or acceptable CKD management programs. Common features of effective and acceptable programs were integration within existing services, nurse-led care, intensive follow-up, provision of culturally-appropriate education, governance structures supporting community ownership, robust clinical systems supporting communication and a central role for Indigenous Health Workers., Conclusions: Given the human cost of dialysis and the growing population of people living with CKD, there is an urgent need to draw lessons from the available evidence from this and other sources, including studies in the broader population, to better serve this population with programs that address the barriers to receiving high-quality care and improve quality of life.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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33. Effectiveness of Fresh to You, a Discount Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Market in Low-Income Neighborhoods, on Children's Fruit and Vegetable Consumption, Rhode Island, 2010-2011.
- Author
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Gorham G, Dulin-Keita A, Risica PM, Mello J, Papandonatos G, Nunn A, Gorham S, Roberson M, and Gans KM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Commerce methods, Environment Design, Feedback, Female, Focus Groups, Food Supply economics, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Minority Groups, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Poverty, Program Evaluation, Public-Private Sector Partnerships, Qualitative Research, Residence Characteristics, Rhode Island, Social Determinants of Health, Commerce standards, Energy Intake, Food Supply methods, Fruit economics, Vegetables economics
- Abstract
Introduction: Eating fruits and vegetables is associated with lowered risk for many chronic diseases. However, most Americans, especially members of low-income and minority populations, do not eat adequate amounts. Fresh to You is a public-private partnership program that brings discount fresh produce markets into low-income neighborhoods. We conducted a mixed-methods evaluation of Fresh to You to assess the effect of the program on children's consumption of fruits and vegetables., Methods: A local produce distributor brought the Fresh to You markets to 6 community organizations serving low-income families in Rhode Island. The markets, held weekly for 5 months at each site, sold fresh produce at below-retail prices. Parents (N = 480) of children aged 3 to 13 years were recruited at the markets to participate in a 5-month cohort study. The primary outcome was change in children's fruit and vegetable intake, measured by a validated screener. We also conducted postintervention focus groups at each site with parents and qualitative interviews with site contacts to collect feedback about Fresh to You., Results: From baseline to 5 months, there was a significant increase in children's daily fruit and vegetable consumption of 0.48 cups (t = 4.16, P < .001). Data from follow-up parent surveys, focus groups, and site contact interviews provided positive feedback about Fresh to You and recommendations for improvement., Conclusion: Fresh to You was effective at increasing consumption of fruits and vegetables among racially and ethnically diverse low-income children aged 3 to 13 years whose parents shopped at the markets. The intervention could serve as a model program for replication in other cities. Refinements and a more rigorous evaluation are needed.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Nutrition and Physical Activity Environments of Home-Based Child Care: What Hispanic Providers Have to Say.
- Author
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Tovar A, Mena NZ, Risica P, Gorham G, and Gans KM
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Cultural Characteristics, Energy Intake, Feeding Behavior ethnology, Female, Focus Groups, Food Preferences, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Pediatric Obesity ethnology, Pediatric Obesity prevention & control, Qualitative Research, Rhode Island epidemiology, Social Environment, Child Care methods, Feeding Behavior psychology, Health Promotion organization & administration, Hispanic or Latino psychology, Motor Activity, Nutrition Policy, Parenting ethnology, Parenting psychology, Pediatric Obesity psychology
- Abstract
Background: It is important to understand the perceptions and beliefs of family child care providers (FCCPs) regarding which factors influence children's physical activity (PA), screen-time (ST), and dietary behaviors in order to develop and implement appropriate obesity prevention interventions. The aim of this qualitative study was to explore the aforementioned perceptions and beliefs of FCCPs in Rhode Island., Methods: Four focus groups (n = 30) were held with FCCPs. Providers were female, Hispanic, and Spanish speaking. Providers were asked about different aspects of feeding, PA, and ST behaviors. Themes were coded using NVivo10 (QSR International Pty Ltd, Doncaster, Victoria, Australia). Content analysis was used to analyze final themes., Results: Providers understood the importance of providing opportunities for healthy eating and PA for the children they cared for, but there was room for improvement, especially with regard to certain feeding and ST practices. Several barriers were evident, including the lack of physical infrastructure for PA, cultural beliefs and practices related to child feeding, and difficulties working with parents to provide consistent messages across environments., Conclusions: Given that FCCPs are aware of the importance of healthy eating and PA, there is a need to address the specific barriers they face, and operationalize some of their knowledge into practical everyday actions. This formative work will inform the development of a culturally relevant, multicomponent intervention for ethnically diverse FCCPs to improve the food and PA environments of their homes, which should, in turn, improve the dietary, PA, and ST behaviors of the 2- to 5-year-old children they care for.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Effectiveness, cost effectiveness, acceptability and implementation barriers/facilitators of chronic kidney disease management programs and models of care for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians: a mixed methods systematic review protocol.
- Author
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Reilly R, Evans K, Gomersall J, Gorham G, Warren S, O'Shea R, Peters M, Brown A, and Cass A
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Care Facilities, Australia, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Cost-Benefit Analysis economics, Health Plan Implementation organization & administration, Health Services, Indigenous organization & administration, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ethnology
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Feasibility and acceptability of an early childhood obesity prevention intervention: results from the healthy homes, healthy families pilot study.
