45 results on '"Michelle E. Ross"'
Search Results
2. Corrigendum to: Automated identification of implausible values in growth data from pediatric electronic health records.
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Carrie Daymont, Michelle E. Ross, A. Russell Localio, Alexander G. Fiks, Richard C. Wasserman, and Robert W. Grundmeier
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- 2021
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3. Using a Mystery-Caller Approach to Examine Access to Prostate Cancer Care in Philadelphia.
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Craig Evan Pollack, Michelle E Ross, Katrina Armstrong, Charles C Branas, Karin V Rhodes, Justin E Bekelman, Alicia Wentz, Christian Stillson, Archana Radhakrishnan, Enny Oyeniran, and David Grande
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Prior work suggests that access to health care may influence the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer. Mystery-caller methods have been used previously to measure access to care for health services such as primary care, where patients' self-initiate requests for care. We used a mystery-caller survey for specialized prostate cancer care to assess dimensions of access to prostate cancer care.We created an inventory of urology and radiation oncology practices in southeastern Pennsylvania. Using a 'mystery caller' approach, a research assistant posing as a medical office scheduler in a primary care office, attempted to make a new patient appointment on behalf of a referred patient. Linear regression was used to determine the association between time to next available appointment with practice and census tract characteristics.We successfully obtained information on new patient appointments from 198 practices out of the 223 in the region (88.8%). Radiation oncology practices were more likely to accept Medicaid compared to urology practices (91.3% vs 36.4%) and had shorter mean wait times for new patient appointments (9.0 vs 12.8 days). We did not observe significant differences in wait times according to census tract characteristics including neighborhood socioeconomic status and the proportion of male African American residents.Mystery-caller methods that reflect real-world referral processes from primary care offices can be used to measure access to specialized cancer care. We observed significant differences in wait times and insurance acceptance between radiation oncology and urology practices.
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- 2016
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4. Ecological Momentary Assessment of Factors Associated with Water Intake among Adolescents with Kidney Stone Disease
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Lihai Song, Steven Warner, Janet Audrain-McGovern, Anisha I. Patel, Douglas J. Wiebe, Brittney Henderson, Susan L. Furth, Michelle E. Ross, and Gregory E. Tasian
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Beverage consumption ,Ecology ,business.industry ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,medicine.disease ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Male patient ,Kidney stone disease ,medicine ,Mixed effects ,Population study ,Kidney stones ,Water intake ,Health behavior ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maintaining high water intake reduces kidney stone recurrence, but is difficult to do. Strategies to reduce stone recurrence among adolescents are lacking. METHODS: We conducted an ecological momentary assessment study to identify factors associated with water intake among 25 adolescents with nephrolithiasis. Over 7-days, participants used smart bottles to self-monitor water intake and received questionnaires randomly four times daily that were completed in real-time on mobile devices. The questionnaires ascertained awareness of water intake volume, awareness of water intake goals, perceived need to drink, access to water, alternative beverage consumption, and attitudes towards bathrooms. Linear mixed-effects models were fit to estimate the association between momentary responses and daily water intake. RESULTS: Over 175 person-days, 595 (85%) assessments were completed. Median daily water intake was 1304mL (IQR 848–1832); 20% of participants met their intake goal for ≥4 days. Unawareness of water intake volume was associated with drinking 690mL less water a day (p=0.04). A strong self-perceived need to drink more was associated with drinking 1954 mL less water each day compared to no need to drink more (p
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- 2019
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5. Persistent Hypertension in Children and Adolescents: A 6-Year Cohort Study
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David C. Kaelber, Richard C. Wasserman, Wilson D. Pace, A. Russell Localio, Jennifer Steffes, Janeen B. Leon, Robert W. Grundmeier, Alexander G. Fiks, and Michelle E. Ross
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Blood Pressure ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference Values ,030225 pediatrics ,Confidence Intervals ,Medicine ,Humans ,Stage (cooking) ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Pediatric hypertension ,Age Factors ,Retrospective cohort study ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Body Height ,Confidence interval ,Natural history ,Blood pressure ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Hypertension ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,business ,Cohort study - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To determine the natural history of pediatric hypertension. METHODS: We conducted a 72-month retrospective cohort study among 165 primary care sites. Blood pressure measurements from two consecutive 36 month periods were compared. RESULTS: Among 398 079 primary care pediatric patients ages 3 to 18, 89 347 had ≥3 blood pressure levels recorded during a 36-month period, and 43 825 children had ≥3 blood pressure levels for 2 consecutive 36-month periods. Among these 43 825 children, 4.3% (1881) met criteria for hypertension (3.5% [1515] stage 1, 0.8% [366] stage 2) and 4.9% (2144) met criteria for elevated blood pressure in the first 36 months. During the second 36 months, 50% (933) of hypertensive patients had no abnormal blood pressure levels, 22% (406) had elevated blood pressure levels or CONCLUSIONS: In a primary care cohort, most children initially meeting criteria for hypertension or elevated blood pressure had subsequent normal blood pressure levels or did not receive recommended follow-up measurements. These results highlight the need for more nuanced initial blood pressure assessment and systems to promote follow-up of abnormal results.
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- 2020
6. Association of early hypotension in pediatric sepsis with development of new or persistent acute kidney injury
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Julie C. Fitzgerald, Marianne Chilutti, Michelle E. Ross, Amanda H. Anderson, Robert W. Grundmeier, Neal J. Thomas, Scott L. Weiss, and Fran Balamuth
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Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatric advanced life support ,030232 urology & nephrology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Article ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Pediatric intensive care unit ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Acute kidney injury ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Acute Kidney Injury ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Blood pressure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Hypotension ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine how hypotension in the first 48 hours of sepsis management impacts acute kidney injury (AKI) development and persistence. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective study of patients >1 month to
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- 2020
7. A real-time search strategy for finding urban disease vector infestations
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Michael J. Levy, Ricardo Castillo-Neyra, Jennifer K. Peterson, Carlos Condori-Pino, Cesar Naquira-Velarde, Erica Billig Rose, Jason Roy, and Michelle E. Ross
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Epidemiology ,Computer science ,030231 tropical medicine ,Bayesian probability ,01 natural sciences ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,11. Sustainability ,Statistics ,Triatoma infestans ,parasitic diseases ,Population growth ,0101 mathematics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Data collection ,biology ,Applied Mathematics ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Field (geography) ,3. Good health ,Vector (epidemiology) ,Predictive power ,Biological dispersal - Abstract
Objectives Containing domestic vector infestation requires the ability to swiftly locate and treat infested homes. In urban settings where vectors are heterogeneously distributed throughout a dense housing matrix, the task of locating infestations can be challenging. Here, we present a novel stochastic compartmental model developed to help locate infested homes in urban areas. We designed the model using infestation data for the Chagas disease vector species Triatoma infestans in Arequipa, Peru. Methods Our approach incorporates disease vector counts at each observed house, and the vector’s complex spatial dispersal dynamics. We used a Bayesian method to augment the observed data, estimate the insect population growth and dispersal parameters, and determine posterior infestation probabilities of households. We investigated the properties of the model through simulation studies, followed by field testing in Arequipa. Results Simulation studies showed the model to be accurate in its estimates of two parameters of interest: the growth rate of a domestic triatomine bug colony and the probability of a triatomine bug successfully invading a new home after dispersing from an infested home. When testing the model in the field, data collection using model estimates was hindered by low household participation rates, which severely limited the algorithm and in turn, the model’s predictive power. Conclusions While future optimization efforts must improve the model’s capabilities when household participation is low, our approach is nonetheless an important step toward integrating data with predictive modeling to carry out evidence-based vector surveillance in cities.
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- 2020
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8. Risk maps for cities: Incorporating streets into geostatistical models
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Kwonsang Lee, Erica Billig Rose, Michelle E. Ross, Ricardo Castillo-Neyra, Michael J. Levy, Dylan S. Small, and Jason Roy
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Chagas disease ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Gaussian ,030231 tropical medicine ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Normal Distribution ,Geographic Mapping ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.08 [https] ,Disease Vectors ,purl.org/pe-repo/ocde/ford#3.03.09 [https] ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Spatio-Temporal Analysis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Peru ,Triatoma infestans ,INLA ,Animals ,Humans ,Chagas Disease ,Triatoma ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Cities ,Gaussian field ,biology ,City block ,Urban Health ,Architectural Accessibility ,Function (mathematics) ,biology.organism_classification ,Field (geography) ,Euclidean distance ,Point data ,Infectious Diseases ,Geography ,symbols ,Topography, Medical ,Vector ,City streets ,Cartography - Abstract
Vector-borne diseases commonly emerge in urban landscapes, and Gaussian field models can be used to create risk maps of vector presence across a large environment. However, these models do not account for the possibility that streets function as permeable barriers for insect vectors. We describe a methodology to transform spatial point data to incorporate permeable barriers, by distorting the map to widen streets, with one additional parameter. We use Gaussian field models to estimate this additional parameter, and develop risk maps incorporating streets as permeable barriers. We demonstrate our method on simulated datasets and apply it to data on Triatoma infestans, a vector of Chagas disease in Arequipa, Peru. We found that the transformed landscape that best fit the observed pattern of Triatoma infestans infestation, approximately doubled the true Euclidean distance between neighboring houses on different city blocks. Our findings may better guide control of re-emergent insect populations.
