Publications by authors named "Tompkins A"

Objectives: High-risk populations for lung cancer, including Black men and those with lower socioeconomic status, experience worse outcomes when treated. The mortality benefit of lung cancer screening cannot be realized without adherence to annual screening. Our study aims to understand annual adherence to lung cancer screening in a population traditionally experiencing health disparities, thus identifying lung cancer screening's impact on lung cancer disparities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Cardiothoracic surgery lacks gender and racial/ethnic diversity. Recent studies have highlighted disparities based on gender and race/ethnicity among academic cardiothoracic surgeons. The impact of the intersection of these factors on representation and salary is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The Asian tiger mosquito has expanded its presence in Italy, raising important public health concerns.
  • The study uses a new model to assess how temperature trends and heatwaves influence the mosquito's distribution, particularly in urban areas such as Rome and Milan.
  • The model shows that the mosquito season is lengthening and suggests possibilities for an early warning system to aid in mosquito control efforts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Hospitalized patients with palliative care needs often have high levels of physical and psychological symptom distress. Virtual reality (VR) with a music therapy intervention may improve physical and psychological symptoms.

Objectives: To assess symptom distress and quality of life (QOL) among hospitalized palliative care patients who participated in a virtual reality-based music therapy (VR-MT) intervention, and to explore VR-MT from the perspectives of health care professionals involved in their care.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Training in cardiothoracic surgery coincides with a time when many plan their families. Many choose to delay childbearing until the end of training, 33% of women and 20% of men reported using assisted reproductive technology (ART). States have varying laws regarding abortion and ART, which can influence these decisions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fundus image quality serves a crucial asset for medical diagnosis and applications. However, such images often suffer degradation during image acquisition where multiple types of degradation can occur in each image. Although recent deep learning based methods have shown promising results in image enhancement, they tend to focus on restoring one aspect of degradation and lack generalisability to multiple modes of degradation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The authors provide an overview of cultural adjustments and policy changes to support wellness in medicine. Subsequently, the data around wellness in cardiothoracic surgery, as well as policies and interventions that have been put into place to address wellness concerns in cardiothoracic surgery is discussed. The authors focus on both trainees and attendings and provide both a list of actions to address deficits in wellness management in the field, as well as resources available to promote well-being among cardiothoracic surgeons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Diversity in the physician workforce improves patient care, physician well-being, and innovation. Workforce diversity is dependent on fair compensation that is unbiased by race or ethnicity. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a disparity of representation and salary on the basis of race or ethnicity exists in academic cardiothoracic surgery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the differences in treatment responses among melanoma patients based on tumor characteristics, utilizing radiomic analysis of medical images to identify non-invasive biomarkers.
  • This research involved 291 patients treated with either immune checkpoint inhibitors or BRAF targeted therapy, and 667 tumor lesions were analyzed for treatment outcomes.
  • The findings show significant organ-level differences in treatment response and variability, with specific machine-learning models accurately predicting disease control or progression based on radiomic features, highlighting the potential for personalized treatment strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study examines the spatiotemporal variations of PM, PM, SO, O, NO, and NO concentrations in Northwestern South America (NWSA). We assess the efficacy of existing policies, identify underlying phenomena, and highlight areas for further research. Significant findings have emerged by analyzing reanalysis and in-situ data, employing the WRF-Chem model, and utilizing a new Lagrangian framework designed to overcome some drawbacks common to analysis of pollution Long-Range Transport.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A new database of the Entomological Inoculation Rate (EIR) was used to directly link the risk of infectious mosquito bites to climate in Sub-Saharan Africa. Applying a statistical mixed model framework to high-quality monthly EIR measurements collected from field campaigns in Sub-Saharan Africa, we analyzed the impact of rainfall and temperature seasonality on EIR seasonality and determined important climate drivers of malaria seasonality across varied climate settings in the region. We observed that seasonal malaria transmission was within a temperature window of 15°C-40°C and was sustained if average temperature was well above 15°C or below 40°C.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aeromonads are a well-known cause of gastrointestinal illness in humans; however, extra-intestinal infections due to spp. have been increasingly reported. Severe infection and septic shock due to spp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Takotsubo cardiomyopathy is a form of non-ischemic cardiomyopathy characterized by transient systolic dysfunction. The prevalence of Takotsubo cardiomyopathy has been estimated to be about 2% overall but about 10% amongst women presenting with clinical manifestations of acute coronary syndrome. The overall mechanism of the disease still remains unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigate how ocean feedbacks and the diurnal cycle impact convective aggregation using a slab ocean coupled to a cloud resolving model. With a 20 m mixed layer ocean, aggregation occurs after 25 days. Thinner ocean layers slow the onset of clustering, with a 1 m ocean layer needing around 43 days.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Cold snare polypectomy (CSP) is the preferred resection technique for small (6-9 mm) polyps due to lower rate of incomplete resection compared to cold forceps polypectomy (CFP) and improved safety profile over hot snare polypectomy (HSP).

