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1.
Pediatrics ; 140(1)2017 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28759391

ABSTRACT

Patients with severe cystic lung disease are considered to be at risk for cyst rupture during air travel because of the possibility of increase in cyst size and impaired equilibration of pressure between the cysts and other parts of the lung. This may have clinically devastating consequences for the patient but may also result in significant costs for emergency alteration of flight schedule. We report the use of a hypobaric chamber to simulate cabin pressure changes encountered on a commercial flight to assess the safety to fly of a child with severe cystic lung disease secondary to Langerhans cell histiocytosis. The test did not result in an air leak, and the child subsequently undertook air travel without mishap. This is the first reported use of a hypobaric chamber test in a child with severe cystic lung disease. This test has the potential to be used as a fitness to fly test in children at risk for air leak syndromes who are being considered for air travel.


Subject(s)
Aerospace Medicine/methods , Histiocytosis, Langerhans-Cell/complications , Lung Diseases/complications , Space Simulation/methods , Aircraft , Child , Cysts , Humans , Hypoxia , Lung Diseases/diagnosis , Male , Risk Factors , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Travel
2.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 16: 41, 2016 Apr 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27066892

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Health care institutions have patient question sets that can expand over time. For a multispecialty group, each specialty might have multiple question sets. As a result, question set governance can be challenging. Knowledge of the counts, variability and repetition of questions in a multispecialty practice can help institutions understand the challenges of question set proliferation. METHODS: We analyzed patient-facing question sets that were subject to institutional governance and those that were not. We examined question variability and number of repetitious questions for a simulated episode of care. In addition to examining general patient question sets, we used specific examples of tobacco questions, questions from two specialty areas, and questions to menopausal women. RESULTS: In our analysis, there were approximately 269 institutionally governed patient question sets with a mean of 74 questions per set accounting for an estimated 20,000 governed questions. Sampling from selected specialties revealed that 50 % of patient question sets were not institutionally governed. We found over 650 tobacco-related questions in use, many with only slight variations. A simulated use case for a menopausal woman revealed potentially over 200 repeated questions. CONCLUSIONS: A group practice with multiple specialties can have a large volume of patient questions that are not centrally developed, stored or governed. This results in a lack of standardization and coordination. Patients may be given multiple repeated questions throughout the course of their care, and providers lack standardized question sets to help construct valid patient phenotypes. Even with the implementation of a single electronic health record, medical practices may still have a health information management gap in the ability to create, store and share patient-generated health information that is meaningful to both patients and physicians.


Subject(s)
Group Practice , Information Storage and Retrieval , Orthopedics/statistics & numerical data , Surveys and Questionnaires , Urology/statistics & numerical data , Computer Simulation , Humans , Menopause , Orthopedics/methods , Tobacco Use , Urology/methods
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