571 results on '"KAPLAN, SHERRIE H."'
Search Results
2. Evaluating barriers and potential solutions to speaking up about coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) symptoms: A survey among nursing home workers
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Gussin, Gabrielle M, Singh, Raveena D, Tjoa, Thomas T, Saavedra, Raheeb, Kaplan, Sherrie H, and Huang, Susan S
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,COVID-19 ,COVID-19 Testing ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Reproducibility of Results ,Nursing Homes ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Epidemiology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveQuantify the frequency and drivers of unreported coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) symptoms among nursing home (NH) staff.DesignConfidential telephone survey.SettingThe study was conducted in 70 NHs in Orange County, California, December 2020-February 2022.ParticipantsThe study included 120 NH staff with COVID-19.MethodsWe designed a 40-item telephone survey of NH staff to assess COVID-19 symptom reporting behavior and types of barriers [monetary, logistic, and emotional (fear or stigma)] and facilitators of symptom reporting using 5-point Likert scales. Summary statistics, reliability of survey constructs, and construct and discriminant validity were assessed.ResultsOverall, 49% of surveys were completed during the 2020-2021 COVID-19 winter wave and 51% were completed during severe acute respiratory coronavirus virus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) δ (delta)/ (omicron) waves, with a relatively even distribution of certified nursing assistants, licensed vocational or registered nurses, and nonfrontline staff. Most COVID-19 cases (71%) were detected during mandated weekly NH surveillance testing and most staff (67%) had ≥1 symptom prior to their test. Only 34% of those with symptoms disclosed their symptom to a supervisor. Responses were consistent across 8 discrete survey constructs with Cronbach α > 0.70. In the first wave of the pandemic, fear and lack of knowledge were drivers of symptom reporting. In later waves, adequate staffing and sick days were drivers of symptom reporting. COVID-19 help lines and encouragement from supervisors facilitated symptom reporting and testing.ConclusionsMandatory COVID-19 testing for NH staff is key to identifying staff COVID-19 cases due to reluctance to speak up about existing symptoms. Active encouragement from supervisors to report symptoms and stay home when ill was a major driver of symptom reporting and resultant infection prevention and worker safety measures.
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- 2023
3. The Association Between Financial Toxicity and Treatment Regret in Men With Localized Prostate Cancer
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Joyce, Daniel D, Wallis, Christopher JD, Huang, Li-Ching, Hoffman, Karen E, Zhao, Zhiguo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Rehabilitation ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Prostate Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Prevention ,Aging ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Male ,Decision Making ,Shared ,Prostatic Neoplasms - Abstract
BackgroundFinancial toxicity is emerging as an important patient-centered outcome and is understudied in prostate cancer patients. We sought to understand the association between financial burden and treatment regret in men with localized prostate cancer to better evaluate the role of financial discussions in patient counseling.MethodsUtilizing the Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation dataset, we identified all men accrued between 2011 and 2012 who underwent surgery, radiation, or active surveillance for localized prostate cancer. Financial burden and treatment regret were assessed at 3- and 5-year follow-up. The association between financial burden and regret was assessed using multivariable longitudinal logistic regression controlling for demographic and disease characteristics, treatment, functional outcomes, and patient expectations.ResultsOf the 2924 eligible patients, regret and financial burden assessments for 3- and/or 5-year follow-up were available for 81% (n = 2359). After adjustment for relevant covariates, financial burden from "finances in general" was associated with treatment regret at 3 years (odds ratio [OR] = 2.47, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.33 to 4.57; P = .004); however, this association was no longer statistically significant at 5-year follow-up (OR = 1.19, 95% CI = 0.56 to 2.54; P = .7).ConclusionsIn this population-based sample of men with localized prostate cancer, we observed associations between financial burden and treatment regret. Our findings suggest indirect treatment costs, especially during the first 3 years after diagnosis, may impact patients more profoundly than direct costs and are important for inclusion in shared decision making.
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- 2022
4. Prostate volume, baseline urinary function, and their association with treatment choice and post-treatment urinary function in men treated for localized prostate cancer
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Tallman, Jacob E., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Penson, David F., Koyama, Tatsuki, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Hoffman, Karen E., and Barocas, Daniel A.
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- 2023
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5. Association between Treatment for Localized Prostate Cancer and Mental Health Outcomes.
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Luckenbaugh, Amy N, Wallis, Christopher JD, Huang, Li-Ching, Wittmann, Daniela, Klaassen, Zachary, Zhao, Zighuo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Laviana, Aaron A, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hoffman, Karen E, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Fatigue ,Androgen Antagonists ,Cohort Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,mental health ,prostatic neoplasms ,quality of life ,Cancer ,Mental Health ,Urologic Diseases ,Aging ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Prostate Cancer ,Depression ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
PurposeWe aimed to compare patient-reported mental health outcomes for men undergoing treatment for localized prostate cancer longitudinally over 5 years.Materials and methodsWe conducted a prospective population-based analysis using the Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (CEASAR) study. Patient-reported depressive symptoms (Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression [CES-D]) and domains of the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short Form survey evaluating emotional well-being and energy/fatigue were assessed through 5 years after treatment with surgery, radiotherapy (with or without androgen deprivation therapy) and active surveillance. Regression models were adjusted for outcome-specific baseline function, demographic and clinicopathological characteristics, and treatment approach.ResultsA total of 2,742 men (median [quartiles] age 64 [59-70]) met inclusion criteria. Baseline depressive symptoms, as measured by the CES-D, were low (median 4, quartiles 1-8) without differences between groups. We found no effect of treatment modality on depressive symptoms (p=0.78), though older age, poorer health, being unmarried and baseline CES-D score were associated with declines in mental health. There was no clinically meaningful association between treatment modality and scores for either emotional well-being (p=0.81) or energy/fatigue (p=0.054).ConclusionsThis prospective, population-based cohort study of men with localized prostate cancer showed no clinically important differences in mental health outcomes including depressive symptoms, emotional well-being, and energy/fatigue according to the treatment received (surgery, radiotherapy, or surveillance). However, we identified a number of characteristics associated with worse mental health outcomes including: older age, poorer health, being unmarried, and baseline CES-D score which may allow for early identification of patients most at risk of these outcomes following treatment.
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- 2022
6. Association between pelvic nodal radiotherapy and patient-reported functional outcomes through 5 years among men undergoing external-beam radiotherapy for prostate cancer: An assessment of the comparative effectiveness analysis of surgery and radiation (CEASAR) cohort.
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Wallis, Christopher JD, Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Penson, David F, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Tallman, Jacob E, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Barocas, Daniel A, and Hoffman, Karen E
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Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cohort Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Cohort studies ,Patient reported outcome measures ,Prospective studies ,Prostatic neoplasms ,Survey and questionnaires ,Prostate Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,6.5 Radiotherapy and other non-invasive therapies ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
BackgroundThe role of pelvic irradiation in men receiving external beam radiotherapy (EBRT) for prostate cancer is unclear, in part due to a lack of data on patient-reported outcomes. We sought to compare functional outcomes for men receiving prostate and pelvic versus prostate-only radiotherapy, longitudinally over 5 years.Materials and methodsWe performed a population-based, prospective cohort study of men with clinically-localized prostate cancer undergoing EBRT. We examined the effect of prostate and pelvic (n = 102) versus prostate-only (n = 485) radiotherapy on patient-reported disease-specific (using the Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite[EPIC]-26) and general health-related (using the SF-36) function, over 5 years. Regression models were adjusted for outcome-specific baseline function, clinicopathologic characteristics, and androgen deprivation therapy (ADT).Results587 men (median [quartiles] age 69 [64-73] years) met inclusion criteria and completed ≥1 post-treatment survey. More men treated with prostate and pelvic radiotherapy had high-risk disease (58% vs. 18%, P < 0.01) and received ADT (75% vs. 41%, P < 0.01). These men reported worse sexual (6 months-5 years), hormonal (at 6 months), and physical (6 months-5 years) function. Accounting for baseline function, patient and tumor characteristics, and use of ADT, pelvic irradiation was not associated with statistically or clinically significant differences in bowel function, urinary incontinence, irritative voiding symptoms or sexual function through 5-years (all P > 0.05). Marginally clinically important differences were noted in hormonal function at 3-years (adjusted mean difference 4.7, 95% confidence interval [1.2-8.3]; minimally clinically important difference (MCID) 4 to 6) and 5-years (4.2, [0.4-8.0]) following treatment. After adjustment, there was a transient statistically significant, but not clinically important, difference in emotional well-being at 6 months (3.0, [0.19-5.8]; MCID 6) that resolved by 1 year and no differences in physical functioning or energy and fatigue.ConclusionThis prospective, population-based cohort study of men with localized prostate cancer treated with EBRT, showed no clinically important differences in disease-specific or general health-related quality of life with the addition of pelvic irradiation to prostate radiotherapy, supporting the use of pelvic radiotherapy when it may be of clinical benefit, such as men with increased risk of nodal involvement.
