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1.
J Burn Care Res ; 2024 Apr 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38609182

Recovery from a severe burn injury requires early and aggressive therapy, which is often painful and distressing to the patient. Burn therapists who guide these interventions may be prone to experiencing secondary trauma and compassion fatigue through repeated exposure to difficult situations. At the same time, therapists may gain a sense of purpose and altruism from their work, fostering compassion satisfaction. Despite being well documented in other health professions, compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction have not been sufficiently explored among burn therapists. This study aimed to quantify and characterize burn therapists' compassion fatigue and satisfaction using the Professional Quality of Life scale and to answer the question of what job-related factors may impact these outcomes. A total of 143 burn therapists participated in this study. Results revealed compassion fatigue subsale scores of burnout and secondary traumatic stress in the low or moderate range and compassion satisfaction scores in the moderate or high ranges for all participants. This study presents new knowledge for the field of burn care in its quantification of professional quality of life in burn therapists. While burn therapists experienced moderate-to-high levels of compassion satisfaction in their work, burnout and stress also approached moderate levels. Years of practice was a significant predictor of compassion. Although the reasons for this are not clear, it may be related to increased competence or confidence in practice and may suggest a need for different support strategies for practitioners at each stage of their burn therapy career.

2.
J Burn Care Res ; 2024 Apr 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38665040

Exposure to patients who have experienced major traumatic events places burn therapists at risk of developing high levels of anxiety and stress, directly impacting their quality of life. Poor professional quality of life has been associated with negative physical and emotional characteristics in healthcare professionals and may subsequently influence patient safety and satisfaction, job retention, and productivity. The purpose of this study was to understand and describe the experiences of occupational and physical therapists who provide acute therapy to people who have sustained burn injuries. Semistructured interviews were completed with 10 participants (8 females and 7 physical therapists) for this qualitative descriptive study. Conventional content analysis was used to analyze the data collected from semistructured interviews. Six themes emerged after content analysis: (1) the importance of therapeutic relationships to patient successes and therapists' retention; (2) the autonomy and flexibility of burn therapists; (3) the impact of career longevity on compassion; (4) the uniqueness of burn team relationships and camaraderie; (5) the challenges of operating within the business of a healthcare system; and (6) the physical, mental, and emotional challenges to the burn therapists' resiliency. This research brings to light the physical, mental, and emotional challenges that impact burn therapists' resiliency, and which should be considered when creating programs to increase retention and professional quality of life in this professional population.

3.
J Burn Care Res ; 45(3): 608-613, 2024 05 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38375782

Occupational and physical therapists who routinely provide potentially painful and distressing rehabilitation to burn survivors are at risk for developing compassion fatigue. Burn therapists may also experience compassion satisfaction based on the successes their patients accomplish. The purpose of this review was to synthesize the literature related to compassion fatigue and satisfaction in therapists who work with burn survivors, explore previously reported predictors and mediators of (and responses to) these constructs, and identify gaps in the literature. Original, peer-reviewed papers published from journal inception to May 2023 were obtained from 5 electronic bibliographic databases: CINAHL, Embase, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Web of Science. Studies were eligible if they (1) reported compassion fatigue or its related concepts and (2) focused on occupational or physical therapists who work with burn survivors directly or as a member of a multidisciplinary burn treatment team. The initial search revealed 284 articles, 2 of which met inclusion criteria and are summarized in this scoping review. Neither article focused solely on burn therapists but examined the experiences of multidisciplinary burn team members working in single burn centers in North America. Both studies used a cross-sectional survey-based design to assess concepts related to compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction. This scoping review uncovered important gaps in the literature related to compassion fatigue or satisfaction in burn therapists. More research is needed to better understand the interplay between concepts as well as their relationship to burn therapists' outcomes.