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- 2018
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9. Assessment of the combination of temperature and relative humidity on kidney stone presentations
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Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, Gregory E. Tasian, Susan L. Furth, Michelle E. Ross, Jose Pulido, Lihai Song, David S. Goldfarb, Steven Warner, and Robert E. Kopp
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Male ,Risk ,Hot Temperature ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Wet-bulb temperature ,South Carolina ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Kidney Calculi ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Relative humidity ,Mean radiant temperature ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,General Environmental Science ,Heat index ,Temperature ,Humidity ,medicine.disease ,Heat stress ,Environmental science ,Kidney stones ,High heat ,Heat-Shock Response - Abstract
Temperature and relative humidity have opposing effects on evaporative water loss, the likely mediator of the temperature-dependence of nephrolithiasis. However, prior studies considered only dry-bulb temperatures when estimating the temperature-dependence of nephrolithiasis. We used distributed lag non-linear models and repeated 10-fold cross-validation to determine the daily temperature metric and corresponding adjustment for relative humidity that most accurately predicted kidney stone presentations during hot and cold periods in South Carolina from 1997–2015. We examined three metrics for wet-bulb temperatures and heat index, both of which measure the combination of temperature and humidity, and for dry-bulb temperatures: (1) daytime mean temperature; (2) 24-hour mean temperature; and (3) most extreme 24-hour temperature. For models using dry-bulb temperatures, we considered four treatments of relative humidity. Among 188,531 patients who presented with kidney stones, 24-hour wet bulb temperature best predicted kidney stone presentation during summer. Mean cross-validated residuals were generally lower in summer for wet-bulb temperatures and heat index than the corresponding dry-bulb temperature metric, regardless of type of adjustment for relative humidity. Those dry-bulb models that additionally adjusted for relative humidity had higher mean residuals than other temperature metrics. The relative risk of kidney stone presentations at the 99(th) percentile of each temperature metric compared to the respective median temperature in summer months differed by temperature metric and relative humidity adjustment, and ranged from an excess risk of 8% to 14%. All metrics performed similarly in winter. The combination of temperature and relative humidity determine the risk of kidney stone presentations, particularly during periods of high heat and humidity. These results suggest that metrics that measure moist heat stress should be used to estimate the temperature-dependence of kidney stone presentations, but that the particular metric is relatively unimportant.
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- 2018
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10. When Primary Care Providers (PCPs) Help Patients Choose Prostate Cancer Treatment
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Justin E. Bekelman, Nandita Mitra, Craig Evan Pollack, Christian Stillson, Michelle E. Ross, David Grande, and Archana Radhakrishnan
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Adenocarcinoma ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Ambulatory care ,Internal medicine ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Physician's Role ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Philadelphia ,Prostatectomy ,Response rate (survey) ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Primary Health Care ,Radiotherapy ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cancer ,Patient Preference ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Emergency medicine ,Patient Participation ,Family Practice ,business - Abstract
Background The role of primary care providers (PCPs) in decision making around cancer care remains largely unknown. We evaluated how frequently men with localized prostate cancer report receiving help from their PCP about their treatment, and whether those men who do are less likely to receive definitive treatment. Methods We mailed surveys to men newly diagnosed with localized prostate cancer between 2012 and 2014 in the greater Philadelphia region. Participants were asked whether their PCP helped decide how to treat their cancer. The outcome was receipt of definitive treatment (either radical prostatectomy or radiotherapy). Results A total of 2386 men responded (adjusted response rate, 51.1%). Among these men, 38.2% reported receiving help from their PCP regarding choosing a treatment, and 79.6% received definitive treatment. In adjusted analyses, non-Hispanic black men (odds ratio, 1.76; 95% confidence interval, 1.37-2.27) were more likely than non-Hispanic white men to report receiving help from their PCP. However, men who did receive help were not more likely to forgo definitive treatment overall (P = .58) or in the subgroups of men who may be least likely to benefit from definitive treatment. Conclusions Though a substantial proportion of men reported receiving help from their PCP about prostate cancer treatment, these discussions were not associated with different treatment patterns. Further effort is needed to determine how to optimize the role of PCPs in supporting patients to make preference-sensitive cancer decisions.
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- 2017
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11. Automated identification of implausible values in growth data from pediatric electronic health records
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Alexander G. Fiks, Carrie Daymont, Richard C. Wasserman, Robert W. Grundmeier, A. Russell Localio, and Michelle E. Ross
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Male ,Adolescent ,Growth data ,Datasets as Topic ,Health Informatics ,Growth ,Primary care ,Health records ,Research and Applications ,computer.software_genre ,Standard deviation ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Moving average ,030225 pediatrics ,Statistics ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Growth Charts ,Child ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,Infant ,Corrigenda ,Body Height ,Confidence interval ,Identification (information) ,Child, Preschool ,Data quality ,Female ,Data mining ,business ,computer ,Algorithms - Abstract
Objective Large electronic health record (EHR) datasets are increasingly used to facilitate research on growth, but measurement and recording errors can lead to biased results. We developed and tested an automated method for identifying implausible values in pediatric EHR growth data. Materials and Methods Using deidentified data from 46 primary care sites, we developed an algorithm to identify weight and height values that should be excluded from analysis, including implausible values and values that were recorded repeatedly without remeasurement. The foundation of the algorithm is a comparison of each measurement, expressed as a standard deviation score, with a weighted moving average of a child’s other measurements. We evaluated the performance of the algorithm by (1) comparing its results with the judgment of physician reviewers for a stratified random selection of 400 measurements and (2) evaluating its accuracy in a dataset with simulated errors. Results Of 2 000 595 growth measurements from 280 610 patients 1 to 21 years old, 3.8% of weight and 4.5% of height values were identified as implausible or excluded for other reasons. The proportion excluded varied widely by primary care site. The automated method had a sensitivity of 97% (95% confidence interval [CI], 94–99%) and a specificity of 90% (95% CI, 85–94%) for identifying implausible values compared to physician judgment, and identified 95% (weight) and 98% (height) of simulated errors. Discussion and Conclusion This automated, flexible, and validated method for preparing large datasets will facilitate the use of pediatric EHR growth datasets for research.
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- 2017
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12. Development of a Clinical Prediction Model for Central Line-Associated Bloodstream Infection in Children Presenting to the Emergency Department
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Laura M Figueroa-Phillips, Susan E. Coffin, Christopher P. Bonafide, Michelle E. Ross, and James P. Guevara
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Catheterization, Central Venous ,Adolescent ,Bacteremia ,Neutropenia ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Blood culture ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Central line ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Catheter ,Upper respiratory tract infection ,Blood Culture ,Case-Control Studies ,Catheter-Related Infections ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Emergency medicine ,Emergency Medicine ,Female ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital - Abstract
Objective The majority of the children with a central line who present to the emergency department with fever or other signs of bacteremia do not have a central line-associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI). Our objective was to develop a clinical prediction model for CLABSI among this group of children in order to ultimately limit unnecessary hospital admissions and antibiotic use. Methods We performed a nested case-control study of children with a central line who presented to the emergency department of an urban, tertiary care children's hospital between January 2010 and March 2015 and were evaluated for CLABSI with a blood culture. Results The final multivariable model developed to predict CLABSI consisted of 12 factors: age younger than 5 years, black race, use of total parenteral nutrition, tunneled central venous catheter, double-lumen catheter, absence of other bacterial infection, absence of viral upper respiratory tract infection symptoms, diarrhea, emergency department temperature greater than 39.5°C, fever prior to presentation, neutropenia, and spring/summer season. The clinical prediction score had good discrimination for CLABSI with a c-statistic of 0.81 (confidence interval, 0.77-0.85). A cut point less than 6 was associated with a sensitivity of 98.5% and a negative predictive value of 99.2% for CLABSI. Conclusions We were able to identify risk factors and develop a clinical prediction model for CLABSI in children presenting to the emergency department. Once validated in future study, this clinical prediction model could be used to assess the need for hospitalization and/or antibiotics among this group of patients.
