Publications by authors named "Mary Muldoon"

Many land-grant universities are examining approaches to community engagement to better align with the US land-grant mission of knowledge democratization. With a growing majority of the United States' population living in urbanized spaces, it is a societal imperative for university engagement initiatives to devise strategies for engaging people on the complexity of urban issues central to individual and community wellbeing. Effective urban engagement demands collaboration and strong relationships with urban organizations and residents to co-create approaches to urban concerns.

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Depression is highly prevalent in patients with cardiovascular disease, but questions about the effectiveness of screening and intervention remain unanswered. To evaluate the effects of proactive intervention at an acute-care heart and vascular hospital, patients who reported depressive symptoms on admission were randomized to an active, counseling-based depression intervention plus standard care (referral to a primary or psychiatric care physician) or to standard care alone. Despite early termination of patient enrollment because of lower-than-expected recruitment rates, the project had a positive impact.

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At Baylor Jack and Jane Hamilton Heart and Vascular Hospital, we developed a preadmission packet that is given to patients before their procedure date, enabling them to complete much of their paperwork in advance. The results of our subsequent study revealed that nurses save time during the assessment interview when patients arrive at the hospital with their admission database forms completed. In a busy facility with a large number of patients admitted daily, the nursing time saved can translate into a substantial economic benefit.

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For surgical patients' family members, the wait during surgery can cause anxiety that can be exacerbated if staff members provide inadequate or inconsistent information about the patient's status. Educational interventions and other staff-intensive measures to help reduce family members' anxiety can be time consuming for staff members and impractical in a high-volume facility. To improve communication with patients' families, nurses at a heart and vascular hospital in Dallas, Texas, designed and distributed a card containing estimated procedure times, helpful telephone numbers, and other information.

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We initiated a study at Baylor Jack and Jane Hamilton Heart and Vascular Hospital to compare the sliding scale insulin (SSI) protocol used in 2006 with the SSI protocol currently used to treat diabetic patients admitted for procedures or surgery. An audit of patients' records revealed greater variation in staff compliance with the current protocol than with the previous one. In addition, it seemed that more patients were refusing insulin coverage under the current protocol than under the prior version.

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