Filtered By:
Education: Study
Management: Electronic Health Records (EHR)

This page shows you your search results in order of date.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 4814 results found since Jan 2013.

Use of a Person-Centered Narrative Intervention in an Outpatient Palliative Care Setting: A Feasibility Study
J Patient Exp. 2023 Sep 18;10:23743735231202729. doi: 10.1177/23743735231202729. eCollection 2023.ABSTRACTPerson-centered narrative interventions offer potential solutions to facilitate a connection between the person receiving care and the person delivering the care, to improve quality of care, and positively impact a patient's biopsychosocial well-being. This single-arm feasibility study investigates patient-reported outcomes and barriers/facilitators to the implementation of an all-virtually delivered person-centered narrative intervention into the person's electronic health record. Overall, electronic data collection f...
Source: Cancer Control - September 22, 2023 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Heather Coats Nadia Shive C Robert Bennett Bonnie Adrian Andrew D Boyd Ardith Z Doorenbos Sarah J Schmiege Source Type: research

The effect of herpes zoster vaccination on the occurrence of deaths due to dementia in England and Wales
CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that HZ vaccination improved cognitive function at a fairly advanced stage of the dementia disease process because most individuals whose underlying cause of death was dementia during our nine-year follow-up period were likely already living with dementia at the start of the HZ vaccination program. By using a different population, type of data, and outcome than our prior study in Welsh electronic health record data, this analysis adds to the evidence base that HZ vaccination slows, or potentially even prevents, the natural history of dementia.PMID:37732219 | PMC:PMC10508823 | DOI:10.1101/2023.09.08.23295225
Source: Herpes - September 21, 2023 Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Felix Michalik Min Xie Markus Eyting Simon He ß Seunghun Chung Pascal Geldsetzer Source Type: research

A Comparison of the effect of patient-specific vs. weight-based protocols to treat vaso-occlusive episodes (VOE) in the emergency department
CONCLUSIONS: We found a shorter ED length of stay for patients assigned to a PSP. Patients in both groups experienced good pain relief without significant side effects.PMID:37731093 | DOI:10.1111/acem.14805
Source: Accident and Emergency Nursing - September 21, 2023 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Paula Tanabe Stephanie Ibemere Ava E Pierce Caroline E Freiermuth Hayden B Bosworth Hongqui Yang Ifeyinwa Osunkwo James H Paxton John J Strouse Joseph Miller Judith A Paice Padmaja Veeramreddy Patricia L Kavanagh R Gentry Wilkerson Robert Hughes Huiman X Source Type: research

Characteristics of self-triaged emergency department visits by adults with cancer
CONCLUSIONS: Adults with cancer infrequently use available clinician advice before visiting the ED and may use factors other than clinical severity to determine their need for emergency care. Future work should explore the challenges that patients face navigating unplanned acute care, including reasons for underusing existing resources.PMID:37729532 | DOI:10.37765/ajmc.2023.89429
Source: The American Journal of Managed Care - September 20, 2023 Category: Health Management Authors: Arthur S Hong Amy Hughes D Mark Courtney Hannah Fullington Simon J Craddock Lee John W Sweetenham Navid Sadeghi Song Zhang Angela Bazzell Ethan A Halm Source Type: research

Ranitidine Use and Incident Cancer in a Multinational Cohort
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cohort study, ranitidine use was not associated with an increased risk of cancer compared with the use of other H2RAs. Further research is needed on the long-term association of ranitidine with cancer development.PMID:37725377 | DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.33495
Source: Cancer Control - September 19, 2023 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Seng Chan You Seung In Seo Thomas Falconer Chen Yanover Talita Duarte-Salles Sarah Seager Jose D Posada Nigam H Shah Phung-Anh Nguyen Yeesuk Kim Jason C Hsu Mui Van Zandt Min-Huei Hsu Hang Lak Lee Heejoo Ko Woon Geon Shin Nicole Pratt Rae Woong Park Chris Source Type: research

Implementing Remote Patient Monitoring of Physical Activity in Clinical Practice
CONCLUSION: RPM technology provides an opportunity for clinicians to obtain objective feedback for monitoring progress of patients in rehabilitation settings. Nurses working in rehabilitation settings may need to provide additional patient education and support to improve uptake.PMID:37723623 | DOI:10.1097/RNJ.0000000000000435
Source: Rehabilitation Nursing - September 19, 2023 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Margaret McCarthy David Jevotovsky Devin Mann Akhila Veerubhotla Eleanor Muise Jonathan Whiteson John Ross Rizzo Source Type: research

Implementation of substance use screening in rural federally-qualified health center clinics identified high rates of unhealthy alcohol and cannabis use among adult primary care patients
CONCLUSIONS: Self-administered EHR-integrated screening was feasible to implement, and detected substantial alcohol, cannabis, and tobacco use in rural FQHC clinics. Counseling was documented for a minority of patients with moderate-high risk use, possibly indicating a need for better support of primary care providers in addressing substance use. There is potential to broaden the reach of screening by offering it at routine medical visits rather than restricting to annual preventive care visits, within these and other rural primary care clinics.PMID:37726839 | PMC:PMC10510292 | DOI:10.1186/s13722-023-00404-y
Source: Addiction Science and Clinical Practice - September 19, 2023 Category: Addiction Authors: Jennifer McNeely Bethany McLeman Trip Gardner Noah Nesin Vijay Amarendran Sarah Farkas Aimee Wahle Seth Pitts Margaret Kline Jacquie King Carmen Rosa Lisa Marsch John Rotrosen Leah Hamilton Source Type: research

Real-world clinical outcomes of patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma receiving pembrolizumab  + axitinib vs. ipilimumab + nivolumab
CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides insight into newer mccRCC treatment tolerability and effectiveness in the real-world US community setting. Our real-world results were comparable to data from clinical trials, which is encouraging for mccRCC patients.PMID:37722984 | DOI:10.1016/j.urolonc.2023.08.009
Source: Urologic Oncology - September 18, 2023 Category: Urology & Nephrology Authors: Neil J Shah Sneha D Sura Reshma Shinde Junxin Shi Puneet Singhal Rodolfo F Perini Robert J Motzer Source Type: research

Trends in consultations and prescribing for rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases: an electronic primary care records study
CONCLUSION: Pandemic-associated restrictions led to fewer primary care consultations and relative increases in analgesic prescribing, including strong opioids, for RMDs in the UK. Policymakers must consider the impact of these changes in future healthcare resource planning.PMID:37722859 | DOI:10.3399/BJGP.2022.0648
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - September 18, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Victoria K Welsh Kayleigh J Mason James Bailey Ram Bajpai Kelvin P Jordan Christian D Mallen Claire Burton Source Type: research

Inequities in hypertension management: observational cross-sectional study in North East London using electronic health records
CONCLUSION: Individuals of Black ethnicity and younger people are less likely to have controlled hypertension and may warrant targeted interventions. Possible explanations for these findings are presented but further research is needed about reasons for ethnic differences.PMID:37722858 | DOI:10.3399/BJGP.2023.0077
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - September 18, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Stuart Rison Oliver Redfern Isabel Dostal Chris Carvalho Rohini Mathur Zahra Raisi-Estabragh John Robson Source Type: research

Trends in consultations and prescribing for rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases: an electronic primary care records study
CONCLUSION: Pandemic-associated restrictions led to fewer primary care consultations and relative increases in analgesic prescribing, including strong opioids, for RMDs in the UK. Policymakers must consider the impact of these changes in future healthcare resource planning.PMID:37722859 | DOI:10.3399/BJGP.2022.0648
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - September 18, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Victoria K Welsh Kayleigh J Mason James Bailey Ram Bajpai Kelvin P Jordan Christian D Mallen Claire Burton Source Type: research

Inequities in hypertension management: observational cross-sectional study in North East London using electronic health records
CONCLUSION: Individuals of Black ethnicity and younger people are less likely to have controlled hypertension and may warrant targeted interventions. Possible explanations for these findings are presented but further research is needed about reasons for ethnic differences.PMID:37722858 | DOI:10.3399/BJGP.2023.0077
Source: The British Journal of General Practice - September 18, 2023 Category: Primary Care Authors: Stuart Rison Oliver Redfern Isabel Dostal Chris Carvalho Rohini Mathur Zahra Raisi-Estabragh John Robson Source Type: research