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- 2019
13. Urologic Care and Progression to End-Stage Kidney Disease: A Chronic Kidney Disease in Children (CKiD) Nested Case-Control Study
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Michelle R. Denburg, Steven A. Zderic, Susan L. Furth, Alison G. Abraham, Gregory E. Tasian, Michelle E. Ross, and David I. Chu
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urology ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Lower risk ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Prospective cohort study ,Child ,Obstructive uropathy ,Reflux nephropathy ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Infant ,medicine.disease ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Nested case-control study ,Cohort ,Disease Progression ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Female ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Summary Introduction Children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) risk progressing to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). The majority of CKD causes in children are related to congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract, which may be treated by urologic care. Objective To examine the association of ESKD with urologic care in children with CKD. Study design This was a nested case–control study within the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children (CKiD) prospective cohort study that included children aged 1–16 years with non-glomerular causes of CKD. The primary exposure was prior urologic referral with or without surgical intervention. Incidence density sampling matched each case of ESKD to up to three controls on duration of time from CKD onset, sex, race, age at baseline visit, and history of low birth weight. Conditional logistic regression analysis was performed to estimate rate ratios (RRs) for the incidence of ESKD. Results Sixty-six cases of ESKD were matched to 153 controls. Median age at baseline study visit was 12 years; 67% were male, and 7% were black. Median follow-up time from CKD onset was 14.9 years. Seventy percent received urologic care, including 100% of obstructive uropathy and 96% of reflux nephropathy diagnoses. Cases had worse renal function at their baseline visit and were less likely to have received prior urologic care. After adjusting for income, education, and insurance status, urology referral with surgery was associated with 50% lower risk of ESKD (RR 0.50 [95% confidence interval [CI] 0.26–0.997), compared to no prior urologic care (Figure). After excluding obstructive uropathy and reflux nephropathy diagnoses, which were highly correlated with urologic surgery, the association was attenuated (RR 0.72, 95% CI 0.24–2.18). Discussion In this study, urologic care was commonly but not uniformly provided to children with non-glomerular causes of CKD. Underlying specific diagnoses play an important role in both the risk of ESKD and potential benefits of urologic surgery. Conclusion Within the CKiD cohort, children with non-glomerular causes of CKD often received urologic care. Urology referral with surgery was associated with lower risk of ESKD compared to no prior urologic care but depended on specific underlying diagnoses. Download : Download high-res image (77KB) Download : Download full-size image
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- 2019
14. Asthma Control Test
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Robert W. Grundmeier, Nathalie E. duRivage, Alexander G. Fiks, Michelle E. Ross, Andrew Suh, Daniel Weng, and Stephanie L. Mayne
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Concordance ,medicine.disease ,Predictive value ,Uncontrolled asthma ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Child Report ,030228 respiratory system ,Control test ,030225 pediatrics ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,medicine ,business ,Proxy (statistics) ,Asthma Control Test ,Asthma - Abstract
We compared results of a modified version of the Asthma Control Test using parent proxy report (PP-ACT) with results reported by children and parents using the validated Childhood–Asthma Control Test (C-ACT). 104 parent-child dyads with a child aged 6 to 12 years with asthma were randomized to complete PP-ACT followed by C-ACT or C-ACT followed by PP-ACT. Scores ≤19 indicated uncontrolled asthma. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value for the PP-ACT in comparison with the C-ACT, and calculated concordance between the 2 scales. The PP-ACT had sensitivity of 86% and negative predictive value of 88% for detecting uncontrolled asthma. More than 75% of surveys were concordant (κ = 0.54, moderate agreement). Our results suggest that while the PP-ACT missed few children with uncontrolled asthma and may simplify reporting of asthma control in circumstances when child report is not feasible or creates barriers to survey receipt, limitations of proxy reporting should be considered.
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- 2016
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15. Annual Incidence of Nephrolithiasis among Children and Adults in South Carolina from 1997 to 2012
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Lawrence Copelovitch, David I. Chu, Ron Keren, Christopher S. Saigal, Gregory E. Tasian, David J. Sas, Lihai Song, Michelle E. Ross, Susan L. Furth, and Michelle R. Denburg
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Cross-sectional study ,South Carolina ,Population ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Nephrolithiasis ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Rate ratio ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Age Distribution ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Cumulative incidence ,Sex Distribution ,Child ,education ,Aged ,Transplantation ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,Health Surveys ,Confidence interval ,Black or African American ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Nephrology ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Risk assessment ,business - Abstract
Background and objectives The prevalence of nephrolithiasis in the United States has increased substantially, but recent changes in incidence with respect to age, sex, and race are not well characterized. This study examined temporal trends in the annual incidence and cumulative risk of nephrolithiasis among children and adults living in South Carolina over a 16-year period. Design, setting, participants, & measurements We performed a population–based, repeated cross–sectional study using the US Census and South Carolina Medical Encounter data, which capture all emergency department visits, surgeries, and admissions in the state. The annual incidence of nephrolithiasis in South Carolina from 1997 to 2012 was estimated, and linear mixed models were used to estimate incidence rate ratios for age, sex, and racial groups. The cumulative risk of nephrolithiasis during childhood and over the lifetime was estimated for males and females in 1997 and 2012. Results Among an at-risk population of 4,625,364 people, 152,925 unique patients received emergency, inpatient, or surgical care for nephrolithiasis. Between 1997 and 2012, the mean annual incidence of nephrolithiasis increased 1% annually from 206 to 239 per 100,000 persons. Among age groups, the greatest increase was observed among 15–19 year olds, in whom incidence increased 26% per 5 years (incidence rate ratio, 1.26; 95% confidence interval, 1.22 to 1.29). Adjusting for age and race, incidence increased 15% per 5 years among females (incidence rate ratio, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.14 to 1.16) but remained stable for males. The incidence among blacks increased 15% more per 5 years compared with whites (incidence rate ratio, 1.15; 95% confidence interval, 1.14 to 1.17). These changes in incidence resulted in doubling of the risk of nephrolithiasis during childhood and a 45% increase in the lifetime risk of nephrolithiasis for women over the study period. Conclusions The incidence of kidney stones has increased among young patients, particularly women, and blacks.
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- 2016
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16. Sex as Effect Modifier of the Association between Daily Wet-Bulb Temperatures and Kidney Stones Presentations
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Lihai Song, Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, Gregory E. Tasian, Michelle E. Ross, Robert E. Kopp, David S. Goldfarb, and Jose Pulido
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Urine volume ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Physiology ,Renal water reabsorption ,Kidney stones ,Effect modifier ,medicine.disease ,business ,General Environmental Science ,Kidney disease ,A determinant - Abstract
Background and aim: Compared to female mammals, males have greater evaporative water loss and renal water reabsorption, which affects urine volume, a determinant of kidney stone formation. In this ...
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- 2018
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17. MP13-01 KIDNEY STONE HOTSPOTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA USING CLUSTER DETECTION
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David A. Ladner, Gregory E. Tasian, Lihai Song, and Michelle E. Ross
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South carolina ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine ,Kidney stones ,medicine.disease ,business ,Disease cluster ,Archaeology - Published
- 2018
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18. Urology Consultation and Emergency Department Revisits for Children with Urinary Stone Disease
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Gregory E. Tasian, Michelle E. Ross, Charles D. Scales, Lihai Song, Jane Kurtzman, and David I. Chu
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South carolina ,Urologic Diseases ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urinary stone ,Urinary system ,Urology ,South Carolina ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Discharge home ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Primary outcome ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,Referral and Consultation ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Emergency department ,humanities ,Hospitalization ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Urinary Calculi ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Facilities and Services Utilization ,Urinary stone disease - Abstract
We determined the association between urology consultation and emergency department revisits for children with urinary stones.This retrospective cohort study included patients 18 years old or younger who presented to an emergency department in South Carolina with a urinary stone from 1997 to 2015. The primary exposure was urology consultation during the index emergency department visit. The primary outcome was a stone related emergency department revisit occurring within 180 days of discharge from an index emergency department visit. Secondary outcomes included computerized tomography use, inpatient admission and emergent surgery.Of 5,642 index emergency department visits for acute urinary stones 11% resulted in at least 1 stone related emergency department revisit within 180 days. Of revisits 59% occurred within 30 days of discharge and 39% were due to pain. The odds of emergency department revisit were highest within the first 48 hours of discharge home (OR 22.6, 95% CI 18.0 to 28.5) and rapidly decreased thereafter. Urology consultation was associated with a 37% lower adjusted odds of emergency department revisit (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.44 to 0.90) and 68% lower odds of computerized tomography use across all emergency department visits (OR 0.32, 95% CI 0.15 to 0.69). Among patients who revisited the emergency department the frequency of pain complaints was 27% in those with a urological consultation at the index visit and 39% in those without.Urology consultation was associated with decreased emergency department revisits and computerized tomography use in pediatric patients with urinary stones. Future studies should identify patients who benefit most from urology consultation and ascertain processes of care that decrease emergency department revisits among high risk patients.
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- 2018
19. Risk factors and inpatient outcomes associated with acute kidney injury at pediatric severe sepsis presentation
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Neal J. Thomas, Amanda H. Anderson, Julie C. Fitzgerald, Fran Balamuth, Michelle E. Ross, and Scott L. Weiss
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Nephrology ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Population ,Comorbidity ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Malignancy ,Intensive Care Units, Pediatric ,Severity of Illness Index ,Sepsis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Hospital Mortality ,education ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Pediatric intensive care unit ,education.field_of_study ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Abdominal Infection ,Acute kidney injury ,Age Factors ,Infant ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Length of Stay ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Creatinine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Hypotension ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Little data exist on acute kidney injury (AKI) risk factors in pediatric sepsis. We identified risk factors and inpatient outcomes associated with AKI at sepsis recognition in children with severe sepsis. Retrospective, cross-sectional study with inpatient outcome description of 315 patients > 1 month to
- Published
- 2018
20. H<scp>yak</scp> mortality monitoring system: innovative sampling and estimation methods – proof of concept by simulation
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Tyler H. McCormick, Jon Wakefield, Michelle E. Ross, and Samuel J. Clark
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sampling ,Epidemiology ,Computer science ,Survey sampling ,Sample (statistics) ,data amalgamation ,01 natural sciences ,010104 statistics & probability ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health facility ,Mortality measurement ,HDSS ,Statistics ,Original Research Article ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Statistical Methods ,0101 mathematics ,Estimation ,Data collection ,1. No poverty ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Sampling (statistics) ,sample survey ,Verbal autopsy ,3. Good health ,Cluster sampling - Abstract
Traditionally health statistics are derived from civil and/or vital registration. Civil registration in low- to middle-income countries varies from partial coverage to essentially nothing at all. Consequently the state of the art for public health information in low- to middle-income countries is efforts to combine or triangulate data from different sources to produce a more complete picture across both time and space – data amalgamation. Data sources amenable to this approach include sample surveys, sample registration systems, health and demographic surveillance systems, administrative records, census records, health facility records and others. We propose a new statistical framework for gathering health and population data – Hyak – that leverages the benefits of sampling and longitudinal, prospective surveillance to create a cheap, accurate, sustainable monitoring platform. Hyak has three fundamental components: •Data amalgamation: A sampling and surveillance component that organizes two or more data collection systems to work together: (1) data from HDSS with frequent, intense, linked, prospective follow-up and (2) data from sample surveys conducted in large areas surrounding the Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) sites using informed sampling so as to capture as many events as possible;•Cause of death: Verbal autopsy to characterize the distribution of deaths by cause at the population level; and•Socioeconomic status (SES): Measurement of SES in order to characterize poverty and wealth.We conduct a simulation study of the informed sampling component of Hyak based on the Agincourt HDSS site in South Africa. Compared with traditional cluster sampling, Hyak's informed sampling captures more deaths, and when combined with an estimation model that includes spatial smoothing, produces estimates of both mortality counts and mortality rates that have lower variance and small bias.
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- 2018
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21. MP66-01 EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT REVISITS FOR CHILDREN FOLLOWING AN ACUTE URINARY STONE EPISODE
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Lihai Song, Gregory E. Tasian, Charles D. Scales, Jane Kurtzman, and Michelle E. Ross
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,Urinary stone ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Emergency department ,Medical emergency ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2017
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22. MP01-17 AGE, SEX, AND CLIMATE DIFFERENCES IN THE TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE OF KIDNEY STONE PRESENTATION
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Lihai Song, Jose Pulido, Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, Susan L. Furth, Gregory E. Tasian, David S. Goldfarb, Michelle E. Ross, Steven Warner, and Robert E. Kopp
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Andrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Urology ,General surgery ,Medicine ,Kidney stones ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 2017
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23. Electronic health record (EHR) based postmarketing surveillance of adverse events associated with pediatric off-label medication use: A case study of short-acting beta-2 agonists and arrhythmias
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Russell Localio, Weiwei Liu, Richard C. Wasserman, Alexander G. Fiks, Robert W. Grundmeier, Angela S. Czaja, Michelle E. Ross, and William G. Adams
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions ,Epidemiology ,Postmarketing surveillance ,Off-label use ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Administration, Inhalation ,Product Surveillance, Postmarketing ,Medicine ,Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Adverse effect ,Child ,Adrenergic beta-2 Receptor Agonists ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,Pharmacoepidemiology ,Child, Preschool ,Cohort ,Emergency medicine ,Propensity score matching ,Female ,business - Abstract
Purpose Use electronic health record (EHR) data to (1) estimate the risk of arrhythmia associated with inhaled short-acting beta-2 agonists (SABA) in pediatric patients and (2) determine whether risk varied by on-label versus off-label prescribing. Methods Retrospective cohort study of 335 041 children ≤18 years using EHR primary care data from 2 pediatric health systems (2011-2013). A series of monthly pseudotrials were created, using propensity score methodology to balance baseline characteristics between SABA-exposed (identified by prescription) and SABA-unexposed children. Association between SABA and subsequent arrhythmia for each health system was estimated through pooled logistic regression with separate estimates for children initiating under and over 4 years old (off-label and on-label, respectively). Results Eleven percent of the cohort received a SABA prescription, 57% occurred under the age of 4 years (off-label). During the follow-up period, there were 283 first arrhythmia events, most commonly atrial tachyarrhythmias and premature ventricular/atrial contractions. In 1 health system, adjusted risk for arrhythmia was increased among exposed children (OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.31-2.73) without evidence of interaction between label status and risk. The absolute adjusted rate difference was 3.6/10 000 person-years of SABA exposure. The association between SABA exposure and arrhythmias was less strong in the second system (OR 1.26, 95% CI 0.30-5.33). Conclusion Using EHR data, we could estimate the risk of a rare event associated with medication use and determine difference in risk related to on-label versus off-label status. These findings support the value of EHR-based data for postmarketing drug studies in the pediatric population.
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- 2017
24. Incidence of Pneumocystis jirovecii and Adverse Events Associated With Pneumocystis Prophylaxis in Children Receiving Glucocorticoids
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Michelle E. Ross, Jeffrey S. Gerber, Matthew L. Basiaga, and Alexis Ogdie
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antifungal Agents ,Adolescent ,Opportunistic Infections ,Pneumocystis carinii ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immunocompromised Host ,0302 clinical medicine ,Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) ,Internal medicine ,Trimethoprim, Sulfamethoxazole Drug Combination ,Medicine ,Pneumocystis jirovecii ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Adverse effect ,Child ,Bone Marrow Diseases ,Glucocorticoids ,Retrospective Studies ,biology ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Incidence ,Pneumonia, Pneumocystis ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Odds ratio ,Original Articles ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Trimethoprim ,Infectious Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Chemoprophylaxis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Drug Eruptions ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background Antimicrobial prophylaxis is indicated to prevent Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (PJP) in profoundly immunosuppressed children. The incidence of PJP infection in children with chronic glucocorticoid exposure is unknown, and PJP prophylaxis has been associated with adverse events. We hypothesized that PJP infection is rare in children without human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), cancer, or a transplant history who are using chronic glucocorticoids and that those exposed to PJP prophylaxis are more likely to experience a cutaneous hypersensitivity reaction or myelosuppression than unexposed patients. Methods This study involved a retrospective cohort from the Clinformatics Data Mart Database (OptumInsight, Eden Prairie, MN). We identified patients ≤18 years of age who received at least 2 prescriptions for a systemic glucocorticoid within a 60-day period and excluded patients with a history of PJP infection, an oncologic diagnosis, transplant, or HIV/AIDS. PJP prophylaxis exposure was identified by using national drug codes. Cutaneous hypersensitivity reaction or myelosuppression was identified by using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision (ICD-9), codes. We used a discrete time-failure model to examine the association between exposure and outcome. Results We identified 119399 children on glucocorticoids, 10% of whom received PJP prophylaxis. The incidences of PJP were 0.61 and 0.53 per 10000 patient-years in children exposed and those unexposed to PJP prophylaxis, respectively. In a multivariable model, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was associated with cutaneous hypersensitivity reaction (odds ratio, 3.20; 95% confidence interval, 2.62-3.92) and myelosuppression (odds ratio, 1.85; 95% confidence interval, 1.56-2.20). Conclusions PJP infection was rare in children using glucocorticoids chronically, and PJP prophylaxis-associated cutaneous hypersensitivity reactions and myelosuppression are more common. The use of PJP chemoprophylaxis in children without HIV/AIDS, cancer, or a transplant history who are taking glucocorticoids chronically should be considered carefully.