Burns , Compassion Fatigue , Physical Therapists , Humans , Compassion Fatigue/psychology , Burns/psychology , Physical Therapists/psychology , Job Satisfaction , Burnout, Professional/psychology , Occupational Therapists/psychology , Empathy
4.
Am J Cardiol ; 212: 41-47, 2024 Feb 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38042265

Pediatric patients are often referred to cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) laboratories for assessment of exercise-related symptoms. For clinicians to understand results in the context of performance relative to peers, adequate fitness-based prediction equations must be available. However, reference equations for prediction of peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) in pediatrics are largely developed from field-based testing, and equations derived from CPET are primarily developed using adult data. Our objective was to develop a pediatric reference equation for VO2peak. Clinical CPET data from a validation cohort of 1,383 pediatric patients aged 6 to 18 years who achieved a peak respiratory exchange ratio ≥1.00 were analyzed to identify clinical and exercise testing factors that contributed to the prediction of VO2peak from tests performed using the Bruce protocol. The resultant prediction equation was applied to a cross-validation cohort of 1,367 pediatric patients. Exercise duration, gender, weight, and age contributed to the prediction of VO2peak, generating the following prediction equation: (R2 = 0.645, p <0.001, standard error of the estimate = 6.19 ml/kg/min): VO2peak (ml/kg/min) =16.411+ 3.423 (exercise duration [minutes]) - 5.145 (gender [0 = male, 1 = female]) - 0.121 (weight [kg]) + 0.179 (age [years]). This equation was stable across the age range included in the present study, with differences ≤0.5 ml/kg/min between mean measured and predicted VO2peak in all age groups. In conclusion, this study represents what we believe is the largest pediatric CPET-derived VO2peak prediction effort to date, and this VO2peak prediction equation provides clinicians who perform and interpret exercise tests in pediatric patients with a resource with which to better quantify fitness when CPET is not available.


Exercise Test , Exercise , Adult , Humans , Male , Female , Child , Exercise Test/methods , Respiratory Function Tests , Oxygen Consumption , Oxygen
5.
J Pediatr ; 264: 113770, 2024 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37802386

OBJECTIVE: To develop reference values for cardiorespiratory fitness, as quantified by peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) and treadmill time, in patients aged 6 through 18 years referred for cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET). STUDY DESIGN: We reviewed a clinical pediatric CPET database for fitness data in children aged 6-18 years with no underlying heart disease. CPET was obtained via the Bruce protocol utilizing objectively confirmed maximal effort via respiratory exchange ratio. Fitness data (VO2peak and treadmill test duration) were analyzed to determine age- and sex-specific reference values for this pediatric cohort. RESULTS: Data from 2025 pediatric CPETs (53.2% female) were included in the analyses. VO2peak increased with age in males, but not females. Treadmill test duration increased with age in both males and females. Fitness was generally higher in males when compared with females in the same age groups. CONCLUSIONS: Our study provides extensive reference values for both VO2peak and total treadmill test time via the Bruce protocol for a pediatric population without known cardiac disease. Furthermore, the inclusion of objectively confirmed maximal exercise effort increases confidence in these findings compared with prior studies in this area. Clinicians performing CPET in pediatric populations can utilize these reference values to characterize test results according to representative peer data.


Cardiorespiratory Fitness , Heart Diseases , Male , Humans , Female , Child , Reference Values , Exercise Test/methods , Exercise , Oxygen Consumption
6.
Pediatr Cardiol ; 2023 Feb 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36757429

Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) provides clinicians with information vital to the management of pediatric cardiology patients. CPET can also be used to measure cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) in these patients. CRF is a robust marker of overall health in children. However, a complete understanding of CRF in pediatric cardiology patients is limited by lack of large, standardized CPET databases. Our purpose was to develop a standardized CPET database, describe available data at our institution, and discuss challenges and opportunities associated with this project. CPETs performed from 1993 to present in an urban pediatric hospital were collected and compiled into a research database. Historical data included demographic and clinical variables and CPET outcomes, and additional variables were calculated and coded to facilitate analyses in these cohorts. Patient diagnoses were coded to facilitate sub-analyses of specific cohorts. Quality assurance protocols were established to ensure future database contributions and promote inter-institutional collaborations. This database includes 10,319 CPETs (56.1% male), predominantly using the Bruce Protocol. Patients ranging from ages 6 to 18 years comprise 86.8% of available CPETs. Diagnosis classification scheme includes patients with structurally normal hearts (n = 3,454), congenital heart disease (n = 3,614), electrophysiological abnormalities (n = 2,082), heart transplant or cardiomyopathy (n = 833), and other diagnoses (n = 336). Historically, clinicians were provided with suboptimal interpretive resources for CPET, often generalizing inferences from these resources to non-representative clinical populations. This database supports representative CRF comparisons and establishes a framework for future CRF-based registries in pediatric patients referred for CPET, ultimately improving clinical decision-making regarding fitness in these populations.

7.
J Health Care Chaplain ; : 1-14, 2022 Dec 15.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36520544

The aim of this study was to describe the range of spiritual care activities in support of clinical colleagues at a subset of U.S. hospitals. A descriptive cross-sectional design using a 76-item Zoom/telephone guided survey containing a subset of staff care questions was employed. Data were provided by directors/managers responsible for spiritual care services at the 2020-2021 U.S. News & World Report top hospitals. Results identified staff support as an important chaplaincy function at both organizational and spiritual care department levels. Staff chaplains at over half of the hospitals spend an estimated 10-30% of their time on staff care, with chaplains in five hospitals spending greater than 30%. The most frequently reported activities were religiously associated, such as blessings and rituals for hospital events. Additionally, chaplains actively support staff during critical events such as patient deaths and through organizational protocols such as code lavender and critical incident debriefings. Chaplain support for staff most commonly grew out of personal relationships or referrals from clinical managers. Future research opportunities in this area include systematic data collection for chaplains' specific staff support activities as well as efforts to investigate the impact of those activities on patient experience.

8.
J Health Care Chaplain ; : 1-18, 2022 Sep 14.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36102782

The functions of hospital chaplains and the corresponding staffing of spiritual care departments remain persistent and parallel questions within the profession. No consensus exists on services provided by spiritual care departments nor the staffing patterns to meet those expectations. This study describes the key activities and staffing at the 20 U.S. News and World Report Best Hospitals 2020-2021 as well as the connections between services, staffing, and select hospital characteristics such as average daily census. Information about each hospital's chaplaincy department was gathered via a Zoom/telephone assisted survey with its spiritual care manager. Findings reveal that while spiritual care departments are structurally integrated into their organizations and chaplains respond consistently to requests for care, involvement in established organizational protocols varies. Study findings support the notion that staffing levels are a function of chaplain integration into an organization and the activities organizations expect chaplains to fulfill.

9.
Exp Brain Res ; 238(12): 2931-2945, 2020 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33068173

Postural instability is a major disabling feature in Parkinson's disease (PD). We quantified the organization of leg and trunk muscles into synergies stabilizing the center of pressure (COP) coordinate within the uncontrolled manifold hypothesis in levodopa-naïve patients with PD and age-matched control subjects. The main hypothesis was that changes in the synergic control of posture are present early in the PD process even before levodopa exposure. Eleven levodopa-naïve patients with PD and 11 healthy controls performed whole-body cyclical voluntary sway tasks and a self-initiated load-release task during standing on a force plate. Surface electromyographic activity in 13 muscles on the right side of the body was analyzed to identify muscle groups with parallel scaling of activation levels (M-modes). Data were collected both before ("off-drug") and approximately 60 min after the first dose of 25/100 carbidopa/levodopa ("on-drug"). COP-stabilizing synergies were quantified for the load-release task. Levodopa-naïve patients with PD showed no COP-stabilizing synergy "off-drug", whereas controls showed posture-stabilizing multi-M-mode synergy. "On-drug", patients with PD demonstrated a significant increase in the synergy index. There were no significant drug effects on the M-mode composition, anticipatory postural adjustments, indices of motor equivalence, or indices of COP variability. The results suggest that levodopa-naïve patients with PD already show impaired posture-stabilizing multi-muscle synergies that may be used as promising behavioral biomarkers for emerging postural disorders in PD. Moreover, levodopa modified synergy metrics differently in these levodopa-naïve patients compared to a previous study of patients on chronic antiparkinsonian medications (Falaki et al. in J Electromyogr Kinesiol 33:20-26, 2017a), suggesting different neurocircuitry involvement.


Levodopa , Parkinson Disease , Humans , Muscle, Skeletal , Parkinson Disease/drug therapy , Postural Balance , Posture
10.
J Parkinsons Dis ; 10(3): 1075-1085, 2020.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32538866

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: To synchronize data collection, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) recommended Common Data Elements (CDEs) for use in Parkinson's disease (PD) research. This study delineated the progression patterns of these CDEs in a cohort of PD patients. METHODS: One hundred-twenty-five PD patients participated in the PD Biomarker Program (PDBP) at Penn State. CDEs, including MDS-Unified PD Rating Scale (UPDRS)-total, questionnaire-based non-motor (-I) and motor (-II), and rater-based motor (-III) subscales; Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA); Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS); University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT); and PD Questionnaire (PDQ-39) were obtained at baseline and three annual follow-ups. Annual change was delineated for PD or subgroups [early = PDE, disease duration (DD) <1 y; middle = PDM, DD = 1-5 y; and late = PDL, DD > 5 y] using mixed effects model analyses. RESULTS: UPDRS-total, -II, and PDQ-39 scores increased significantly, and UPSIT decreased, whereas UPDRS-I, -III, MoCA, and HDRS did not change, over 36 months in the overall PD cohort. In the PDE subgroup, UPDRS-II increased and UPSIT decreased significantly, whereas MoCA and UPSIT decreased significantly in the PDM subgroup. In the PDL subgroup, UPDRS-II and PDQ-39 increased significantly. Other metrics within each individual subgroup did not change. Sensitivity analyses using subjects with complete data confirmed these findings. CONCLUSION: Among CDEs, UPDRS-total, -II, PDQ-39, and UPSIT all are sensitive metrics to track PD progression. Subgroup analyses revealed that these CDEs have distinct stage-dependent sensitivities, with UPSIT for DD < 5 y, PDQ-39 for DD > 5 y, UPDRS-II for early (DD < 1) or later stages (DD > 5).


Common Data Elements , Disease Progression , Parkinson Disease/diagnosis , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (U.S.) , Severity of Illness Index , United States
11.
Exp Brain Res ; 238(1): 229-245, 2020 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31838566

We explored the origin of the impaired control of action stability in Parkinson's disease (PD) by testing levodopa-naïve PD patients to disambiguate effects of PD from possible effects of long-term exposure to levodopa. Thirteen levodopa-naïve PD patients and 13 controls performed single- and multi-finger force production tasks, including producing a self-paced quick force pulse into a target. A subgroup of patients (n = 10) was re-tested about 1 h after the first dose of levodopa. Compared to controls, PD patients showed lower maximal forces and synergy indices stabilizing total force (reflecting the higher inter-trial variance component affecting total force). In addition, PD patients showed a trend toward shorter anticipatory synergy adjustments (a drop in the synergy index in preparation to a quick action) and larger non-motor equivalent finger force deviations. Lower maximal force, higher unintentional force production (enslaving) and higher inter-trial variance indices occurred in PD patients after one dosage of levodopa. We conclude that impairment in synergies is present in levodopa-naïve patients, mainly in indices reflecting stability (synergy index), but not agility (anticipatory synergy adjustments). A single dose of levodopa, however, did not improve synergy indices, as it did in PD patients on chronic anti-PD medication, suggesting a different mechanism of action. The results suggest that indices of force-stabilizing synergies may be used as an early behavioral sign of PD, although it may not be sensitive to acute drug effects in drug-naïve patients.


Antiparkinson Agents/pharmacology , Fingers/physiopathology , Levodopa/pharmacology , Motor Activity/physiology , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Psychomotor Performance/physiology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Motor Activity/drug effects , Parkinson Disease/drug therapy , Psychomotor Performance/drug effects
12.
J Am Med Dir Assoc ; 14(11): 787-90, 2013 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24094899

The high risk for recidivism among sex offenders who need long term care (LTC) raises serious issues when they are cared for alongside frail, vulnerable adults. LTC providers must balance offenders' right to access care with other residents' right to be free from abuse and must assess and manage the risks associated with admitting offenders. This article identifies sources of legal liability that derive from sex offender management and discusses the need for the LTC community to develop reasonable, balanced guidance on how best to mitigate the risks associated with sex offenders, protect the rights of all residents, and reduce provider liabilities.


Criminals , Liability, Legal , Long-Term Care/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Safety/legislation & jurisprudence , Sex Offenses , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Risk , Sex Offenses/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Responsibility
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