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Selected Works

Kennith R. Culp

Adult

Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Geriatric Hemodialysis Patients: A Comparative Study Of Vascular Access... Including Commentary By Courts Nf And Mathers T, Kennith Culp, L. Taylor, P. Hulme Oct 2011

Geriatric Hemodialysis Patients: A Comparative Study Of Vascular Access... Including Commentary By Courts Nf And Mathers T, Kennith Culp, L. Taylor, P. Hulme

Kennith R. Culp

OBJECTIVES: To compare vascular access in hemodialysis patients >/= 65 years of age with those /= 65 years). DESIGN: A descriptive, longitudinal study with a 1-year follow-up period. METHODS: Following the placement of a permanent vascular access, information was collected by the dialysis nursing staff about the configuration of the access, needle gauge used for cannulation, dialysis prescriptions, diabetic status, and other comorbid disease conditions. Odds ratios (OR) for vascular access thrombosis (VAT) risk were calculate between the two age groups. RESULTS: Comparisons between the two age groups suggest a higher frequency of polytetrafluorethylene (PTFE) grafts in the >/= 65-year-old …


Health Status And Resources Of Rural Homeless Women And Children, Martha Craft-Rosenberg, S. Powell, Kennith Culp Oct 2011

Health Status And Resources Of Rural Homeless Women And Children, Martha Craft-Rosenberg, S. Powell, Kennith Culp

Kennith R. Culp

The purpose of this research is to describe the health status and health resources for homeless women and children in a Midwestern rural community. A group of 31 rural homeless women in a shelter participated in the study by answering questions on the Rural Homeless Interview developed by the investigators. The findings revealed higher than expected rates of illness, accidents, and adverse life events, with the incidence ofsubstance abuse and mental illness being comparable to data from other homeless populations. The data on children were limited by lack of knowledge on the part of their mothers. Some mothers reported that …


Traumatic Injury Rates In Meatpacking Plant Workers, Kennith Culp, M. Brooks, Kerri Rupe, C. Zwerling Oct 2011

Traumatic Injury Rates In Meatpacking Plant Workers, Kennith Culp, M. Brooks, Kerri Rupe, C. Zwerling

Kennith R. Culp

This was a 3-year retrospective cohort study of traumatic injuries in a midwestern pork meatpacking plant. Based on n = 5410 workers, this was a diverse workforce: Caucasian (56.6%), Hispanic (38.9%), African American (2.7%), Asian (1.1%) and Native American (0.8%). There were n = 1655 employees with traumatic injuries during this period. At 6 months of employment, the probability of injury was 33% in the harvest workers who were responsible for slaughter operations. The overall incidence injury rate was 22.76 per 100 full-time employees per year. Women experienced a higher incidence for injury than men. The risk ratio (RR) for …


Agricultural-Related Injury And Illness In The Gambia: A Descriptive Survey Of A Rural Nursing Service And Area Farmers, Kennith Culp, R. Kuye, K. Donham, R. Rautiainen, M. Umbarger-Mackey, S. Marquez Oct 2011

Agricultural-Related Injury And Illness In The Gambia: A Descriptive Survey Of A Rural Nursing Service And Area Farmers, Kennith Culp, R. Kuye, K. Donham, R. Rautiainen, M. Umbarger-Mackey, S. Marquez

Kennith R. Culp

This is an exploratory, descriptive study based on a convenience sample from a rural nursing service and in-country area farmers from The Gambia. The purpose of the study was to provide descriptive information about agricultural-related injury and illness from area farmers and to obtain data from rural nurses about the time they spent caring for and treating farmers. Employees of the nursing service could read and write English fluently and thus completed a written questionnaire; the area farmers were unable to read and write English so they were interviewed by farm extension workers in their own tribal language. The most …


Pesticide Handling And Exposures Among Cotton Farmers In The Gambia, R. Kuye, K. Donham, S. Marquez, W. Sanderson, L. Fuortes, R. Rautiainen, M. Jones, Kennith Culp Oct 2011

Pesticide Handling And Exposures Among Cotton Farmers In The Gambia, R. Kuye, K. Donham, S. Marquez, W. Sanderson, L. Fuortes, R. Rautiainen, M. Jones, Kennith Culp

Kennith R. Culp

Objectives: There are substantial health hazards to farmers and the environment associated with pesticide use in developing countries. Based on observations by the authors and previous reports, most previous studies in Africa are descriptive in nature. The aim of this study was to investigate how cotton farmers are exposed to pesticides in The Gambia and quantify their pesticide exposures and provide information for the formulation of a policy on pesticide safety for the country. Methods: A representative sample of 20 cotton farmers in the Central and Upper River Divisions (CRD and URD) of The Gambia were surveyed by questionnaires. Dermal …


Acute Confusion Assessment Instruments: Clinical Versus Research Usability, C. Rapp, B. Wakefield, M. Kundrat, J. Mentes, Toni Tripp-Reimer, Kennith Culp, Paula Mobily, J. Akins, L. Onega Oct 2011

Acute Confusion Assessment Instruments: Clinical Versus Research Usability, C. Rapp, B. Wakefield, M. Kundrat, J. Mentes, Toni Tripp-Reimer, Kennith Culp, Paula Mobily, J. Akins, L. Onega

Kennith R. Culp

Acute confusion (AC), also referred to as delirium (AC/delirium), is a common problem seen by health professionals who work in a variety of care settings. This is an evaluative report on the clinical usability of instruments to assess AC/delirium as a part of nursing practice. Specifically, five instruments [the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM), Delirium Rating Scale (DRS), Delirium Symptom Inventory (DSI), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Neelon/Champagne (NEECHAM) Confusion Scale] are discussed. The work demonstrates how the cooperation of nurses in practice, education, and research can improve both patient and staff outcomes.


Modeling Mortality Risk In Hemodialysis Patients Using Laboratory Values As Time-Dependent Covariates, Kennith Culp, M. Flanigan, E. Lowrie, N. Lew, B. Zimmerman Oct 2011

Modeling Mortality Risk In Hemodialysis Patients Using Laboratory Values As Time-Dependent Covariates, Kennith Culp, M. Flanigan, E. Lowrie, N. Lew, B. Zimmerman

Kennith R. Culp

Proportional hazards analyses assume that the magnitude of mortality risk for a predictor variable remains proportional over time. In a time-dependent model, the explanatory variable violates this assumption, and repeat observations are required to accommodate the change in risk that occurs over time. Using a retrospective cohort design, we tested the following laboratory values for a time-by-covariate interaction: hematocrit (HCT), serum albumin (ALB), and serum creatinine (CR). A random sample of 4,083 hemodialysis patients whose specimens were analyzed in a central laboratory over a 3-year period served as the study group. Using the baseline observation, we discovered significant probability values …


Clinical Methods. Acute Confusion Assessment Instruments: Clinical Versus Research Usability, C. Rapp, B. Wakefield, M. Kundrat, J. Mentes, Toni Tripp-Reimer, Kennith Culp, Paula Mobily, J. Akins, L. Onega Oct 2011

Clinical Methods. Acute Confusion Assessment Instruments: Clinical Versus Research Usability, C. Rapp, B. Wakefield, M. Kundrat, J. Mentes, Toni Tripp-Reimer, Kennith Culp, Paula Mobily, J. Akins, L. Onega

Kennith R. Culp

Acute confusion (AC), also referred to as delirium (AC/delirium), is a common problem seen by health professionals who work in a variety of care settings. This is an evaluative report on the clinical usability of instruments to assess AC/delirium as a part of nursing practice. Specifically, five instruments [the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM), Delirium Rating Scale (DRS), Delirium Symptom Inventory (DSI), Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), and Neelon/Champagne (NEECHAM) Confusion Scale] are discussed. The work demonstrates how the cooperation of nurses in practice, education, and research can improve both patient and staff outcomes.