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- 2022
7. Experiences and barriers with home bladder manometry in the pediatric neurogenic bladder population: A qualitative study
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Macaraeg, Amanda M., Alshehabi, Sara M., Huen, Kathy H., Davis-Dao, Carol A., Williamson, Sarah H., Boswell, Timothy C., Chalmers, Christina, Stephany, Heidi A., Chuang, Kai-wen, Wehbi, Elias J., Kain, Zeev N., Kaplan, Sherrie H., and Khoury, Antoine E.
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- 2024
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8. Association between adherence to radiation therapy quality metrics and patient reported outcomes in prostate cancer
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Tallman, Jacob E., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Penson, David F., Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Barocas, Daniel A., and Hoffman, Karen E.
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- 2023
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9. Radiotherapy after radical prostatectomy: Effect of timing of postprostatectomy radiation on functional outcomes
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Huelster, Heather L, Laviana, Aaron A, Joyce, Daniel D, Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Hoffman, Karen E, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Aging ,Cancer ,Prostate Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Urologic Diseases ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,6.4 Surgery ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Aged ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Postoperative Period ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Prostate cancer ,Outcomes ,Radiation ,Erectile function ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Introduction and objectiveThe timing of radiotherapy (RT) after prostatectomy is controversial, and its effect on sexual, urinary, and bowel function is unknown. This study seeks to compare patient-reported functional outcomes after radical prostatectomy (RP) and postprostatectomy radiation as well as elucidate the timing of radiation to allow optimal recovery of function.MethodsThe Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (CEASAR) study is a prospective, population-based, observational study of men with localized prostate cancer. Patient-reported sexual, urinary, and bowel functional outcomes were measured using the 26-item Expanded Prostate Index Composite at baseline and at 6, 12, 36, and 60 months after enrollment. Functional outcomes were compared among men undergoing RP alone, post-RP adjuvant radiation (RP + aRT), and post-RP salvage radiation (RP + sRT) using multivariable models controlling for baseline clinical, demographic, and functional characteristics.ResultsAmong 1,482 CEASAR participants initially treated with RP for clinically localized prostate cancer, 11.5% (N = 170) received adjuvant (aRT, N = 57) or salvage (sRT, N = 113) radiation. Men who received post-RP RT had worse scores in all domains (sexual function [-9.0, 95% confidence interval {-14.5, -3.6}, P < 0.001], incontinence [-8.8, {-14.0, -3.6}, P < 0.001], irritative voiding [-5.9, {-9.0, -2.8}, P < 0.001], bowel irritative [-3.5, {-5.8, -1.2}, P = 0.002], and hormonal function [-4.5, {-7.2, -1.7}, P = 0.001]) compared to RP alone at 5 years of follow-up. Compared to men treated with RP alone in an adjusted linear model, sRT was associated with significantly worse scores in all functional domains. aRT was associated with significantly worse incontinence, urinary irritation, and hormonal function domain scores compared to RP alone at 5 years of follow-up. On multivariable modeling, RT administered approximately 24 months after RP was associated with the smallest decline in sexual domain score, with an adjusted mean decrease of 8.85 points (95% confidence interval [-19.8, 2.1]) from post-RP, pre-RT baseline.ConclusionsIn men with localized prostate cancer, post-RP RT was associated with significantly worse sexual, urinary, and bowel function domain scores at 5 years compared to RP alone. Radiation delayed for approximately 24 months after RP may be optimal for preserving erectile function compared to radiation administered closer to the time of RP.
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- 2020
10. Development and Internal Validation of a Web-based Tool to Predict Sexual, Urinary, and Bowel Function Longitudinally After Radiation Therapy, Surgery, or Observation.
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Laviana, Aaron A, Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Hoffman, Karen, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Intestines ,Urinary Tract ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Sexuality ,Internet ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Male ,Urinary Tract Physiological Phenomena ,Watchful Waiting ,Comparative effectiveness ,Disease risk ,Nomogram ,Patient-reported function ,Prostate cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Cancer ,Aging ,Prostate Cancer ,Patient Safety ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,7.3 Management and decision making ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
BackgroundShared decision making to guide treatment of localized prostate cancer requires delivery of the anticipated quality of life (QOL) outcomes of contemporary treatment options (including radical prostatectomy [RP], intensity-modulated radiation therapy [RT], and active surveillance [AS]). Predicting these QOL outcomes based on personalized features is necessary.ObjectiveTo create an easy-to-use tool to predict personalized sexual, urinary, bowel, and hormonal function outcomes after RP, RT, and AS.Design, setting, and participantsA prospective, population-based cohort study was conducted utilizing US cancer registries of 2563 men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer in 2011-2012.InterventionPatient-reported urinary, sexual, and bowel function up to 5 yr after treatment.Outcome measurements and statistical analysisPatient-reported urinary, sexual, bowel, and hormonal function through 5 yr after treatment were collected using the 26-item Expanded Prostate Index Composite (EPIC-26) questionnaire. Comprehensive models to predict domain scores were fit, which included age, race, D'Amico classification, body mass index, EPIC-26 baseline function, treatment, and standardized scores measuring comorbidity, general QOL, and psychosocial health. We reduced these models by removing the instrument scores and replacing D'Amico classification with prostate-specific antigen (PSA) and Gleason score. For the final model, we performed bootstrap internal validation to assess model calibration from which an easy-to-use web-based tool was developed.Results and limitationsThe prediction models achieved bias-corrected R-squared values of 0.386, 0.232, 0.183, 0.214, and 0.309 for sexual function, urinary incontinence, urinary irritative, bowel, and hormonal domains, respectively. Differences in R-squared values between the comprehensive and parsimonious models were small in magnitude. Calibration was excellent. The web-based tool is available at https://statez.shinyapps.io/PCDSPred/.ConclusionsFunctional outcomes after treatment for localized prostate cancer can be predicted at the time of diagnosis based on age, race, PSA, biopsy grade, baseline function, and a general question regarding overall health. Providers and patients can use this prediction tool to inform shared decision making.Patient summaryIn this report, we studied patient-reported sexual, urinary, hormonal, and bowel function through 5 yr after treatment with radical prostatectomy, radiation therapy, or active surveillance for localized prostate cancer. We developed a web-based predictive tool that can be used to predict one's outcomes after treatment based on age, race, prostate-specific antigen, biopsy grade, pretreatment baseline function, and a general question regarding overall health. We hope both patients and providers can use this tool to better understand expected outcomes after treatment, further enhancing shared decision making between providers and patients.
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- 2020
11. The role of parental health and distress in assessing children’s health status
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Kaplan, Sherrie H., Shaughnessy, Marilou, Fortier, Michelle A., Vivero-Montemayor, Marla, Masague, Sergio Gago, Hayes, Dylan, Stern, Hal, Dai, Maozhu, Heim, Lauren, and Kain, Zeev
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- 2022
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12. Correction to: Prostate volume, baseline urinary function, and their association with treatment choice and post-treatment urinary function in men treated for localized prostate cancer
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Tallman, Jacob E., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Penson, David F., Koyama, Tatsuki, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Hoffman, Karen E., and Barocas, Daniel A.
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- 2023
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13. Interpretation of Domain Scores on the EPIC-How Does the Domain Score Translate into Functional Outcomes?
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Laviana, Aaron A, Hernandez, Agustin, Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Hoffman, Karen, Feurer, Irene D, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Hashibe, Mia, O'Neil, Brock B, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Urologic Diseases ,Prostate Cancer ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Quality of Life ,Radiotherapy ,Recovery of Function ,Risk Factors ,prostatic neoplasms ,patient reported outcome measures ,quality of life ,urinary incontinence ,penile erection - Abstract
PurposeThe EPIC-26 (Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite-Short Form) is a validated questionnaire for measuring health related quality of life. However, the relationship between domain scores and functional outcomes remains unclear, leading to potential confusion about expectations after treatment. For instance, does a sexual function domain score of 80 mean that a patient can achieve erection sufficient for intercourse? Consequently we sought to determine the relationship between the domain score and the response to obtaining the best possible outcome for each question.Materials and methodsUsing data from the CEASAR (Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation) study, a multicenter, prospective study of men diagnosed with localized prostate cancer, we analyzed 11,464 EPIC-26 questionnaires from a total of 2,563 men at baseline through 60 months of followup who were treated with robotic prostatectomy, radiotherapy or active surveillance. We dichotomized every item into its best possible outcome and assessed the percent of men at each domain score who achieved the best result.ResultsFor every EPIC-26 item the frequency of the best possible outcome was reported by domain score category. For example, a score of 80 to 100 on sexual function corresponded to 97% of men reporting erections sufficient for intercourse while at a score of 40 to 60 only 28% reported adequate erections. Also, at a score of 80 to 100 on the urinary incontinence domain 93% of men reported rarely or never leaking vs 6% at a score of 61 to 80.ConclusionsOur findings indicate a novel way to interpret EPIC-26 domain scores, demonstrating large variations in the percent of respondents reporting the best possible outcomes over narrow domain score differences. This information may be valuable when counseling men on treatment options.
