391 results match your criteria: "The University of California San Francisco[Affiliation]"
J Pain
November 2021
Department of Anesthesiology, Critical Care & Pain Management; Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York; Department of Anesthesiology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York.
Abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery is common and burdensome, yet the lack of standardized diagnostic criteria for this type of acute pain impedes basic, translational, and clinical investigations. The collaborative effort among the Analgesic, Anesthetic, and Addiction Clinical Trial Translations, Innovations, Opportunities, and Networks, American Pain Society, and American Academy of Pain Medicine Pain Taxonomy (AAAPT) provides a systematic framework to classify acute painful conditions. Using this framework, a multidisciplinary working group reviewed the literature and developed core diagnostic criteria for acute abdominal and peritoneal pain after surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Nurs
February 2020
Laura E. Britton is a postdoctoral fellow at the Columbia University School of Nursing in New York City. Amy Alspaugh is a doctoral student at the Medical University of South Carolina College of Nursing in Charleston, as well as a clinical instructor in the Schools of Nursing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University in Durham, NC. Madelyne Z. Greene is an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Nursing. Monica R. McLemore is an associate professor in the Department of Family Health Care Nursing at the University of California San Francisco School of Nursing. Contact author: Laura E. Britton, The authors and planners have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise. A podcast with the authors is available at www.ajnonline.com.
Contraception is widely used in the United States, and nurses in all settings may encounter patients who are using or want to use contraceptives. Nurses may be called on to anticipate how family planning intersects with other health care services and provide patients with information based on the most current evidence. This article describes key characteristics of nonpermanent contraceptive methods, including mechanism of action, correct use, failure rates with perfect and typical use, contraindications, benefits, side effects, discontinuation procedures, and innovations in the field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Dermatol
March 2020
Department of Dermato-Venereology, Aarhus University Hospital, Aarhus, Denmark.
Throughout much of the African continent, healthcare systems are already strained in their efforts to meet the needs of a growing population using limited resources. Climate change threatens to undermine many of the public health gains that have been made in this region in the last several decades via multiple mechanisms, including malnutrition secondary to drought-induced food insecurity, mass human displacement from newly uninhabitable areas, exacerbation of environmentally sensitive chronic diseases, and enhanced viability of pathogenic microbes and their vectors. We reviewed the literature describing the various direct and indirect effects of climate change on diseases with cutaneous manifestations in Africa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Public Health
January 2020
Lauren Brinkley-Rubinstein is with the Center for Health Equity Research and the Department of Social Medicine at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. David H. Cloud is with the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University, Atlanta, GA, and the Amend Program at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine. The authors are also guest editors for this supplement issue.
Fam Med
January 2020
Contra Costa Family Medicine Residency Program, an affiliated program of the University of California San Francisco Department of Family and Community Medicine.
Background And Objectives: In Kenya, little data exists on point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) training and use for family medicine physicians. In 2017, a 3-day POCUS workshop assembled most of the family medicine physicians in Kenya. Through surveys, we assessed how this workshop could affect the level of POCUS use, skill, and confidence in family medicine practitioners in the long term.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN Engl J Med
December 2019
From the University of Chicago, Chicago (M.F., A.M.); the Times of India, Delhi (R.N.); and the University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, and the University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley (R.F.).
J Am Coll Cardiol
December 2019
Cooper Medical School of Rowan University, Camden, New Jersey.
N Engl J Med
December 2019
From the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Center for Outcomes Research in Cardiology, Division of Cardiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (D.S.K.), Harvard Medical School (D.S.K., I.T.K., A.K.J.), Brigham and Women's Hospital (I.T.K.), and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (A.K.J.) - all in Boston; the University of California San Francisco Center for Vulnerable Populations, San Francisco (D.S.K.); and the Harvard Global Health Institute, Cambridge, MA (I.T.K., A.K.J.).
Health Aff (Millwood)
November 2019
Frequent emergency department (ED) users often have complex behavioral health and social needs. However, policy makers often focus on this population's medical system use without examining its use of behavioral health and social services systems. To illuminate the wide-ranging needs of frequent ED users, we compared medical, mental health, substance use, and social services use among nonelderly nonfrequent, frequent, and superfrequent ED users in San Francisco County, California.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
November 2019
Julia Adler-Milstein is an associate professor of medicine and director of the Clinical Informatics and Improvement Research Center, School of Medicine, UCSF.
Substantial policy effort has been directed at improving patients' ability to access and use electronic health records. Using nationwide data from 2,410 hospitals for the period 2014-16, we examined associations between patient- and hospital-level characteristics and access to and use of electronic health record data among discharged patients. On average, hospitals gave 95 percent of discharged patients access to view, download, and transmit their information, but only about 10 percent of those with access used it-levels that were stagnant during the study period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Natl Med Assoc
December 2019
Inclusion and Diversity, Ophthalmology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. Electronic address:
Background: Physician diversity is linked to improved quality of care of diverse patient populations. The transition from medical school to residency is an opportunity to improve and increase workforce diversity in all specialties. However, there is limited published literature on the factors contributing to the ranking of residency programs on women and underrepresented minorities (URMs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Orthop Surg
July 2020
From the University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA (Dr. Marmor, Dr. Huang, Mr. Knox, and Dr. Herfat), Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) Foundation, Paris, France, and Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA (Dr. Herfat), and Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA (Dr. Firoozabadi).
