4 results on '"Zakariyah, Sharif-Sidi"'
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2. Addressing depression and behavioral health needs through a digital program at scale
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Karen Fickel, Erin Green, Lawrence A. Miller, William Wong, Ryan Hanson, Bradley H. Crotty, Melek Somai, Christine Shen, Jaymes Burns, Zakariyah Sharif-Sidi, and Caitlin Dunn
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Wilcoxon signed-rank test ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Specialty ,Anxiety ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Interquartile range ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Primary Health Care ,business.industry ,Depression ,Health Policy ,Mental health ,Digital health ,Anxiety Disorders ,Cognitive behavioral therapy ,Physical therapy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Depression and anxiety disorders are prevalent mental health conditions; yet they are often unrecognized, under-addressed and/or under-treated, and specialty treatment for these conditions is oftentimes difficult to access. By acting either as a bridge to therapy or as a form of therapy, digital tools, such as those that provide internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT), may help clinicians support their patients' mental health needs. At one academic health system, a digital mental health program was deployed in primary care and outpatient behavioral health programs to help patients meet needs identified through screening or clinical visits. Over the first two years of operation, 138 clinicians (40% of eligible clinicians) prescribed the program to 2,228 unique patients, from which 1,117 (48.9%) enrolled. Patients who enrolled tended to be younger and healthier than non-enrollees. On average, enrolled patients spent 114.6 minutes within the iCBT program. Clinical improvement was assessed using pre- and post PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores for depression and anxiety, respectively. Pre/Post scores were compared using Wilcoxon Rank Sum test. Patients with at least moderate depression had an average 23% reduction in PHQ-9 scores (median change -3(interquartile range 7), p
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- 2020
3. Clinical Characteristics, Disease Course, and Outcomes of Patients With Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis in the US
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Andrew, Creadore, Sheena, Desai, Allireza, Alloo, Anna K, Dewan, Mina, Bakhtiar, Carla, Cruz-Diaz, Alisa, Femia, Lindy, Fox, Kimberly L, Katz, Robert, Micheletti, Caroline A, Nelson, Alex G, Ortega-Loayza, J Randall, Patrinely, Molly, Plovanich, Misha, Rosenbach, Sheila, Shaigany, Bridget E, Shields, Jamal Z, Saleh, Zakariyah, Sharif-Sidi, Kanade, Shinkai, Jacob, Smith, Chang, Su, Karolyn A, Wanat, Jill K, Wieser, Shari, Wright, Megan H, Noe, and Arash, Mostaghimi
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Acute Generalized Exanthematous Pustulosis ,Adolescent ,Humans ,Female ,Dermatology ,Middle Aged ,Glucocorticoids ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Retrospective Studies ,Skin ,Original Investigation - Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis (AGEP) is a rare, severe cutaneous adverse reaction associated with systemic complications. Currently available data are largely limited to small retrospective case series. OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical characteristics, disease course, and outcomes of a heterogeneous group of patients with AGEP across the US. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective review of a case series of patients was conducted from January 1, 2000, through July 31, 2020. All 340 included cases throughout 10 academic health systems in the US were scored retrospectively using the EuroSCAR scoring system, and patients with a score corresponding to probable or definite AGEP and aged 18 years or older were included. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Patient demographic characteristics, clinical course, suspected causative agent, treatment, and short- and long-term outcomes. RESULTS: Most of the 340 included patients were women (214 [62.9%]), White (206 [60.6%]), and non-Hispanic (239 [70.3%]); mean (SD) age was 57.8 (17.4) years. A total of 154 of 310 patients (49.7%) had a temperature greater than or equal to 38.0 °C that lasted for a median of 2 (IQR, 1-4) days. Of 309 patients, 263 (85.1%) developed absolute neutrophilia and 161 patients (52.1%) developed either absolute or relative eosinophilia. Suspected causes of AGEP were medications (291 [85.6%]), intravenous contrast agents (7 [2.1%]), infection (3 [0.9%]), or unknown (39 [11.5%]). In 151 cases in which a single medication was identified, 63 (41.7%) were β-lactam antimicrobials, 51 (33.8%) were non–β-lactam antimicrobials, 9 (6.0%) were anticonvulsants, and 5 (3.3%) were calcium channel blockers. The median time from medication initiation to AGEP start date was 3 (IQR, 1-9) days. Twenty-five of 298 patients (8.4%) had an acute elevation of aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase levels, with a peak at 6 (IQR, 3-9) days. Twenty-five of 319 patients (7.8%) experienced acute kidney insufficiency, with the median time to peak creatinine level being 4 (IQR, 2-5) days after the AGEP start date. Treatments included topical corticosteroids (277 [81.5%], either alone or in combination), systemic corticosteroids (109 [32.1%]), cyclosporine (10 [2.9%]), or supportive care only (36 [10.6%]). All-cause mortality within 30 days was 3.5% (n = 12), none of which was suspected to be due to AGEP. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This retrospective case series evaluation of 340 patients, the largest known study cohort to date, suggests that AGEP onset is acute, is usually triggered by recent exposure to an antimicrobial, may be associated with liver or kidney complications in a minority of patients, and that discontinuation of the triggering treatment may lead to improvement or resolution.
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- 2022
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4. Evaluation of a Case Series of Patients With Generalized Pustular Psoriasis in the United States
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Megan H, Noe, Marilyn T, Wan, Arash, Mostaghimi, Joel M, Gelfand, Ritesh, Agnihothri, April W, Armstrong, Tina, Bhutani, Alina, Bridges, Nicholas, Brownstone, Melissa, Butt, Kristina P Callis, Duffin, Christian, Carr, Andrew, Creadore, Katherine L, DeNiro, Sheena, Desai, Arturo R, Dominguez, Emily K, Duffy, Janet A, Fairley, Alisa, Femia, Johann E, Gudjonsson, Jessica A, Kaffenberger, Kimberly L, Katz, Stephanie T, Le, Edgar, Martinez, Emanual, Maverakis, Bridget, Myers, Haley B, Naik, Caroline A, Nelson, Alex G, Ortega-Loayza, Molly E, Plovanich, Lauren K, Rangel, Vignesh, Ravi, Vidhatha D, Reddy, Jamal Z, Saleh, Joslyn S, Kirby, Jeena K, Sandhu, Hadir, Shakshouk, Bridget E, Shields, Zakariyah, Sharif-Sidi, Jacob, Smith, Amanda, Steahr, Atrin, Toussi, Karolyn A, Wanat, Bo, Wang, Brian M, Wei, Annika, Weinhammer, Scott D, Worswick, and Alexander, Yang
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Adult ,Skin Diseases, Vesiculobullous ,Brief Report ,Acute Disease ,Chronic Disease ,Humans ,Psoriasis ,Female ,Dermatology ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP) is a chronic, orphan disease with limited epidemiological data. OBJECTIVE: To describe the clinical characteristics, treatments, longitudinal disease course, and disease-specific health care utilization among patients with GPP across the United States. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A retrospective longitudinal case series involving 95 adults who met the European Rare and Severe Psoriasis Expert Network consensus definition for GPP and were treated at 20 US academic dermatology practices between January 1, 2007, and December 31, 2018. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The primary outcome is to describe the patient characteristics, associated medical comorbidities, treatment patterns complications, and GPP–specific health care utilization. RESULTS: Sixty-seven of 95 patients (70.5%) were women (mean age, 50.3 years [SD, 16.1 years]). In the initial encounter, 35 patients (36.8%) were hospitalized and 64 (67.4%) were treated with systemic therapies. In total, more than 20 different systemic therapies were tried. During the follow-up period, 19 patients (35.8%) reported hospitalizations at a median rate of 0.5 hospitalizations per year (IQR, 0.4-1.6). Women had a decreased risk of an emergency department or hospital encounter (odds ratio, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.04-0.83). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Generalized pustular psoriasis is a rare, chronic disease without standard treatment and is associated with continued health care utilization over time.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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