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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
How Clinicians Feel About Working With Spouses Of The Chronically Ill, Douglas Ingram
How Clinicians Feel About Working With Spouses Of The Chronically Ill, Douglas Ingram
NYMC Faculty Publications
Clinicians who provide psychotherapy to spouses or partners of the chronically ill were solicited through listserves of psychodynamic and other organizations. The current report excluded those therapists working with spouses of dementia patients. Interviews were conducted with clinicians who responded. The interviews highlight the challenges commonly encountered by psychotherapeutic work with this cohort of therapy patients. A comparison is drawn that shows both overlap and distinctions between the experiences of those therapists engaging with spouses of chronically ill patients without a dementing process and those working with spouses of chronically ill patients who do suffer from a dementing process.
Change In Overactive Bladder Symptoms After Surgery For Stress Urinary Incontinence In Women, Halina Zyczynski, Michael E Albo, Howard B Goldman, Clifford Y Wai, Larry T Sirls, Linda Brubaker, Peggy Norton, R E Varner, Maude Carmel, Hae-Young Kim
Change In Overactive Bladder Symptoms After Surgery For Stress Urinary Incontinence In Women, Halina Zyczynski, Michael E Albo, Howard B Goldman, Clifford Y Wai, Larry T Sirls, Linda Brubaker, Peggy Norton, R E Varner, Maude Carmel, Hae-Young Kim
NYMC Faculty Publications
OBJECTIVE: To assess change in overactive bladder (OAB) symptoms up to 5 years after surgery and to identify associated predictors of change from baseline.
METHODS: This is a secondary analysis of data from three multicenter urinary incontinence (UI) surgical trials of women with stress-predominant mixed UI assigned to Burch colposuspension, autologous fascial sling, or retropubic or transobturator midurethral slings. The primary outcome was improvement of 70% or greater from baseline in symptoms measured by the Urinary Distress Inventory-Irritative subscale. Surgical groups were compared within respective trials. Generalized linear models were fit using 1-year and up to 5-year data.
RESULTS: Significant …
Missing Data Frequency And Correlates In Two Randomized Surgical Trials For Urinary Incontinence In Women, Linda Brubaker, Heather J Litman, Hae-Young Kim, Philippe Zimmern, Keisha Dyer, John W Kusek, Holly E Richter, Anne Stoddard
Missing Data Frequency And Correlates In Two Randomized Surgical Trials For Urinary Incontinence In Women, Linda Brubaker, Heather J Litman, Hae-Young Kim, Philippe Zimmern, Keisha Dyer, John W Kusek, Holly E Richter, Anne Stoddard
NYMC Faculty Publications
INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: Missing data is frequently observed in clinical trials; high rates of missing data may jeopardize trial outcome validity.
PURPOSE: We determined the rates of missing data over time, by type of data collected and compared demographic and clinical factors associated with missing data among women who participated in two large randomized clinical trials of surgery for stress urinary incontinence, the Stress Incontinence Surgical Treatment Efficacy Trial (SISTEr) and the Trial of Midurethral Sling (TOMUS).
METHODS: The proportions of subjects who attended and missed each follow-up visit were calculated. The chi-squared test, Fisher's exact test and t test …
The Minimum Important Difference For The International Consultation On Incontinence Questionnaire-Urinary Incontinence Short Form In Women With Stress Urinary Incontinence, Larry Sirls, Sharon Tennstedt, Linda Brubaker, Hae-Young Kim, Ingrid Nygaard, David Rahn, Jonathan Shepherd, Holly Richter
The Minimum Important Difference For The International Consultation On Incontinence Questionnaire-Urinary Incontinence Short Form In Women With Stress Urinary Incontinence, Larry Sirls, Sharon Tennstedt, Linda Brubaker, Hae-Young Kim, Ingrid Nygaard, David Rahn, Jonathan Shepherd, Holly Richter
NYMC Faculty Publications
INTRODUCTION: Minimum important difference (MID) estimates the minimum degree of change in an instrument's score that correlates with a patient's subjective sense of improvement. We aimed to determine the MID for the International Consultation on Incontinence Questionnaire-Urinary Incontinence Short Form (ICIQ-UI SF) using both anchor based and distribution based methods derived using data from the Trial of Midurethral Slings (TOMUS).
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Instruments for the anchor-based analyses included the urogenital distress inventory (UDI), incontinence impact questionnaire (IIQ), patient global impression of improvement (PGI-I), incontinence episodes (IE) on 7-day bladder diary, and satisfaction with surgical results. After confirming moderate correlation …