Publications by authors named "G N HENNING"

Article Synopsis
  • Female physicians are becoming a larger part of the workforce but face significant challenges with family planning due to demanding work hours, limited parental leave, and potential stigma.
  • The study aimed to identify factors affecting fertility and pregnancy complications among U.S. female physicians, such as age, stress, and working conditions, noting that those in surgical fields experience higher rates of infertility and complications.
  • Despite their increasing numbers, female physicians still struggle with balancing personal and professional lives, highlighting the need for more research and better policies to support their reproductive health and family planning.
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Job satisfaction has been found to increase with age. However, we still have a very limited understanding of how job satisfaction changes as people approach retirement. This is important as the years before retirement present specific challenges for older workers.

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Retirement is associated with numerous representations, some of them being negative and the other positive. Yet, these representations affect the health of individuals in their transition to retirement. However, although the socio-political context in France favors the emergence of numerous representations of retired people, to our knowledge there is no scale validated in French that would allow us to evaluate them.

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Video-based educational programs offer a promising avenue to augment surgical preparation, allow for targeted feedback delivery, and facilitate surgical coaching. Recently, developments in surgical intelligence and computer vision have allowed for automated video annotation and organization, drastically decreasing the manual workload required to implement video-based educational programs. In this article, we outline the development of a novel AI-assisted video forum and describe the early use in surgical education at our institution.

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Objective: To compare the predictive ability of the modified Frailty Index (mFI) and the revised Risk Analysis Index (RAI-Rev) for perioperative outcomes in patients undergoing major urologic oncologic surgery, aiming to identify the optimal frailty screening tool for surgical risk stratification.

Methods: NSQIP was queried to identify patients undergoing radical prostatectomy, partial or radical nephrectomy, or radical cystectomy between 2013 and 2017. We investigated the association of mFI and RAI-Rev with the following 30-day perioperative outcomes using multivariable logistic regression: major complications, Clavien grade ≥4 complications, non-home discharge, 30-day readmission, and all-cause mortality.

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