9 results match your criteria: "Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network[Affiliation]"
Clin Transl Sci
January 2025
Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Clinical research studies are becoming increasingly complex resulting in compounded work burden and longer study cycle times, each fueling runaway costs. The impact of protocol complexity often results in inadequate recruitment and insufficient sample sizes, which challenges validity and generalizability. Understanding the need to provide an alternative model to engage researchers and sponsors and bringing clinical research opportunities to the broader community, clinical research networks (CRN) have been proposed and initiated in the United States and other parts of the world.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
August 2024
Department of Oncology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
There is a critical need for a streamlined process to identify genotype-matched individuals eligible for enrollment into clinical trials and/or targeted therapies, as current methodologies face challenges in integrating diverse molecular data sources. We have developed a precision oncology platform to assist molecular tumor boards and community oncologists in reviewing patients' phenotypes, evaluating related knowledge, and identifying genotype-matched therapies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nurs Adm
September 2024
Author Affiliations: Assistant Professor (Dr Holtz), Barnes-Jewish College of Nursing; and Professor (Dr McQueen), Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, Missouri; Assistant Professor (Dr Weissinger), Villanova University Fitzpatrick College of Nursing; and Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network Liaison (Alderfer) and Director of Nursing Clinical Inquiry and Research (Dr Swavely), Reading Hospital, Pennsylvania; Research Scientist (Dr Sledge), Barnes-Jewish Hospital; Assistant Professor (Dr Yu), Barnes-Jewish College of Nursing; and PhD Student (Pohlman), Barnes-Jewish College, St Louis, Missouri; Director, Spiritual Services and Adjunct Professor (Rev Adil), Reading Hospital, and Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; PhD Student (Mugoya), Barnes-Jewish College of Nursing, St Louis, Missouri; Level IV Staff Nurse in PACU (Minchhoff), Reading Hospital, Pennsylvania; and Anne and George L. Bunting Professor of Clinical Ethics and Professor of Nursing and Pediatrics (Dr Rushton), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Objective: The aim of this study was to understand newer nurses' perception and expectations of their work environment, professional and institutional satisfaction, and motivating/decision-making factors around nursing and intent to leave their positions.
Background: Studies have shown newly graduated nurses face many challenges transitioning from a student to an independently practicing nurse. The COVID pandemic complicated this transition and created new stressors resulting in discouragement and turnover for newer nurses.
Am J Crit Care
March 2024
Cynda Rushton is the Anne and George L. Bunting Professor of Clinical Ethics, Berman Institute of Bioethics and School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Background: Traumatic stress and moral injury may contribute to burnout, but their relationship to institutional betrayal and moral resilience is poorly understood, leaving risk and protective factors understudied.
Objectives: To examine traumatic stress symptoms, moral injury symptoms, moral resilience, and institutional betrayal experienced by critical care nurses and examine how moral injury and traumatic stress symptoms relate to moral resilience, institutional betrayal, and patient-related burnout.
Methods: This cross-sectional study included 121 critical care nurses and used an online survey.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci
June 2023
Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland,USA.
Testosterone, many steroidal androgens, and nonsteroidal ligands that bind to androgen receptor and exert tissue-specific transcriptional activity (selective androgen receptor modulators [SARMs]) are being developed as function-promoting therapies to treat functional limitations associated with aging and chronic diseases. This narrative review describes preclinical studies, mechanisms, and randomized trials of testosterone, other androgens, and nonsteroidal SARMs. Sex differences in muscle mass and strength and empiric use of anabolic steroids by athletes to increase muscularity and athletic performance provide supportive evidence of testosterone's anabolic effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUrol Clin North Am
November 2022
Oncology Center, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Brady Urological Institute, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, 600 North Wolfe Street, Marburg 407, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA; Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, 1830 Monument Street, Suite 328, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
This article reviews the role of testosterone in normal male sexual anatomic development and function, the consequences of low testosterone on sexual function, and clinical standards for health care providers treating hypogonadal men with sexual dysfunction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nurs Adm
October 2022
Author Affiliations: Senior Director (Dr Swavely), Nursing Clinical Inquiry and Research; and Vice President, Chief Nursing Officer (Dr Romig), Reading Hospital; and Assistant Professor (Dr Weissinger), Villanova University, Pennsylvania; Assistant Professor (Dr Holtz), Goldfarb School of Nursing Barnes Jewish College, Saint Louis, Missouri; and Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network Liaison (Ms Alderfer) and Critical Care Clinical Nurse Level 5 (Ms Lynn), and Director, Spiritual Services (Rev Adil), Reading Hospital, West Reading, Pennsylvania; and Anne and George L. Bunting Professor of Clinical Ethics and Professor of Nursing and Pediatrics (Dr Rushton), Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Objective: The aim of this study was to understand the traumatic stress and resilience of nurses who cared for patients with COVID-19.
Background: Studies have shown a high proportion of healthcare workers are at risk for developing posttraumatic stress disorder after a pandemic. Resilience factors are believed to play an important role in the well-being of healthcare professionals.
Endocrinol Metab Clin North Am
March 2022
Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, 1830 Monument Street, Suite 328, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA. Electronic address:
Hypogonadism is a common clinical condition affecting men, with older men having an increased incidence. Clinicians (endocrinologists and urologists) who may be involved in providing testosterone therapy should be familiar with the effects of testosterone on the prostate. Before initiating testosterone therapy, physicians and patients should partake in shared decision-making, including pretreatment testing, risks and benefits of testosterone therapy relating to benign prostatic hyperplasia and lower urinary tract symptoms, a discussion on prostate cancer in those who have not been diagnosed with malignancy, and a thorough discussion with patients who may have a previous diagnosis of prostate cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nurses Prof Dev
December 2020
Elizabeth Scala, MSN/MBA, RN, HNB-BC, is Research Program Coordinator, The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Maryland. Mary E. Alderfer, MSN, RN, CNML, is Liaison to Johns Hopkins Clinical Research Network, Reading Hospital, West Reading, Pennsylvania. Rowena Leong Milburn, DNP, RNC-LRN, is Special Care Nursery PACE RN III, Sibley Memorial Hospital/Johns Hopkins Medicine, Washington, DC.
Inquiry is the foundation of nursing practice. Inquiry projects impact safety, quality measures, and patient/staff outcomes. As the profession with closest proximity to the patient, nurses must not only participate in but also spearhead inquiry work.
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