Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Population Health
Neighborhood-Level Risk Factors for Severe Hyperglycemia among Emergency Department Patients without a Prior Diabetes Diagnosis
Koziatek, Christian A; Bohart, Isaac; Caldwell, Reed; Swartz, Jordan; Rosen, Perry; Desai, Sagar; Krol, Katarzyna; Neill, Daniel B; Lee, David C
A person's place of residence is a strong risk factor for important diagnosed chronic diseases such as diabetes. It is unclear whether neighborhood-level risk factors also predict the probability of undiagnosed disease. The objective of this study was to identify neighborhood-level variables associated with severe hyperglycemia among emergency department (ED) patients without a history of diabetes. We analyzed patients without previously diagnosed diabetes for whom a random serum glucose value was obtained in the ED. We defined random glucose values ≥ 200 mg/dL as severe hyperglycemia, indicating probable undiagnosed diabetes. Patient addresses were geocoded and matched with neighborhood-level socioeconomic measures from the American Community Survey and claims-based surveillance estimates of diabetes prevalence. Neighborhood-level exposure variables were standardized based on z-scores, and a series of logistic regression models were used to assess the association of selected exposures and hyperglycemia adjusting for biological and social individual-level risk factors for diabetes. Of 77,882 ED patients without a history of diabetes presenting in 2021, 1,715 (2.2%) had severe hyperglycemia. Many geospatial exposures were associated with uncontrolled hyperglycemia, even after controlling for individual-level risk factors. The most strongly associated neighborhood-level variables included lower markers of educational attainment, higher percentage of households where limited English is spoken, lower rates of white-collar employment, and higher rates of Medicaid insurance. Including these geospatial factors in risk assessment models may help identify important subgroups of patients with undiagnosed disease.
PMCID:10447789
PMID: 37580543
ISSN: 1468-2869
CID: 5593202
The relationship between nurse burnout, missed nursing care, and care quality following COVID-19 pandemic
Nantsupawat, Apiradee; Wichaikhum, Orn-Anong; Abhicharttibutra, Kulwadee; Sadarangani, Tina; Poghosyan, Lusine
OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To determine the relationship between nurse burnout, missed nursing care, and care quality following the COVID-19 pandemic. BACKGROUND:Quality of care and missed nursing care can be consequences of nurse burnout. Little is known about how these factors related to nurse burnout following the COVID-19 pandemic. DESIGN/METHODS:This study used a cross-sectional correlational design and was conducted in 12 general hospitals across Thailand from August to October 2022. METHODS:394 nurses providing direct nursing care to patients during the COVID-19 pandemic completed the survey. The Emotional Exhaustion (EE) subscale of the Maslach Burnout Inventory-Human Services Survey (MBI-HSS), MISSCARE survey, and quality of care reported by nurses were used to collect data. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression models were used to analyse the data. RESULTS:Approximately thirty-six percent of nurses had burnout following the COVID-19 pandemic. Missed nursing care was higher among nurses with burnout. Most participants reported illness/symptoms such as anxiety, fatigue, a lack of concentration, and sleeping problems. After adjusting for demographic characteristics, every additional unit of emotional exhaustion was associated with 1.61 times higher odds of missed nursing care, 3.37 times higher odds of poor quality of nurse care, and 2.62 times higher odds of poor quality of care for the overall unit. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The study findings demonstrate that burnout is associated with missed nursing care and poor quality of care following the COVID-19 pandemic. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE/CONCLUSIONS:Policymakers, hospital administrators, and nurse managers should invest in strategies to reduce nurse burnout, which can increase patient safety and quality of care.
PMID: 37219019
ISSN: 1365-2702
CID: 5592242
Associations Between Different Types of Housing Insecurity and Future Emergency Department Use Among a Cohort of Emergency Department Patients
Routhier, Giselle; Mijanovich, Tod; Schretzman, Maryanne; Sell, Jessica; Gelberg, Lillian; Doran, Kelly M
Housing insecurity can take multiple forms, such as unaffordability, crowding, forced moves, multiple moves, and homelessness. Existing research has linked homelessness to increased emergency department (ED) use, but gaps remain in understanding the relationship between different types of housing insecurity and ED use. In this study, we examined the association between different types of housing insecurity, including detailed measures of homelessness, and future ED use among a cohort of patients initially seen in an urban safety-net hospital ED in the United States between November 2016 and January 2018. We found that homelessness was associated with a higher mean number of ED visits in the year post-baseline. Other measures of housing insecurity (unaffordability, crowding, forced moves, and multiple moves) were not associated with greater ED use in the year post-baseline in multivariable models. We also found that only specific types of homelessness, primarily unsheltered homelessness, were associated with increased ED use.
ORIGINAL:0017007
ISSN: 1548-6869
CID: 5553842
Social Capital and Sleep Outcomes Across Childhood in United States Families
Duh-Leong, Carol; Fuller, Anne E; Johnson, Sara B; Coble, Chanelle A; Nagpal, Nikita; Gross, Rachel S
OBJECTIVE:To examine whether aspects of social capital, or benefits received from social relationships, are associated with regular bedtime and sleep duration across childhood in US families with lower income. METHODS:Cross-sectional study using the 2018-19 National Survey of Children's Health in participants with incomes <400% federal poverty level. Separately for early childhood (0-5 years), school-age (6-12 years), and adolescence (13-17 years), we used weighted logistic regression to examine associations between social capital (measured by family social cohesion, parent social support, child social support) and sleep (measured by regular bedtime, sleep duration, adequate sleep per American of Academy of Sleep guidelines). Path analysis tested whether regular bedtime mediated associations between social capital and sleep duration. RESULTS:In our sample (N = 35,438), 84.9% had a regular bedtime, 60.2% had adequate sleep. Family social cohesion was associated with sleep duration and adequate sleep (infancy: adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.18 [95% confidence interval [CI], 1.32, 3.60]; school age: aOR 2.03 [95% CI, 1.57, 2.63]; adolescence: aOR 2.44 [95% CI, 1.94, 3.09]). In toddlerhood, parent social support was associated with adequate sleep (aOR 1.44 [95% CI, 1.06, 1.96]). In adolescence, child social support was associated with regular bedtime (aOR 1.70 [95% CI, 1.25, 2.32]. Across childhood, associations between family social cohesion and sleep duration were partially mediated by regular bedtime. CONCLUSIONS:Family social cohesion was associated with adequate sleep across childhood, this was partially mediated by regular bedtime. Associations between social support and sleep outcomes varied by development stage. Future work should consider how supportive relationships may influence child sleep outcomes.
PMID: 36641090
ISSN: 1876-2867
CID: 5426342
Smoking Cessation in Smokers with Alcohol Use Disorder: Does Age Matter?
Renton, Nicholas; Mwafy, Alaa; Morgan, Tucker; Nicholson, Andrew; Sherman, Scott
PMCID:10465450
PMID: 36941427
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 5606712
Retinal hypoplasia and degeneration result in vision loss in Friedreich ataxia
Rodden, Layne N; McIntyre, Kellie; Keita, Medina; Wells, Mckenzie; Park, Courtney; Profeta, Victoria; Waldman, Amy; Rummey, Christian; Balcer, Laura J; Lynch, David R
OBJECTIVE:Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an inherited condition caused by a GAA triplet repeat (GAA-TR) expansion in the FXN gene. Clinical features of FRDA include ataxia, cardiomyopathy, and in some, vision loss. In this study, we characterize features of vision loss in a large cohort of adults and children with FRDA. METHODS:Using optical coherence tomography (OCT), we measured peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL) thickness in 198 people with FRDA, and 77 controls. Sloan letter charts were used to determine visual acuity. RNFL thickness and visual acuity were compared to measures of disease severity obtained from the Friedreich Ataxia Clinical Outcomes Measures Study (FACOMS). RESULTS:The majority of patients, including children, had pathologically thin RNFLs (mean = 73 ± 13 μm in FRDA; 98 ± 9 μm in controls) and low-contrast vision deficits early in the disease course. Variability in RNFL thickness in FRDA (range: 36 to 107 μm) was best predicted by disease burden (GAA-TR length X disease duration). Significant deficits in high-contrast visual acuity were apparent in patients with an RNFL thickness of ≤68 μm. RNFL thickness decreased at a rate of -1.2 ± 1.4 μm/year and reached 68 μm at a disease burden of approximately 12,000 GAA years, equivalent to disease duration of 17 years for participants with 700 GAAs. INTERPRETATION/CONCLUSIONS:These data suggest that both hypoplasia and subsequent degeneration of the RNFL may be responsible for the optic nerve dysfunction in FRDA and support the development of a vision-directed treatment for selected patients early in the disease to prevent RNFL loss from reaching the critical threshold.
PMID: 37334854
ISSN: 2328-9503
CID: 5542542
Vision as a piece of the head trauma puzzle [Comment]
Bell, Carter A; Grossman, Scott N; Balcer, Laura J; Galetta, Steven L
Approximately half of the brain's circuits are involved in vision and control of eye movements. Therefore, visual dysfunction is a common symptom of concussion, the mildest form of traumatic brain injury (TBI). Photosensitivity, vergence dysfunction, saccadic abnormalities, and distortions in visual perception have been reported as vision-related symptoms following concussion. Impaired visual function has also been reported in populations with a lifetime history of TBI. Consequently, vision-based tools have been developed to detect and diagnose concussion in the acute setting, and characterize visual and cognitive function in those with a lifetime history of TBI. Rapid automatized naming (RAN) tasks have provided widely accessible and quantitative measures of visual-cognitive function. Laboratory-based eye tracking approaches demonstrate promise in measuring visual function and validating results from RAN tasks in patients with concussion. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) has detected neurodegeneration in patients with Alzheimer's disease and multiple sclerosis and may provide critical insight into chronic conditions related to TBI, such as traumatic encephalopathy syndrome. Here, we review the literature and discuss the future directions of vision-based assessments of concussion and conditions related to TBI.
PMID: 36801966
ISSN: 1476-5454
CID: 5592092
Germline immunomodulatory expression quantitative trait loci (ieQTLs) associated with immune-related toxicity from checkpoint inhibition
Ferguson, Robert; Chat, Vylyny; Morales, Leah; Simpson, Danny; Monson, Kelsey R; Cohen, Elisheva; Zusin, Sarah; Madonna, Gabriele; Capone, Mariaelena; Simeone, Ester; Pavlick, Anna; Luke, Jason J; Gajewski, Thomas F; Osman, Iman; Ascierto, Paolo; Weber, Jeffrey; Kirchhoff, Tomas
BACKGROUND:Immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) has improved clinical outcomes for metastatic melanoma patients; however, 65-80% of patients treated with ICI experience immune-related adverse events (irAEs). Given the plausible link of irAEs with underlying host immunity, we explored whether germline genetic variants controlling the expression of 42 immunomodulatory genes were associated with the risk of irAEs in melanoma patients treated with the single-agent anti-CTLA-4 antibody ipilimumab (IPI). METHODS:We identified 42 immunomodulatory expression quantitative trait loci (ieQTLs) most significantly associated with the expression of 382 immune-related genes. These germline variants were genotyped in IPI-treated melanoma patients, collected as part of a multi-institutional collaboration. We tested the association of ieQTLs with irAEs in a discovery cohort of 95 patients, followed by validation in an additional 97 patients. RESULTS:We found that the alternate allele of rs7036417, a variant linked to increased expression of SYK, was strongly associated with an increased risk of grade 3-4 toxicity [odds ratio (OR) = 7.46; 95% confidence interval (CI) = 2.65-21.03; p = 1.43E-04]. This variant was not associated with response (OR = 0.90; 95% CI = 0.37-2.21; p = 0.82). CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:We report that rs7036417 is associated with increased risk of severe irAEs, independent of IPI efficacy. SYK plays an important role in B-cell/T-cell expansion, and increased pSYK has been reported in patients with autoimmune disease. The association between rs7036417 and IPI irAEs in our data suggests a role of SYK overexpression in irAE development. These findings support the hypothesis that inherited variation in immune-related pathways modulates ICI toxicity and suggests SYK as a possible future target for therapies to reduce irAEs.
PMID: 37301715
ISSN: 1879-0852
CID: 5535092
Reproductive Health Counseling among Youth with Sickle Cell Disease
Stanek, Charis J; Reich, Jenna; Theroux, Charleen I; Creary, Susan E; Quinn, Gwendolyn P; Nahata, Leena
STUDY OBJECTIVE/OBJECTIVE:Reproductive health counseling is important for youth with sickle cell disease (SCD) given that they experience potential infertility risks from SCD and its treatments and high rates of unplanned pregnancies. Thus, the objective of this study was to describe documented occurrences of reproductive health counseling among youth with SCD and examine differences in counseling by sociodemographic and treatment characteristics. METHODS:tests were used to examine sample characteristics and relationships between sociodemographic factors, clinical characteristics, site, and reproductive health counseling (fertility, contraception, and genetic counseling). RESULTS:Seven of 167 (4%) youth had documented discussions about the potential impacts of SCD on fertility. Fertility counseling was also low among those who received a bone marrow transplant or hydroxyurea (n = 1/2, 50%; and n = 1/104, 1%, respectively). Only 57% of youth received contraception counseling, and only 55% of sexually active youth used birth control; birth control use was associated with older age (P = .028), severe clinical disease (P = .003), and documentation of contraception counseling (P = .047). Most youth received genetic counseling (80%), although more genetic counseling occurred at Nationwide Children's Hospital (P < .001). There was no association between gender and any type of counseling. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Findings suggest reproductive health counseling gaps in this population, with important implications for future infertility distress and unplanned pregnancies. Future research should examine barriers to counseling, explore fertility impacts of SCD and treatments, and inform evidence-based guidelines for reproductive health care in SCD.
PMID: 36934802
ISSN: 1873-4332
CID: 5502442
Integrating Text Messaging in a Low Threshold Telebuprenorphine Program for New York City Residents with Opioid Use Disorder during COVID-19: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Tofighi, Babak; Badiei, Beita; Badolato, Ryan; Lewis, Crystal Fuller; Nunes, Edward; Thomas, Anil; Lee, Joshua D
BACKGROUND:Pragmatic innovations are needed to optimize clinical outcomes among people who use opioids initiating buprenorphine. This pilot randomized controlled trial assessed the feasibility of integrating text messaging in a low threshold telebuprenorphine bridge program for people who use opioids during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS:Eligible adult patients with opioid use disorder inducted on buprenorphine (N = 128) in the NYC Health+Hospitals Virtual Buprenorphine Clinic between May and November 2020 were randomized to an automated texting intervention based on the medical management model versus treatment as usual. A participant feedback survey was administered at 8 weeks (n = 18). Primary outcomes consisted of acceptability (eg, study enrollment, engagement with the intervention) and feasibility (eg, lack of phone number and/or mobile phone ownership) of integrating texting in clinical care. A secondary outcome included retention in treatment at week 8 (ie, active buprenorphine prescription within the prior 7 days). RESULTS:Nearly all eligible patients consented to enroll in the study (90.8%) and few were excluded because of lack of mobile phone ownership (n = 27, 14.6%). Requests to discontinue receipt of texts (n = 6, 9.4%) was attributed to excessive message frequency, perceived lack of relevancy, and reduced interest in the intervention. Respondents completing the follow-up feedback survey were generally satisfied with the frequency of software-generated messages (14/18, 77.8%) and half shared text content with peers (9/18, 50%). There were no perceived issues with privacy, intrusiveness, or ease of use. Retention did not differ between participants randomized to the texting (M = 5.23 weeks, SD = 3.41) and treatment as usual groups (M = 4.98 weeks, SD = 3.34) at week 8 ( P = 0.676). CONCLUSIONS:This pilot randomized controlled trial confirms high acceptability and feasibility of integrating an automated texting tool in a telebuprenorphine bridge program. Future studies should assess whether text messaging may be efficacious when combined with staff contact and content addressing social determinants of health.
PMCID:10544683
PMID: 37788603
ISSN: 1935-3227
CID: 5708532