Background: The optimal treatment of acetabular fractures in the senior cohort is undetermined. Total hip arthroplasty in the setting of an acetabular fracture is increasing in popularity. However, there is concern regarding the fixation of a prosthetic cup in a fractured acetabulum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
September 2019
Division of Pulmonary Diseases and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
While best known for its role in the innate immune system, the TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1) is now known to play a role in modulating cellular growth and autophagy. One of the major ways that TBK1 accomplishes this task is by modulating the mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR), a master regulator that when activated promotes cell growth and inhibits autophagy. However, whether TBK1 promotes or inhibits mTOR activity is highly cell type and context dependent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObstet Gynecol
October 2019
Camran Nezhat Institute, Center for Special Minimally Invasive and Robotic Surgery, Palo Alto, the Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, and the University of California-San Francisco, School of Medicine, San Francisco, California; and the Nezhat Medical Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
The pathophysiology of endometriosis-associated pain involves inflammatory and hormonal alterations and changes in brain signaling pathways. Although medical treatment can provide temporary relief, most patients can achieve long-term sustained pain relief when it is combined with surgical intervention. Owing to its complexity, there is an ongoing debate about how to optimally manage endometriosis-associated pain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSSM Popul Health
December 2019
Center for Health and Community at the University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF)'s Culture of Health Action Framework guides a movement to improve health and advance health equity across the nation. Action Area One of the Framework, Making Health a Shared Value, highlights the role of individual and community factors in achieving a societal commitment to health and health equity, centered around three drivers: Mindset and Expectations, Sense of Community, and Civic Engagement. To stimulate research about how Action Area One and its drivers may impact health, Evidence for Action (E4A), a signature research funding program of RWJF, developed and released a national Call for Proposals (CFP).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAAPA
September 2019
In the Department of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery at the University of California San Francisco Medical Center in San Francisco, Calif., Trina Sheedy is a senior physician assistant and Chase Heaton is an assistant professor. The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.
Exposure of the oral cavity and oropharynx to human papillomavirus (HPV) often results in an asymptomatic, transient oral infection that is cleared by the body's immune system; however, a small percentage of these oral infections can persist in a dormant state. Depending on the HPV genotype, a persistent oral infection may lead to benign or malignant disease. High-risk HPV types 16 and 18, which cause most cervical and anal cancers, also are the cause of the rising rate of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Acute Care Surg
April 2020
From the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine (E.S.); University of California San Francisco Graduate Division (P.L.); University of California San Francisco (A.I.N.); Zuckerberg San Francisco General (S.L.) San Francisco; and Department of Surgery (C.J.), University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California.
Background: The negative effect of cirrhosis on mortality following traumatic injury has been quantified in multiple observational studies. However, to our knowledge, the information contained in these studies has never been synthesized. The aims of this study were: (1) to determine the magnitude of the effect of liver cirrhosis on mortality, morbidity, and hospital course among trauma patients and (2) to analyze sources of study heterogeneity that may lead to differing estimates in the observed mortality rate among patients with cirrhosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
August 2019
Ranak B. Trivedi is a core investigator at the Center for Innovation to Implementation, VA Palo Alto Healthcare System, and an assistant professor of psychiatry in the Department of Public Mental Health and Population Sciences, Stanford University, in Menlo Park, California.
Aiming to increase care access, the national Primary Care-Mental Health Integration (PC-MHI) initiative of the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) embedded specialists, care managers, or both in primary care clinics to collaboratively care for veterans with psychiatric illness. The initiative's effects on health care use and cost patterns were examined among 5.4 million primary care patients in 396 VHA clinics in 2013-16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt IEEE EMBS Conf Neural Eng
March 2019
Physiology Department at the University of California - San Francisco, 675 Nelson Rising Lane, Room 436 San Francisco, CA 94158.
Electrical stimulation is a highly-effective, temporally-precise technique to evoke neural activity in the brain, and thus is critically important for both research and clinical applications. Here, we set out to understand the time-course and spatial spread of neural activation elicited by electrical stimulation. By imaging the cortex of awake, chronically-implanted, transgenic mice during electrical stimulation, we found that a broad range of stimulation parameters led to widespread neural activation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2020
Department of Surgery, The University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, United States of America.
Introduction: Prognosis after resection of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is highly variable. Compared to clinicopathologic factors, the use of molecular markers to predict outcome has not been well studied. We investigated the prognostic importance of thymidylate synthase (TS) gene expression and polymorphisms in patients after resection of HCC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Blood Cancer
October 2019
Department of Pediatrics, The University of California San Francisco School of Medicine and UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital, San Francisco, California.
Malformation syndromes with predisposition to peripheral neuroblastic tumors (pNT), including neuroblastoma, ganglioneuroblastoma, and ganglioneuroma, may provide clues to critical mutations influencing pNT development. Our objective was to identify and characterize features of pNT associated with specific malformation syndromes. A systematic review of the literature was performed using MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bronchology Interv Pulmonol
July 2019
Division of Thoracic Surgery, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Mod Pathol
November 2019
Department of Pathology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX, 77030, USA.
Hybrid oncocytic/chromophobe tumor (HOCT) of the kidney represents a poorly understood clinicopathologic entity with pathologic features that overlap between benign renal oncocytoma (RO) and malignant chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (ChRCC). Consequently, characterization of HOCT and its separation from the foregoing entities are clinically important. The aim of this study was to describe the pathologic and molecular features of HOCT and to compare them with those of RO and ChRCC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
June 2019
Natasha Bryant is managing director and a senior research associate at LeadingAge.
Home health and personal care aides are one of the largest groups of health care workers in the US, with nearly three million people providing direct care for people with serious illness living in the community. These home care workers face challenges in recruitment, training, retention, and regulation, and there is a lack of data and research to support evidence-based policy change. Personal care aides receive little formal training, and they experience low pay and a lack of respect for the skill required for their jobs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
June 2019
Peter I. Buerhaus is a professor and director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Health Workforce Studies, College of Nursing, Montana State University.