Publications by authors named "Longmire W"

Approximately 20% of veterans suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). NPs are well positioned to provide early detection and assist veterans with access to life-saving treatment. The PTSD Toolkit for Nurses helps nurses improve their skills in assessing PTSD and provides a specialized intervention and referral procedure that promotes help-seeking behavior among veterans.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The aim of this study was to develop a competency based training programme to support multidisciplinary working in a combined biochemistry and haematology laboratory. The training programme was developed to document that staff were trained in the full range of laboratory tests that they were expected to perform. This programme subsequently formed the basis for the annual performance review of all staff.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Although numerous important contributions have originated from basic science research performed by surgeons, it seems that such dedicated work is becoming increasingly difficult to accomplish. What are the reasons for this change and what improvements can be made? This study aims to characterize the basic research training and careers of senior academic surgeons to assess and devise strategies for sustaining productive and quality surgical research.

Methods: A 25-item survey was sent to 850 senior-level members of academic societies, including the Association of Academic Surgeons, Society of University Surgeons, and American Surgical Association.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: To characterize the career choices and developments made by leading senior surgeons in this country and to examine hypothetically whether application of a short tracking program would have hindered their career decisions.

Design: A survey pertaining to each surgeon's career, decisions, and opinions concerning surgical training.

Setting And Participants: Senior surgeons of regional and national surgical societies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the US, the remarkable decline in the incidence of gastric cancer during the mid-portion of this century has leveled off during the last two decades as an equally remarkable and poorly understood increase in the percentage of the generally more unfavorable cardia cancers has become apparent. The importance of H. pylori infection is being actively investigated and treatment to reduce the infection may offer a means of decreasing the disease, particularly in areas of high incidence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Children's and parent's subjective ratings of the frequency and severity of nausea and emesis were assessed among 33 children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia receiving identical chemotherapy. Parents were trained to record the frequency of the child's actual emesis episodes during chemotherapy. Although parent and child ratings of nausea were significantly correlated, children generally rated their nausea and emesis as more frequent and more severe than did their parents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In an effort to determine the role of interventional radiologic and endoscopic techniques in the management of benign biliary strictures, a retrospective analysis was carried out on 194 consecutive patients with bile duct strictures treated at UCLA between 1955 and 1990. Patients were classified as group 1 (1955 through 1979; n = 138) or group 2 (1980 through 1989; n = 56). Follow-up was for a minimum of 24 months and was in excess of 3 years in 179 patients (92%).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Traditionally regarded as a disease of the elderly, the natural history of carcinoma of the bile duct in young patients has not been well defined. Of 186 patients (mean age of 62 years) treated at UCLA (1954 to 1988) for carcinoma of the bile duct, 26 were less than 45 years old. Younger patients had symptoms for an average of 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The majority of patients with bile duct cancer have small focal adenocarcinomas localized to the upper, middle, or lower third of the bile duct. In contrast, a small subgroup of patients have been identified with bile duct tumors that are diffuse, involving multiple segments of the extrahepatic biliary tract. Among 186 patients with documented bile duct cancer treated at the UCLA Medical Center between 1954 and 1988, 13 patients (7%) had diffuse lesions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Recent studies have advocated the nonoperative treatment of elderly patients with bile duct cancer using biliary endoprostheses. In addition to a 30-day mortality rate of 9%, disadvantages with this approach include lack of a definitive diagnosis and the inability to assess resectability. For comparison, we reviewed 42 consecutive cases of bile duct cancer managed surgically at UCLA (from 1954 to 1988) among patients age 70 years or older.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A retrospective review of patients treated for carcinoma of the common bile duct has demonstrated improvement in diagnostic capabilities, leading to earlier management by resectional therapy. The ability to resect these tumors is directly translatable to improved long-term survival. Efforts to obtain proof of malignancy prior to resection are often frustrated by the inability to obtain adequate representative tissue for frozen section.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pylorus preserving pancreatoduodenectomy (PPPD) was reintroduced 12 years ago. Since that time, over 400 patients have undergone PPPD with approximately 41 per cent having chronic pancreatitis and 54 per cent having pancreatic and other periampullary malignancies. Reported 5-year survivals in this latter group have been comparable to those achieved by the classic Whipple procedure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We reviewed the records of 340 patients with a tissue diagnosis of pancreatic cancer treated at UCLA Medical Center between 1973 and 1988. Sixty-one patients underwent pancreatic resection (group I), 173 had some form of surgical palliation (group II), and 106 had neither (group III). The diagnosis was made 1 to 2 months more quickly in the last 8 years of the review than in the first 8 years, but the effect of early diagnosis on curability was negligible.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An analysis of 186 patients treated for bile duct cancer at UCLA Medical Center from November 1954 to December 1988 demonstrated improvements in several areas of diagnosis and management. Comparison of 96 patients treated between 1954 and 1978 (group 1) with 90 patients treated between 1978 and 1988 (group 2) showed earlier diagnosis and treatment in group 2 (2.1 months from onset of symptoms) than in group 1 (4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Improvement in survival rates for solid tumors, the cancers of greatest concern to the surgeon, has lagged far behind the dramatic advances that have been made in the treatment of leukemias, lymphomas, and certain childhood tumors. The application of new technical procedures and an aggressive approach to certain metastatic lesions offer chances for improving operative results, but the greatest contribution to curing cancer that can be made by surgeons at this time is the complete removal of the small localized primary tumor. By more active participation in "early detection programs" surgeons can increase their opportunities to treat cancer at this stage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Hemangiomas are the most common benign tumors occurring in the liver. However, the natural history of hepatic hemangiomas has not been well defined. Four patients (3 women, 1 man) with recurrent giant liver hemangiomas underwent either surgical or radiation therapy as initial treatment for the primary tumor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Evaluation of the patency of the pancreaticojejunostomy was conducted in four patients who had undergone Whipple's procedure. Three patients had a mucosa-to-mucosa anastomosis, and in one patient the pancreatic remnant had been invaginated into the jejunal loop. The longest interval between the operation and the present study was 9.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF