Publications by authors named "Rs Morris"

Background: Mechanically ventilated critically ill patients often develop pleural effusions, which may impact lung compliance and expansion. This systematic review explores the management of pleural effusion in the critically ill population.

Methods: A comprehensive literature search was performed.

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Introduction: Older age is a well-established risk factor for withdrawal of life-sustaining therapy (WDLST) and discharge to hospice (DH) in traumatic brain injury (TBI). However, a paucity of data exists in identifying factors associated with end-of-life (EoL) care in younger patients with TBI. We sought to identify hospital and patient factors associated with EoL care and timing of EoL care in younger adults with severe TBI.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the safety of observing patients with small concurrent traumatic hemopneumothorax (HPTX), finding that 74% of patients were managed with observation instead of immediate tube thoracostomy (TT).
  • Results indicate that patients under observation experienced lower rates of pulmonary complications and shorter hospital stays compared to those who underwent early TT.
  • However, observation had a notable failure rate, with many patients needing further intervention, but those who did fail showed outcomes similar to those who got immediate TT.
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Introduction: Gallstone disease is one of the most common surgical diagnoses in the United States. Notably absent from the literature is the patient's perspective on priorities in management. Understanding patient values will assist surgeons and systems in achieving high-quality, patient-focused care for biliary disease.

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Introduction: The Traumatic Brain Injury - Patient Reported Outcome (TBI-PRO) model was previously derived to predict long-term patient satisfaction as assessed by the Quality of Life After Brain Injury (QOLIBRI) score. The aim of this study is to externally and prospectively validate the TBI-PRO model to predict long-term patient-reported outcomes and to derive a new model using a larger dataset of older adults with TBI.

Methods: Patients admitted to a Level I trauma center with TBI were prospectively followed for 1 y after injury.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study focused on managing traumatic hemothorax (HTX) with tube thoracostomy (TT), which is known to have a high complication rate, and aimed to assess the impact of a 2017 guideline that recommended observing stable patients with HTX volumes of 300 mL or less instead of immediately performing TT.
  • - A review of 357 patients was conducted comparing periods before and after the guideline was implemented, revealing that the post-guideline group had a higher observation rate (75% vs 59%) and a lower rate of TT placement (42% vs 57%).
  • - The results showed no increase in observation failures or complications, alongside reduced hospital and ICU stays, indicating that the guideline effectively reduced
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Background: Retained hemothorax (rHTX) requiring intervention occurs in up to 20% of patients who undergo chest tube (TT) placement for a hemothorax (HTX). Thoracic irrigation at the time of TT placement decreases the need for secondary intervention in this patient group but those findings are limited because of the single-center design. A multicenter study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of thoracic irrigation.

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Background: Tiered trauma team activation (TTA) allows systems to optimally allocate resources to an injured patient. Target undertriage and overtriage rates of <5% and <35% are difficult for centers to achieve, and performance variability exists. The objective of this study was to optimize and externally validate a previously developed hospital trauma triage prediction model to predict the need for emergent intervention in 6 hours (NEI-6), an indicator of need for a full TTA.

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Introduction: Retained hemothorax (HTX) is a common complication following thoracic trauma. Small studies demonstrate the benefit of thoracic cavity irrigation at the time of tube thoracostomy (TT) for the prevention of retained HTX. We sought to assess the effectiveness of chest irrigation in preventing retained HTX leading to a secondary surgical intervention.

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Article Synopsis
  • Delays in starting VTE prophylaxis for patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI) remain an issue despite existing guidelines, prompting a hypothesis that an expanded Trauma Program Performance Improvement (PI) team will enhance timely care and reduce complications.
  • A retrospective review analyzed TBI patients before and after the expansion of the Trauma PIPS team over two separate years, excluding those with critical conditions or early interventions.
  • Results showed significant reductions in initiation time for VTE prophylaxis and increased administration rates, leading to lower VTE event rates without raising bleeding incidents, confirming the effectiveness of the multidisciplinary team's efforts.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the effectiveness and safety of early venous thromboembolism chemoprophylaxis in traumatic brain injury patients requiring neurosurgery, a group often excluded from previous research.
  • Conducted as a retrospective review at a level I trauma center from 2016 to 2020, the study compared patients who received early chemoprophylaxis (within 72 hours of surgery) to those who had it later.
  • Results showed that early initiation significantly reduced venous thromboembolism rates without increasing the risk of worsening intracranial hemorrhage or the need for further surgical interventions.
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The introduction and subsequent rapid spread of Japanese encephalitis virus genotype IV across all Australian mainland states and the Northern Territory since late 2021 has increased the risk of an incursion of this mosquito-transmitted zoonotic virus disease into New Zealand, with serious implications for both animal and human health. The potential modes of entry are through introduction of infected mosquitoes as hitchhikers on ships or aircraft, windborne transfer of mosquitoes, or arrival of infected reservoir bird species. A competent vector mosquito, , is endemic in New Zealand and other mosquito species may also become involved.

