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Health assessment of the Arab American community in southwest Brooklyn

Sarsour, Linda; Tong, Virginia S; Jaber, Omar; Talbi, Mohammed; Julliard, Kell
Data on Arab American health is lacking nationwide. This survey of the Arab American community in southwest Brooklyn assessed perceptions of health status, needs, behaviors, and access to services. Bilingual interviewers administered a structured survey to community members in public gathering places. Of 353 surveyed, 43% were men and 57% women, most spoke Arabic and were Muslim, and most had moved to the U.S. after 1990. One quarter were unemployed. Over 50% reported household incomes below federal poverty level. Nearly 30% had no health insurance. 58% reported choosing their health care venue based on language considerations. 43% reported problems in getting health care, including ability to pay, language barriers, and immigration. 42% of men, and 8% of women reported current smoking. Almost half of respondents never exercised. Rates of poverty, lack of health insurance, and smoking in men are cause for concern and were high even for immigrant groups.
PMID: 20740375
ISSN: 1573-3610
CID: 2399082

Effects of acupuncture during labor and delivery in a U.S. hospital setting: a case-control pilot study

Citkovitz, Claudia; Klimenko, Elena; Bolyai, Melani; Applewhite, Liat; Julliard, Kell; Weiner, Zeev
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to assess clinical effects and logistical feasibility of acupuncture given during labor and delivery in a U.S. hospital setting. DESIGN: A case-control pilot study was conducted with 45 parturients receiving acupuncture during labor and delivery alongside standard care. Primary outcome endpoints were incidence of cesarean section, amount of parenteral opioids used, use of epidural anesthesia, and duration of labor. Secondary endpoints included patient satisfaction and nursing staff acceptance as assessed by postpartum questionnaire, maximum flow rate of oxytocin, incidence of instrumental delivery, Apgar score, and incidence of adverse event. RESULTS: Forty-five (45) patients receiving acupuncture were compared to 127 historical controls matched for maternal age, gestational age, parity, and use of oxytocin (augmentation and induction were matched separately). Acupuncture patients underwent significantly fewer cesarean sections (7% versus 20%, p = 0.004). No significant differences were noted in other clinical endpoints. Seventy-eight percent (78%) of nurses reported a subjective perception of improvement in patients' comfort with acupuncture, while 83% reported that the acupuncturists' presence never interfered with their work. Eighty-seven percent (87%) of patients reported that acupuncture had helped them. CONCLUSIONS: Acupuncture during labor and delivery is well tolerated by patients and medical staff. It should be further evaluated for its promise in potentially reducing the incidence of cesarean section.
PMID: 19432512
ISSN: 1557-7708
CID: 2399072

Health needs in Brooklyn's Chinatown: a pilot assessment using rapid participatory appraisal

Thein, Khin; Thuya Zaw, Kyaw; Teng, Rui-Er; Liang, Celia; Julliard, Kell
BACKGROUND: The relatively new Chinatown of Brooklyn is medically underserved. A pilot assessment of the health needs of this community was conducted using Rapid Participatory Appraisal. METHODS: In-depth interviews with health professionals and community members plus searches of national, state, and local electronic health databases were conducted taking into account multiple determinants of health. RESULTS: Community organization, sociological factors, services, and policy were all partly responsible for unmet health needs, including the lack of an overall community structure related to health. Health concerns of all kinds were exacerbated by poverty, language barriers, immigration status, culture, and the need for acculturation. Significant health assets were present but were not adequate to address needs. DISCUSSION: While each health concern had its own unique identifiable causes, the interaction of these concerns and the limitations of assets at all levels make solutions difficult.
PMID: 19395836
ISSN: 1049-2089
CID: 2399062

Strengthening the nurse-patient relationship: "what is the most important thing I can do for you today?"

Cappabianca, Agnes; Julliard, Kell; Raso, Rosanne; Ruggiero, Jillian
We asked our patients, "What is the most important thing I can do for you today?" and analyzed the self-identified patient needs. Eleven themes emerged; we used these findings to drive a unit-based project and a hospital-based project, hard-wiring strategies into the infrastructure of Relationship-Centered Care to build relationships between patients/families and staff and to establish a healing and caring environment.
PMID: 19715102
ISSN: 1078-4535
CID: 2399102

What Latina patients don't tell their doctors: a qualitative study

Julliard, Kell; Vivar, Josefina; Delgado, Carlos; Cruz, Eugenio; Kabak, Jennifer; Sabers, Heidi
PURPOSE: The treatment a patient receives is greatly affected by what he or she chooses to disclose to a physician. This qualitative study investigated such factors as culture and background that contribute to Latina patients' nondisclosure of medical information. METHODS: Participants were 28 Latina women living in Brooklyn. In-depth interviews in English or Spanish were conducted and documented by extensive notes. We used a grounded theory approach to find emerging themes, which were coded using a continuous iterative process. RESULTS: Six primary themes emerged: the physician-patient relationship, language, physician sex and age, time constraints, sensitive health issues, and culture and birthplace. Such qualities as compassion, caring, human interest, and kindness were important to many Latinas, who did not feel safe sharing information if these qualities were absent. Language barriers caused problems with physician-patient interaction, which were complicated by the presence of a translator. Physicians being male or younger could make disclosure difficult, especially around issues of sexuality and genital examination. Time constraints and cultural differences sometimes resulted in physicians' lack of awareness of sensitive areas that patients did not wish to discuss, such as sexuality, family planning, domestic abuse, and use of recreational drugs. Birthplace (foreign born vs US born) played a role in how the women perceived barriers to disclosure. CONCLUSIONS: Staff training in techniques for building rapport can foster better communication, increase empathy and compassion, and lead to the establishment of trusting relationships in which disclosure is more likely.
PMCID:2582474
PMID: 19001307
ISSN: 1544-1717
CID: 2399052

Provider insights about palliative care barriers and facilitators: results of a rapid ethnographic assessment

Goepp, Julius G; Meykler, Simon; Mooney, Nancy E; Lyon, Claudia; Raso, Rosanne; Julliard, Kell
Palliative care remains underutilized in the United States. This may represent failure of translation of research into practice (diffusion of innovation). Qualitative methods can identify barriers to and facilitators of diffusion of innovation. The aim is to identify potential barriers to and facilitators of inpatient palliative care utilization at a large urban hospital, as articulated by health professionals. Rapid ethnographic assessment methods were used among health professionals with subsequent extraction of predominant themes illuminating factors influencing adoption of palliative care services. In all, 3 stakeholder categories and 7 major themes emerged. Analysis revealed consistent need for organized, cross-disciplinary education/training services and a clearly-defined team approach. Denial at all stakeholder levels and in most themes was a barrier to implementation of palliative care. Consistent, defined educational, policymaking, and procedural standards were requirements for best adoption of palliative care. Denial was a striking obstruction to diffusion of innovation.
PMID: 18550780
ISSN: 1049-9091
CID: 1897622

A randomized clinical trial comparing the effect of maternal intravenous hydration and placebo on the amniotic fluid index in oligohydramnios

Yan-Rosenberg, Linli; Burt, Borislava; Bombard, Allan T; Callado-Khoury, Fady; Sharett, Loren; Julliard, Kell; Weiner, Zeev
OBJECTIVE: To compare the treatment of acute intravenous hydration with placebo in term pregnant women manifesting oligohydramnios. METHODS: All patients with oligohydramnios who met the inclusion criteria were offered participation in this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. After ruling out rupture of membranes and maternal and fetal complications, we recruited 44 women with third trimester singleton pregnancies having an amniotic fluid index (AFI) of less than 6. Patients were randomized into treatment or control groups. Patients in the treatment group received a continuous intravenous infusion of (1/2) normal saline (NS) at a rate of 1000 mL/h for two hours. Patients in the placebo group received an intravenous infusion of (1/2) NS at 10 mL/h for two hours. The AFI was re-assessed by the same sonographer one hour after the hydration was completed. Both the patient and the examiner were blinded to the study groups. RESULTS: Maternal age, parity, gestational age, and birth weight were not significantly different between the two groups. The AFI increased significantly in both treatment (3.8 +/- 1.2 vs. 5.3 +/- 2.5, p < 0.05) and placebo (4 +/- 1.3 vs. 5.5 +/- 2.4, p < 0.05) groups. Moreover, the changes in AFI did not significantly differ between the treatment and the placebo groups (1.2 +/- 2.1 vs. 1.5 +/- 2.1, respectively; p > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: There are statistically significant short-term increases in the AFI in patients with oligohydramnios whether the patients are treated with intravenous fluids or not. The short-term increase in AFI may reflect physiologic diurnal variations in the amniotic fluid.
PMID: 17763271
ISSN: 1476-7058
CID: 1890962

