Publications by authors named "Camille L Rogers"

Background: Effective use of nontechnical skills (NTS) contributes to the provision of safe, quality care in the fast-paced, dynamic setting of the operating room (OR). Inter-professional education of NTS to OR team members can improve performance. Such training requires the accurate measurement of NTS in order to identify gaps in their utilization by OR teams.

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Background: Team debriefing is an important teamwork development intervention for improving team outputs in healthcare. Debriefing is a key component of experiential team training teamwork development interventions such as simulation-based training. Improving the quality of debriefing of healthcare teams, therefore, has multiple benefits.

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Infantile myofibromatosis is an unusual and rare lesion of the bone and soft tissue, which can be seen in the craniofacial skeleton. These complex tumors present a challenge to craniofacial surgeons regarding diagnosis, management, and safe and effective surgical treatment, frequently requiring complex reconstruction. We present the case of a 7-month-old girl with multicentric infantile myofibromatosis of the right parietal and fronto-orbital region, the associated clinical presentation, histopathologic findings, and surgical management, along with a review of the relevant literature.

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Background: Helicopter transport (HT) is an efficient, but costly, means for injured patients to receive life-saving, definitive trauma care. Identifying the characteristics of inappropriate HT presents an opportunity to improve the utilization of this finite medical resource.

Methods: Trauma registry records of all HT for a 3-year period (2016-2018) to an urban Level I trauma center were reviewed.

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White adipose tissue (WAT) plays a crucial role in regulating weight and everyday health. Still, there are significant limitations to available primary culture models, all of which have failed to faithfully recapitulate the adipose microenvironment or extend WAT viability beyond two weeks. The lack of a reliable primary culture model severely impedes research in WAT metabolism and drug development.

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White adipose tissue (WAT) is a critical organ in both health and disease. However, physiologically faithful tissue culture models of primary human WAT remain limited, at best. In this study we describe a novel WAT culture system in which primary human WAT is sandwiched between tissue-engineered sheets of adipose-derived stromal cells.

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