Background: Coronavirus-2 (COVID-19) has caused a worldwide pandemic since December 2019. Since then, clinical trials with vaccines have been started and completed, and at present, 3 COVID-19 vaccines have been approved for use in the United States. Healthcare providers were among the first to get vaccinated, but the precise attitudes of healthcare workers toward vaccination are uncertain.
Objective: To understand residents and fellows' attitudes toward vaccination and record any side effects after vaccination.
Methods: We conducted an anonymous survey that was open from 3-1-2021 to 3-12-2021 using distribution lists from the Graduate Medical Education office on the Lubbock campus of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center after getting approval from the Institutional Review Board (L21-088).
Results: Eighty-one residents and fellows (26.6% out of 304) responded to our survey. Among those who responded, 63 (77.8 %) were between 25 and 35 years old, and 41 (50.6%) were males. Seventy-seven (95.1%) received the vaccine (Pfizer-BioNTech), 78 (96.3%) reported that they supported vaccination, and 3 (3.7%) reported that they did not want vaccination. Eight members (9.8%) had tested positive for COVID-19 infection before vaccination, but only 1 (1.23%) had tested positive for COVID-19 antibodies. All residents and fellows reported side effects after the vaccination, including pain at the injection site (77; 100%), local redness (9; 11.6%), local swelling (13; 16.8%), fever (25; 32.5%), fatigue (25; 32.5%), chills (34; 44.1 %), headache (38; 49.4%).
Conclusions: Most medical trainees have a high interest in COVID-19 vaccination; however, a few reported that they did not want vaccination.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/21501327211022978 | DOI Listing |
ATS Sch
January 2025
Critical Care Medicine Department, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland.
Rapid accumulation of knowledge and skills by trainees in the intensive care unit assumes prior mastery of clinically relevant core physiology concepts. However, for many fellows, their foundational physiology knowledge was acquired years earlier during their preclinical medical curricula and variably reinforced during the remainder of their undergraduate and graduate medical training. We sought to assess the retention of clinically relevant pulmonary physiology knowledge among pulmonary and critical care medicine (PCCM) and critical care medicine (CCM) fellows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Cardiovasc Dis
December 2024
Mount Sinai Morningside-BronxCare Health System Bronx, NY, USA.
Objectives: Cardiogenic shock is a significant economic burden on healthcare facilities and patients. The prevalence and outcome of cardiogenic shock in the South Bronx are unknown. The aim of the study was to examine the burden of non-AMI CS in Hispanic and Black population in South Bronx and characterize their in-hospital outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimicrob Steward Healthc Epidemiol
January 2025
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Pediatric Critical Care Medicine, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, USA.
Objective: Identify essential components of a curriculum on antimicrobial stewardship (AS) for pediatric residents.
Design: Survey.
Setting: Academic tertiary care children's hospital.
Background: Medical student exposure to role-modeling of high-value care (HVC) behaviors may shape professional identity formation and future HVC practices.
Objective: To investigate the frequency and characteristics of HVC role-modeling witnessed by medical students during core clinical rotations.
Design: Cross-sectional survey study.
Adv Skin Wound Care
January 2025
At the University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, USA, J. Benjamin Jackson III, MD, MBA, is Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery and Director of Orthopaedic Research, Department of Orthopaedics; and Yianni Bakaes, BS, and Ben Jacques, BS, are Medical Students, School of Medicine. Chase Gauthier, MD, is Research Fellow, Prisma Health Department of Orthopedics, Columbia, South Carolina. Also at the University of South Carolina, William L. Mills Jr, MD, and Kenny Nguyen, MD, are Medical Residents, School of Medicine; Tyler Gonzalez, MD, MBA, is Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Orthopaedics; and David L. Cone, MD, is Clinical Associate Professor of Family and Preventative Medicine, School of Medicine. The authors have disclosed no financial relationships related to this article. Submitted September 6, 2023; accepted in revised form January 16, 2024.
Objective: To evaluate the effect of hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy on the outcomes of patients with chronic refractory osteomyelitis (CRO) when combined with modern antibiotics with modern delivery methods and/or surgical treatments.
Methods: The authors conducted a retrospective review on 58 patients with CRO from a single institution who underwent HBO therapy along with standard treatment between January 2009 and December 2019. To investigate associations with binary outcomes of interest, they estimated logistic regression models.
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