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- 2017
25. How Men with Prostate Cancer Choose Specialists: A Qualitative Study
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Craig Evan Pollack, Tammy Jiang, Michelle E. Ross, Archana Radhakrishnan, Christian Stillson, Linda Crossette, and David Grande
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Prostate adenocarcinoma ,Counseling ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,Urologists ,Decision Making ,Primary care ,Adenocarcinoma ,Choice Behavior ,Article ,Physicians, Primary Care ,03 medical and health sciences ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Referral and Consultation ,Qualitative Research ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Family medicine ,Treatment decision making ,Family Practice ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The specific specialist that a patient sees can have a large influence on the type of care they receive. METHODS We administered semistructured interviews with 47 men diagnosed with prostate adenocarcinoma between 2012 and 2014. Telephone interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed using a systematic thematic approach. RESULTS Three profiles of patients emerged for choosing specialists: active (21.3%), partially active (53.2%), and passive (25.5%). Active patients conducted substantial research when choosing a diagnosing urologist and a treating specialist: they searched online, consulted other men with prostate cancer, and/or visited multiple specialists for opinions. Partially active patients took only 1 additional step to find a treating specialist on their own after receiving a referral from their diagnosing urologist. Passive patients relied exclusively on referrals from their primary care physicians (PCPs) and diagnosing urologists. CONCLUSION The majority of patients relied on their PCPs for referrals to diagnosing urologists and on their diagnosing urologists to choose the treating specialist. Given these findings and the significance of specialist choice in determining treatment, it is important that PCPs recognize their indirect but potentially important effect on treatment choice when making referrals for prostate cancer. PCPs should consider counseling patients about seeking second opinions from providers with different treatment perspectives and participating in treatment decisions.
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- 2017
26. A Neighborhood-Wide Association Study (NWAS): Example of prostate cancer aggressiveness
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Tara Jackson, Timothy R. Rebbeck, Craig Newcomb, Charnita Zeigler-Johnson, Charles C. Branas, Karl Dailey, Shannon M. Lynch, Nandita Mitra, Harold Riethman, and Michelle E. Ross
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Gerontology ,Multivariate analysis ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Disease ,Severity of Illness Index ,Health Services Accessibility ,Geographical locations ,Mathematical and Statistical Techniques ,Residence Characteristics ,Risk Factors ,Epidemiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Generalized estimating equation ,Principal Component Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,Geography ,Prostate Cancer ,Prostate Diseases ,1. No poverty ,Genomics ,Middle Aged ,3. Good health ,Oncology ,Research Design ,Physical Sciences ,Principal component analysis ,Income ,Neighborhoods ,Statistics (Mathematics) ,Research Article ,Census ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Human Geography ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,Diagnostic Medicine ,Cancer Detection and Diagnosis ,Genome-Wide Association Studies ,Genetics ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Statistical Methods ,Poverty ,Aged ,Survey Research ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Social Support ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Computational Biology ,Human Genetics ,Odds ratio ,Pennsylvania ,Genome Analysis ,United States ,Cancer registry ,Genitourinary Tract Tumors ,030104 developmental biology ,Multivariate Analysis ,North America ,Earth Sciences ,Housing ,lcsh:Q ,Neoplasm Grading ,People and places ,business ,Mathematics ,Demography - Abstract
Purpose Cancer results from complex interactions of multiple variables at the biologic, individual, and social levels. Compared to other levels, social effects that occur geospatially in neighborhoods are not as well-studied, and empiric methods to assess these effects are limited. We propose a novel Neighborhood-Wide Association Study(NWAS), analogous to genome-wide association studies(GWAS), that utilizes high-dimensional computing approaches from biology to comprehensively and empirically identify neighborhood factors associated with disease. Methods Pennsylvania Cancer Registry data were linked to U.S. Census data. In a successively more stringent multiphase approach, we evaluated the association between neighborhood (n = 14,663 census variables) and prostate cancer aggressiveness(PCA) with n = 6,416 aggressive (Stage≥3/Gleason grade≥7 cases) vs. n = 70,670 non-aggressive (Stage
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- 2017
27. Bayesian Inference for Two‐Phase Studies with Categorical Covariates
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Michelle E. Ross and Jon Wakefield
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Statistics and Probability ,Biometry ,Computer science ,Bayesian probability ,Inference ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,Bayesian inference ,Wilms Tumor ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,symbols.namesake ,Bayes' theorem ,Humans ,Computer Simulation ,Categorical variable ,Likelihood Functions ,Models, Statistical ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,business.industry ,Applied Mathematics ,Sampling (statistics) ,Bayes Theorem ,Markov chain Monte Carlo ,Pattern recognition ,General Medicine ,Random effects model ,Markov Chains ,Multivariate Analysis ,symbols ,Artificial intelligence ,Epidemiologic Methods ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,business ,Monte Carlo Method ,computer - Abstract
In this paper, we consider two-phase sampling in the situation in which all covariates are categorical. Two-phase designs are appealing from an efficiency perspective since, if carefully implemented, they allow sampling to be concentrated in informative cells. A number of likelihood-based methods have been developed for the analysis of two-phase data, but we describe a Bayesian approach which has previously been unavailable. The methods are first compared with existing approaches via a simulation study, and are then applied to data collected on Wilms tumour. The benefits of a Bayesian approach include relaxation of the reliance on asymptotic inference, particularly in sparse data situations, and the potential to model data with complex dependencies, for example, via the introduction of random effects. The sparse data situation is illustrated via a simulated example.
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- 2013
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28. Dietary Zinc and Incident Calcium Kidney Stones in Adolescence
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Marshall L. Stoller, Michelle R. Denburg, Thomas Chi, Gregory E. Tasian, Steven Warner, Lawrence Copelovitch, Robert W. Grundmeier, Lihai Song, David W. Killilea, Michelle E. Ross, Susan L. Furth, and James Massey
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Urology ,Urinary system ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Calcium oxalate ,Physiology ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Zinc ,Calcium ,Urinalysis ,Dietary zinc ,Excretion ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Kidney Calculi ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Child ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Diet ,Spot urine ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Case-Control Studies ,Kidney stones ,Female ,business - Abstract
We determined the association between dietary zinc intake and incident calcium kidney stones in adolescents. We also examined the relationship between dietary zinc intake and urinary zinc excretion between cases and controls.We conducted a nested case-control study within a large pediatric health care system. Three 24-hour dietary recalls and spot urine chemistry analyses were obtained for 30 participants 12 to 18 years old with a first idiopathic calcium based kidney stone and 30 healthy controls matched for age, sex, race and month of enrollment. Conditional logistic regression models were used to estimate the association between daily zinc intake and incident calcium kidney stones, adjusting for dietary phytate, protein, calcium, sodium and oxalate. Multivariable linear regression was used to estimate the association between dietary and urine zinc, adjusting for urine creatinine and dietary phytate and calcium.Cases had lower daily zinc intake (8.1 mg) than controls (10 mg, p = 0.029). Daily zinc intake of boys and girls with calcium stones was 2 mg and 1.2 mg less, respectively, than the daily intake recommended by the Institute of Medicine. Odds of incident stones were reduced by 13% for every 1 mg increase in daily zinc intake (OR 0.87, 95% CI 0.75-0.99). There was an estimated 4.5 μg/dl increase in urine zinc for every 1 mg increase in dietary zinc (p = 0.009), with weak evidence of a smaller increase in urine zinc in cases than in controls (interaction p = 0.08).Decreased dietary zinc intake was independently associated with incident calcium nephrolithiasis in this population of adolescents.
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- 2016
29. Diagnosis and Medication Treatment of Pediatric Hypertension: A Retrospective Cohort Study
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Michelle E. Ross, David C. Kaelber, Janeen B. Leon, Weiwei Liu, Richard C. Wasserman, Alexander G. Fiks, A. Russell Localio, and Wilson D. Pace
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Medication prescription ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Prehypertension ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Age Distribution ,030225 pediatrics ,Severity of illness ,Ambulatory Care ,Medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical diagnosis ,Sex Distribution ,Child ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Retrospective Studies ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,Blood Pressure Determination ,United States ,Blood pressure ,Logistic Models ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Ambulatory ,Hypertension ,Female ,business ,Cohort study ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Pediatric hypertension predisposes children to adult hypertension and early markers of cardiovascular disease. No large-scale studies have examined diagnosis and initial medication management of pediatric hypertension and prehypertension. The objective of this study was to evaluate diagnosis and initial medication management of pediatric hypertension and prehypertension in primary care. METHODS: Retrospective cohort study aggregating electronic health record data on >1.2 million pediatric patients from 196 ambulatory clinics across 27 states. Demographic, diagnosis, blood pressure (BP), height, weight, and medication prescription data extracted. Main outcome measures include proportion of pediatric patients with ≥3 visits with abnormal BPs, documented hypertension and prehypertension diagnoses, and prescribed antihypertensive medications. Marginal standardization via logistic regression produced adjusted diagnosis rates. RESULTS: Three hundred ninety-eight thousand seventy-nine patients, ages 3 to 18, had ≥3 visits with BP measurements (48.9% girls, 58.6% CONCLUSIONS: Hypertension and prehypertension were infrequently diagnosed among pediatric patients. Guidelines for diagnosis and initial medication management of abnormal BP in pediatric patients are not routinely followed.
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- 2016
30. Preschool ADHD Diagnosis and Stimulant Use Before and After the 2011 AAP Practice Guideline
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Alexander G. Fiks, Michelle E. Ross, Robert W. Grundmeier, Lihai Song, A. Russell Localio, Weiwei Liu, Jennifer Steffes, Richard C. Wasserman, Banita McCarn, and Stephanie L. Mayne
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Logistic regression ,Severity of Illness Index ,Physicians, Primary Care ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,Severity of illness ,Confidence Intervals ,Medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Medical prescription ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Retrospective Studies ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Retrospective cohort study ,Guideline ,Confidence interval ,Drug Utilization ,Stimulant ,Logistic Models ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,Female ,Guideline Adherence ,business ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Cohort study ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the change in the diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and prescribing of stimulants to children 4 to 5 years old after release of the 2011 American Academy of Pediatrics guideline. METHODS: Electronic health record data were extracted from 63 primary care practices. We included preventive visits from children 48 to 72 months old receiving care from January 2008 to July 2014. We compared rates of ADHD diagnosis and stimulant prescribing before and after guideline release using logistic regression with a spline and clustering by practice. Patterns of change (increase, decrease, no change) were described for each practice. RESULTS: Among 87 067 children with 118 957 visits before the guideline and 56 814 with 92 601 visits after the guideline, children had an ADHD diagnosis at 0.7% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.7% to 0.8%) of visits before and 0.9% (95% CI, 0.8% to 0.9%) after guideline release and had stimulant prescriptions at 0.4% (95% CI, 0.4% to 0.4%) of visits in both periods. A significantly increasing preguideline trend in ADHD diagnosis ended after guideline release. The rate of stimulant medication use remained constant before and after guideline release. Patterns of change from before to after the guideline varied significantly across practices. CONCLUSIONS: Release of the 2011 guideline that addressed ADHD in preschoolers was associated with the end of an increasing rate of diagnosis, and the rate of prescribing stimulants remained constant. These are reassuring results given that a standardized approach to diagnosis was recommended and stimulant treatment is not first-line therapy for this age group.
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- 2016
31. Adoption of a Portal for the Primary Care Management of Pediatric Asthma: A Mixed-Methods Implementation Study
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Elias Brandt, Dorothy Miller, Dean Karavite, Alexander G. Fiks, Stacia A. Finch, Valerie McGoldrick, Kathleen G. Noonan, Banita McCarn, Wilson D. Pace, Andrew Suh, Stephanie L. Mayne, Michelle E. Ross, Kelli Giacomini, Christoph U. Lehmann, Elizabeth W. Staton, Laura P. Shone, Robert W. Grundmeier, and Nathalie E. duRivage
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Male ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,020205 medical informatics ,Health information technology ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,Health Informatics ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Logistic regression ,Pediatrics ,Patient Care Planning ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Nursing ,Patient Portals ,Professional-Family Relations ,030225 pediatrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,medicine ,Humans ,Anti-Asthmatic Agents ,Patient Reported Outcome Measures ,Medical prescription ,Child ,Asthma ,Original Paper ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Communication ,Patient portal ,asthma ,Focus Groups ,medicine.disease ,Focus group ,3. Good health ,health information technology ,electronic health records ,Logistic Models ,Family medicine ,Sick leave ,Female ,Sick Leave ,business ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
Background: Patient portals may improve communication between families of children with asthma and their primary care providers and improve outcomes. However, the feasibility of using portals to collect patient-reported outcomes from families and the barriers and facilitators of portal implementation across diverse pediatric primary care settings have not been established. Objective: We evaluated the feasibility of using a patient portal for pediatric asthma in primary care, its impact on management, and barriers and facilitators of implementation success. Methods: We conducted a mixed-methods implementation study in 20 practices (11 states). Using the portal, parents of children with asthma aged 6-12 years completed monthly surveys to communicate treatment concerns, treatment goals, symptom control, medication use, and side effects. We used logistic regression to evaluate the association of portal use with child characteristics and changes to asthma management. Ten clinician focus groups and 22 semistructured parent interviews explored barriers and facilitators of use in the context of an evidence-based implementation framework. Results: We invited 9133 families to enroll and 237 (2.59%) used the portal (range by practice, 0.6%-13.6%). Children of parents or guardians who used the portal were significantly more likely than nonusers to be aged 6-9 years (vs 10-12, P=.02), have mild or moderate/severe persistent asthma (P=.009 and P=.04), have a prescription of a controller medication (P
- Published
- 2016
32. MP43-03 DIETARY ZINC IS INVERSELY ASSOCIATED WITH RISK OF NEPHROLITHIASIS IN ADOLESCENTS
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James Massey, David W. Killilea, Gregory E. Tasian, Susan L. Furth, Robert W. Grundmeier, Michelle E. Ross, Thomas Chi, Marshall L. Stoller, and Lihai Song
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business.industry ,Urology ,Medicine ,Physiology ,business ,Dietary zinc - Published
- 2016
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33. MP82-15 TEMPORAL TRENDS IN DIRECT COSTS OF NEPHROLITHIASIS, 1997 TO 2012
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Lihai Song, Susan L. Furth, Gregory E. Tasian, and Michelle E. Ross
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Indirect costs ,business.industry ,Natural resource economics ,Urology ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2016
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34. MP82-03 AGE DIFFERENCES IN THE TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE OF KIDNEY STONE PRESENTATION
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Antonio Gasparrini, Gregory E. Tasian, Lihai Song, Susan L. Furth, Michelle E. Ross, and Robert E. Kopp
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Age differences ,business.industry ,Urology ,medicine ,Kidney stones ,Presentation (obstetrics) ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2016
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35. Variations in Mental Health Diagnosis and Prescribing Across Pediatric Primary Care Practices
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Benyamin Margolis, Russell Localio, Weiwei Liu, Laurel K. Leslie, Lihai Song, Banita McCarn, Michelle E. Ross, Richard C. Wasserman, Stephanie L. Mayne, Jennifer Steffes, Romuladus E. Azuine, Alexander G. Fiks, Edward Gotlieb, and Robert W. Grundmeier
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,MEDLINE ,Logistic regression ,Pediatrics ,Health Services Accessibility ,Article ,Odds ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical prescription ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,Psychiatry ,Child ,Retrospective Studies ,Psychotropic Drugs ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Mental Disorders ,Retrospective cohort study ,Mental health ,United States ,Foster care ,Logistic Models ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Workforce ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Primary care pediatricians increasingly care for children’s mental health problems, but little is known about practice-level variation in diagnosis and psychotropic medication prescribing practices. METHODS: This retrospective review of electronic heath records from 43 US primary care practices included children aged 4 to 18 years with ≥1 office visit from January 1, 2009, to June 30, 2014. We examined variability in diagnosis and psychotropic prescribing across practices using logistic regression with practice fixed effects and evaluated associations of the availability of colocated or community-based mental health providers or the proportion of children in foster care with diagnosis and prescribing using generalized linear mixed models. RESULTS: Among 294 748 children, 40 932 (15%) received a mental health diagnosis and 39 695 (14%) were prescribed psychotropic medication. Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder was most commonly diagnosed (1%–16% per practice). The proportion of children receiving any psychotropic medication (4%-26%) and the proportion receiving ≥2 medication classes (1%-12%) varied across practices. Prescribing of specific medication classes also varied (stimulants, 3%–18%; antidepressants, 1%–12%; α-agonists, 0%–8%; second-generation antipsychotics, 0%–5%). Variability was partially explained by community availability of psychiatrists (significantly higher odds of a diagnosis or prescription when not available) but not by colocation of mental health professionals or percentage of children in foster care. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of mental health diagnosis and psychotropic medication prescribing varies substantially across practices and is only partially explained by psychiatrist availability. Research is needed to better define the causes of variable practice-level diagnosis and prescribing and implications for child mental health outcomes.