- Author
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Keita AD, Risica PM, Drenner KL, Adams I, Gorham G, and Gans KM
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Body Mass Index, Child Behavior, Child, Preschool, Drinking, Family Health, Feasibility Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Fruit, Health Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Milk, Nutrition Surveys, Parenting psychology, Parents psychology, Pediatric Obesity psychology, Pilot Projects, Prospective Studies, Socioeconomic Factors, Television, United States epidemiology, Vegetables, Diet, Exercise, Motivational Interviewing, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Pediatric Obesity prevention & control, Sedentary Behavior
- Abstract
Background: This study examined the feasibility and acceptability of a home-based early childhood obesity prevention intervention designed to empower low-income racially/ethnically diverse parents to modify their children's health behaviors., Methods: We used a prospective design with pre-/posttest evaluation of 50 parent-child pairs (children aged 2 to 5 years) to examine potential changes in dietary, physical activity, and sedentary behaviors among children at baseline and four-month follow-up., Results: 39 (78%) parent-child pairs completed evaluation data at 4-month follow-up. Vegetable intake among children significantly increased at follow-up (0.54 cups at 4 months compared to 0.28 cups at baseline, P = 0.001) and ounces of fruit juice decreased at follow-up (11.9 ounces at 4 months compared to 16.0 ounces at baseline, P = 0.036). Sedentary behaviors also improved. Children significantly decreased time spent watching TV on weekdays (P < 0.01) and also reduced weekend TV time. In addition, the number of homes with TV sets in the child's bedroom also decreased (P < 0.0013)., Conclusions: The findings indicate that a home-based early childhood obesity prevention intervention is feasible, acceptable and demonstrates short-term effects on dietary and sedentary behaviors of low-income racially/ethnically diverse children.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The challenges and evolution of patient-focused redesign.
- Author
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Murphy L and Gorham G
- Subjects
- Humans, Hospital Restructuring organization & administration, Nursing, Supervisory organization & administration, Patient-Centered Care organization & administration
- Published
- 1996
38. Organizational and operational redesign: if we should, then how?
- Author
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Murphy L and Gorham G
- Subjects
- Decision Making, Organizational, Humans, Leadership, Nursing Staff, Hospital organization & administration, Total Quality Management, Hospital Restructuring organization & administration, Nursing, Supervisory organization & administration, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care
- Abstract
Health care leaders and clinical professionals are reconfiguring their environments. However, restructuring of management, reengineering of work, and redesigning process work flows and care delivery modalities contribute to demands that are inherent in an industry that deals with multiple variables of the human condition. After approximately 7 years of health care reengineering and redesign, fundamental tenets are being validated regarding leadership attributes, employee preparation and involvement, and commitment to the process of ongoing redesign and improvement.
- Published
- 1996
39. Why empowerment does not empower: the bankruptcy of current paradigms.
- Author
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Belasco JA and Gorham G
- Subjects
- Humans, Organizational Innovation, Decision Making, Organizational, Leadership, Nursing Staff organization & administration, Nursing, Supervisory organization & administration, Power, Psychological
- Abstract
As a result of the rapid changes taking place in health care, nurse leaders are more challenged than ever to assume a new and different kind of leadership. Under the current paradigm, leaders are responsible for the performance of their people. Leaders do things TO the organization and the people in it. That paradigm of leader responsibility for other people's performance, given today's circumstances, guarantees organizational failure. A radical transformation in leadership thinking must take place. The leader's job is to get the people to be responsible for their own performance.
- Published
- 1996
40. Mind-body dualism and the Harvey-Descartes controversy.
- Author
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Gorham G
- Subjects
- France, History, 17th Century, Humans, United Kingdom, Philosophy history, Physiology history
- Published
- 1994
41. Learned heart-rate control by a patient with a ventricular parasystolic rhythm.
- Author
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Pickering T and Gorham G
- Subjects
- Adult, Arrhythmias, Cardiac drug therapy, Female, Humans, Physical Exertion, Propranolol therapeutic use, Rest, Self-Help Devices, Time Factors, Ventricular Fibrillation therapy, Arrhythmias, Cardiac therapy, Feedback, Heart Rate
- Abstract
A 31-year-old woman with a ventricular parasystolic rhythm is described. The arrhythmia was always absent below a rate of 72 per minute, and always present over a rate of 106 per minute. Voluntary heart-rate control was learned using a biofeedback techinque, as a result of which she could increase her rate by 25 per minute and decrease it by 1-2 per minute. Both voluntary speeding and exercise brought on the arrhythmia, but later in the training she could reach a higher heart-rate before the arrhythmia appeared. Propranolol inhibited the arrhythmia only to the extent that is slowed the heart.
- Published
- 1975
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42. Kartagener's triad: a family study.
- Author
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GORHAM GW and MERSELIS JG Jr
- Subjects
- Humans, Kartagener Syndrome, Medical Records, Research
- Published
- 1959
43. The relation between external potassium concentration and the electrolyte content of isolated rat muscle in the steady state.
- Author
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RELMAN AS, GORHAM GW, and LEVINSKY NG
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Electrolytes metabolism, Muscles metabolism, Potassium metabolism
- Published
- 1961
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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