Publications by authors named "S J Bedoya"

Voicing My CHOiCES (VMC) is an advance care planning (ACP) guide designed to assist adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with serious illness in communicating their care preferences to others. This study evaluated a revised version of VMC. A structured interview was used alongside two versions of VMC to solicit AYA preferences and feedback regarding content and layout changes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Youth with life-limiting conditions, like cancer, experience significant psychosocial challenges such as anxiety, depression, and pain, which can negatively impact long-term health outcomes.
  • The study involved 100 English-speaking pediatric outpatients aged 8-21 who completed a brief distress screener called Checking IN, alongside caregiver-proxy reports, to assess their psychosocial distress.
  • Results showed that both youth and caregivers identified fatigue, worry, and sleep difficulties as significant issues, highlighting the effectiveness of real-time assessments in improving psychosocial support and referral processes for distressed youth.
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Advance care planning (ACP) is crucial in supporting optimal, patient-centered care for adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with life-limiting illnesses and can reduce unwanted outcomes at end-of-life. While several ACP tools and interventions have been designed for AYAs, most of these were developed in the United States of America (USA). This paper describes a study designed to adapt the AYA ACP tool, Voicing My CHOiCES (VMC), for the Australian population.

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Background: Antisynthetase syndrome is an inflammatory myopathy that is characterized by the presence of anti-aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase antibodies. Only 30% of those who suffer from the disease can be identified. We present three Hispanic cases of antisynthetase syndrome with unusual clinical pictures were extended myositis panel results enable disease diagnosis and treatment.

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Objective: Chronic illness in children and adolescents is associated with significant stress and risk of psychosocial problems. In busy pediatric clinics, limited time and resources are significant barriers to providing mental health assessment for every child. A brief, real-time self-report measure of psychosocial problems is needed.

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