4 results match your criteria: "3 The University of Chicago[Affiliation]"

Preferences and behavior are heavily influenced by one's current visceral experience, yet people often fail to anticipate such effects. Although research suggests that this gap is difficult to overcome-to act as if in another visceral state-research on mental simulation has demonstrated that simulations can substitute for experiences, albeit to a weaker extent. We examine whether mentally simulating visceral states can impact preferences and behavior.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Ring avulsion injuries can range from soft tissue injury to complete amputation. Grading systems have been developed to guide treatment, but there is controversy with high-grade injuries. Traditionally, advanced ring injuries have been treated with completion amputation, but there is evidence that severe ring injuries can be salvaged.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Physician Burnout and the Calling to Care for the Dying: A National Survey.

Am J Hosp Palliat Care

December 2017

5 Trent Center for Bioethics, Humanities, and History of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.

Background: Physician burnout raises concerns over what sustains physicians' career motivations. We assess whether physicians in end-of-life specialties had higher rates of burnout and/or calling to care for the dying. We also examined whether the patient centeredness of the clinical environment was associated with burnout.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Advances in treatment of hyperkalemia in chronic kidney disease.

Expert Opin Pharmacother

December 2015

c 3 The University of Chicago Medicine, Department of Medicine, American Society of Hypertension Comprehensive Hypertension Center, Section of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism , Chicago, IL, USA.

Introduction: Hyperkalemia is a frequent electrolyte disorder associated with life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death. Patients prone to hyperkalemia have chronic kidney disease (CKD) either alone or in conjunction with diabetes or heart failure (HF). Although agents inhibiting the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone-system (RAAS) are currently the first-line treatments toward cardio- and nephroprotection, their administration often leads to potassium elevation in such patients and results in high rates of treatment discontinuation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF