512 results match your criteria: "The Dell Medical School at The University of Texas at Austin[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate how reliable and valid remote assessments of atopic dermatitis severity are, using caregiver-provided photos (p-EASI) and videos (v-EASI) compared to traditional in-person evaluations.
  • A group of 50 children with varying severity of atopic dermatitis had their skin condition assessed by caregivers through photos and videos, and by clinicians using in-person ratings.
  • Results showed that p-EASI demonstrated strong reliability and validity, while v-EASI had moderate reliability, indicating both methods could be useful for assessing atopic dermatitis remotely.
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Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) consists of chronic, relapsing-remitting autoimmune diseases of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract with an increasing global disease burden. Pathogenetic mechanisms are not well understood, but current hypotheses involve the role of environmental factors, including dietary antigens, in immune dysregulation and proinflammatory shifts in microbial composition (gut dysbiosis) in genetically susceptible individuals. Increased metabolic demand and malabsorption secondary to systemic inflammation, coupled with significant GI symptoms that lead to reduced oral food intake, may leave patients with IBD vulnerable to developing malnutrition.

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Purpose: To assess the quality, content, readability, and accountability of information about glaucoma found online.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Participants: Thirteen websites containing patient education materials for glaucoma were analyzed in this study.

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Treatment Outcomes in Birdshot Chorioretinitis: Corticosteroid Sparing, Corticosteroid Discontinuation, Remission, and Relapse.

Ophthalmol Retina

July 2022

The Wilmer Eye Institute, Department of Ophthalmology, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland; Department of Epidemiology, Center for Clinical Trials and Evidence Synthesis, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland. Electronic address:

Purpose: To describe treatment-related outcomes among patients with birdshot chorioretinitis (BSCR).

Design: Retrospective cohort study.

Participants: Patients diagnosed with BSCR at 2 tertiary care academic medical centers.

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The discontinuation of the United States Medical Licensing Examination Step 2 Clinical Skills Examination emphasizes the need for other reliable standardized assessments of medical student clinical skills. For 30 years, the California Consortium for the Assessment of Clinical Competence (CCACC) has collaborated in the development of clinical skills assessments and has become a valuable resource for clinicians, standardized patient educators, psychometricians, and medical educators. There are many merits to strong multi-institutional partnerships, including the integration of data across multiple schools to provide feedback to both students and curricula, pooled test performance statistics for analysis and quality assurance, shared best practices and resources, individual professional development, and opportunities for research and scholarship.

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Although there is a shortage of kidneys available for transplantation, many transplantable kidneys are not procured or are discarded after procurement. We investigated whether local market competition and/or organ availability impact kidney procurement/utilization. We calculated the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) for deceased donor kidney transplants (2015-2019) for 58 US donation service areas (DSAs) and defined 4 groups: HHI ≤ 0.

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Narrative medicine is a humanities-based discipline that posits that attention to the patient narrative and the collaborative formation of a narrative between the patient and provider is essential for the provision of health care. In this Special Article, we review the basic theoretical constructs of the narrative medicine discipline and apply them to the perioperative setting. We frame our discussion around the 4 primary goals of the current iteration of the perioperative surgical home: enhancing patient-centered care, embracing shared decision making, optimizing health literacy, and avoiding futile surgery.

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Background Previous studies on racial disparity in mechanical thrombectomy (MT) treatment of acute large vessel occlusion stroke lack individual patient data that influence treatment decision-making. We assessed patient-level data in a large US health care system from 2016 to 2020 for racial disparities in MT utilization and eligibility. Methods and Results A retrospective study was performed of 34 596 patients admitted to 43 hospitals from January 2016 to September 2020.

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Many traditional practices in medical genetics education need review to counteract messages of essentialism, or the belief in an underlying natural structure differentiating social categories. While genomics research increasingly disproves a genetic foundation for race, research from educational scholars demonstrates that current medical genetics instruction may actually reinforce racial bias in learners. In this monograph, we outline seven recommendations for medical educators to actively counteract essentialism, racial, and otherwise, in the genetics classroom.

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Anesthesiology and anesthesiologists have a tremendous opportunity and responsibility to eliminate health disparities and to achieve health equity. We thus examine health disparity and health equity through the lens of anesthesiology and the perspective of anesthesiologists. In this paper, we define health disparity and health care disparities and provide tangible, representative examples of the latter in the practice of anesthesiology.

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Students with disabilities add rich diversity to medical education and help motivate health equity. Unjust obstacles faced by many of these students along pathways to medicine begin during medical school admissions. Deeply embedded ableist notions of what it means to be a physician keep archaic practices in place that serve as systemic barriers to the admission of members of this population.

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Mediators of screening uptake in a colorectal cancer screening intervention among Hispanics.

BMC Cancer

January 2022

Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center El Paso, 5001 El Paso Drive, El Paso, TX, 79905, USA.

Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in the USA. Although a number of CRC screening tests have been established as being effective for CRC prevention and early detection, rates of CRC screening test completion in the US population remain suboptimal, especially among the uninsured, recent immigrants and Hispanics. In this study, we used a structural equation modelling approach to identify factors influencing screening test completion in a successful CRC screening program that was implemented in an uninsured Hispanic population.

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Disparities are well-documented across the continuum of surgical care. Counteracting such disparities requires new multidisciplinary approaches that utilize the expertise of affected individuals, such as community-based participatory research (CBPR). CBPR is an approach to research that is anchored in equitable, sustainable community-academic partnerships, and has been shown to improve intervention implementation and outcomes.

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We analyzed (1) the correspondence of patient and clinician perceived patient involvement in decision making and ratings made by independent observer's independent ratings, as well as (2), factors associated with patient-perceived involvement, among patients seeking hand specialty care. During 63 visits, the patient, their hand specialist, and 2 independent observers each rated patient involvement in decision making using the 9-item shared decision-making questionnaire for patients and clinicians, and the 5-item observing patient involvement scale (OPTION-5). We also measured health literacy (Newest Vital Sign), patient and visit characteristics (gender, age, race, years of education, occupation, marital status, and family present).

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Article Synopsis
  • Maternal vitamin D levels during pregnancy and lactation may affect a child's bone and muscle development, but research on the impact of vitamin D supplementation in these periods is limited.
  • A study was conducted with 1,300 pregnant women in Bangladesh, where they received different doses of vitamin D3 weekly, and their children's musculoskeletal health was evaluated at age 4.
  • Results showed no significant differences in bone mineral content or grip strength between high-dose vitamin D groups and placebo, except for a slight improvement in head bone density in the highest dose group.
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