435 results match your criteria: "at Brigham and Women's Hospital[Affiliation]"

Introduction: Evidence-based resources, including toolkits, guidance, and capacity-building materials, are used by routine immunization programs to achieve critical global immunization targets. These resources can help spread information, change or improve behaviors, or build capacity based on the latest evidence and experience. Yet, practitioners have indicated that implementation of these resources can be challenging, limiting their uptake and use.

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Mutations in the gene encoding Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) cause a subset of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (fALS) cases. A shared effect of these mutations is that SOD1, which is normally a stable dimer, dissociates into toxic monomers that seed toxic aggregates. Considerable research effort has been devoted to developing compounds that stabilize the dimer of fALS SOD1 variants, but unfortunately, this has not yet resulted in a treatment.

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Using Critical Pedagogy to Advance Antiracism in Health Professions Education.

AMA J Ethics

January 2024

Resident physician in the Harvard Combined Internal Medicine and Pediatrics Residency Program at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston Children's Hospital, and Boston Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts.

This article draws on Paulo Freire's Pedagogy of the Oppressed to model how health professions education can advance health equity. It first introduces 3 well-known frameworks that can be meaningfully applied as critical pedagogy: structural competency, critical race theory, and participatory action research. It then highlights applications of these frameworks that can prepare trainees for reflection and action that motivate health equity.

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The COVID-19 pandemic altered everyday life starting in March 2020. These alterations extended to the lives of children as their normal routines were disrupted by community lockdowns, online learning, limited in-person social contact, increased screen time, and reduced physical activity. Considerable research has investigated the physical health impact of COVID-19 infection, but far fewer studies have investigated the physiological impact of stressful pandemic-related changes to daily life, especially in children.

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Background: Low birthweight (LBW) infants are at increased risk of morbidity and mortality. Exclusive breastfeeding up to six months is recommended to help them thrive through infection prevention, growth improvements, and enhancements in neurodevelopment. However, limited data exist on the feeding experiences of LBW infants, their caregivers and key community influencers.

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Purpose Of Study: The postacute landscape has been challenged since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic by staffing shortages and a decline in postacute bed availability. As a result, patients in acute care hospitals are experiencing longer lengths of stay (LOS) and case managers (CMs) are managing increasingly complex discharge plans. This project involved the design and implementation of a modified Early Screen for Discharge Planning (ESDP) tool to support prioritizing patients with complex discharge needs, with the primary outcome of decreasing LOS.

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To be ethical, clinical trials must exhibit a favorable risk-benefit balance at the time of their initiation. However, in some cases, the expected value of a study decreases while the study is ongoing, due to developments outside of the study itself, such as findings from other studies or an otherwise shifting evidence base. While such situations are acknowledged in the research community, they have not received sufficient attention, given the high costs of uninformative studies, both in material and human capital.

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As the third edition of the is released with the latest recommendations for the prevention and management of healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), a new approach to reporting HAIs is just beginning to unfold. This next generation of HAI reporting will be fully electronic and based largely on existing data in electronic health record (EHR) systems and other electronic data sources. It will be a significant change in how hospitals report HAIs and how the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and other agencies receive this information.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Cultural brokering is identified as a method to improve communication and trust between patients and healthcare providers, yet there's a lack of clear definitions and evidence regarding its effectiveness and impact on health outcomes in the existing literature.
  • * The analysis reveals facilitators and barriers to effective cultural brokering, emphasizing the importance of establishing connections and trust while addressing misunderstandings and resource limitations; it proposes four key aims for cultural brokering: language support, cultural bridging, social advocacy, and healthcare navigation.
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'Wow, That's Me': Uneven Access To Gender-Affirming Care.

Health Aff (Millwood)

September 2023

Meg Quint (they/them/theirs or name only, is a first-year medical student at Stanford School of Medicine, in Stanford, California. They are also a research assistant in transgender health research under the Department of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Hypertension at Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston, Massachusetts. The author thanks Sari Reisner and Ken H. Mayer for their edits and mentorship, They also thank Dr. Andrew Marano, Michael Parisi, and the Brigham and Women's Hospital Center for Transgender Health for an amazing, affirming surgical experience and for confirming all medical information mentioned in this essay. The author offers a final and special thank you to Mary Ann Quint, Mari Tarantino, Jonathan Quint, and Melanie Quint for supporting them through surgical recovery and empowering them to share their experience with the world. To access the author's disclosures, click on the Details tab of the article online.

A nonbinary/genderqueer person reflects on their experience pursuing a chest reduction as gender-affirming care.

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Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are questionnaires that assess how patients feel and function. PROMs should be developed and validated using a mixed methods, multistep approach with extensive patient input to ensure that they are easy to understand, comprehensive, and relevant. PROMs that are specific to gender-affirming care (including surgery), such as the GENDER-Q, can be used to educate patients, align patients' goals and preferences with realistic expectations about the surgical procedures' purposes and outcomes, and conduct comparative effectiveness research.

