Publications by authors named "R C Pruett"

Background: Financial toxicity describes the harmful effect of individual treatment costs and fiscal burdens that have a compounding negative impact on outcomes in surgery. While this phenomenon has been widely studied in surgical oncology, the purpose of this study was to perform a novel exploration of the impact of financial toxicity in emergency general surgery (EGS) patients throughout the US.

Study Design: The Nationwide Readmissions Database for January and February 2018 was queried for all EGS patients aged 18 to 65 years.

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Objectives: Fibrinolytic therapy can be effective for management of complex pleural effusions. Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA, 10 mg) and deoxyribonuclease (DNAse) every 12 h with a dwell time of one hour is a common strategy based on published data. We used a simpler protocol of tPA (4 mg) without DNAse but with a longer dwell time of 12 h, repeated daily.

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Background And Objective: Asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood. Treatment adherence by adolescents is often poor, and their outcomes are worse than those of younger patients. We conducted a quality improvement initiative to improve asthma control and outcomes for high-risk adolescents treated in a primary care setting.

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Objective: Human milk has well-established health benefits for preterm infants. We conducted a multidisciplinary quality improvement effort aimed at providing at least 500 mL of human milk/kg in the first 14 days of life to very low birth weight (VLBW) (< 1,500 g) infants in the neonatal intensive care unit.

Subjects And Methods: Improvement activities included antenatal consults with at-risk mothers, staff and parent education, a breast pump loaner program for uninsured/underinsured mothers, pump logs, establishment of a donor milk program, and twice-daily physician evaluation of infants' ability to tolerate feedings.

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Article Synopsis
  • Narcotics often cause adverse drug events in children, particularly opioid oversedation in hospitalized patients.
  • Objectives focused on improving methods to prevent opioid oversedation during perioperative care while ensuring effective pain management.
  • Results showed a significant decrease in opioid-related oversedation events and an increase in the interval between these incidents, highlighting the effectiveness of revised prescribing practices and enhanced sedation assessments.
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