17 results match your criteria: "Boston University Chobanian and Avedesian School of Medicine[Affiliation]"

Role for a video tool in educating youth with epilepsy about anticonvulsant and contraceptive drug interactions.

Epilepsy Behav

November 2024

Boston University Chobanian and Avedesian School of Medicine, Boston, MA, United States; Division of Pediatric Neurology, Boston Medical Center, Boston, MA, United States.

Purpose: Anti-seizure medications (ASM) can lower the efficacy of hormonal birth control (BC), while estrogen-containing BC can increase ASM metabolism, altering seizure frequency. Despite these adverse interactions, many youth with epilepsy demonstrate inadequate knowledge about this topic. Thus, there is a need to develop tools that empower youth with epilepsy to make more informed contraceptive decisions.

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Aims: Lower limb fractures are common in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) and represent a significant burden to the existing orthopaedic surgical infrastructure. In high income country (HIC) settings, internal fixation is the standard of care due to its superior outcomes. In LMICs, external fixation is often the surgical treatment of choice due to limited supplies, cost considerations, and its perceived lower complication rate.

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Background: Hydroxyurea remains underutilized in the pediatric sickle cell population despite its well-known efficacy in decreasing sickle cell complications and hospitalizations. Access to refills and liquid formulation remains a critical barrier to adherence to hydroxyurea regimens. This study was undertaken to determine the clinical impact of home-delivering compounded liquid hydroxyurea (LHU) to pediatric patients with sickle cell disease.

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Importance: Medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) are highly effective, but only 22% of individuals in the US with opioid use disorder receive them. Hospitalization potentially provides an opportunity to initiate MOUD and link patients to ongoing treatment.

Objective: To study the effectiveness of interprofessional hospital addiction consultation services in increasing MOUD treatment initiation and engagement.

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Oligodendrocytes originating in the brain and spinal cord as well as in the ventral and dorsal domains of the neural tube are transcriptomically and functionally distinct. These distinctions are also reflected in the ultrastructure of the produced myelin, and the susceptibility to myelin-related disorders, which highlights the significance of the choice of patterning protocols in the differentiation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) into oligodendrocytes. Thus, our first goal was to survey the different approaches applied to the generation of iPSC-derived oligodendrocytes in 2D culture and in organoids, as well as reflect on how these approaches pertain to the regional and spatial fate of the generated oligodendrocyte progenitors and myelinating oligodendrocytes.

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This paper describes the past, present, and future of medical education in Cambodia. Although doctor training began in 1902, the first medical school was not founded until 1946. Since the colonial era, the curriculum and teaching strategies have been strongly influenced by the French system, dominated by didactic lectures and the apprenticeship model.

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Socioeconomic Impact on Swallow Therapy Attendance.

Dysphagia

August 2024

Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Boston Medical Center, Boston University School of Medicine, 830 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.

Dysphagia negatively impacts quality of life and increases health care costs. Swallow therapy is the primary and effective treatment for dysphagia of various etiologies, and attendance is critical to success. This study seeks to identify barriers to swallow therapy attendance at a tertiary care, safety-net hospital.

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Guiding Principles for Writing About Immigrants and Immigrant Health.

J Immigr Minor Health

February 2024

Immigrant &, Refugee Health Center, Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedesian School of Medicine, 725 Albany Street, Suite 5b, Boston, MA, 02118, USA.

This perspective identifies harmful phrasing and frames in current clinician and researcher work relating to immigrant health and provides equity-centered alternatives. Recommendations are organized within two broad categories, one focused on shifting terminology toward more humanizing language and the second focused on changing frames around immigration discourse. With regards to shifting terminology, this includes: 1) avoiding language that conflates immigrants with criminality (i.

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Despite growing acceptability of health-related social needs (HRSN) screening and increasing policy incentives for adoption, clinical implementation of HRSN screening remains low. HRSN screening has been particularly difficult for Community Health Centers (CHCs), which have limited resources to implement and sustain new workflows. While CHCs provide care to patients with disproportionately high levels of unmet social needs, identifying HRSN screening implementation strategies that take CHC-specific contexts into account remains elusive.

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Purpose: Little is known about the uptake of germline genetic testing for patients with prostate cancer after 2018 guideline changes. This study characterizes genetic service referral patterns and predictors of referrals among patients with prostate cancer.

Methods: A retrospective cohort study using electronic health record data was conducted at an urban safety-net hospital.

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We prospectively examined the association between COVID-19 vaccination and menstrual cycle characteristics in an internet-based prospective cohort study. We included a sample of 1,137 participants who enrolled in Pregnancy Study Online (PRESTO), a preconception cohort study of couples trying to conceive, during January 2021-August 2022. Eligible participants were aged 21-45 years, United States or Canadian residents, and trying to conceive without fertility treatment.

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Early initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) alters viral rebound kinetics after analytic treatment interruption (ATI) and may play a role in promoting HIV-1 remission. Autologous neutralizing antibodies (aNAbs) represent a key adaptive immune response in people living with HIV-1. We aimed to investigate the role of aNAbs in shaping post-ATI HIV-1 rebound variants.

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Women's Reactions to Breast Density Information Vary by Sociodemographic Characteristics.

Womens Health Issues

July 2023

Section of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Boston University Chobanian and Avedesian School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts; The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice and Dartmouth Cancer Center, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.

Article Synopsis
  • A study examined how women react to receiving information about their breast density and how this affects their future mammogram plans.
  • Most women (86%) felt informed, but some reported anxiety (15%) or confusion (11%), with racial and literacy differences affecting these reactions.
  • Non-Hispanic Black, Asian, and Hispanic women, as well as women with low literacy, were more likely to feel anxious and confused, impacting their likelihood of future mammograms, highlighting the need for accessible education on breast density.
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Emerging From the Pandemic: How Has Academic Surgery Changed?

J Surg Res

August 2023

Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin; Department of Surgery, William S. Middleton VA, Madison, Wisconsin.

Academic surgery has changed along with the rest of the world in response to the COVID pandemic. With increasing rates of vaccination against COVID over the past 2 y, we have slowly but steadily made progress toward controlling the spread of the virus. Surgeons, academic surgery departments, health systems, and trainees are all attempting to establish a new normal in various domains-clinical, research, teaching, and in their personal lives.

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Perceptions of Breast Cancer Risks Among Women Receiving Mammograph Screening.

JAMA Netw Open

January 2023

Dartmouth Cancer Center, The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.

Importance: Breast density is an independent risk factor for breast cancer. Despite the proliferation of mandated written notifications about breast density following mammography, there is little understanding of how women perceive the relative breast cancer risk associated with breast density.

Objective: To assess women's perception of breast density compared with other breast cancer risks and explore their understanding of risk reduction.

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