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1.
Contemp Clin Trials ; 73: 98-110, 2018 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30218818

ABSTRACT

Care for patients transitioning from chronic kidney disease to kidney failure often falls short of meeting patients' needs. The PREPARE NOW study is a cluster randomized controlled trial studying the effectiveness of a pragmatic health system intervention, 'Patient Centered Kidney Transition Care,' a multi-component health system intervention designed to improve patients' preparation for kidney failure treatment. Patient-Centered Kidney Transition Care provides a suite of new electronic health information tools (including a disease registry and risk prediction tools) to help providers recognize patients in need of Kidney Transitions Care and focus their attention on patients' values and treatment preferences. Patient-Centered Kidney Transition Care also adds a 'Kidney Transitions Specialist' to the nephrology health care team to facilitate patients' self-management empowerment, shared-decision making, psychosocial support, care navigation, and health care team communication. The PREPARE NOW study is conducted among eight [8] outpatient nephrology clinics at Geisinger, a large integrated health system in rural Pennsylvania. Four randomly selected nephrology clinics employ the Patient Centered Kidney Transitions Care intervention while four clinics employ usual nephrology care. To assess intervention effectiveness, patient reported, biomedical, and health system outcomes are collected annually over a period of 36 months via telephone questionnaires and electronic health records. The PREPARE NOW Study may provide needed evidence on the effectiveness of patient-centered health system interventions to improve nephrology patients' experiences, capabilities, and clinical outcomes, and it will guide the implementation of similar interventions elsewhere. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02722382.


Subject(s)
Kidney Failure, Chronic/therapy , Patient Transfer , Patient-Centered Care , Renal Insufficiency, Chronic/therapy , Decision Making , Delivery of Health Care , Disease Progression , Nephrology , Patient Care Team , Patient Navigation , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Registries , Self-Management , Social Support
2.
Focus ; 11(12): 1-5, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12206109
3.
J Anim Sci ; 70(1): 263-72, 1992 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1582913

ABSTRACT

The proportion of transferable beef embryos obtained after superovulation, follicle aspiration, and in vitro maturation and fertilization has been small. To seek possible explanations, cows on different planes of nutrition were treated with exogenous gonadotropin and oocytes were isolated from their ovaries. The record for each oocyte included characteristics of the follicle, ovary, and cow from which it was obtained and the response to in vitro maturation, fertilization, and development. The sample was used to obtain estimates of the relationships among the variables. The logistic function with the probability of normal development as the dependent variable was the basic equation of the statistical model. When an explanatory variable was itself a result of the biological system, an equation explaining variation therein was added to the model. Had equations representing endogenous regressors not been added to the model a simple, single equation would have represented oocyte development response; given an oocyte at aspiration only one variable, cumulus quantity, was found to condition the probability of normal development directly. However, the complete model included four additional equations: 1) the probability that an oocyte was recovered at aspiration was conditional on the plane of nutritional treatment and progesterone concentration in follicular fluid; 2) cumulus quantity was conditional on the presence on a corpus luteum, follicle size, and progesterone concentration; 3) progesterone concentration was dependent on plane of nutrition; and 4) corpus luteum was conditional on plane of nutrition. The estimated model provided some insight into the complexity of oocyte development response and the role nutrition may play.


Subject(s)
Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Cattle/physiology , Oocytes/growth & development , Ovary/physiology , Superovulation/physiology , Animals , Corpus Luteum/anatomy & histology , Corpus Luteum/physiology , Female , Follicular Fluid/chemistry , Maternal Age , Models, Statistical , Nutritional Status , Ovarian Follicle/anatomy & histology , Ovary/anatomy & histology , Parity , Probability , Progesterone/analysis
4.
J Anim Sci ; 56(1): 30-9, 1983 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6681811

ABSTRACT

Age and weight at puberty in beef heifers were hypothesized to be jointly dependent random variables with the joint distribution conditional upon values of exogenous variables such as breed, date of birth and postweaning rate of gain. A statistical model was specified that tested the joint dependency hypothesis and measured the impact of variation in the explanatory variables on puberty. Model parameters were estimated by two-stage least-squares procedures from data on 556 beef heifers: 190 raised at the Northern Agricultural Research Center (NARC), Havre, Montana and 366 raised at the Livestock and Range Research Station (LARRS), Miles City, Montana. Results did not support the hypothesis that age and weight at puberty were jointly dependent; weight at puberty did depend upon age at puberty, but age at puberty did not depend upon weight at puberty when postweaning level of nutrition was known. Thus, the appropriate probability distribution was a conditional univariate probability distribution on age. Results were consistent with past research in that breed and breed-cross differences existed, and heifers heavier at weaning and fed higher levels of postweaning nutrition reached puberty at an earlier age and heavier weight.


Subject(s)
Cattle/physiology , Sexual Maturation , Age Factors , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Body Weight , Cattle/genetics , Estrus , Female , Models, Biological , Pregnancy , Weaning
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