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Background: Understanding the expectations of early career acute care surgeons will help clarify the practice and employment models that will attract and retain high-quality surgeons, thereby sustaining our workforce. This study aimed to outline the clinical and academic preferences and priorities of early career acute care surgeons and to better define full-time employment.

Methods: A survey on clinical responsibilities, employment preferences, work priorities, and compensation was distributed to early career acute care surgeons in the first 5 years of practice.

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Older adults account for a disproportionate share of the morbidity and mortality after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Predicting functional and cognitive outcomes for individual older adults after TBI is challenging in the acute phase of injury. Given that neurologic recovery is possible and uncertain, life-sustaining therapy may be pursued initially, even if for some, there is a risk of survival to an undesired level of disability or dependence.

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Introduction: The decision to withdraw life sustaining treatment (WDLST) in older adults with traumatic brain injury is subject to wide variability leading to nonbeneficial interventions and unnecessary use of hospital resources. We hypothesized that patient and hospital factors are associated with WDLST and WDLST timing.

Methods: All traumatic brain injury patients ≥65 with Glasgow coma scores (GCS) of 4-11 from 2018 to 2019 at level I and II centers were selected from the National Trauma Data Bank.

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Introduction: The American College of Surgeons (ACS) delineates trauma team activation (TTA) criteria to identify seriously injured trauma patients in the field. Patients are deemed to be severely undertriaged (SU), placing them at risk for adverse outcomes, when they do not meet TTA criteria but nonetheless sustain significant injuries (Injury Severity Score [ISS] ≥25).

Objectives: Delineate patient demographics, injuries, and outcomes after SU.

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Background: Patients undergoing surgical procedures are at an increased risk of venous thromboembolism events. A fixed Enoxaparin dosing regimen is the standard of care for chemoprophylaxis in most institutions; however, breakthrough venous thromboembolism events are still reported. We aimed to systematically review the literature to determine the ability of various Enoxaparin dosing regimens to achieve adequate prophylactic anti-Xa levels for venous thromboembolism prevention in hospitalized general surgery patients.

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Background: Rates of venous thromboembolism (VTE) remain high in emergency general surgery (EGS) patients despite chemical VTE prophylaxis. Emerging literature supports anti-factor Xa (AFXa) monitoring for patients on enoxaparin (LMWH), although a significant knowledge gap remains regarding the optimal dosing and monitoring in EGS patients. We hypothesize that standard dose VTE prophylaxis regimens provide inadequate VTE prophylaxis in EGS patients.

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Background: Estimation of long-term quality of life in patients sustaining Traumatic brain injuries is a difficult but important task during the early hospitalization. There are very limited tools to assess these outcomes, therefore we aimed to develop a predictive model for quality-of-life that could be used in hospitalized adults with TBIs.

Methods: The TRACK-TBI dataset was used to identify adult patients with TBI from 2014 to 2018.

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Background: Malnutrition is associated with increased morbidity and mortality after trauma. The Geriatric Nutritional Risk Index (GNRI) is a validated scoring system used to predict the risk of complications related to malnutrition in nontrauma patients. We hypothesized that GNRI is predictive of worse outcomes in geriatric trauma patients.

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Introduction: Axial imaging has allowed for more precise measurement and, in-turn, more objective guidelines related to the management of traumatic pneumothoraces (PTXs). In 2017, our trauma center used a guideline to observe any PTX ≤35 mm in stable patients. We hypothesize that this guideline would decrease unnecessary chest tubes without affecting failure rates.

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Background: Trauma and acute care surgery (ACS) staffing models vary widely across the United States, resulting in large discrepancies in staffing, compensation, schedule, and clinical/nonclinical expectations. An urgent need exists to define clinical, academic, and schedule expectations for a full-time employment (FTE) of a trauma and ACS surgeon in the United States.

Methods: A survey was distributed to departmental leaders at Levels I, II, III trauma centers across the United States regarding current workload.

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Background: The ability to reliably predict outcomes after trauma in older adults (age ≥ 65 y) is critical for clinical decision making. Using novel machine-learning techniques, we sought to design a nonlinear, competing risks paradigm for prediction of older adult discharge disposition following injury.

Materials And Methods: The National Trauma Databank (NTDB) was used to identify patients 65+ y between 2007 and 2014.

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