Publications by authors named "C E Vaughan"

Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, virtual care was used to deliver primary care services. Nurses contributed to primary care teams' capacity to deliver care virtually. This study explored nurses' roles in virtual care delivery in primary care and the barriers and facilitators that influenced their contributions.

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Background: Carotid stenosis is a risk factor for cerebrovascular accident (CVA) following coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Guidelines recommend selective preoperative screening with Doppler ultrasound (US) but nonselective application is commonplace. Recent data has questioned the efficacy of perioperative carotid intervention, challenging the value of this practice.

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Control over symptoms postconcussion is central to an active self-directed recovery process. Therefore, assessing a patient's confidence in controlling their symptoms and facilitating their concussion recovery is an important component of treatment. Previously, no measures existed to assess symptom-specific self-efficacy (SE) in pediatric concussion recovery.

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Background: Bladder health encompasses total bladder well-being and not merely the absence of urinary symptoms. While much is known about the prevalence of urinary symptoms in women, little is known about the distribution of bladder health (eg, optimal to poor).

Objective: We report the distributions of multiple dimensions of bladder health and function in a population-based sample of community-dwelling women, overall and separately in women without urinary symptoms to begin to explore bladder health dimensions that may precede the onset of symptoms.

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Article Synopsis
  • A diagnosis of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) often depends on reports from informants about noticeable behavioral changes in patients.
  • The term "bvFTD-by-proxy" refers to cases where changes are reported only by informants, which can lead to questions about the reliability of their observations.
  • Three case studies illustrated that symptoms resembling bvFTD were reported by spouses, but medical tests showed only mild issues, highlighting the risks of inaccurate informant reports and the need for careful, coordinated care to protect patient autonomy.
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