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- 2019
14. Children and their parents' assessment of postoperative surgical pain: Agree or disagree?
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Kaminsky, Olivia, Fortier, Michelle A, Jenkins, Brooke N, Stevenson, Robert S, Gold, Jeffrey I, Zuk, Jeannie, Golianu, Brenda, Kaplan, Sherrie H, and Kain, Zeev N
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Humans ,Pain ,Postoperative ,Acetaminophen ,Analgesics ,Pain Measurement ,Adenoidectomy ,Tonsillectomy ,Longitudinal Studies ,Prospective Studies ,Parents ,Adolescent ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Male ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Agreement ,Pain ,Pediatric ,Postoperative ,Pain Research ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine - Abstract
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study is to compare postoperative pain scores between children undergoing tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy (T&A) surgery and their parents, identify potential predictors for this disagreement, and determine possible impact on analgesic administration.MethodsThis is a prospective longitudinal study conducted with children undergoing outpatient T&A in 4 major tertiary hospitals and their parents. Children and their parents were enrolled prior to surgery and completed baseline psychological instruments assessing parental anxiety (STAI), parental coping style (MBSS), child temperament (EAS) and parental medication administration attitude questionnaire (MAQ). Postoperatively, parents and children completed at-home pain severity ratings (Faces Pain Scale-Revised, children; Numeric Rating Scale, parents) on postoperative recovery days 1, 2, and 3, reflecting an overall pain level for the past 24 h. Parents also completed a log of analgesic administration. Based on postoperative pain scores, parent-child dyads were classified as overestimators (i.e., parents rated their child's pain higher than children rated their own pain), in agreement (i.e., rating in agreement), or underestimators (i.e., parents rated their child's pain lower than children rated their own pain).ResultsA significant proportion of parent-child pairs disagreed on pain ratings on postoperative days 1-3 (30.05%-35.95%). Of those pairs in disagreement, the majority of parents overestimated their child's pain on all three postoperative days, specifically such that a total of 24-26% parents overestimated their child's pain on postoperative days 1, 2, and 3. Repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated that parents in the overestimator group administered higher, though still within safe limits, amounts of ibuprofen and oxycodone (mg/day) than did the underestimator or agreement groups. Multiple regression models showed hospital site as the only independent predictor for postoperative pain rating disagreement between children and parents.ConclusionsSince parents overestimate their child's postoperative pain and may administer more analgesics to their child, it is essential to develop a standardized method of child pain assessment and a tailored recommended postoperative analgesic regimen amongst medical providers for children undergoing T&A.
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- 2019
15. Sexual function outcomes of radiation and androgen deprivation therapy for localized prostate cancer in men with good baseline function
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Joyce, Daniel D., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Luckenbaugh, Amy N., Huelster, Heather L., Zhao, Zhiguo, Hoffman, Karen E., Huang, Li-Ching, Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, Neil, Brock B. O’, Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Penson, David F., and Barocas, Daniel A.
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- 2022
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16. Parental satisfaction of child's perioperative care
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Shafer, Jonathan S, Jenkins, Brooke N, Fortier, Michelle A, Stevenson, Robert S, Hikita, Natasha, Zuk, Jeannie, Gold, Jeffrey I, Golianu, Brenda, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Mayes, Linda, and Kain, Zeev N
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Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Anxiety ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Humans ,Hypnosis ,Anesthetic ,Male ,Parents ,Patient Satisfaction ,Perioperative Care ,ambulatory surgery ,anxiety ,child social functioning ,mYPAS ,parental engagement ,parental stress ,mYPAS ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Anesthesiology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundSatisfaction in the hospital setting is an important component of both hospital funding and patient experience. When it comes to a child's hospital experience, parent satisfaction of their child's perioperative care is also necessary to understand. However, little research has been conducted on the predictors of this outcome. Therefore, the purpose of this current study was to validate a priori selected predictors for parental satisfaction in their child's perioperative process.MethodsEight hundred and ten pediatric patients who underwent tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy surgery and their parents were included in this study. The primary outcome was assessed using a 21-item parent satisfaction questionnaire resulting in three satisfaction scores: overall care satisfaction, OR/induction satisfaction, and total satisfaction.ResultsDescriptive statistics and correlational analysis found that sedative-premedication, parental presence at anesthesia induction, child social functioning, parental anxiety, and language were all significant predictors of various components of the satisfaction score. Regression models, however, revealed that only parent anxiety and child social functioning remained significant predictors such that parents who reported lower state anxiety (OR/induction satisfaction: OR = 0.975, 95% CI [0.957, 0.994]; total satisfaction: OR = 0.968, 95% CI [0.943, 0.993]) and who had higher socially functioning children (overall care satisfaction: OR = 1.019, 95% CI [1.005, 1.033]; OR/induction satisfaction: OR = 1.011, 95% CI [1.000, 1.022]) were significantly more satisfied with the perioperative care they received.ConclusionLower parent anxiety and higher child social functioning were predictive of higher parental satisfaction scores.
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- 2018
17. Comparison of Patient-reported Outcomes After External Beam Radiation Therapy and Combined External Beam With Low-dose-rate Brachytherapy Boost in Men With Localized Prostate Cancer
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Lee, Daniel J, Barocas, Daniel A, Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Resnick, Matthew J, Koyoma, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, McCollum, Dan, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S, Hashibe, Mia, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette M, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Penson, David F, and Hoffman, Karen E
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Aging ,Prostate Cancer ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Aged ,Brachytherapy ,Hormones ,Humans ,Intestines ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Radiation Dosage ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,Sexual Dysfunction ,Physiological ,Survival Analysis ,Urinary Incontinence ,Other Physical Sciences ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis ,Theoretical and computational chemistry ,Medical and biological physics - Abstract
PurposeTo compare patient-reported disease-specific functional outcomes after external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) and EBRT combined with low-dose-rate brachytherapy prostate boost (EB-LDR) among men with localized prostate cancer.Methods and materialsThe prospective, population-based Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation study enrolled men with localized prostate cancer in 2011 to 2012. The 26-item Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite measured patient-reported disease-specific function at baseline and at 6, 12, and 36 months. Higher domain scores indicate better function. Minimal clinically important difference was defined as 6 for urinary incontinence, 5 for urinary irritative function, 4 for bowel function, 12 for sexual function, and 4 for hormonal function. Multivariable linear and logistic regression models were fit to estimate the effect of treatment on patient-reported outcomes.ResultsFive-hundred seventy-eight men received EBRT and 109 received EB-LDR. Median patient age was 69 years, and 70% had intermediate- or high-risk disease. Men in the EB-LDR group were younger (P .05). On multivariable analyses, men receiving EB-LDR reported worse urinary irritative function at 6 months (adjusted mean difference [AMD] -14.4, P
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- 2018
18. Contemporary prostate cancer radiation therapy in the United States: Patterns of care and compliance with quality measures.
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Lee, Daniel J, Barocas, Daniel A, Zhao, Zhiguo, Huang, Li-Ching, Koyama, Tatsuki, Resnick, Matthew J, Conwill, Ralph, McCollum, Dan, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S, Hashibe, Mia, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette M, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Penson, David F, and Hoffman, Karen E
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Prostate ,Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Brachytherapy ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,Health Care Surveys ,Radiation Oncology ,Quality Control ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Guideline Adherence ,United States ,Male ,Radiotherapy ,Intensity-Modulated ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Radiotherapy ,Image-Guided ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,Dose Fractionation ,Radiation ,Prostate Cancer ,Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research - Abstract
PurposeQuality measures represent the standards of appropriate treatment agreed upon by experts in the field and often supported by data. The extent to which providers in the community adhere to quality measures in radiation therapy (RT) is unknown.Methods and materialsThe Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation study enrolled men with clinically localized prostate cancer in 2011 and 2012. Patients completed surveys and medical records were reviewed. Patients were risk-stratified according to D'Amico classification criteria. Patterns of care and compliance with 8 quality measures as endorsed by national consortia as of 2011 were assessed.ResultsOverall, 926 men underwent definitive RT (69% external beam radiation therapy [EBRT]), 17% brachytherapy (BT), and 14% combined EBRT and BT with considerable variation in radiation techniques across risk groups. Most men who received EBRT had dose-escalated EBRT (>75 Gy; 93%) delivered with conventional fractionation (
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- 2018
19. The Influence of Psychosocial Constructs on the Adherence to Active Surveillance for Localized Prostate Cancer in a Prospective, Population-based Cohort.
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Lang, Maximilian F, Tyson, Mark D, Alvarez, JoAnn Rudd, Koyama, Tatsuki, Hoffman, Karen E, Resnick, Matthew J, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Chen, Vivien, Paddock, Lisa E, Hamilton, Ann S, Hashibe, Mia, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Stroup, Antoinette, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Staging ,Sentinel Surveillance ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Risk Assessment ,Anxiety ,Decision Making ,Psychology ,Social Support ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Educational Status ,United States ,Male ,Watchful Waiting ,Neoplasm Grading ,Aging ,Cancer ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prostate Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Urologic Diseases ,Patient Safety ,Behavioral and Social Science ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the influence of psychosocial factors such as prostate cancer (PCa) anxiety, social support, participation in medical decision-making (PDM), and educational level on patient decisions to discontinue PCa active surveillance (AS) in the absence of disease progression.MethodsThe Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation study is a prospective, population-based cohort study of men with localized PCa diagnosed in 2011-2012. PCa anxiety, social support, PDM, educational level, and patient reasons for discontinuing AS were assessed through patient surveys. A Cox proportional hazards model examined the relationship between psychosocial variables and time to discontinuation of AS.ResultsOf 531 patients on AS, 165 (30.9%) underwent treatment after median follow-up of 37 months. Whereas 69% of patients cited only medical reasons for discontinuing AS, 31% cited at least 1 personal reason, and 8% cited personal reasons only. Patients with some college education discontinued AS significantly earlier (hazard ratio: 2.0, 95% confidence interval: 1.2, 3.2) than patients with less education. PCa anxiety, social support, and PDM were not associated with seeking treatment.ConclusionWe found that 31% of men who choose AS for PCa discontinue AS within 3 years. Eight percent of men who sought treatment did so in the absence of disease progression. Education, but not psychosocial factors, seems to influence definitive treatment-seeking. Future research is needed to understand how factors unrelated to disease severity influence treatment decisions among patients on AS to identify opportunities to improve adherence to AS.
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- 2017
20. Association Between Radiation Therapy, Surgery, or Observation for Localized Prostate Cancer and Patient-Reported Outcomes After 3 Years
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Barocas, Daniel A, Alvarez, JoAnn, Resnick, Matthew J, Koyama, Tatsuki, Hoffman, Karen E, Tyson, Mark D, Conwill, Ralph, McCollum, Dan, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S, Hashibe, Mia, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette M, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, and Penson, David F
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Cancer ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Aging ,Urologic Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Prostate Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Decision Making ,Erectile Dysfunction ,Humans ,Intestinal Diseases ,Kaplan-Meier Estimate ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Prospective Studies ,Prostate-Specific Antigen ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Quality of Life ,Radiotherapy ,Intensity-Modulated ,Treatment Outcome ,Urinary Incontinence ,Urination Disorders ,Watchful Waiting ,Medical and Health Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
ImportanceUnderstanding the adverse effects of contemporary approaches to localized prostate cancer treatment could inform shared decision making.ObjectiveTo compare functional outcomes and adverse effects associated with radical prostatectomy, external beam radiation therapy (EBRT), and active surveillance.Design, setting, and participantsProspective, population-based, cohort study involving 2550 men (≤80 years) diagnosed in 2011-2012 with clinical stage cT1-2, localized prostate cancer, with prostate-specific antigen levels less than 50 ng/mL, and enrolled within 6 months of diagnosis.ExposuresTreatment with radical prostatectomy, EBRT, or active surveillance was ascertained within 1 year of diagnosis.Main outcomes and measuresPatient-reported function on the 26-item Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC) 36 months after enrollment. Higher domain scores (range, 0-100) indicate better function. Minimum clinically important difference was defined as 10 to 12 points for sexual function, 6 for urinary incontinence, 5 for urinary irritative symptoms, 5 for bowel function, and 4 for hormonal function.ResultsThe cohort included 2550 men (mean age, 63.8 years; 74% white, 55% had intermediate- or high-risk disease), of whom 1523 (59.7%) underwent radical prostatectomy, 598 (23.5%) EBRT, and 429 (16.8%) active surveillance. Men in the EBRT group were older (mean age, 68.1 years vs 61.5 years, P
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- 2017
21. Correction to: Association between adherence to radiation therapy quality metrics and patient reported outcomes in prostate cancer
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Tallman, Jacob E., Wallis, Christopher J. D., Huang, Li-Ching, Zhao, Zhiguo, Penson, David F., Koyama, Tatsuki, Conwill, Ralph, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Paddock, Lisa E., Stroup, Antoinette, Cooperberg, Matthew R., Hashibe, Mia, O’Neil, Brock B., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Greenfield, Sheldon, Barocas, Daniel A., and Hoffman, Karen E.
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- 2023
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22. Impact of Adherence to Quality Measures for Localized Prostate Cancer on Patient-reported Health-related Quality of Life Outcomes, Patient Satisfaction, and Treatment-related Complications.
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Sohn, William, Resnick, Matthew J, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Phillips, Sharon, Koyama, Tatsuki, Goodman, Michael, Hamilton, Ann S, Hashibe, Mia, Hoffman, Karen E, Paddock, Lisa E, Stroup, Antoinette M, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Penson, David F, and Barocas, Daniel A
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Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Treatment Outcome ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Reimbursement ,Incentive ,Patient Satisfaction ,Male ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Self Report ,Patient Safety ,Aging ,Cancer ,Prostate Cancer ,Pain Research ,Urologic Diseases ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Chronic Pain ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Good Health and Well Being ,prostate cancer ,quality ,health-related quality of life ,patient-centered ,PQRS ,Public Health and Health Services ,Applied Economics ,Health Policy & Services - Abstract
Background and objectiveQuality measures used in pay-for-performance systems are intended to address specific quality goals, such as safety, efficiency, effectiveness, timeliness, equity, and patient-centeredness. Given the small number of narrowly focused measures in prostate cancer care, we sought to determine whether adherence to any of the available payer-driven quality measures influences patient-centered outcomes, including health-related quality of life (HRQOL), patient satisfaction, and treatment-related complications.MethodsThe Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation study is a population-based, prospective cohort study that enrolled 3708 men with clinically localized prostate cancer during 2011 and 2012, of whom 2601 completed the 1-year survey and underwent complete chart abstraction. Compliance with 6 quality indicators endorsed by national consortia was assessed. Multivariable regression was used to determine the relationship between indicator compliance and Expanded Prostate Cancer Index Composite (EPIC-26) instrument summary scores, satisfaction scale scores (service satisfaction scale for cancer care), and treatment-related complications.ResultsOverall rates of compliance with these quality measures ranged between 64% and 88%. Three of the 6 measures were weakly associated with 1-year sexual function and bowel function scores (β=-4.6, 1.69, and 2.93, respectively; P≤0.05), whereas the remaining measures had no significant relationship with patient-reported HRQOL outcomes. Satisfaction scores and treatment-related complications were not associated with quality measure compliance.ConclusionsCompliance with available nationally endorsed quality indicators, which were designed to incentivize effective and efficient care, was not associated with clinically important changes in patient-centered outcomes (HRQOL, satisfaction, or complications) within 1-year.
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- 2016
23. The patient's perspective on the need for informed consent for minimal risk studies: Development of a survey-based measure
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Kaplan, Sherrie H, Gombosev, Adrijana, Fireman, Sheila, Sabin, James, Heim, Lauren, Shimelman, Lauren, Kaganov, Rebecca, Osann, Kathryn E, Tjoa, Thomas, and Huang, Susan S
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Generic health relevance ,Sociology ,Applied Ethics ,Applied ethics - Abstract
Background: Recent efforts to study quality improvement (QI) efforts to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of healthcare have raised important questions about ethical boundaries for waiving informed consent. Confusion exists because similar projects can be undertaken for research or QI purposes, a distinction currently used to define Institutional Review Board oversight. However, patients are not aware of such distinctions. We sought to evaluate patients' views of waiving consent for non-invasive projects to improve healthcare quality and delivery. Methods: We developed a 32-item measure of patient thresholds for waiving consent for different types of QI interventions, including those involving changes to: 1) the hospital environment; 2) hospital policies or procedures; 3) objects used by patients; 4) medications or devices; and 5) use of patient information. In a sample of 200 hospitalized patients, we tested and confirmed the reliability and validity of subscales representing each of the 5 intervention types. Results: For each of the five consent threshold scales, all items in each scale had substantial item-to-total correlations with the other items in that scale taken together. All five internal consistency reliability coefficients exceeded.70 for the total sample. Means for all 5 scales indicated general patient support for waiving consent across all categories of interventions studied. However, patients were significantly less comfortable foregoing consent for interventions involving medications or devices, or sharing of patient information. Conclusion: We developed and tested a survey instrument to contribute to the understanding of patient preferences for consent in QI assessment activities. Measures were found to be reliable and valid. Findings indicated general patient support for waiving consent across all minimal risk categories studied. However, more work is needed to reassure and protect patients during minimal risk studies involving medications or devices, or the sharing of patient information.
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- 2016
24. Contributors to Patients' Ratings of Quality of Care Among Ethnically Diverse Patients with Type 2 Diabetes.
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Choi, Sarah E, Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Billimek, John, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, and Sorkin, Dara H
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Humans ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Linear Models ,Risk Assessment ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Attitude to Health ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Asian Americans ,Patient Participation ,Patient Satisfaction ,Disease Management ,Quality of Health Care ,California ,Female ,Male ,Healthcare Disparities ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Hispanic or Latino ,Whites ,Interpersonal quality of care ,Participatory decision making ,Quality of care ,Race/ethnicity ,Trust ,Clinical Research ,Diabetes ,Health Services ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health - Abstract
We examined racial/ethnic differences in patients' ratings of components of interpersonal quality [participatory decision making (PDM) style, being treated as an equal partner, and feelings of trust], and evaluated the association between each of these components and patients' ratings of overall healthcare quality among non-Hispanic white (NHW), Vietnamese American, and Mexican American patients with type 2 diabetes. The findings indicated that although all three components were significantly associated with ratings of overall healthcare quality, the significant interactions between race/ethnicity and both PDM style (β = -0.09, p
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- 2016
25. Effectiveness of Remote Patient Monitoring After Discharge of Hospitalized Patients With Heart Failure: The Better Effectiveness After Transition–Heart Failure (BEAT-HF) Randomized Clinical Trial
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Ong, Michael K, Romano, Patrick S, Edgington, Sarah, Aronow, Harriet U, Auerbach, Andrew D, Black, Jeanne T, De Marco, Teresa, Escarce, Jose J, Evangelista, Lorraine S, Hanna, Barbara, Ganiats, Theodore G, Greenberg, Barry H, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Kimchi, Asher, Liu, Honghu, Lombardo, Dawn, Mangione, Carol M, Sadeghi, Bahman, Sadeghi, Banafsheh, Sarrafzadeh, Majid, Tong, Kathleen, and Fonarow, Gregg C
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Patient Safety ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Aging ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Heart Disease ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Confounding Factors ,Epidemiologic ,Female ,Heart Failure ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Monitoring ,Physiologic ,Odds Ratio ,Patient Discharge ,Patient Readmission ,Proportional Hazards Models ,Prospective Studies ,Quality of Life ,Research Design ,Telemetry ,Telephone ,United States ,Better Effectiveness After Transition–Heart Failure (BEAT-HF) Research Group ,Clinical Sciences ,Opthalmology and Optometry ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences ,Health services and systems - Abstract
ImportanceIt remains unclear whether telemonitoring approaches provide benefits for patients with heart failure (HF) after hospitalization.ObjectiveTo evaluate the effectiveness of a care transition intervention using remote patient monitoring in reducing 180-day all-cause readmissions among a broad population of older adults hospitalized with HF.Design, setting, and participantsWe randomized 1437 patients hospitalized for HF between October 12, 2011, and September 30, 2013, to the intervention arm (715 patients) or to the usual care arm (722 patients) of the Better Effectiveness After Transition-Heart Failure (BEAT-HF) study and observed them for 180 days. The dates of our study analysis were March 30, 2014, to October 1, 2015. The setting was 6 academic medical centers in California. Participants were hospitalized individuals 50 years or older who received active treatment for decompensated HF.InterventionsThe intervention combined health coaching telephone calls and telemonitoring. Telemonitoring used electronic equipment that collected daily information about blood pressure, heart rate, symptoms, and weight. Centralized registered nurses conducted telemonitoring reviews, protocolized actions, and telephone calls.Main outcomes and measuresThe primary outcome was readmission for any cause within 180 days after discharge. Secondary outcomes were all-cause readmission within 30 days, all-cause mortality at 30 and 180 days, and quality of life at 30 and 180 days.ResultsAmong 1437 participants, the median age was 73 years. Overall, 46.2% (664 of 1437) were female, and 22.0% (316 of 1437) were African American. The intervention and usual care groups did not differ significantly in readmissions for any cause 180 days after discharge, which occurred in 50.8% (363 of 715) and 49.2% (355 of 722) of patients, respectively (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.03; 95% CI, 0.88-1.20; P = .74). In secondary analyses, there were no significant differences in 30-day readmission or 180-day mortality, but there was a significant difference in 180-day quality of life between the intervention and usual care groups. No adverse events were reported.Conclusions and relevanceAmong patients hospitalized for HF, combined health coaching telephone calls and telemonitoring did not reduce 180-day readmissions.Trial registrationclinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01360203.
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- 2016
26. The Comparative Harms of Open and Robotic Prostatectomy in Population Based Samples.
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O'Neil, Brock, Koyama, Tatsuki, Alvarez, JoAnn, Conwill, Ralph M, Albertsen, Peter C, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S, Hoffman, Karen E, Hoffman, Richard M, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Stanford, Janet L, Stroup, Antoinette M, Paddock, Lisa E, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Stephenson, Robert A, Resnick, Matthew J, Barocas, Daniel A, and Penson, David F
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Humans ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Postoperative Complications ,Treatment Outcome ,Prostatectomy ,SEER Program ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Male ,Robotic Surgical Procedures ,patient outcome assessment ,prostatectomy ,robotics ,Prevention ,Prostate Cancer ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Urologic Diseases ,Cancer ,6.4 Surgery ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
PurposeRobotic assisted radical prostatectomy has largely replaced open radical prostatectomy for the surgical management of prostate cancer despite conflicting evidence of superiority with respect to disease control or functional sequelae. Using population cohort data, in this study we examined sexual and urinary function in men undergoing open radical prostatectomy vs those undergoing robotic assisted radical prostatectomy.Materials and methodsSubjects surgically treated for prostate cancer were selected from 2 large population based prospective cohort studies, the Prostate Cancer Outcomes Study (enrolled 1994 to 1995) and the Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (enrolled 2011 to 2012). Subjects completed baseline, 6-month and 12-month standardized patient reported outcome measures. Main outcomes were between-group differences in functional outcome scores at 6 and 12 months using linear regression, and adjusting for baseline function, sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Sensitivity analyses were used to evaluate outcomes between patients undergoing open radical prostatectomy and robotic assisted radical prostatectomy within and across CEASAR and PCOS.ResultsThe combined cohort consisted of 2,438 men, 1,505 of whom underwent open radical prostatectomy and 933 of whom underwent robotic assisted radical prostatectomy. Men treated with robotic assisted radical prostatectomy reported better urinary function at 6 months (mean difference 3.77 points, 95% CI 1.09-6.44) but not at 12 months (1.19, -1.32-3.71). Subjects treated with robotic assisted radical prostatectomy also reported superior sexual function at 6 months (8.31, 6.02-10.56) and at 12 months (7.64, 5.25-10.03). Sensitivity analyses largely supported the sexual function findings with inconsistent support for urinary function results.ConclusionsThis population based study reveals that men undergoing robotic assisted radical prostatectomy likely experience less decline in early urinary continence and sexual function than those undergoing open radical prostatectomy. The clinical meaning of these differences is uncertain and longer followup will be required to establish whether these benefits are durable.
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- 2016
27. Remote Patient Management After Discharge of Hospitalized Heart Failure Patients: The Better Effectiveness After Transition - Heart Failure Study
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Ong, Michael K, Romano, Patrick S, Edgington, Sarah, Auerbach, Andrew D, Aronow, Harriet U, Black, Jeanne T, De Marco, Teresa, Escarce, Jose J, Evangelista, Lorraine, Ganiats, Theodore G, Greenberg, Barry, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Kimchi, Asher, Liu, Honghu, Lombardo, Dawn, Mangione, Carol M, Sarrafzadeh, Majid, Tong, Kathleen, Fonarow, Gregg C, and Grp, BEAT-HF Rsch
- Subjects
Heart failure ,Transitions of care ,Telemedicine ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services - Published
- 2015
28. Predicting the Risk of Breakthrough Urinary Tract Infections: Primary Vesicoureteral Reflux
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Hidas, Guy, Billimek, John, Nam, Alexander, Soltani, Tandis, Kelly, Maryellen S, Selby, Blake, Dorgalli, Crystal, Wehbi, Elias, McAleer, Irene, McLorie, Gordon, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, and Khoury, Antoine E
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Kidney Disease ,Urologic Diseases ,Digestive Diseases ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,Renal and urogenital ,California ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Incidence ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Male ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Urinalysis ,Urinary Tract Infections ,Vesico-Ureteral Reflux ,risk assessment ,urinary tract infections ,vesico-ureteral reflux - Abstract
PurposeWe constructed a risk prediction instrument stratifying patients with primary vesicoureteral reflux into groups according to their 2-year probability of breakthrough urinary tract infection.Materials and methodsDemographic and clinical information was retrospectively collected in children diagnosed with primary vesicoureteral reflux and followed for 2 years. Bivariate and binary logistic regression analyses were performed to identify factors associated with breakthrough urinary tract infection. The final regression model was used to compute an estimation of the 2-year probability of breakthrough urinary tract infection for each subject. Accuracy of the binary classifier for breakthrough urinary tract infection was evaluated using receiver operator curve analysis. Three distinct risk groups were identified. The model was then validated in a prospective cohort.ResultsA total of 252 bivariate analyses showed that high grade (IV or V) vesicoureteral reflux (OR 9.4, 95% CI 3.8-23.5, p
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- 2015
29. Revisiting a measure of child postoperative recovery: development of the Post Hospitalization Behavior Questionnaire for Ambulatory Surgery
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Jenkins, Brooke N, Kain, Zeev N, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Stevenson, Robert S, Mayes, Linda C, Guadarrama, Josue, and Fortier, Michelle A
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Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Ambulatory Surgical Procedures ,Anesthesia ,Child Behavior ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Hospitalization ,Humans ,Male ,Postoperative Period ,Principal Component Analysis ,Psychometrics ,Reproducibility of Results ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,pediatric ,postoperative ,behavioral change ,ambulatory surgery ,measurement ,modification ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Anesthesiology - Abstract
BackgroundThe Post Hospitalization Behavior Questionnaire (PHBQ) was designed for assessing children's posthospitalization and postoperative new-onset behavioral changes. However, the psychometric properties of the scale have not been re-evaluated in the past five decades despite substantial changes in the practice of surgery and anesthesia. In this investigation, we examined the psychometric properties of the PHBQ to potentially increase the efficacy and relevance of the instrument in current perioperative settings.MethodThis study used principal components analysis, a panel of experts, Cronbach's alpha, and correlations to examine the current subscale structure of the PHBQ and eliminate items to create the Post Hospitalization Behavior Questionnaire for Ambulatory Surgery (PHBQ-AS). Data from previous investigations (N = 1064, Mage = 5.88) which utilized the PHBQ were combined for the purposes of this paper.ResultsA principal components analysis revealed that the original subscale structure of the PHBQ could not be replicated. Subsequently, a battery reduction, which utilized principal components analysis and a panel of experts, was used to eliminate the subscale structure of the scale and reduce the number of items from 27 to 11, creating the PHBQ-AS. The PHBQ-AS demonstrated good internal consistency reliability and concurrent validity with another measure of children's psychosocial and physical functioning.ConclusionRevising the former subscale structure and reducing the number of items in the PHBQ to create the PHBQ-AS may provide a means for reducing the burden of postoperative behavioral assessment through decreasing time of administration and eliminating redundancy of items and allow for more accurate measurement of child postoperative behavioral changes.
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- 2015
30. The Evolution of Self-Reported Urinary and Sexual Dysfunction over the Last Two Decades: Implications for Comparative Effectiveness Research
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Resnick, Matthew J, Barocas, Daniel A, Morgans, Alicia K, Phillips, Sharon E, Koyama, Tatsuki, Albertsen, Peter C, Cooperberg, Matthew R, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S, Hoffman, Karen E, Hoffman, Richard M, Kaplan, Sherrie H, McCollum, Dan, Paddock, Lisa E, Stanford, Janet L, Stroup, Antoinette M, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, and Penson, David F
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Prostate Cancer ,Urologic Diseases ,Adult ,Aged ,Cohort Studies ,Erectile Dysfunction ,Humans ,Incidence ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prostatectomy ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Radiotherapy ,Regression Analysis ,Risk Factors ,Self Report ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Urinary Incontinence ,Prostate cancer ,Quality of life ,Urinary function ,Sexual function ,Patient-reported outcomes ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundDespite the paramount importance of patient-reported outcomes, little is known about the evolution of patient-reported urinary and sexual function over time.ObjectiveTo evaluate differences in pretreatment urinary and sexual function in two population-based cohorts of men with prostate cancer enrolled nearly 20 yr apart.Design, setting, and participantsPatients were enrolled in the Prostate Cancer Outcomes Study (PCOS) or the Comparative Effectiveness Analysis of Surgery and Radiation (CEASAR) study, two population-based cohorts that enrolled patients with incident prostate cancer from 1994 to 1995 and from 2011 to 2012, respectively. Participants completed surveys at baseline and various time points thereafter.Outcome measurements and statistical analysisWe performed multivariable logistic and linear regression analysis to investigate differences in pretreatment function between studies.Results and limitationsThe study comprised 5469 men of whom 2334 (43%) were enrolled in PCOS and 3135 (57%) were enrolled in CEASAR. Self-reported urinary incontinence was higher in CEASAR compared with PCOS (7.7% vs 4.7%; adjusted odds ratio [OR]: 1.83; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.39-2.43). Similarly, self-reported erectile dysfunction was more common among CEASAR participants (44.7% vs 24.0%) with an adjusted OR of 3.12 (95% CI, 2.68-3.64). Multivariable linear regression models revealed less favorable self-reported baseline function among CEASAR participants in the urinary incontinence and sexual function domains. The study is limited by its observational design and possibility of unmeasured confounding.ConclusionsReporting of pretreatment urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction has increased over the past two decades. These findings may reflect sociological changes including heightened media attention and direct-to-consumer marketing, among other potential explanations.Patient summaryPatient reporting of urinary and sexual function has evolved and is likely contingent on continually changing societal norms. Recognizing the evolving nature of patient reporting is essential in efforts to conduct high-quality, impactful comparative effectiveness research.
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- 2015
31. Mental health symptoms and patient-reported diabetes symptom burden: implications for medication regimen changes.
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Sorkin, Dara H, Billimek, John, August, Kristin J, Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Reikes, Andrew R, and Greenfield, Sheldon
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Humans ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Hyperglycemia ,Hypoglycemia ,Medical Records ,Linear Models ,Logistic Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Depressive Disorder ,Comorbidity ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Middle Aged ,Mexican Americans ,California ,Vietnam ,Female ,Male ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,White People ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Asian ,Diabetes-related symptom burden ,mental health ,physician medication prescribing behaviour ,type 2 diabetes. ,Depression ,Mental Health ,Diabetes ,Clinical Research ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Good Health and Well Being ,Asian Americans ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Whites ,type 2 diabetes ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health - Abstract
AimsTo examine the relative contribution of glycaemic control (HbA1C) and depressive symptoms on diabetes-related symptom burden (hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia) in order to guide medication modification.MethodsSecondary analysis of medical records data and questionnaires collected from a racially/ethnically diverse sample of adult patients with type 2 diabetes (n = 710) from seven outpatient clinics affiliated with an academic medical centre over a 1-year period as part of the Reducing Racial Disparities in Diabetes: Coached Care (R2D2C2) study.ResultsResults from linear regression analysis revealed that patients with high levels of depressive symptoms had more diabetes-related symptom burden (both hypoglycaemia and hyperglycaemia) than patients with low levels of depressive symptoms (βs = 0.09-0.17, Ps < 0.02). Furthermore, results from two logistic regression analyses suggested that the odds of regimen intensification at 1-year follow-up was marginally associated with patient-reported symptoms of hypoglycaemia [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.24, 95% CI: 0.98-1.58; P = 0.08] and hyperglycaemia (aOR = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.00-1.46; P = 0.05), after controlling for patients' HbA1C, comorbidity, insulin use and demographics. These associations, however, were diminished for patients with high self-reported hypoglycaemia and high levels of depressive symptoms, but not low depressive symptoms (interaction terms for hypoglycaemia by depressive symptoms, aOR = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.97-0.99; P = 0.03).ConclusionsMental health symptoms are associated with higher levels of patient-reported of diabetes-related symptoms, but the association between diabetes-related symptoms and subsequent regimen modifications is diminished in patients with greater depressive symptoms. Clinicians should focus attention on identifying and treating patients' mental health concerns in order to address the role of diabetes-related symptom burden in guiding physician medication prescribing behaviour.
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- 2015
32. Development of a Short Version of the Modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale
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Jenkins, Brooke N, Fortier, Michelle A, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Mayes, Linda C, and Kain, Zeev N
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- 2015
33. Understanding disparities in lipid management among patients with type 2 diabetes: gender differences in medication nonadherence after treatment intensification.
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Billimek, John, Malik, Shaista, Sorkin, Dara H, Schmalbach, Priel, Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Greenfield, Sheldon, and Kaplan, Sherrie H
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Humans ,Hypertension ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Diabetes Complications ,Blood Glucose ,Anticholesteremic Agents ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Treatment Outcome ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Sex Distribution ,Sex Characteristics ,Adult ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,European Continental Ancestry Group ,Hispanic Americans ,Quality of Health Care ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Cholesterol ,LDL ,Hyperlipidemias ,Cholesterol ,HDL ,Medication Adherence ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Public Health ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
BackgroundGender differences in dyslipidemia are widely documented, but the contributors to these differences are not well understood. This study examines whether differences in quality of care, intensity of lipid-lowering medication regimen, and medication adherence can explain this disparity.MethodsSecondary analysis of medical records data and questionnaires collected from adult patients with type 2 diabetes (n = 1,369) from seven outpatient clinics affiliated with an academic medical center as part of the Reducing Racial Disparities in Diabetes: Coached Care (R2D2C2) study. Primary outcome was low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol.FindingsWomen had higher LDL cholesterol levels than men (mean [SD], 101.2 [35.2] vs. 92.3 [33.0] mg/dL; p
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- 2015
34. Development of a short version of the modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale.
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Jenkins, Brooke N, Fortier, Michelle A, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Mayes, Linda C, and Kain, Zeev N
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Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Anxiety ,Parents ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Psychometrics ,Principal Component Analysis ,Time Factors ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Preoperative Period ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Anesthesiology - Abstract
BackgroundThe modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (mYPAS) is the current "criterion standard" for assessing child anxiety during induction of anesthesia and has been used in >100 studies. This observational instrument covers 5 items and is typically administered at 4 perioperative time points. Application of this complex instrument in busy operating room (OR) settings, however, presents a challenge. In this investigation, we examined whether the instrument could be modified and made easier to use in OR settings.MethodsThis study used qualitative methods, principal component analyses, Cronbach αs, and effect sizes to create the mYPAS-Short Form (mYPAS-SF) and reduce time points of assessment. Data were obtained from multiple patients (N = 3798; Mage = 5.63) who were recruited in previous investigations using the mYPAS over the past 15 years.ResultsAfter qualitative analysis, the "use of parent" item was eliminated due to content overlap with other items. The reduced item set accounted for 82% or more of the variance in child anxiety and produced the Cronbach α of at least 0.92. To reduce the number of time points of assessment, a minimum Cohen d effect size criterion of 0.48 change in mYPAS score across time points was used. This led to eliminating the walk to the OR and entrance to the OR time points.ConclusionsReducing the mYPAS to 4 items, creating the mYPAS-SF that can be administered at 2 time points, retained the accuracy of the measure while allowing the instrument to be more easily used in clinical research settings.
- Published
- 2014
35. Are nursing homes less likely to admit methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus carriers?
- Author
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Reynolds, Courtney, Kim, Diane, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Mukamel, Dana B, Cui, Eric, Lee, Cameron, and Huang, Susan S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Antimicrobial Resistance ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,California ,Carrier State ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,Middle Aged ,Nursing Homes ,Patient Admission ,Staphylococcal Infections ,MRSA ,Postdischarge care ,Long-term care ,Hospital discharge ,aged ,article ,bacterium carrier ,health insurance ,hospital admission ,human ,major clinical study ,methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus ,nursing home ,United States ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology ,Clinical sciences ,Public health - Abstract
We surveyed administrators at 13 nursing homes in Orange County, CA, on their likelihood to admit methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) carriers and assessed applicant characteristics associated with rejection. In multivariate models, denial of admission was associated with MRSA carriage (odds ratio, 2.7; P = .02) and receiving lower ratings for overall suitability for admission (odds ratio, 5.9; P < .001). Larger studies are needed to determine whether decolonization may remove barriers to accessing postdischarge care for MRSA carriers.
- Published
- 2014
36. A remote monitoring and telephone nurse coaching intervention to reduce readmissions among patients with heart failure: study protocol for the Better Effectiveness After Transition - Heart Failure (BEAT-HF) randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Black, Jeanne T, Romano, Patrick S, Sadeghi, Banafsheh, Auerbach, Andrew D, Ganiats, Theodore G, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H, and Ong, Michael K
- Subjects
Heart failure ,Telemonitoring ,Nurse coaching ,Readmission ,Care coordination ,Self-caredisease management ,care ,home ,program ,metaanalysis ,performance ,outcomes ,support ,illness ,update - Published
- 2014
37. Patient Reported Comparative Effectiveness of Contemporary Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy Versus External Beam Radiation Therapy of the Mid 1990s for Localized Prostate Cancer
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O’Neil, Brock, Hoffman, Karen E., Koyama, Tatsuki, Alvarez, JoAnn Rudd, Conwill, Ralph M., Albertsen, Peter C., Cooperberg, Matthew R., Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Hashibe, Mia, Stanford, Janet L., Stroup, Antoinette M., Paddock, Lisa E., Chen, Viven, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Resnick, Matthew J., Penson, David F., and Barocas, Daniel A.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The Effects of Financial Pressures on Adherence and Glucose Control Among Racial/Ethnically Diverse Patients with Diabetes
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Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Sorkin, Dara H, Billimek, John, Greenfield, Sheldon, and Kaplan, Sherrie H
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Health Services ,Diabetes ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Aged ,Confidence Intervals ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Cultural Diversity ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Ethnicity ,Female ,Glycated Hemoglobin A ,Health Care Costs ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Medication Adherence ,Middle Aged ,Odds Ratio ,Racial Groups ,Self Report ,United States ,Affordable Care Act ,type 2 diabetes ,ethnic groups ,race ,financial pressure ,adherence ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Clinical Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundThe Affordable Care Act is designed to decrease the numbers of uninsured patients in U.S. However, even with insurance, patients who have financial hardships may have difficulty obtaining their medications because of cost issues.ObjectiveAmong patients with type 2 diabetes, to examine the association between patients' self-reported financial pressures on cost-related medication non-adherence and glucose control. Additionally, to examine whether having insurance decrease the financial pressures of diabetes care.Design and participantsRacially/ethnically diverse patients (N = 1,361; 249 non-Hispanic whites, 194 Vietnamese, and 533 Mexican American) with type 2 diabetes were recruited from seven outpatient clinics for a cross-sectional, observational study.Key resultsAlthough both Vietnamese and Mexican-American patients reported having low annual incomes, more Mexican Americans reported the presence of financial barriers to getting medical care and perceived financial burden due to their diabetes, compared to whites and Vietnamese (p
- Published
- 2012
39. Underdiagnosed and undertreated depression among racially/ethnically diverse patients with type 2 diabetes.
- Author
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Sorkin, Dara H, Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Billimek, John, August, Kristin J, Greenfield, Sheldon, and Kaplan, Sherrie H
- Subjects
Depression: diagnosis ,epidemiology ,ethnology ,therapy ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2: psychology ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Middle Aged - Abstract
To examine racial/ethnic differences in the prevalence of depressive symptoms and in provider recognition of depression among Latino, Asian, and non-Hispanic white patients with type 2 diabetes.Patients (n = 1,209) with type 2 diabetes were recruited from five university-affiliated primary care clinics for an observational study.Vietnamese American (133, 59.4%) and Mexican American (351, 50.2%) patients were more likely to report symptoms consistent with clinical depression (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression [CES-D] scale score ≥ 22) than non-Hispanic whites (119, 41.6%; F [2, 1206] = 8.05, P < 0.001). Despite comparable diabetes care, Vietnamese and Mexican patients with high depressive symptoms were less likely to be diagnosed and treated than non-Hispanic whites (all P values < 0.001). Minority patients who reported low levels of trust in their provider were less likely to have been diagnosed or treated for depression (adjusted odds ratio 0.65, 95% CI 0.44-0.98, P < 0.05).Innovative strategies are needed to improve recognition of depressive symptoms in minority patients.
- Published
- 2011
40. Surveying Minorities with Limited-English Proficiency: Does Data Collection Method Affect Data Quality among Asian Americans?
