2021
Clinician Trends in Prescribing Direct Oral Anticoagulants for US Medicare Beneficiaries
Wheelock KM, Ross JS, Murugiah K, Lin Z, Krumholz HM, Khera R. Clinician Trends in Prescribing Direct Oral Anticoagulants for US Medicare Beneficiaries. JAMA Network Open 2021, 4: e2137288. PMID: 34870678, PMCID: PMC8649845, DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.37288.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDOAC useAnticoagulant prescriptionOral anticoagulantsUS cliniciansMedicare beneficiariesNational clinical practice guidelinesElevated bleeding riskOral anticoagulant prescriptionsRetrospective cohort studyDirect oral anticoagulantsClinical practice guidelinesUS Medicare beneficiariesInternal medicine physiciansNumber of cliniciansAnticoagulant prescribingDOAC prescriptionsUnique cliniciansBleeding riskCohort studyAnticoagulant strategiesPrescription claimsPractice guidelinesMAIN OUTCOMEMost indicationsMedicare populationImpact of complex, partially nested clustering in a three-arm individually randomized group treatment trial: A case study with the wHOPE trial
Tong G, Seal KH, Becker WC, Li F, Dziura JD, Peduzzi PN, Esserman DA. Impact of complex, partially nested clustering in a three-arm individually randomized group treatment trial: A case study with the wHOPE trial. Clinical Trials 2021, 19: 3-13. PMID: 34693748, PMCID: PMC8847260, DOI: 10.1177/17407745211051288.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsGroup treatment trialsIntraclass correlation coefficientTreatment trialsTreatment sessionsHealth optionsEducation trialThree-armWhole health teamFuture trial designNumber of cliniciansGroup treatment designTrue intraclass correlation coefficientsGroup treatment sessionsTreatment armsClinical trialsClinician levelMultiple cliniciansBACKGROUND/Health teamsOutcome dataTreatment groupsTrial designGroup educationClinical scenariosDifferent clinicians
2020
Pediatric Airway Management in Coronavirus Disease 2019 Patients: Consensus Guidelines From the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia’s Pediatric Difficult Intubation Collaborative and the Canadian Pediatric Anesthesia Society
Matava CT, Kovatsis PG, Lee JK, Castro P, Denning S, Yu J, Park R, Lockman JL, Von Ungern-Sternberg B, Sabato S, Lee LK, Ayad I, Mireles S, Lardner D, Whyte S, Szolnoki J, Jagannathan N, Thompson N, Stein ML, Dalesio N, Greenberg R, McCloskey J, Peyton J, Evans F, Haydar B, Reynolds P, Chiao F, Taicher B, Templeton T, Bhalla T, Raman VT, Garcia-Marcinkiewicz A, Gálvez J, Tan J, Rehman M, Crockett C, Olomu P, Szmuk P, Glover C, Matuszczak M, Galvez I, Hunyady A, Polaner D, Gooden C, Hsu G, Gumaney H, Pérez-Pradilla C, Kiss EE, Theroux MC, Lau J, Asaf S, Ingelmo P, Engelhardt T, Hervías M, Greenwood E, Javia L, Disma N, Yaster M, Fiadjoe JE. Pediatric Airway Management in Coronavirus Disease 2019 Patients: Consensus Guidelines From the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia’s Pediatric Difficult Intubation Collaborative and the Canadian Pediatric Anesthesia Society. Anesthesia & Analgesia 2020, 131: 10.1213/ane.0000000000004872. PMID: 32287142, PMCID: PMC7173403, DOI: 10.1213/ane.0000000000004872.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAirway ManagementAnesthesiaAnesthesiologyChildChild, PreschoolConsensusCoronavirus InfectionsCOVID-19Guidelines as TopicHumansInfantInfant, NewbornInfection ControlInfectious Disease Transmission, Patient-to-ProfessionalIntubation, IntratrachealPandemicsPediatricsPneumonia, ViralConceptsCanadian Pediatric Anesthesia SocietyAerosol-generating medical proceduresHealth care workersAirway managementConsensus guidelinesPediatric anesthesiaCare workersAcute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 pandemicSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemicAnesthesia SocietyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patientsIntravenous anesthetic inductionLine suction cathetersAppropriate personal protective equipmentNegative pressure roomsEvidence-based guidelinesCoronavirus 2 pandemicPediatric airway managementCOVID-19Rigorous study designsMedical proceduresNumber of cliniciansPersonal protective equipmentAsymptomatic patientsAsymptomatic children
2011
Cost and cost-effectiveness of three strategies for training clinicians in motivational interviewing
Olmstead T, Carroll KM, Canning-Ball M, Martino S. Cost and cost-effectiveness of three strategies for training clinicians in motivational interviewing. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2011, 116: 195-202. PMID: 21277713, PMCID: PMC3105154, DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2010.12.015.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsProgram cliniciansIncremental cost-effectiveness ratioMotivational interviewingPrimary outcome measureCost-effectiveness acceptability curvesCommunity treatment programsCost-effectiveness ratioNumber of cliniciansTraining trialsClinician outcomesOutcome measuresAcceptability curvesTreatment programTraining cliniciansCliniciansCost-effective strategyAddiction treatmentTrialsTT conditionsOutcomesSkill-building workshopsEx
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply