Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:genesn01

in-biosketch:true

Total Results:

50


Incidence of rescue surgical airways after attempted orotracheal intubation in the emergency department: A National Emergency Airway Registry (NEAR) Study

Offenbacher, Joseph; Nikolla, Dhimitri A; Carlson, Jestin N; Smith, Silas W; Genes, Nicholas; Boatright, Dowin H; Brown, Calvin A
BACKGROUND:Cricothyrotomy is a critical technique for rescue of the failed airway in the emergency department (ED). Since the adoption of video laryngoscopy, the incidence of rescue surgical airways (those performed after at least one unsuccessful orotracheal or nasotracheal intubation attempt), and the circumstances where they are attempted, has not been characterized. OBJECTIVE:We report the incidence and indications for rescue surgical airways using a multicenter observational registry. METHODS:We performed a retrospective analysis of rescue surgical airways in subjects ≥14 years of age. We describe patient, clinician, airway management, and outcome variables. RESULTS:Of 19,071 subjects in NEAR, 17,720 (92.9%) were ≥14 years old with at least one initial orotracheal or nasotracheal intubation attempt, 49 received a rescue surgical airway attempt, an incidence of 2.8 cases per 1000 (0.28% [95% confidence interval 0.21 to 0.37]). The median number of airway attempts prior to rescue surgical airways was 2 (interquartile range 1, 2). Twenty-five were in trauma victims (51.0% [36.5 to 65.4]), with neck trauma being the most common traumatic indication (n = 7, 14.3% [6.4 to 27.9]). CONCLUSION:Rescue surgical airways occurred infrequently in the ED (0.28% [0.21 to 0.37]), with approximately half performed due to a trauma indication. These results may have implications for surgical airway skill acquisition, maintenance, and experience.
PMID: 36905882
ISSN: 1532-8171
CID: 5542042

Patient portal access for caregivers of adult and geriatric patients: reframing the ethics of digital patient communication

Ganta, Teja; Appel, Jacob M; Genes, Nicholas
Patient portals are poised to transform health communication by empowering patients with rapid access to their own health data. The 21st Century Cures Act is a US federal law that, among other provisions, prevents health entities from engaging in practices that disrupt the exchange of electronic health information-a measure that may increase the usage of patient health portals. Caregiver access to patient portals, however, may lead to breaches in patient privacy and confidentiality if not managed properly through proxy accounts. We present an ethical framework that guides policy and clinical workflow development for healthcare institutions to support the best use of patient portals. Caregivers are vital members of the care team and should be supported through novel forms of health information technology (IT). Patients, however, may not want all information to be shared with their proxies so healthcare institutions must support the development and use of separate proxy accounts as opposed to using the patient's own account as well provide controls for limiting the scope of information displayed in the proxy accounts. Lastly, as socioeconomic barriers to adoption of health IT persist, healthcare providers must work to ensure multiple streams of patient communication, to prevent further propagating health inequities.
PMID: 35437282
ISSN: 1473-4257
CID: 5218212

Mpox in the Emergency Department: A Case Series

Musharbash, Michael; Dilorenzo, Madeline; Genes, Nicholas; Mukherjee, Vikramjit; Klinger, Amanda
Introduction: We sought to describe the demographic characteristics, clinical features, and outcomes of a cohort of patients who presented to our emergency departments with mpox (formerly known as monkeypox) infection between May 1"“August 1, 2022. Case Series: We identified 145 patients tested for mpox, of whom 79 were positive. All positive cases were among cisgender men, and the majority (92%) were among men who have sex with men. A large number of patients (39%) were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) positive. There was wide variation in emergency department (ED) length of stay (range 2"“16 hours, median 4 hours) and test turnaround time (range 1"“11 days, median 4 days). Most patients (95%) were discharged, although a substantial proportion (22%) had a return visit within 30 days, and 28% ultimately received tecrovirimat. Conclusion: Patients who presented to our ED with mpox had similar demographic characteristics and clinical features as those described in other clinical settings during the 2022 outbreak. While there were operational challenges to the evaluation and management of these patients, demonstrated by variable lengths of stay and frequent return visits, most were able to be discharged.
SCOPUS:85178946971
ISSN: 2474-252x
CID: 5622452

A Model Curriculum for an Emergency Medicine Residency Rotation in Clinical Informatics

Baker, Carrie K; Maniam, Nivethietha; Schnapp, Benjamin H; Genes, Nicholas; Nielson, Jeffrey A; Mohan, Vishnu; Hersh, William; Slovis, Benjamin H
AUDIENCE/UNASSIGNED:This curriculum is designed for emergency medicine residents at all levels of training. The curriculum covers basic foundations in clinical informatics for improving patient care and outcomes, utilizing data, and leading improvements in emergency medicine. LENGTH OF CURRICULUM/UNASSIGNED:The curriculum is designed for a four-week rotation. INTRODUCTION/UNASSIGNED:The American College of Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) mandated that all Emergency Medicine (EM) residents receive specific training in the use of information technology.1,2 To our knowledge, a clinical informatics curriculum for EM residents does not exist. We propose the following standardized and reproducible educational curriculum for EM residents. EDUCATIONAL GOALS/UNASSIGNED:The aim of this curriculum is to teach informatics skills to emergency physicians to improve patient care and outcomes, utilize data, and develop projects to lead change.3 These goals will be achieved by providing a foundational informatics elective for EM residents that follows the delineation of practice for Clinical Informatics outlined by the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA) and the American Board of Preventive Medicine (ABPM).4-6. EDUCATIONAL METHODS/UNASSIGNED:The educational strategies used in this curriculum include asynchronous learning via books, papers, videos, and websites. Residents attend administrative sessions (meetings), develop a project proposal, and participate in small group discussions.The rotation emphasizes the basic concepts surrounding clinical informatics with an emphasis on improving care delivery and outcomes, information systems, data governance and analytics, as well as leadership and professionalism. The course focuses on the practical application of these concepts, including implementation, clinical decision support, workflow analysis, privacy and security, information technology across the patient care continuum, health information exchange, data analytics, and leading change through stakeholder engagement. RESEARCH METHODS/UNASSIGNED:An initial version of the curriculum was introduced to two separate institutions and was completed by three rotating resident physicians and one rotating resident pharmacist. A brief course evaluation as well as qualitative feedback was solicited from elective participants by the course director, via email following the completion of the course, regarding the effectiveness of the course content. Learner feedback was used to influence the development of this complete curriculum. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:The curriculum was graded by learners on a 5-point Likert scale (1=strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree). The mean response to, "This course was a valuable use of my elective time," was 5 (sd=0). The mean response to, "I achieved the learning objectives," and "This rotation helped me understand Clinical Informatics," were both 4.75 (sd=0.5). DISCUSSION/UNASSIGNED:Overall, participants reported that the content was effective for achieving the learning objectives. During initial implementation, we found that the preliminary asynchronous learning component worked less effectively than we anticipated due to a lower volume of content. In response to this, as well as resident feedback, we added significantly more educational content.In conclusion, this model curriculum provides a structured process for an informatics rotation for the emergency medicine resident that utilizes the core competencies established by the governing bodies of the clinical informatics specialty and ACGME. TOPICS/UNASSIGNED:Clinical informatics key concepts, including definitions, fundamental terminology, history, policy and regulations, ethical considerations, clinical decision support, health information systems, data governance and analytics, process improvement, stakeholder engagement and change management.
PMCID:10332664
PMID: 37465133
ISSN: 2474-1949
CID: 5535692

Early Rooming Triage: Accuracy and Demographic Factors Associated with Clinical Acuity

Zhang, David Y; Shy, Bradley; Genes, Nicholas
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Early rooming triage increases patient throughput and satisfaction by rapidly assigning patients to a definitive care area, without using vital signs or detailed chart review. Despite these operational benefits, the clinical accuracy of early rooming triage is not well known. We sought to measure the accuracy of early rooming triage and uncover additional patient characteristics that can assist triage. METHODS:We conducted a single-center, retrospective population study of walk-in emergency department (ED) patients presenting to the ED via an early rooming triage system, examining triage accuracy and demographic factor correlation with higher acuity ED outcomes. RESULTS:Among all patients included from the three-year study period (N = 238,457), early rooming triage was highly sensitive (0.89) and less specific (0.61) for predicting which patients would have a severe outcome in the ED. Patients triaged to the lowest acuity area of the ED experienced severe outcomes in 4.39% of cases, while patients triaged to the highest acuity area of the ED experienced severe outcomes in 65.9% of cases. An age of greater than 43 years (odds ratio [OR] 3.48, 95% confidence interval: 3.40, 3.57) or patient's home address farther from the ED ([OR] 2.23 to 3.08) were highly correlated with severe outcomes. Multivariable models incorporating triage team judgment were robust for predicting severe outcomes at triage, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic of 0.82. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Early rooming workflows are appropriately sensitive for ED triage. Consideration of demographic factors, automated or otherwise, can augment ED processes to provide optimal triage.
PMCID:8967449
PMID: 35302446
ISSN: 1936-9018
CID: 5190572

Differences in antibiotic prescribing rates for telemedicine encounters for acute respiratory infections

Li, Kathleen Y; Ngai, Ka Ming; Genes, Nicholas
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Health systems are increasingly implementing direct-to-consumer telemedicine for unscheduled acute care, however quality of care may be variable. Acute respiratory infection antibiotic prescribing rates in telemedicine visits performed by emergency physicians affiliated with medical centers has not been compared to care by unaffiliated, vendor-supplied physicians (a heterogeneous group). We hypothesized that, in virtual visits for acute respiratory infection, affiliated physicians would prescribe antibiotics at a lower rate than unaffiliated physicians. METHODS:We performed a retrospective analysis of on-demand telemedicine visits available to health system employees and dependents at a large urban academic health system from March 2018 to July 2019. We performed multivariable logistic regression to determine the effect of physician affiliation on antibiotic prescribing patterns for acute respiratory infection, adjusting for patient age, visit weekday, and overnight visits. RESULTS: < 0.01) of being prescribed antibiotics, an average marginal effect of 15% (95%CI 2-29%). DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:In this study of virtual visits for unscheduled acute care in a single health system, vendor-supplied physicians were predicted to prescribe an antibiotic in 15% more acute respiratory infection visits compared to system-employed emergency physicians (35% vs 19%). Physician affiliation and familiarity with a health system, in addition to other factors, may be important in guideline adherence and antibiotic stewardship in direct-to-consumer telemedicine encounters.
PMID: 35075936
ISSN: 1758-1109
CID: 5154342

The 21st Century Cures Act and Emergency Medicine - Part 2: Facilitating Interoperability

Vijayaraghavan, Mahima; Genes, Nicholas; Darrow, Bruce J; Rucker, Donald W
PMID: 34607740
ISSN: 1097-6760
CID: 5047142

Using Machine Learning to Improve Screening for Undiagnosed Diabetes among Emergency Department Patients [Meeting Abstract]

Bohart, Isaac; Caldwell, J. Reed; Swartz, Jordan; Rosen, Perry E.; Genes, Nicholas; Koziatek, Christian A.; Neill, Daniel B.; Lee, David C.
ISI:000854899300135
ISSN: 0012-1797
CID: 5421242

Changes in alcohol-related hospital visits during COVID-19 in New York City

Schimmel, Jonathan; Vargas-Torres, Carmen; Genes, Nicholas; Probst, Marc A; Manini, Alex F
BACKGROUND AND AIMS/OBJECTIVE:Increased alcohol consumption has been proposed as a potential consequence of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. There has been little scrutiny of alcohol use behaviors resulting in hospital visits, which is essential to guide pandemic public policy. We aimed to determine whether COVID-19 peak restrictions were associated with increased hospital visits for alcohol use or withdrawal. Secondary objectives were to describe differences based on age, sex and race, and to examine alcohol-related complication incidence. DESIGN/METHODS:Multi-center, retrospective, pre-post study. SETTING/METHODS:New York City health system with five participating hospitals. PARTICIPANTS/METHODS:Adult emergency department encounters for alcohol use, alcoholic gastritis or pancreatitis or hepatitis, alcohol withdrawal syndrome, withdrawal seizure or delirium tremens. MEASUREMENTS/METHODS:Age, sex, race, site and encounter diagnosis. Encounters were compared between 2019 and 2020 for 1 March to 31 May. FINDINGS/RESULTS:There were 2790 alcohol-related visits during the 2019 study period and 1793 in 2020, with a decrease in total hospital visits. Of 4583 alcohol-related visits, median age was 47 years, with 22.3% females. In 2020 there was an increase in percentage of visits for alcohol withdrawal [adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.34, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.07-1.67] and withdrawal with complications (aOR = 1.40, 95% CI = 1.14-1.72), and a decline in percentage of hospital visits for alcohol use (aOR = 0.70, 95% CI = 0.59-0.85) and use with complications (aOR = 0.71, 95% CI = 0.58-0.88). It is unknown whether use visit changes mirror declines in other chief complaints. The age groups 18-29 and 60-69 years were associated with increased visits for use and decreased visits for withdrawal, as were non-white race groups. Sex was not associated with alcohol-related visit changes despite male predominance. CONCLUSIONS:In New York City during the initial COVID-19 peak (1 March to 31 May 2020), hospital visits for alcohol withdrawal increased while those for alcohol use decreased.
PMCID:8212089
PMID: 34060168
ISSN: 1360-0443
CID: 4966502

System Level Informatics to Improve Triage Practices for Sickle Cell Disease Vaso-Occlusive Crisis: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial

Linton, Elizabeth; Souffront, Kimberly; Gordon, Lauren; Loo, George T; Genes, Nicholas; Glassberg, Jeffrey
BACKGROUND:National Heart Lung and Blood Institute guidelines for the treatment of vaso-occlusive crisis among people with sickle cell disease in the emergency department recommend assigning an emergency severity index of 2 at triage. However, patients with sickle cell disease often do not receive guideline-concordant care at triage. To address this gap, a decision support tool was developed, in the form of a text banner on the triage page in the electronic health record system, visible to triage nurses. METHODS:A prospective quality improvement initiative was designed where the emergency severity index clinical decision support tool was deployed to a stratified random sample of emergency department triage nurses to receive the banner (n = 24) or not to receive the banner (n = 27), reminding them to assign the patient to emergency severity index category 2. The acceptability of the emergency severity index clinical decision support tool was evaluated with the Ottawa Acceptability of Decision Rules Instrument. Descriptive and bivariate (chi-square test) statistics were used to characterize the study's primary outcome, proportion of visits assigned an emergency severity index of 2 or higher. A generalized linear mixed model with clustering at the level of the triage nurse was performed to test the association between the banner intervention and triage practices. RESULTS: = 8.79, P ≤ .003). Accounting for clustering by nurse, the odds ratio for proper triage emergency severity index assignment was 3.22 (95% confidence interval 1.17-8.85; P ≤ .02) for the intervention versus control. Surveyed triage nurses reported the emergency severity index clinical decision support tool to be moderately acceptable (nurses' mean Ottawa Acceptability of Decision Rules Instrument scores ranged from 4.13 to 4.90 on the 6-point scale; n = 11). There were no differences in ED experience outcomes including time to first analgesic or length of stay between the control and intervention groups. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Substantial improvements in triage guideline concordance were achieved and sustained without direct nursing education.
PMID: 34301422
ISSN: 1527-2966
CID: 4966522