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Kaplan, Sherrie H., Clarridge, Brian R., and Phillips, Russell S.
- Published
- 2004
41. The Influence of Psychosocial Constructs on the Adherence to Active Surveillance for Localized Prostate Cancer in a Prospective, Population-based Cohort
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Lang, Maximilian F., Tyson, Mark D., Alvarez, JoAnn Rudd, Koyama, Tatsuki, Hoffman, Karen E., Resnick, Matthew J., Cooperberg, Matthew R., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Chen, Vivien, Paddock, Lisa E., Hamilton, Ann S., Hashibe, Mia, Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Kaplan, Sherrie H., Stroup, Antoinette, Penson, David F., and Barocas, Daniel A.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. More Judicious Use of Expectant Management for Localized Prostate Cancer during the Last 2 Decades
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Albertsen, Peter C., Cooperberg, Matthew R., Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann, Hoffman, Richard M., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Paddock, Lisa, Stanford, Janet L., Stroup, Antoinette M., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Eifler, J.B., Alvarez, J., Koyama, T., Conwill, R.M., Ritch, C.R., Hoffman, K.E., Resnick, M.J., Penson, D.F., and Barocas, D.A.
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- 2017
- Full Text
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43. Providing High-Quality Care for Limited English Proficient Patients: The Importance of Language Concordance and Interpreter Use
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Ngo-Metzger, Quyen, Sorkin, Dara H, Phillips, Russell S, Greenfield, Sheldon, Massagli, Michael P, Clarridge, Brian, and Kaplan, Sherrie H
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Good Health and Well Being ,Asian ,Communication Barriers ,Community Health Services ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Cultural Competency ,Female ,Focus Groups ,Health Care Surveys ,Humans ,Language ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Satisfaction ,Pilot Projects ,Professional-Patient Relations ,Quality of Health Care ,United States ,quality of care ,satisfaction ,interpersonal care ,interpreters ,health education ,language barriers ,limited English proficiency ,Asian American ,Clinical Sciences ,General & Internal Medicine - Abstract
BackgroundProvider-patient language discordance is related to worse quality care for limited English proficient (LEP) patients who speak Spanish. However, little is known about language barriers among LEP Asian-American patients.ObjectiveWe examined the effects of language discordance on the degree of health education and the quality of interpersonal care that patients received, and examined its effect on patient satisfaction. We also evaluated how the presence/absence of a clinic interpreter affected these outcomes.DesignCross-sectional survey, response rate 74%.ParticipantsA total of 2,746 Chinese and Vietnamese patients receiving care at 11 health centers in 8 cities.MeasurementsProvider-patient language concordance, health education received, quality of interpersonal care, patient ratings of providers, and the presence/absence of a clinic interpreter. Regression analyses were used to adjust for potential confounding.ResultsPatients with language-discordant providers reported receiving less health education (beta = 0.17, p < 0.05) compared to those with language-concordant providers. This effect was mitigated with the use of a clinic interpreter. Patients with language-discordant providers also reported worse interpersonal care (beta = 0.28, p < 0.05), and were more likely to give low ratings to their providers (odds ratio [OR] = 1.61; CI = 0.97-2.67). Using a clinic interpreter did not mitigate these effects and in fact exacerbated disparities in patients' perceptions of their providers.ConclusionLanguage barriers are associated with less health education, worse interpersonal care, and lower patient satisfaction. Having access to a clinic interpreter can facilitate the transmission of health education. However, in terms of patients' ratings of their providers and the quality of interpersonal care, having an interpreter present does not serve as a substitute for language concordance between patient and provider.
- Published
- 2007
44. A Critique of Current Uses of Health Status for the Assessment of Treatment Effectiveness and Quality of Care
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Kaplan, Sherrie H., Kravitz, Richard L., and Greenfield, Sheldon
- Published
- 2000
45. The role of parental health and distress in assessing children's health status.
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Kaplan, Sherrie H, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Shaughnessy, Marilou, Fortier, Michelle A, Vivero-Montemayor, Marla, Masague, Sergio Gago, Hayes, Dylan, Stern, Hal, Dai, Maozhu, Heim, Lauren, Kain, Zeev, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Kaplan, Sherrie H, Shaughnessy, Marilou, Fortier, Michelle A, Vivero-Montemayor, Marla, Masague, Sergio Gago, Hayes, Dylan, Stern, Hal, Dai, Maozhu, Heim, Lauren, and Kain, Zeev
- Abstract
PurposeThe purpose of the study was to examine the contributions of parents' health and distress to parent's and children's assessments of children's health.MethodsWe used baseline data from a longitudinal study of 364 children (ages 4-12) about to undergo surgery and their parents in a Southern California pediatric hospital. We used the 20-item child self-reported CHRIS 2.0 general health and the parallel parent-reported measure of the child's health, along with a measure of parental distress about the child's health were administered in the perioperative period. Other measures included parents' physical and mental health, quality of life, distress over their child's health, and number and extent of other health problems of the child and siblings.ResultsOn average, parents' reports about the child were consistently and statistically significantly higher than children's self-reports across all sub-dimensions of the CHRIS 2.0 measure. Parents' personal health was positively associated with their reports of the child's health. More distressed parents were closer to the child's self-reports, but reported poorer personal health.ConclusionParent-child differences in this study of young children's health were related to parental distress. Exploring the nature of the gap between parents and children in assessments of children's health could improve effective clinical management for the child and enhance family-centered pediatric care. Future studies are needed to assess the generalizability of CHRIS 2.0 to other health settings and conditions and to other racial/ethnic groups.
- Published
- 2022
46. The Comparative Harms of Open and Robotic Prostatectomy in Population Based Samples
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O’Neil, Brock, Koyama, Tatsuki, Alvarez, JoAnn, Conwill, Ralph M., Albertsen, Peter C., Cooperberg, Matthew R., Goodman, Michael, Greenfield, Sheldon, Hamilton, Ann S., Hoffman, Karen E., Hoffman, Richard M., Kaplan, Sherrie H., Stanford, Janet L., Stroup, Antoinette M., Paddock, Lisa E., Wu, Xiao-Cheng, Stephenson, Robert A., Resnick, Matthew J., Barocas, Daniel A., and Penson, David F.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Response to Testa: A Critique of Current Uses of Health Status for the Assessment of Treatment Effectiveness and Quality of Care
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Kaplan, Sherrie H, Kravitz, Richard L, and Greenfield, Sheldon
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Guidelines as Topic ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,Outcome Assessment ,Health Care ,Research Design ,Self-Assessment ,Treatment Outcome ,health status ,interpretation ,calibration ,Public Health and Health Services ,Applied Economics ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics ,Health services and systems ,Policy and administration - Published
- 2000
48. Prostate volume, baseline urinary function, and their association with treatment choice and post-treatment urinary function in men treated for localized prostate cancer
- Author
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Tallman, Jacob E., primary, Wallis, Christopher J. D., additional, Zhao, Zhiguo, additional, Huang, Li-Ching, additional, Penson, David F., additional, Koyama, Tatsuki, additional, Goodman, Michael, additional, Hamilton, Ann S., additional, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, additional, Paddock, Lisa E., additional, Stroup, Antoinette, additional, Cooperberg, Matthew R., additional, Hashibe, Mia, additional, O’Neil, Brock B., additional, Kaplan, Sherrie H., additional, Greenfield, Sheldon, additional, Hoffman, Karen E., additional, and Barocas, Daniel A., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. 1401. Evaluating Barriers and Potential Solutions to Speaking Up About COVID-19 Symptoms: A Survey Among Nursing Home Workers
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Gussin, Gabrielle M, primary, Singh, Raveena D, additional, Tjoa, Thomas T, additional, Saavedra, Raheeb, additional, Kaplan, Sherrie H, additional, and Huang, Susan S, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Patient-reported Outcomes After External Beam Radiotherapy With Low Dose Rate Brachytherapy Boost vs Radical Prostatectomy for Localized Prostate Cancer: Five-year Results From a Prospective Comparative Effectiveness Study
- Author
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De, Brian, primary, Pasalic, Dario, additional, Barocas, Daniel A., additional, Wallis, Christopher J. D., additional, Huang, Li-Ching, additional, Zhao, Zhiguo, additional, Koyama, Tatsuki, additional, Tang, Chad, additional, Goodman, Michael, additional, Hamilton, Ann S., additional, Wu, Xiao-Cheng, additional, Paddock, Lisa E., additional, Stroup, Antoinette, additional, Cooperberg, Matthew R., additional, Hashibe, Mia, additional, O’Neil, Brock B., additional, Kaplan, Sherrie H., additional, Greenfield, Sheldon, additional, Penson, David F., additional, and Hoffman, Karen E., additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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