Publications by authors named "Breck Nichols"

Objective: To determine whether significant numbers of asthmatic children with initially rated intermittent asthma later suffer poor asthma control and require the addition of controller medications.

Methods: Inner-city Hispanic children were followed prospectively in an asthma-specific disease management system (Breathmobile) for a period of 2 years. Clinical asthma symptoms, morbidity treatment, and demographic data were collected at each visit.

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Objective: Despite the use of optimal therapy and guidelines, the rate of asthma control is suboptimal in adult populations. Purpose of this study is to describe factors associated with ability to achieve well-controlled asthma over time for adult patients treated in a tertiary medical center-based asthma outpatient specialty clinic.

Methods: Existing clinical data collected for 320 adult patients enrolled in a hospital-based outpatient asthma specialty clinic from July 1, 2003 through June 30, 2011 evaluated time to achieve well-controlled asthma and factors associated with well-controlled asthma such as adherence and lack of previous exacerbations.

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Importance: In 2003, the first phase of duty hour requirements for US residency programs recommended by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) was implemented. Evidence suggests that this first phase of duty hour requirements resulted in a modest improvement in resident well-being and patient safety. To build on these initial changes, the ACGME recommended a new set of duty hour requirements that took effect in July 2011.

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To determine if patterns of predominant asthma disease activity are more closely related than baseline asthma severity to measures of morbidity (acute asthma attack, emergency room visit/hospitalization, missed school days, and/or steroid burst). Retrospective analysis was performed for inner-city Los Angeles asthmatic children (3 to 18 years of age) during their first year of enrollment in an asthma-specific disease management program. All measures of morbidity were more closely related to patterns of predominant disease activity than baseline severity.

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