Aims: To describe resection techniques for small (6-9 mm) polyps and determine factors associated with sub-optimal technique.

Methods: This was retrospective cohort study of colonoscopies performed by gastroenterological and surgical endoscopists from 2012 to 2019 where at least one 6-9 mm polyp was removed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination effectiveness in healthcare personnel (HCP) has been established. However, questions remain regarding its performance in high-risk healthcare occupations and work locations. We describe the effect of a COVID-19 HCP vaccination campaign on SARS-CoV-2 infection by timing of vaccination, job type, and work location.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Mosquito-borne diseases are expanding their range, and re-emerging in areas where they had subsided for decades. The extent to which climate change influences the transmission suitability and population at risk of mosquito-borne diseases across different altitudes and population densities has not been investigated. The aim of this study was to quantify the extent to which climate change will influence the length of the transmission season and estimate the population at risk of mosquito-borne diseases in the future, given different population densities across an altitudinal gradient.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Studies about the impact of future climate change on diseases have mostly focused on standard Representative Concentration Pathway climate change scenarios. These scenarios do not account for the non-linear dynamics of the climate system. A rapid ice-sheet melting could occur, impacting climate and consequently societies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In an effort to improve teamwork and collaborative care at a Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC), the Midwest Interprofessional Practice, Education, and Research Center (MIPERC) collaborated on the implementation of an interprofessional collaborative practice (IPCP) program that included placement of multidisciplinary student teams. The MIPERC IPCP program supported staff, preceptor and student teams through interprofessional education and structured interprofessional activities for students, including daily huddles, interprofessional student team visits, and nurse triage phone calls. Results from the project's first year were previously reported (Nagelkerk et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intracerebral implantation of neural stem cells (NSCs) to treat stroke remains an inefficient process with <5% of injected cells being retained. To improve the retention and distribution of NSCs after a stroke, we investigated the utility of NSCs' encapsulation in polyethylene glycol (PEG) microspheres. We first characterized the impact of the physical properties of different syringes and needles, as well as ejection speed, upon delivery of microspheres to the stroke injured rat brain.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Music therapy (MT) and virtual reality (VR) have shown favorable patient-reported outcomes during serious illness. To evaluate implementation measures of feasibility, usability, and acceptability of a VR-based MT intervention. A pilot implementation study of a two-day VR-MT intervention using mixed methods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Malaria forecasts from dynamical systems have never been attempted at the health district or local clinic catchment scale, and so their usefulness for public health preparedness and response at the local level is fundamentally unknown. A pilot preoperational forecasting system is introduced in which the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts ensemble prediction system and seasonal climate forecasts of temperature and rainfall are used to drive the uncalibrated dynamical malaria model VECTRI to predict anomalies in transmission intensity 4 months ahead. It is demonstrated that the system has statistically significant skill at a number of sentinel sites in Uganda with high-quality data.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: A major health burden in Cameroon is malaria, a disease that is sensitive to climate, environment and socio-economic conditions, but whose precise relationship with these drivers is still uncertain. An improved understanding of the relationship between the disease and its drivers, and the ability to represent these relationships in dynamic disease models, would allow such models to contribute to health mitigation and adaptation planning. This work collects surveys of malaria parasite ratio and entomological inoculation rate and examines their relationship with temperature, rainfall, population density in Cameroon and uses this analysis to evaluate a climate sensitive mathematical model of malaria transmission.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF