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Marquette University

2014

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Articles 91 - 112 of 112

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Prueba Go/No-Go, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Luis Diego Conejo Bolaños Jan 2014

Prueba Go/No-Go, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Luis Diego Conejo Bolaños

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

No abstract provided.


A Comparison Of Quality Of Care In Critical Access Hospitals And Other Rural Hospitals, Marianne Baernholdt, Jessica Keim-Malpass, Ivora D. Hinton, Guofen Yan, Marilyn Meyer Bratt Jan 2014

A Comparison Of Quality Of Care In Critical Access Hospitals And Other Rural Hospitals, Marianne Baernholdt, Jessica Keim-Malpass, Ivora D. Hinton, Guofen Yan, Marilyn Meyer Bratt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose:

The United States has about 2100 rural hospitals. Approximately 1300 are Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) with 25 beds or less. CAHs receive cost-based reimbursement through the federal Flex program with the goal to improve quality and access to health care. Reports on quality of care (QOC) and factors that influence quality in CAHs are mixed. This study compared QOC and factors that influence QOC in CAHs and other rural hospitals.

Sample: 385 staff nurses in 6 CAHs and 9 other rural hospitals in North Carolina and Virginia.

Method:

Descriptive cross-sectional design using nurse surveys aggregated to the hospital level, …


Strategies For A Successful Phd Program: Words Of Wisdom From The Wjnr Editorial Board, Vicki S. Conn, Julie Zerwic, Susan M. Rawl, Jean F. Wyman, Janet L. Larson, Cindy M. Anderson, Nancy L. Fahrenwald, Lazelle E. Benefield, Marlene Z. Cohen, Carol E. Smith, Robert V. Topp, Natalie E. Markis Jan 2014

Strategies For A Successful Phd Program: Words Of Wisdom From The Wjnr Editorial Board, Vicki S. Conn, Julie Zerwic, Susan M. Rawl, Jean F. Wyman, Janet L. Larson, Cindy M. Anderson, Nancy L. Fahrenwald, Lazelle E. Benefield, Marlene Z. Cohen, Carol E. Smith, Robert V. Topp, Natalie E. Markis

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Nursing doctoral programs prepare students for research-focused careers within academic settings. The purpose of this Editorial Board Special Article is to provide PhD students and advisors with suggestions for making the most of their doctoral experience. Editorial Board members provide their individual insights on the skills and attributes students must acquire during the course of their doctoral education in order to succeed. The authors provide practical tips and advice on how to excel in a PhD program, including how to select an advisor and a dissertation committee, the importance of attending conferences to increase visibility and develop a network of …


Exploring Essential Characteristics Of Self-Determination For Diverse Students Using Data From Nlts2, Karrie A. Shogren, William Kennedy, Chantelle Dowsett, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Todd D. Little Jan 2014

Exploring Essential Characteristics Of Self-Determination For Diverse Students Using Data From Nlts2, Karrie A. Shogren, William Kennedy, Chantelle Dowsett, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Todd D. Little

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

This study explored the impact of race/ethnicity on three of the four essential characteristics of self-determination—autonomy, self-realization, and psychological empowerment—directly assessed in the National Longitudinal Transition Study-2. Specifically, the impact of race/ethnicity was examined with six disability groups established in previous research: high incidence disabilities (learning disabilities, emotional disturbances, speech language impairments, and other health impairments), sensory disabilities (visual and hearing impairments), cognitive disabilities (autism, multiple disabilities, and deaf-blindness); intellectual disability, traumatic brain injury, and orthopedic impairments. Measurement equivalence was established across groups, but significant differences in the latent means, variances, and covariances were found suggesting a complex pattern of …


Public Health Model Identifies Recruitment Barriers Among Older Adults With Delirium And Dementia, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Jennifer M. Sjostedt Jan 2014

Public Health Model Identifies Recruitment Barriers Among Older Adults With Delirium And Dementia, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Jennifer M. Sjostedt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Recruiting older adults and their family caregivers into research studies presents challenges. Although the literature notes some general recruitment challenges, no studies specifically address the unique challenges of recruiting older adults who have Alzheimer's Disease (AD) and their family caregivers in studies about delirium or suggest using a framework to identify barriers to recruiting this population. In conducting a pilot study about preparing family caregivers to detect delirium symptoms in older adults with (AD) the researchers used the Public Health Model for identifying barriers to recruitment. The goals of this methodological article are to: (1) briefly describe the methodology of …


Two-Method Planned Missing Designs For Longitudinal Research, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Mijke Rhemtulla, Todd D. Little Jan 2014

Two-Method Planned Missing Designs For Longitudinal Research, Mauricio Garnier-Villarreal, Mijke Rhemtulla, Todd D. Little

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

We examine longitudinal extensions of the two-method measurement design, which uses planned missingness to optimize cost-efficiency and validity of hard-to-measure constructs. These designs use a combination of two measures: a “gold standard” that is highly valid but expensive to administer, and an inexpensive (e.g., survey-based) measure that contains systematic measurement bias (e.g., response bias). Using simulated data on four measurement occasions, we compared the cost-efficiency and validity of longitudinal designs where the gold standard is measured at one or more measurement occasions. We manipulated the nature of the response bias over time (constant, increasing, fluctuating), the factorial structure of the …


Efficacy Of Achieving Pregnancy With Fertility-Focused Intercourse, Qiyan Mu, Richard Fehring Jan 2014

Efficacy Of Achieving Pregnancy With Fertility-Focused Intercourse, Qiyan Mu, Richard Fehring

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Purpose:

To compare pregnancy rates when women have intercourse on self-estimated high and peak fertile days and when they only have intercourse on low fertile days during the fertile window (FW).

Study Design and Methods:

We used a prospective observational cohort study design. Our convenience sample included 124 women who utilized our online charting Web sites to achieve pregnancy from January 2010 to November 2012. Participants used an electronic hormonal fertility monitor (EHFM) or self-observed cervical mucus or both to determine fertility during the estimated FW. Pregnancy rates were determined with Kaplan–Meier survival analysis. Chi square analysis was used to …


Spirituality And Religiosity In Adolescents With Sickle Cell Disease: A Descriptive Qualitative Study, Dora L. Clayton-Jones Jan 2014

Spirituality And Religiosity In Adolescents With Sickle Cell Disease: A Descriptive Qualitative Study, Dora L. Clayton-Jones

Dissertations (1934 -)

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a serious debilitating chronic illness and global health problem. Spirituality and religiosity have been shown to have positive correlations with their health outcomes. Research addressing the spiritual and religious needs of adolescents living with SCD is limited.

The aim of this descriptive qualitative study was to examine how adolescents (Mage = 16.2 years) with SCD describe and experience spirituality and religiosity. Nine adolescents completed two semi-structured interviews. Sickle Cell Disease Interview Guides were developed using the Spiritual Development Framework developed by Benson & Roehlkepartain (2008) as a guide. The framework provided a foundation for conceptualizing …


A Feminist Perspective On Listening To Women: Birth Stories Of Vaginal Birth Following Previous Cesarean Delivery, Elizabeth Hill-Karbowski Jan 2014

A Feminist Perspective On Listening To Women: Birth Stories Of Vaginal Birth Following Previous Cesarean Delivery, Elizabeth Hill-Karbowski

Dissertations (1934 -)

Women's perspectives of their experiences are important, and worthy of study. However, there have been no qualitative comparative investigations of vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC) experiences of American women using their birth stories as data. Furthermore, there have been no studies where women's experiences of cesarean have been compared with their own subsequent VBAC.

The purpose of this study was to gain insight into the comparative experience of VBAC and cesarean, valuing women and their experiences through the use of a feminist research perspective. By contributing new and valuable insight into an area of research that has been identified as …


The Influence Of Patient Activation And Social Facilitation On Engagement In Postpartum Weight Self-Management Behaviors, Jennifer Marie Ohlendorf Jan 2014

The Influence Of Patient Activation And Social Facilitation On Engagement In Postpartum Weight Self-Management Behaviors, Jennifer Marie Ohlendorf

Dissertations (1934 -)

Aims: To explore factors that influence the process of women's engagement in postpartum weight self-management (PPWSM) behaviors (eating and physical activity). Transitions Theory and the Integrated Theory of Health Behavior Change guided the selection of salient variables including transition conditions, level of patient activation, and social facilitation, to be examined for association with PPWSM behaviors.