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Globally, increasing rates of facility-based childbirth enable early intervention for small vulnerable newborns. We describe health system-level inputs, current feeding, and discharge practices for moderately low birthweight (MLBW) infants (1500-<2500g) in resource-constrained settings. The Low Birthweight Infant Feeding Exploration study is a mixed methods observational study in 12 secondary- and tertiary-level facilities in India, Malawi, and Tanzania.

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Medicaid Expansion: The Unfinished Promise of the Affordable Care Act.

Am J Public Health

May 2023

Sanjay Kishore is a physician at the Equal Justice Initiative and assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (Montgomery Campus). Micah Johnson is a resident physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA. Sara Rosenbaum is a professor of health policy and law at George Washington University, Washington, DC.

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Unlabelled: Caregivers of pediatric oncology and stem cell transplant patients often care for central lines (CLs) at home. Methods to achieve caregiver CL care proficiency, and interventions designed with caregiver input are lacking.

Methods: Caregivers of pediatric oncology and stem cell transplant patients patients with an external CL or removed within 2 weeks were eligible for a survey assessing knowledge, the value of training strategies, and comfort.

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The Reply.

Am J Med

March 2023

Hematology Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass; Dana Farber Cancer Institute and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass.

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Background: Cognitive tests and biomarkers are the key information to assess the severity and track the progression of Alzheimer's' disease (AD) and AD-related dementias (AD/ADRD), yet, both are often only documented in clinical narratives of patients' electronic health records (EHRs). In this work, we aim to (1) assess the documentation of cognitive tests and biomarkers in EHRs that can be used as real-world endpoints, and (2) identify, extract, and harmonize the different commonly used cognitive tests from clinical narratives using natural language processing (NLP) methods into categorical AD/ADRD severity.

Methods: We developed a rule-based NLP pipeline to extract the cognitive tests and biomarkers from clinical narratives in AD/ADRD patients' EHRs.

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Radical nephroureterectomy with bladder cuff excision (BCE) is the standard of care all high-risk upper tract urothelial carcinomas. With continued advancements, robot-assisted segmental ureteral resection can be employed for ureteral tumors for ipsilateral renal preservation. Herein, we are presenting our experience of different techniques classified by the affected ureteral segment, along with perioperative and intermediate to long-term functional and oncologic outcomes.

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Purpose: Effective health care provider-patient discussions of cancer diagnoses and prognoses are essential to enhance health outcomes in oncology. Chinese Americans have been designated an underserved population in oncology by the National Institutes of Health. We explored the perspectives of Boston Chinese American community members and health care providers regarding communication preferences and decision making in oncology care.

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How Should We Respond to Health Sector Emissions That Exacerbate Climate Change and Inequity?

AMA J Ethics

October 2022

Clinical assistant professor of surgery in the School of Medicine and Health Sciences at the George Washington University in Washington, DC, and co-director of the university's Climate and Health Institute.

A warming climate poses substantial risk to public health and worsens existing health inequity. As a contributor to greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution, the health sector has obligations and ample opportunities to protect health by decreasing waste and motivating more system-wide sustainable clinical practices. Such efforts will have important ethical implications for health equity.

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Genetic testing for patients at risk of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer.

JAAPA

October 2022

Alisha DeTroye is regional director of advanced practice at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, practices in hematology and oncology and is an adjunct assistant professor in the PA program at Wake Forest School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C. Kayla Gabbett practices at Chester County Hospital in West Chester, Pa., Cheryl Yi practices at Newport Orthopedic Institute in Newport Beach, Calif. Melanie Judice practices at Texas Spine and Scoliosis in Austin, Tex. Victor Luu practices at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Mass. Brittany Nelson practices at the Sansum Clinic Internal Medicine in Santa Barbara, Calif. Tanya Gregory is an assistant professor and director of the Office of Academic Excellence in the PA program at Wake Forest School of Medicine. The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

The field of cancer genetic testing has made great advances in correctly identifying patients at risk for hereditary cancer syndromes. These tests, used during a genetic consultation, promote earlier detection of cancer and potentially increase survival. Despite these advancements, a large number of persons at risk for BRCA1/2 mutations remain untested due to a shortage of genetic counselors and lack of clinician knowledge on how to properly screen, identify, and refer patients to genetic counseling.

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Study Question: What is the association between perceived stress during peri-conception and early pregnancy and pregnancy loss among women who have experienced a prior pregnancy loss?

Summary Answer: Daily perceived stress above the median is associated with over a 2-fold risk of early pregnancy loss among women who have experienced a prior loss.

What Is Known Already?: Women who have experienced a pregnancy loss may be more vulnerable to stress while trying to become pregnant again. While prior research has indicated a link between psychological stress and clinically confirmed miscarriages, research is lacking among a pre-conceptional cohort followed prospectively for the effects of perceived stress during early critical windows of pregnancy establishment on risk of both hCG-detected pregnancy losses and confirmed losses, while considering important time-varying confounders.

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