Publications by authors named "J Wilmarth"

Increased utilization of the emergency department (ED) for low acuity concerns saturates EDs, leading to overcrowding. As the ED becomes crowded, the quality of care threatens patient safety and increases length of stay. To improve the efficiency of evaluation and discharge of low acuity patients in the pediatric ED, a performance improvement project was implemented to develop a Fast Track.

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Purpose: Results of a study to determine the effect of a pharmacist-led opioid task force on emergency department (ED) opioid use and discharge prescriptions are presented.

Methods: An observational evaluation was conducted at a large tertiary care center (ED volume of 115,000 visits per year) to evaluate selected opioid use outcomes before and after implementation of an ED opioid reduction program by interdisciplinary task force of pharmacists, physicians, and nurses. Volumes of ED opioid orders and discharge prescriptions were evaluated over the entire 25-month study period and during designated 1-month preimplementation and postimplementation periods (January 2017 and January 2018).

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Hypercholesterolemia occurs in many cardiac transplant patients and may aggravate graft coronary arteriopathy as well as contributing to peripheral vascular disease. Lovastatin, which inhibits 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase, in doses of 40-80 mg/day effectively lowers cholesterol in the general cardiac population but has been associated with rhabdomyolysis in cardiac transplant recipients. To determine whether lower doses of lovastatin would be effective and safe for lowering cholesterol after cardiac transplantation, 44 patients with blood cholesterol greater than 200 mg/dl at least 6 months after cardiac transplantation received 10-20 mg lovastatin daily.

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Heart transplantation is a therapeutic option for many patients with end-stage heart failure. Vigorous medical therapy has evolved so that many patients eligible for heart transplantation can now be discharged and stabilized with medical therapy. Heart transplantation improves survival, but it has not been compared previously with sustained medical therapy with regard to quality of life.

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Mild acute rejection progresses to moderate rejection in approximately one third of the cases. Standard rejection therapy would then be instituted with the attendant risk of infection and other side effects. We randomized 40 episodes of mild acute rejection (20 episodes in each group) to receive no additional therapy or to have the oral cyclosporine dose increased for 7 to 10 days with repeat endomyocardial biopsy performed.

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