Antibiotic ointment in the treatment of Grover disease [Case Report]

Julliard, Kell N; Milburn, Peter B
Grover disease, or transient acantholytic dermatosis, chiefly affects the upper part of the trunk in men older than 40 years. Lesions may last for weeks, months, or years, and often are accompanied by intense pruritus. Some patients respond to topical steroid treatment but many do not. This article reports major or total resolution of Grover disease in 6 of 9 patients following topical application of a triple antibiotic ointment. It also proposes using a case registry as a way of further investigating the efficacy of this treatment so that dermatologists may participate.
PMID: 17725068
ISSN: 0011-4162
CID: 2399042

Measuring thoracic excursion: reliability of the cloth tape measure technique

Bockenhauer, Susan E; Chen, Haifan; Julliard, Kell N; Weedon, Jeremy
OBJECTIVE: To assess the reliability of using a cloth tape measure to determine thoracic respiratory excursion as a measurement of chest expansion or mobility. METHODS: Physicians and residents experienced in osteopathic manipulative treatment measured thoracic excursion with a cloth tape measure held around the circumference of healthy male subjects' chests at two levels. Upper thoracic excursion measurements were taken at the level of the fifth thoracic spinous process and the third intercostal space at the midclavicular line. Lower thoracic excursion measurements were taken at the level of the 10th thoracic spinous process and the xiphoid process. At peak inhalation and exhalation, three examiners measured thoracic excursion at both levels. In the first session (n=5), examiners measured the same subject inhalation and exhalation. In the second session (n=4), examiners measured separate respiratory cycles. For each session, interexaminer intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) were calculated for thoracic excursion, inhalation, and exhalation in the upper and lower positions using a two-way random-effects analysis of variance model. RESULTS: Intraclass correlation coefficients for thoracic excursion ranged from 0.81 to 0.91 (95% confidence interval, 0.69-0.99) at both measurement levels in both sessions. When inhalation and exhalation were considered separately, interexaminer ICCs were 0.99 and greater. Standard deviations for measurements of each subject's thoracic excursion at both levels ranged from 0.5 cm to 0.8 cm with a mean of 0.6 cm. CONCLUSION: The method of using a tape measure to assess thoracic excursion was highly reliable in men, resulting in ICCs of substantial reliability. The SDs at each level of measurement indicate that this method may be most useful in measuring changes in thoracic excursion that are expected to be 0.6 cm or greater.
PMID: 17596587
ISSN: 0098-6151
CID: 2399112

Towards a model for planning clinical research in Oriental medicine

Julliard, Kell N; Citkovitz, Claudia; McDaniel, Douglas
BACKGROUND: Oriental medicine (OM) is widely practiced internationally and embraces many schools of thought. Western medical research is currently struggling to understand OM in purely biomedical terms, with limited success. OBJECTIVE: We propose a research model for applying Western research methodologies to OM in a way that respects its theory and modes of clinical application. This would facilitate systematic investigations of OM's specific assumptions and make explicit the way OM studies could build on each other. METHODS: To develop this model, the authors extracted key assumptions of Western research methodology germane to clinical research, put them in a developmentally logical sequence, and related them to the diagnostic and clinical processes of OM. RESULTS: The model categorizes studies into seven levels. Foundation studies (level one) establish the conceptual basis for OM research by establishing the internal validity of its basic "truth statements." Measurement studies (level two) determine how OM identifies and measures diagnostic indicators, treatment outcomes, and other basic aspects of health. Group studies (level three) describe populations in ways meaningful to their health. Pattern/diagnosis studies (level four) identify and define OM patterns of disharmony. Treatment technique studies (level five) describe particular techniques or principles of treatment, their indications, and rationale. Treatment effectiveness studies (level six) evaluate techniques of treatment, often by comparing the results of one technique with those of another in similar patients. Systematic reviews (level seven) draw together studies on the same topic to see if conclusions are thereby strengthened. CONCLUSION: The levels can be used to establish relationships between already published studies, determine if sufficient background research has been done to enable a study idea to be carried out, and generate ideas for future studies.
PMID: 17362847
ISSN: 1550-8307
CID: 2399032