Background: Women who do not lose their pregnancy weight are at higher risk of being overweight or obese later in life. Little is known about what women do to self-manage the return to pre-pregnant weight and how providers can influence PPWSM.

Design: Prospective, longitudinal, correlational …


Family Caregivers’ Knowledge Of Delirium And Preferred Modalities For Receipt Of Information, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Jennifer M. Sjostedt Jan 2014

Family Caregivers’ Knowledge Of Delirium And Preferred Modalities For Receipt Of Information, Margaret J. Bull, Lesley Boaz, Jennifer M. Sjostedt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Delirium is a life-threatening, frequently reversible condition that is often a sign of an underlying health problem. In-hospital mortality alone for older adults with delirium ranges from 25% to 33%. Early recognition of delirium is critical because prolonged duration poses a greater risk of poor functional outcomes for older adults. Family caregivers, who are familiar with the older adult’s usual behaviors, are most likely to recognize delirium symptoms but might dismiss them as due to aging. It is important to learn what family caregivers know about delirium to ascertain their need for education. The aims of this study were to …


Replication Of Known Dental Characteristics In Porcine Skin: Emerging Technologies For The Imaging Specialist, L. Thomas Johnson, Thomas W. Radmer, Dean C. Jeutter, Gary L. Stafford, Joseph Thulin, Thomas Wirtz, George Corliss, Kwang Woo Ahn, Alexis Visotky, Ronald L. Groffy Jan 2014

Replication Of Known Dental Characteristics In Porcine Skin: Emerging Technologies For The Imaging Specialist, L. Thomas Johnson, Thomas W. Radmer, Dean C. Jeutter, Gary L. Stafford, Joseph Thulin, Thomas Wirtz, George Corliss, Kwang Woo Ahn, Alexis Visotky, Ronald L. Groffy

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

This study demonstrates that it is sometimes possible to replicate patterns of human teeth in pig skin and determine scientifically that a given injury pattern (bite mark) correlates with the dentitions of a very small proportion of a population dataset, e.g., 5 percent or even 1 percent. The authors recommend building on the template of this research with a sufficiently large database of samples that reflects the diverse world population. They also envision the development of a sophisticated imaging software application that enables forensic examiners to insert parameters for measurement, as well as additional methods of applying force to produce …


Operative Management Of Idiophatic Myositis Ossificans Of Lateral Pterygoid Muscle, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Andrea Doetzer, Flavio Camejo, Jose A. Bosio Jan 2014

Operative Management Of Idiophatic Myositis Ossificans Of Lateral Pterygoid Muscle, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Andrea Doetzer, Flavio Camejo, Jose A. Bosio

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

INTRODUCTION

Myositis ossificans (MO) is characterized as heterotopic bone formation within muscle. MO rarely occurs in the head and neck region. Excision of the heterotopic bone is the standard treatment. This report summarizes a case of a 12-year old female with MO involving the lateral pterygoid muscle. The heterotopic bone was excised using an intraoral incision. Despite intensive physical therapy, the operation failed as evidenced by new bone formation in the area within three weeks of the operation.

PRESENTATION OF CASE

A twelve years old female patient presenting with mouth opening of 10 mm, no facial asymmetry, and no jaw …


Review Found Little Difference Between Sandblasted And Acid-Etched (Sla) Dental Implants And Modified Surface (Slactive) Implants, Gary L. Stafford Jan 2014

Review Found Little Difference Between Sandblasted And Acid-Etched (Sla) Dental Implants And Modified Surface (Slactive) Implants, Gary L. Stafford

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Data sources

Medline, Embase, the Cochrane Oral Health Group's Trials Register and OpenGREY databases were searched together with the reference lists of identified articles.

Study selection

Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and prospective cohort studies of at least six month duration were included. Studies/case series in which there was only one implant surface (SLA or SLActive) and one loading protocol (immediate or early) were also considered.

Data extraction and synthesis

Two reviewers screened, selected and abstracted data, independently. RCTs were assessed for quality using the Cochrane risk of bias approach and observational studies using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale (NOS). The primary outcomes …


Patterns Of Dental Service Utilization Following Nontraumatic Dental Condition Visits To The Emergency Department In Wisconsin Medicaid, Nicholas M. Pajewski, Christopher Okunseri Jan 2014

Patterns Of Dental Service Utilization Following Nontraumatic Dental Condition Visits To The Emergency Department In Wisconsin Medicaid, Nicholas M. Pajewski, Christopher Okunseri

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Objectives: To examine patterns of dental service utilization for adult Medicaid enrollees in Wisconsin following nontraumatic dental condition (NTDC) visits to the emergency department (ED).

Methods: This is a retrospective, observational study of claims for NTDC visits to the ED and dental service encounters from the Wisconsin Medicaid Evaluation and Decision Support database (2001-2009). We used competing risk models to predict probabilities of returning to the ED versus obtaining follow-up care from a dentist.

Results: We observed a 43 percent increase in the rate of NTDC visits to the ED, with most of this increase occurring from 2001 to 2005. …


Racial/Ethnic Disparities In Provision Of Dental Procedures To Children Enrolled In Delta Dental Insurance In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Pradeep Bhagavatula, Qun Xiang, Fredrick Eichmiller, Aniko Szabo, Christopher Okunseri Jan 2014

Racial/Ethnic Disparities In Provision Of Dental Procedures To Children Enrolled In Delta Dental Insurance In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Pradeep Bhagavatula, Qun Xiang, Fredrick Eichmiller, Aniko Szabo, Christopher Okunseri

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Objectives: Most studies on the provision of dental procedures have focused on Medicaid enrollees known to have inadequate access to dental care. Little information on private insurance enrollees exists. This study documents the rates of preventive, restorative, endodontic, and surgical dental procedures provided to children enrolled in Delta Dental of Wisconsin (DDWI) in Milwaukee.

Methods: We analyzed DDWI claims data for Milwaukee children aged 0-18 years between 2002 and 2008. We linked the ZIP codes of enrollees to the 2000 US Census information to derive racial/ethnic estimates in the different ZIP codes. We estimated the rates of preventive, restorative, endodontic, …


Management Of Dental Extraction In A Female Patient With Fanconi Anemia, Andre Peisker, Gregor F. Raschke, Arndt Guentsch, Korosh Roshanghias, Stefan Schultze-Mosgau Jan 2014

Management Of Dental Extraction In A Female Patient With Fanconi Anemia, Andre Peisker, Gregor F. Raschke, Arndt Guentsch, Korosh Roshanghias, Stefan Schultze-Mosgau

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Oral surgery in patients with bleeding disorders is associated with a high risk of bleeding during and after surgery. This article is aimed to present the case of an eight-year-old girl suffering from severe Fanconi anemia with pancytopenia who underwent a dental extraction. The hemostatic effect of local administration of tranexamic acid in combination with a primary suture seems to be extremely helpful in order to reduce the necessity of blood products and the risk of postoperative bleeding.


Fasl Expression In Articular Discs Of Human Temporomandibular Joint And Association With Osteoarthrosis, Flavio De Alcantara Camejo, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Andrea Doetzer, Karina Sao Thiago Caporal, Viviane Ambros, Marina Azevedo, Luciana Reis Azevedo Alanis, Marcia Olandoski, Lucia Noronha, Paula C. Trevilatto Jan 2014

Fasl Expression In Articular Discs Of Human Temporomandibular Joint And Association With Osteoarthrosis, Flavio De Alcantara Camejo, Luis Eduardo Almeida, Andrea Doetzer, Karina Sao Thiago Caporal, Viviane Ambros, Marina Azevedo, Luciana Reis Azevedo Alanis, Marcia Olandoski, Lucia Noronha, Paula C. Trevilatto

School of Dentistry Faculty Research and Publications

Background

Apoptosis is a programme of cell death which does not induce an inflammatory response. Recent previous research has suggested a correlation between temporomandibular internal derangement and apoptosis. Fas ligand (FasL) is an apoptosis‐inducing factor, known to trigger apoptosis through distinct signal pathways. This study aims to examine, by immunohistochemistry, the expression of FasL in temporomandibular joint (TMJ) articular discs of patients with anterior disc displacement with reduction (ADDwR) and without reduction (ADDwoR) in patients with and without osteoarthrosis (OA).

Methods

Forty‐two (n = 42) TMJ articular discs were divided into two cut‐offs: (i) 8 control, 17 ADDwR, 17 …


Prehabilitation Influences Exercise-Related Psychological Constructs Such As Self-Efficacy And Outcome Expectations To Exercise, Kent Brown, Paul D. Loprinzi, Joseph A. Brosky, Robert V. Topp Jan 2014

Prehabilitation Influences Exercise-Related Psychological Constructs Such As Self-Efficacy And Outcome Expectations To Exercise, Kent Brown, Paul D. Loprinzi, Joseph A. Brosky, Robert V. Topp

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Brown, K, Loprinzi, PD, Brosky, JA, and Topp, R. Prehabilitation influences exercise-related psychological constructs such as self-efficacy and outcome expectations to exercise. J Strength Cond Res 28(1): 201–209, 2014—Osteoarthritis (OA) is a clinical condition affecting more than 27 million Americans. There is no known cure for OA other than replacing the diseased joint with a joint prosthesis, a process called total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The TKA projections for the year 2016 are 1,046,000, and this number is predicted to increase by 600% to more than 3.4 million cases by 2030. The purpose of this study was to determine whether knee …


Psychometric Evaluation Of An Instrument To Measure Hispanic Mothers’ Normative Beliefs, Intentions, Past Experience And Past Behavior Related To The Discussion Of Sex-Related Topics With Their Adolescent Daughters, Dana Rodriguez, Robert V. Topp, Richard J. Fehring Jan 2014

Psychometric Evaluation Of An Instrument To Measure Hispanic Mothers’ Normative Beliefs, Intentions, Past Experience And Past Behavior Related To The Discussion Of Sex-Related Topics With Their Adolescent Daughters, Dana Rodriguez, Robert V. Topp, Richard J. Fehring

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Aim: The aim of this project was to describe the psychometric properties of a recently developed instrument that measures Hispanic mother normative beliefs, intentions, past experience, and past behavior regarding the Discussion of Sex-Related Topics (DSRTs) with their adolescent daughters.

Background: The DSRTs between Hispanic mothers and their adolescent daughters is important because this interaction has been found to be a protective factor against the daughter’s risk for STDs and unintended pregnancy. Hispanic mother talk less with their daughters about sex-related topics (SRTs) than other ethnic groups. The Rodriguez Normative Belief Instrument (RNBI) has been established to measure …


The Impact Of Patient–Provider Communication And Language Spoken On Adequacy Of Depression Treatment For U.S. Women, Abiola O. Keller, Ronald Gangnon, Whitney P. Witt Jan 2014

The Impact Of Patient–Provider Communication And Language Spoken On Adequacy Of Depression Treatment For U.S. Women, Abiola O. Keller, Ronald Gangnon, Whitney P. Witt

College of Nursing Faculty Research and Publications

Many women with depression are untreated or undertreated for their condition. The quality of patient–provider communication may impact the receipt of depression treatment. We examine the relationship between patient–provider communication and receipt of adequate treatment for depression among women. The study sample consisted of women with depression who visited a provider in the previous 12 months in the 2002–2008 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (N = 3,179). Multivariate regression was used to examine the independent contribution of sociodemographic characteristics, health care factors, patient–provider communication, and respondent language on depression treatment status (none, some, adequate). We found that more than one-third of …


Neurobiological Mechanisms That Contribute To Stress-Related Cocaine Use, John R. Mantsch, Oliver Vranjkovic, Robert C. Twining, Paul J. Gasser, Jayme R. Mcreynolds, Jordan M. Blacktop Jan 2014

Neurobiological Mechanisms That Contribute To Stress-Related Cocaine Use, John R. Mantsch, Oliver Vranjkovic, Robert C. Twining, Paul J. Gasser, Jayme R. Mcreynolds, Jordan M. Blacktop

Biomedical Sciences Faculty Research and Publications

The ability of stressful life events to trigger drug use is particularly problematic for the management of cocaine addiction due to the unpredictable and often uncontrollable nature of stress. For this reason, understanding the neurobiological processes that contribute to stress-related drug use is important for the development of new and more effective treatment strategies aimed at minimizing the role of stress in the addiction cycle. In this review we discuss the neurocircuitry that has been implicated in stress-induced drug use with an emphasis on corticotropin releasing factor actions in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and an important pathway from the …