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1.
JMIR Pediatr Parent ; 4(2): e18830, 2021 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34128809

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Abusive head trauma (AHT) is a serious health problem affecting more than 3000 infants annually in the United States. The American Academy of Pediatrics and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommend that health care providers counsel new parents about the dangers of AHT. Previous studies demonstrate that parental education is effective at reducing AHT events. South Carolina law requires hospitals to offer all new parents with the opportunity to watch an educational video about AHT. This mandate is addressed in different ways at the several delivery centers within a large South Carolina health care system with a range of viewing methods utilized, from DVD players to mobile workstations to personal devices. Frequent technical barriers and workflow inefficiencies resulted in low rates of compliance with this mandate at several campuses. To improve compliance of parent viewing of this educational video, the health care system standardized video viewing protocol across all campuses by implementing the use of iPads for parental education. Existing literature suggests that patient education can be improved in the hospital setting by utilizing tablet computers, but our literature search identified a gap in research around the education of parents and caregivers during hospitalization for childbirth. We used the implementation of an iPad-based parental education delivery protocol to evaluate whether tablet computers can improve compliance with delivering new parent education in the hospital setting. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to evaluate whether the standardized use of iPads to deliver education in the mother-baby unit resulted in improved rates of parents' acceptance of the opportunity to view an educational video about AHT. METHODS: We interviewed physicians and nurses to determine what previous protocols were in place to educate new parents before a standardized iPad-based protocol was implemented across 6 campuses of a large South Carolina health care system. A retrospective study was conducted by review of 5231 records from across the 6 campuses to determine the pre- and postintervention compliance rates of viewing the AHT educational video by parents in the mother-baby unit. RESULTS: Compliance increased overall (P<.001) across sites from an average of 41.93% (SD 46.24) to 99.73% (SD 0.26) (φ=0.510). As much as 4 of 6 locations saw a significant increase in compliance rates after introducing the iPad intervention (P<.001). The remaining 2 locations that showed no significant difference (P>.05) had very high rates of preintervention compliance. CONCLUSIONS: Following the implementation of a standardized iPad-based protocol to deliver new parent education, there was a significant improvement in the percentage of new parents who viewed an educational video about AHT in the mother-baby unit. Based on these results, other health care providers should consider iPads to be a feasible and effective method for delivering hospital-based education to families in the mother-baby unit.

2.
Rev Urol ; 21(1): 49-52, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31239833

ABSTRACT

Orchialgia is a common urologic complaint with a myriad of etiologies. Workup for orchialgia requires a broad differential diagnosis and a thorough understanding of relevant anatomy. We report the case of a 43-year-old man who presented to a urologist with right testicular pain. Following a negative workup, the patient received a spermatic cord block for therapeutic and diagnostic purposes. Two months after the block, the patient returned with new complaints of ipsilateral inner thigh paresthesias, suggesting a pathologic process proximal to the genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve. A subsequent MRI of the lumbosacral spine revealed a paraspinal mass involving nerve roots at L1-2. We highlight the utility of the spermatic cord block and its role in the diagnosis of a paraspinal tumor as an uncommon cause of orchialgia.

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