Searched for: in-biosketch:true
person:lajamc01
What's Important: Women Trailblazers in Orthopaedics: Marian Frauenthal Sloane, MD-Ahead of Her Time
Hooper, Jessica M; Santiesteban, Lauren; Levin, Alexandra; Lajam, Claudette M
PMID: 31169582
ISSN: 1535-1386
CID: 3918062
Policy and Ethical Considerations for Widespread Utilization of Generic Orthopedic Implants
Pean, Christian A; Lajam, Claudette; Zuckerman, Joseph; Bosco, Joseph
PMCID:6588801
PMID: 31286053
ISSN: 2352-3441
CID: 3973852
Institution-Wide Blood Management Protocol Reduces Transfusion Rates Following Spine Surgery
Alfonso, Allyson R; Hutzler, Lorraine; Lajam, Claudette; Bosco, Joseph; Goldstein, Jeffrey
Background/UNASSIGNED:Spine surgery is associated with significant intraoperative blood loss, often leading to transfusion. Patients who receive transfusions have an increased length of stay and risk of perioperative complications. To decrease the transfusion rate, we implemented an evidence-based institution-wide restrictive transfusion blood management guideline. The goal of this study is to describe the impact of this guideline on our spine surgery patients. Methods/UNASSIGNED:We analyzed the incidence of transfusion following 3709 single-institution, inpatient spine procedures before and after implementation of a revised blood transfusion protocol. The baseline period (1742 patients) from January 2014 to March 2015 was compared to the study period (1967 patients) of April 2015 to July 2016. One patient was excluded because of incomplete medical records. The revised protocol included establishing a postoperative blood transfusion trigger at hemoglobin < 7g/dL, instituting a computerized provider order entry, and appointing a physician champion to monitor and report progress. Results/UNASSIGNED: = .01). There was no significant difference in total hospital costs following protocol implementation. Conclusions/UNASSIGNED:Implementation of a restrictive transfusion protocol through use of a computerized provider order entry and a physician champion to oversee clinician compliance led to a 40.1% reduction in blood transfusion following spine surgery. Behavior changes were visible with a 40.7% increase in hemoglobin documentation before transfusion, and patients benefited from a reduction in length of stay and postsurgical infection rate. Future study is encouraged to understand the long-term impact of this intervention and its role in hospital expenditure.
PMCID:6625709
PMID: 31328091
ISSN: 2211-4599
CID: 3987882
The Utility and Cost Effectiveness of Immediate Postoperative Laboratory Studies in Hip and Knee Arthroplasty
Bookman, Jared S; Romanelli, Filippo; Hutzler, Lorraine; Bosco, Joseph A; Lajam, Claudette
BACKGROUND:Routine immediate postoperative laboratory studies, including metabolic panels and hematologic profiles, are commonly ordered after arthroplasty procedures. However, their values only occasionally influence management. This study investigated the clinical utility and value of these tests. METHODS:A large retrospective cohort study of 18,935 patients spanning a 6-year period from 2008 to 2013 from a single high-volume institution was evaluated. Only immediate postoperative labs drawn on postoperative day 0 in the recovery room were included in the study. Complete blood counts (CBC) and basic metabolic panels (BMP) were reviewed, and ranges of abnormal were set for each lab test based on values significant enough to impact patient management. Cost effectiveness calculations were made based on current cost of the laboratory tests. RESULTS:Actionably low hemoglobin values ( < 8 g/dL) were found in 1.44% of the overall cohort. Unilateral primary total knee arthroplasty was associated with the fewest hemoglobin abnormalities at 0.59%. Primary unilateral total hip arthroplasty was associated with abnormal hemoglobin values in 1.81% of cases. Significant electrolyte abnormalities were far less common, with hyperkalemia (> 6.5 mEq/L) in 0.19%, hyponatremia ( < 120 mEq/L) in 0.01% and elevated creatinine (> 2.0 mg/dL) was found in 0.25%. Hemoglobin values were calculated at a cost of $1,710 to detect a single significantly abnormal result. The cost to detect a single actionably abnormal BMP value was $1,000. CONCLUSIONS:Routine immediate postoperative laboratory tests represent a high institutional cost and are seldom abnormal enough to warrant a change in patient management. The routine use of these tests can likely be safely eliminated in uncomplicated primary unilateral arthroplasty procedures.
PMID: 31128583
ISSN: 2328-5273
CID: 3921182
Vaping and Orthopaedic Surgery: A Review of Current Knowledge
Amaro, Emilie J; Shepard, Nicholas; Moss, Lewis; Karamitopoulos, Mara; Lajam, Claudette
PMID: 30648983
ISSN: 2329-9185
CID: 3595292
Ethics of Opioid Prescriber Regulations Physicians, Patients, and Pain [Editorial]
Lajam, Claudette M.; Cenname, John; Hutzler, Lorraine H.; Bosco, Joseph A., III
ISI:000509672500004
ISSN: 0021-9355
CID: 4305062
Aligning Anesthesiology and Perioperative Services with Value-Based Care: Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association of Anesthesia Clinical Directors (AACD) [Editorial]
Serdiuk, Andrew A; Urman, Richard D; Seong, S Andrew; Tsai, Mitchell H; Dutton, Richard P; Lajam, Claudette; Haynes, Gary R; Carollo, Dominic S; Jacques, Paul St; Hirsch, Joshua A
PMID: 30005295
ISSN: 1873-4529
CID: 3261772
Total Knee Arthroplasty is Safe in Jehovah's Witness Patients-A 12-year Perspective [Meeting Abstract]
Wolfson, Theodore; Novikov, David; Chen, Kevin; Kim, Kelvin; Anoushiravani, Afshin; Deshmukh, Ajit; Lajam, Claudette
ISI:000460104600005
ISSN: 0003-2999
CID: 3727532
The Quality Conundrum: Recognizing and Reckoning With Musculoskeletal Healthcare Disparities
Page, Alexandra; Lajam, Claudette M; O'Connor, Mary I
Disparities in musculoskeletal health care exist across race, ethnicity, sex, and socioeconomic status. Because medical and socioeconomic comorbidities disproportionately affect certain patient populations, the transition to a value-based model of healthcare delivery and reimbursement based on current methodology has unintentionally intensified musculoskeletal healthcare disparities. To address healthcare disparities, surgeons must understand the history and effect of a value-based model of healthcare delivery and reimbursement and the current risk adjustment and reporting initiatives that inform future directions of healthcare systems. Attention to bias and the use of shared decision making at the patient-surgeon level may help promote more equitable care. At the health systems level, surgeons can collect demographic data via registries and use existing disparity-related reporting measures to promote more equitable care. The development of quality reporting measures and risk stratification models that encourage the delivery of equitable musculoskeletal health care for all patients is necessary.
PMID: 31411448
ISSN: 0065-6895
CID: 4042452
Reducing liberal red blood cell transfusions at an academic medical center
Saag, Harry S; Lajam, Claudette M; Jones, Simon; Lakomkin, Nikita; Bosco, Joseph A 3rd; Wallack, Rebecca; Frangos, Spiros G; Sinha, Prashant; Adler, Nicole; Ursomanno, Patti; Horwitz, Leora I; Volpicelli, Frank M
BACKGROUND: Educational and computerized interventions have been shown to reduce red blood cell (RBC) transfusion rates, yet controversy remains surrounding the optimal strategy needed to achieve sustained reductions in liberal transfusions. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of clinician decision support (CDS) along with targeted education on liberal RBC utilization to four high-utilizing service lines compared with no education to control service lines across an academic medical center. Clinical data along with associated hemoglobin levels at the time of all transfusion orders between April 2014 and December 2015 were obtained via retrospective chart review. The primary outcome was the change in the rate of liberal RBC transfusion orders (defined as any RBC transfusion when the hemoglobin level is >7.0 g/dL). Secondary outcomes included the annual projected reduction in the number of transfusions and the associated decrease in cost due to these changes as well as length of stay (LOS) and death index. These measures were compared between the 12 months prior to the initiative and the 9-month postintervention period. RESULTS: Liberal RBC utilization decreased from 13.4 to 10.0 units per 100 patient discharges (p = 0.002) across the institution, resulting in a projected 12-month savings of $720,360. The mean LOS and the death index did not differ significantly in the postintervention period. CONCLUSION: Targeted education combined with the incorporation of CDS at the time of order entry resulted in significant reductions in the incidence of liberal RBC utilization without adversely impacting inpatient care, whereas control service lines exposed only to CDS had no change in transfusion habits.
PMID: 28035775
ISSN: 1537-2995
CID: 2383762