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- 2016
36. Spatial Clustering of Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) in the Seattle-Puget Sound Region of Washington State
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Anneclaire J. De Roos, Jon Wakefield, Scott Davis, and Michelle E. Ross
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Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,education.field_of_study ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,business.industry ,Scan statistic ,Myelodysplastic syndromes ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Population ,Cancer cluster ,medicine.disease ,Oncology ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Spatial clustering ,business ,education ,Sound (geography) ,Demography - Abstract
Incidence of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) has been described in the United States since its inclusion in the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results program in 2001, and the Seattle-Puget Sound region of Washington State has among the highest rates of the registries. In this investigation, we described small-scale incidence patterns of MDS within the Seattle-Puget Sound region from 2002 to 2006 and identified potential spatial clusters to inform planning of future studies of MDS etiology. We used a spatial disease mapping model to estimate smoothed relative risks for each census tract and to describe the spatial component of variability in the incidence rates. We also used two methods to describe the location of potential MDS clusters: the approach of Besag and Newell and the Kulldorff spatial scan statistic. Our findings from all three approaches indicated the most likely areas of increased MDS incidence were located on Whidbey Island in Island County. Interpretation is limited because our data are based on the residential location of the MDS case only at the time of diagnosis. Nevertheless, inclusion of identified cluster regions in future population-based research and investigation of individual-level exposures could shed light on environmental risk factors for MDS.
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- 2010
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37. Bayesian hierarchical models for smoothing in two-phase studies, with application to small area estimation
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Michelle E. Ross and Jon Wakefield
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Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,education.field_of_study ,Computer science ,Population ,Bayesian probability ,Context (language use) ,Markov chain Monte Carlo ,Random effects model ,computer.software_genre ,Article ,symbols.namesake ,Small area estimation ,symbols ,Bayesian hierarchical modeling ,Data mining ,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty ,education ,computer ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Smoothing - Abstract
Summary Two-phase study designs are appealing since they allow for the oversampling of rare subpopulations, which improves efficiency. We describe a Bayesian hierarchical model for the analysis of two-phase data. Such a model is particularly appealing in a spatial setting in which random effects are introduced to model between-area variability. In such a situation, one may be interested in estimating regression coefficients or, in the context of small area estimation, in reconstructing the population totals by strata. The gains in efficiency of the two-phase sampling scheme are compared with standard approaches by using 2011 birth data from the research triangle area of North Carolina. We show that the method proposed can overcome small sample difficulties and improve on existing techniques. We conclude that the two-phase design is an attractive approach for small area estimation.
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- 2015
38. Changing patterns of alpha agonist medication use in children and adolescents 2009-2011
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Benyamin Margolis, Weiwei Liu, Alan Grimes, Russell Localio, Banita McCarn, Robert W. Grundmeier, Edward Gotlieb, Richard C. Wasserman, Jennifer Steffes, Laurel K. Leslie, Michelle E. Ross, Lihai Song, Alexander G. Fiks, and Stephanie L. Mayne
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Agonist ,Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,medicine.drug_class ,Population ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Medical prescription ,education ,Child ,Drug Approval ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,United States Food and Drug Administration ,Brief Report ,Mental health ,United States ,Guanfacine ,Clonidine ,Clinical trial ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Adrenergic alpha-Agonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe rates and patterns of long- and short-acting alpha agonist use for behavioral problems in a primary care population following Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of the long-acting alpha agonists guanfacine and clonidine.Children and adolescents 4-18 years of age, who received an alpha agonist prescription between 2009 and 2011, were identified from a sample of 45 United States primary care practices in two electronic health record-based research networks. Alpha agonist receipt was identified using National Drug Codes and medication names. The proportion of subjects receiving long- and short-acting prescriptions in each year was calculated and examined with respect to reported mental health diagnoses, and whether indications for use were on-label, had evidence from clinical trials, or had no trial evidence.In a cohort of 282,875 subjects, 27,671 (10%) received any psychotropic medication and only 4,227 subjects (1.5%) received at least one prescription for an alpha agonist, most commonly a short-acting formulation (83%). Only 20% of alpha agonist use was on-label (use of long-acting formulations for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD]). Most subjects (68%) received alpha agonists for indications with evidence of efficacy from clinical trials but no FDA approval, primarily short-acting formulations for ADHD and autism; 12% received alpha agonists for diagnoses lacking randomized clinical trial evidence in children, including sleep disorders and anxiety, or for which there was no documented mental health diagnosis. Rates of long-acting alpha agonist use increased more than 20-fold from 0.2% to 4%, whereas rates of short-acting alpha agonist use grew only slightly between 2009 and 2011 from 10.6% to 11.3%.Alpha agonist use was uncommon in this population, and most subjects received short-acting forms for conditions that were off-label, but with clinical trial evidence. The safety and efficacy of use for conditions, including sleep disorders and anxiety, lacking evidence from randomized trials, warrant further investigation.
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- 2015
39. MP80-03 KIDNEY STONE INCIDENCE RATES AMONG CHILDREN AND ADULTS IN SOUTH CAROLINA FROM 1997-2012
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Susan L. Furth, Gregory E. Tasian, Christopher S. Saigal, Michelle E. Ross, Ron Keren, and Lihai Song
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South carolina ,business.industry ,Urology ,Medicine ,Kidney stones ,business ,medicine.disease ,Demography - Published
- 2015
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40. Parent-reported outcomes of a shared decision-making portal in asthma: a practice-based RCT
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Robert W. Grundmeier, Alexander G. Fiks, Michelle E. Ross, Andrew Suh, Dean Karavite, Stephanie L. Mayne, Ryan O'Hara, and A. Russell Localio
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Male ,Parents ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Decision Making ,Anti-asthmatic Agent ,Article ,law.invention ,Decision Support Techniques ,Medication Adherence ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Professional-Family Relations ,Intervention (counseling) ,Absenteeism ,medicine ,Electronic Health Records ,Humans ,Anti-Asthmatic Agents ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Asthma ,Descriptive statistics ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Patient portal ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Hospitalization ,Treatment Outcome ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Physical therapy ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Electronic health record (EHR)-linked patient portals are a promising approach to facilitate shared decision-making between families of children with chronic conditions and pediatricians. This study evaluated the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of MyAsthma, an EHR-linked patient portal supporting shared decision-making for pediatric asthma. METHODS: We conducted a 6-month randomized controlled trial of MyAsthma at 3 primary care practices. Families were randomized to MyAsthma, which tracks families’ asthma treatment concerns and goals, children’s asthma symptoms, medication side effects and adherence, and provides decision support, or to standard care. Outcomes included the feasibility and acceptability of MyAsthma for families, child health care utilization and asthma control, and the number of days of missed school (child) and work (parent). Descriptive statistics and longitudinal regression models assessed differences in outcomes between study arms. RESULTS: We enrolled 60 families, 30 in each study arm (mean age 8.3 years); 57% of parents in the intervention group used MyAsthma during at least 5 of the 6 study months. Parents of children with moderate to severe persistent asthma used the portal more than others; 92% were satisfied with MyAsthma. Parents reported that use improved their communication with the office, ability to manage asthma, and awareness of the importance of ongoing attention to treatment. Parents in the intervention group reported that children had a lower frequency of asthma flares and intervention parents missed fewer days of work due to asthma. CONCLUSIONS: Use of an EHR-linked asthma portal was feasible and acceptable to families and improved clinically meaningful outcomes.
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- 2015
41. Propensity Score Methods for Analyzing Observational Data Like Randomized Experiments: Challenges and Solutions for Rare Outcomes and Exposures
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Amanda R. Kreider, A. Russell Localio, Michelle E. Ross, David T. Rubin, Meredith Matone, and Yuan-Shung Huang
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Gerontology ,Male ,Matching (statistics) ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Randomized experiment ,Matched-Pair Analysis ,Poison control ,law.invention ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Covariate ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Propensity Score ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Models, Statistical ,business.industry ,Confounding ,Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic ,medicine.disease ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Causality ,Observational Studies as Topic ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Epidemiologic Research Design ,Propensity score matching ,Observational study ,Female ,Medical emergency ,business ,Antipsychotic Agents - Abstract
Randomized controlled trials are the "gold standard" for estimating the causal effects of treatments. However, it is often not feasible to conduct such a trial because of ethical concerns or budgetary constraints. We expand upon an approach to the analysis of observational data sets that mimics a sequence of randomized studies by implementing propensity score models within each trial to achieve covariate balance, using weighting and matching. The methods are illustrated using data from a safety study of the relationship between second-generation antipsychotics and type 2 diabetes (outcome) in Medicaid-insured children aged 10-18 years across the United States from 2003 to 2007. Challenges in this data set include a rare outcome, a rare exposure, substantial and important differences between exposure groups, and a very large sample size.
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- 2014
42. Using a Mystery-Caller Approach to Examine Access to Prostate Cancer Care in Philadelphia
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Christian Stillson, Craig Evan Pollack, Alicia Wentz, Enny Oyeniran, Archana Radhakrishnan, David Grande, Charles C. Branas, Katrina Armstrong, Michelle E. Ross, Justin E. Bekelman, and Karin V. Rhodes
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Male ,Cancer Treatment ,lcsh:Medicine ,Health Services Accessibility ,Prostate cancer ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health care ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,lcsh:Science ,Philadelphia ,Multidisciplinary ,Prostate Cancer ,Prostate Diseases ,Health services research ,Census ,3. Good health ,Oncology ,Research Design ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Engineering and Technology ,Health Services Research ,Management Engineering ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,Urology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Insurance ,Appointments and Schedules ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,Socioeconomic status ,Primary Care ,Risk Management ,Survey Research ,Medicaid ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Cancers and Neoplasms ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Cancer ,medicine.disease ,United States ,Health Care ,Genitourinary Tract Tumors ,Family medicine ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Delivery of Health Care - Abstract
Purpose Prior work suggests that access to health care may influence the diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer. Mystery-caller methods have been used previously to measure access to care for health services such as primary care, where patients’ self-initiate requests for care. We used a mystery-caller survey for specialized prostate cancer care to assess dimensions of access to prostate cancer care. Materials and Methods We created an inventory of urology and radiation oncology practices in southeastern Pennsylvania. Using a ‘mystery caller’ approach, a research assistant posing as a medical office scheduler in a primary care office, attempted to make a new patient appointment on behalf of a referred patient. Linear regression was used to determine the association between time to next available appointment with practice and census tract characteristics. Results We successfully obtained information on new patient appointments from 198 practices out of the 223 in the region (88.8%). Radiation oncology practices were more likely to accept Medicaid compared to urology practices (91.3% vs 36.4%) and had shorter mean wait times for new patient appointments (9.0 vs 12.8 days). We did not observe significant differences in wait times according to census tract characteristics including neighborhood socioeconomic status and the proportion of male African American residents. Conclusions Mystery-caller methods that reflect real-world referral processes from primary care offices can be used to measure access to specialized cancer care. We observed significant differences in wait times and insurance acceptance between radiation oncology and urology practices.
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- 2016
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43. Risk for Incident Diabetes Mellitus Following Initiation of Second-Generation Antipsychotics Among Medicaid-Enrolled Youths
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A. Russell Localio, Meredith Matone, Chris Feudtner, Michelle E. Ross, Yuan-Shung Huang, David T. Rubin, and Amanda R. Kreider
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Male ,Risk ,Olanzapine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Adolescent ,Diabetes mellitus ,Odds Ratio ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Medicaid managed care ,business.industry ,Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus ,Drug Synergism ,Retrospective cohort study ,Odds ratio ,Risperidone ,medicine.disease ,Antidepressive Agents ,United States ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Quetiapine ,Female ,business ,Risk assessment ,Antipsychotic Agents ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) have increasingly been prescribed to Medicaid-enrolled children, either singly or in a medication combination. Although metabolic adverse effects have been linked to SGA use in youths, estimating the risk for type 2 diabetes mellitus, a rarer outcome, has been challenging.To determine whether SGA initiation was associated with an increased risk for incident type 2 diabetes mellitus. Secondary analyses examined the risk associated with multiple-drug regimens, including stimulants and antidepressants, as well as individual SGAs.Retrospective national cohort study of Medicaid-enrolled youths between January 2003 and December 2007. In this observational study using national Medicaid Analytic eXtract data files, initiators and noninitiators of SGAs were identified in each month. Included in this study were US youths aged 10 to 18 years with a mental health diagnosis and enrolled in a Medicaid fee-for-service arrangement during the study. Those with chronic steroid exposure, a diagnosis of diabetes mellitus, or SGA use during a 1-year look-back period were ineligible. The mean follow-up time for all participants was 17.2 months. Youths were followed up until diagnosis of diabetes mellitus or end of follow-up owing to censoring caused by the transition into a Medicaid managed care arrangement or Medicaid ineligibility (the end of available data). Propensity weights were developed to balance observed demographic and clinical characteristics between exposure groups. Discrete failure time models were fitted using weighted logistic regression to estimate the risk for incident diabetes mellitus between initiators and noninitiators.A filled SGA prescription.Incident type 2 diabetes mellitus identified through visit and pharmacy claims during the observation period.Among 107,551 SGA initiators and 1,221,434 noninitiators, the risk for incident diabetes mellitus was increased among initiators (odds ratio [OR], 1.51; 95% CI, 1.35-1.69; P .001). Compared with youths initiating only SGAs, the risk was higher among SGA initiators who used antidepressants concomitantly at the time of SGA initiation (OR, 1.54; 95% CI, 1.17-2.03; P = .002) but was not significantly different for SGA initiators who were concomitantly using stimulants. As compared with a reference group of risperidone initiators, the risk was higher among those initiating ziprasidone (OR, 1.61; 95% CI, 0.99-2.64; P = .06) and aripiprazole (OR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.21-2.07; P = .001) but not quetiapine fumarate or olanzapine.The risk for incident type 2 diabetes mellitus was increased among youths initiating SGAs and was highest in those concomitantly using antidepressants. Compared with risperidone, newer antipsychotics were not associated with decreased risk.
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- 2015
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44. Gender-specific determinants of asthma among U.S. adults
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Edward Zhao, Michelle E. Ross, Rebecca E. Greenblatt, Blanca E. Himes, and Omar Mansour
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Allergy ,National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Ethnic group ,Overweight ,Biochemistry ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Adult asthma ,Obesity ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Socioeconomic status ,Asthma ,2. Zero hunger ,business.industry ,Research ,Smoking ,Organic Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030228 respiratory system ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index ,Demography - Abstract
Background Asthma, a chronic respiratory disease affecting over 18.7 million American adults, has marked disparities by gender, race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status. Our goal was to identify gender-specific demographic and socioeconomic determinants of asthma prevalence among U.S. adults using data from the Behavioral Risk Factors Surveillance System (BRFSS) and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES). Methods Gender-specific regression analyses were performed to model the relationship between asthma prevalence with age, race/ethnicity, income, education level, smoking status, and body mass index (BMI), while taking into account the study designs. Results Based on BRFSS data from 1,003,894 respondents, weighted asthma prevalence was 6.2% in males and 10.6% in females. Asthma prevalence among grade 2 obese and grade 3 obese vs. not overweight or obese women was 2.5 and 3.5 times higher, respectively, while that in men was 1.7 and 2.4 times higher; asthma prevalence among current vs. never smoker women was 1.4 times higher, while that in men was 1.1 times higher. Similar results were obtained with NHANES data from 13,364 respondents: asthma prevalence among grade 2 obese and grade 3 obese vs. not overweight or obese respondents was 2.0 and 3.3 times higher for women, though there was no significant difference for men; asthma prevalence among current vs. never smokers was 1.8 times higher for women and not significantly different in men. Asthma prevalence by race/ethnicity and income levels did not differ considerably between men and women. Conclusions Our results underscore the importance of obesity and smoking as modifiable asthma risk factors that most strongly affect women. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40733-017-0030-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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45. Differential Child Maltreatment Risk Across Deployment Periods of US Army Soldiers.
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Taylor CM, Ross ME, Wood JN, Griffis HM, Harb GC, Mi L, Song L, Strane D, Lynch KG, and Rubin DM
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- Combat Disorders epidemiology, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Military Personnel psychology, Risk Assessment, United States epidemiology, Child Abuse statistics & numerical data, Combat Disorders psychology, Family Relations psychology, Military Personnel statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: We described the risk for maltreatment among toddlers of US Army soldiers over different deployment cycles to develop a systematic response within the US Army to provide families appropriate supports., Methods: We conducted a person-time analysis of substantiated maltreatment reports and medical diagnoses among children of 112,325 deployed US Army soldiers between 2001 and 2007., Results: Risk of maltreatment was elevated after deployment for children of soldiers deployed once but not for children of soldiers deployed twice. During the 6 months after deployment, children of soldiers deployed once had 4.43 substantiated maltreatment reports and 4.96 medical diagnoses per 10,000 child-months. The highest maltreatment rate among children of soldiers deployed twice occurred during the second deployment for substantiated maltreatment (4.83 episodes per 10,000 child-months) and before the first deployment for medical diagnoses of maltreatment (3.78 episodes per 10,000 child-months)., Conclusions: We confirmed an elevated risk for child maltreatment during deployment but also found a previously unidentified high-risk period during the 6 months following deployment, indicating elevated stress within families of deployed and returning soldiers. These findings can inform efforts by the military to initiate and standardize support and preparation to families during periods of elevated risk.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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