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ResearchersTitlePublicationAbstract
Madamala K, Campbell CR, Hsu EB, Hsieh YH, James J.Characteristics of physician relocation following Hurricane Katrina.Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2007 Jul;1(1):21-6.Introduction
On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina made landfall along the US Gulf Coast, resulting in the evacuation of >1.5 million people, including nearly 6000 physicians. This article examines the relocation patterns of physicians following the storm, determines the impact that the disaster had on their lives and practices, and identifies lessons learned.

Methods
An Internet-based survey was conducted among licensed physicians reporting addresses within Federal Emergency Management Agency-designated disaster zones in Louisiana and Mississippi. Descriptive data analysis was used to describe respondent characteristics. Multivariate logistic regression was performed to identify the factors associated with physician nonreturn to original practice. For those remaining relocated out of state, bivariate analysis with chi or Fisher exact test was used to determine factors associated with plans to return to original practice.

Results
A total of 312 eligible responses were collected. Among disaster zone respondents, 85.6% lived in Louisiana and 14.4% resided in Mississippi before the hurricane struck. By spring 2006, 75.6% (n = 236) of the respondents had returned to their original homes, whereas 24.4% (n = 76) remained displaced. Factors associated with nonreturn to original employment included family or general medicine practice (OR 0.42, 95% CI 0.17-1.04; P = .059) and severe or complete damage to the workplace (OR 0.24, 95% CI 0.13-0.42; P < .001).

Conclusions
A sizeable proportion of physicians remain displaced after Hurricane Katrina, along with a lasting decrease in the number of physicians serving in the areas affected by the disaster. Programs designed to address identified physician needs in the aftermath of the storm may give confidence to displaced physicians to return.
Ahn J, McCombs JS, Jung C, Croudace TJ, McDonnell D, Ascher-Svanum H, Edgell ET, Shi L.Classifying patients by antipsychotic adherence patterns using latent class analysis: characteristics of nonadherent groups in the California Medicaid Program.Value Health Jan/Feb 2008;11(1):48-56.Objectives
This study identifies latent classes defined by varying degrees of adherence to antipsychotic drug therapy and examines the sociodemographic, clinical, and resource utilization correlates associated with membership in each adherence class.

Data and methods
Patient-level data were drawn from the 1994 to 2003, 100%-sample California Medicaid fee-for-service paid claims data for patients with schizophrenia (N = 36,195). The date of the first antipsychotic medication filled after January 1, 1999 was then used to divide each patient's data into a 6-month preindex (baseline) and a 12-month postindex (follow-up) period. Three categorical adherence indicators-a dichotomous variable of medication possession ratio greater than 0.80, the number of antipsychotic treatment attempts, and time to a change in antipsychotic medications-and two covariates-a categorical variable of duration of therapy and a dichotomous variable of polypharmacy-were used in the latent class model.

Results
A three-class model returned the lowest values for all the information criteria and was therefore interpreted as follows: The prevalence rates of the latent classes were 1) 14.8% for the adherent; 2) 20.7% for the partially adherent; and 3) 64.5% for the nonadherent. Membership in the nonadherent class was associated with minority ethnicity, being female, eligibility due to welfare status, prior hospitalizations, and a higher number of prior treatment episodes. Membership in the partially adherent class was associated with higher use of outpatient care, higher rates of depot antipsychotic drug use, and polypharmacy.

Conclusion
Multiple indicators of adherence to antipsychotic medication can be used to define classes of adherence that are associated with patient characteristics and distinct patterns of prior health-care use.

Shi LL, Zurakowski D, Jones DG, Koris MJ, Thornhill TS.Semiconstrained primary and revision total elbow anthroplasty with use of the Coonrad-Morrey prosthesis.JBJS Jul 2007 ; 89(7): 1467-75

Background
Semiconstrained total elbow prostheses are used routinely by many surgeons to treat a variety of severe elbow disorders. Our objective was to review the results of primary and revision total elbow arthroplasty with use of the Coonrad-Morrey prosthesis. The selected use of this semiconstrained implant in patients with instability and poor bone stock was hypothesized to provide inferior results compared with those in the published reports.

Methods
The results of sixty-seven semiconstrained total elbow arthroplasties that were performed in fifty-six patients 
between 1990 and 2003 were evaluated. Thirty-seven elbows had a primary arthroplasty and were followed for a mean of eighty-six months, and thirty  elbows had a revision arthroplasty and were followed for a mean of sixty-eight months. Mayo elbow performance scores and radiographic analyses were used to assess the clinical results.

Results
In the primary arthroplasty group, the average flexion improved from 116 degrees to 135 degrees; average extension, from -40 degrees to -33 degrees; average pronation, from 60 degrees to 81 degrees; and average supination, from 60 degrees to 69 degrees. The improvements in flexion and pronation were significant (p<0.001 for both). Preoperatively, twenty-five (74%) of thirty-four elbows with data available had moderate or severe pain, whereas only four (11%) had pain postoperatively. The average postoperative Mayo score (and standard deviation) was 84+/-16. Eleven of the thirty-seven primary replacements failed, and the five-year survival rate was 72%. In the revision arthroplasty group, average flexion improved from 124 degrees to 131 degrees; average extension, from -32 degrees to -22 degrees; average pronation, from 66 degrees to 75 degrees; and average supination, from 64 degrees to 76 degrees; the improvement in supination was significant (p<0.05). Preoperatively, eighteen (64%) of the twenty-eight elbows with data available had moderate or severe pain, while only five (17%) had pain postoperatively. The average postoperative Mayo score was 85+/-16. Eleven of the thirty revision replacements failed, and the five-year survival rate was 64%.

Conclusions
A Coonrad-Morrey semiconstrained total elbow arthroplasty provides excellent pain relief and good functional return in patients with severe destructive arthropathy. The higher prevalence of failure in this cohort compared with series reported elsewhere is likely due to adverse patient selection as this implant was reserved for more complex arthroplasties with severe bone loss and ligamentous laxity.

Shi L, Ascher-Svanum H, Zhu B, Faries D, Montgomery W, Marder SRCharacteristics and use patterns of patients taking first-generation depot antipsychotics or oral antipsychotics for schizophrenia.Psychiatr Serv. Apr 2007. 58(4):482-8Objective
Investigators compared patient characteristics and antipsychotic use patterns between individuals with schizophrenia treated in usual care with first-generation depot antipsychotics and those treated with oral antipsychotics (first- or second-generation or both).

Methods
Analyses used data from the U.S. Schizophrenia Care and Assessment Program, a large, prospective study of treatment for schizophrenia conducted July 1997 through September 2003. Participants were assessed at  enrollment and every six months thereafter with patient self-report, validated psychiatric measures, and systematic extraction of medical records. Individuals treated with a first-generation depot antipsychotic at any time during the three-year study (N=569) were compared with those  treated with only oral antipsychotics (N=1,617) on characteristics at enrollment and medication use pattern during the year after enrollment.

Results
Compared with patients receiving only oral antipsychotics, participants treated with depot medications (haloperidol or fluphenazine decanoate) were more likely to be African American (p<.001); less likely to be a veteran (p=.005); had more psychiatric hospitalizations in the year before enrollment (p<.001); and were more likely to have been arrested (p<.001), to use alcohol and illicit substances (p<.001), and to show higher psychopathology, particularly psychotic symptoms and disorganized thinking (p<.01 for both). In the year after enrollment, participants treated with depot medications had a high mean medication possession ratio (91%), and most of the medication regimens (68%) were augmented with oral antipsychotics for prolonged durations (median of 144 days).

Conclusions
Patients with schizophrenia treated with first-generation depot antipsychotics differed from those treated with only oral antipsychotics. Findings suggest that first-generation depot antipsychotics might address some unmet needs of a unique subgroup of patients with schizophrenia.
Kahn MJ, Markert RJ, Lopez FA, Specter S, Randall H, Krane NKIs medical student choice of a primary care residency influenced by debt?MedGenMed. 2006. 8(4):18Context
The average medical student accumulates more than $120,000 in debt upon graduation.

Objective
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether medical student debt affects residency choice.

Design
This was a cross-sectional research study.

Setting
This study was a 5-year analysis of student debt and residency choice for 2001-2005 graduates from 3 US medical schools (n = 2022): Tulane University School of Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana; University of South Florida College of Medicine, Tampa, Florida; and Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans.

Main Outcome Measures
Individual student data were collected from offices of financial aid for debt prior to and during medical school to determine total debt at graduation. Total debt (adjusted for inflation) was compared with residency match results coded according to specialties listed in the Graduate Medical Education Directory 2005-2006. Graduates were coded into either primary care (PC) or nonprimary care (NPC) specialty categories. Logistic regression for the choice of a PC residency was used with 4 predictors: (1) total debt, (2) medical school, (3) year of graduation, and (4) number of years of training required for a residency program.

Results
Mean total debt for the study population was $89,807 (SD = 54,925). Graduates entering PC did not have significantly less total debt than those entering NPC ($87,206 vs $91,430; P = .09). Further, total debt was not a predictor of a PC residency after adjusting for medical school, year of graduation, and years of training in residency (P = .64).

Conclusion
There is no association between PC residency choice and debt. We conclude that medical students make residency decisions on the basis of a complex set of factors.

Flick LH, Cook CA, Homan SM, McSweeney M, Campbell C, Parnell L

Persistent tobacco use during pregnancy and the likelihood of psychiatric disorders

Am J of PH. Mental Health for Individuals and Communities. Oct 2006. 96(10):1799-1807

Objectives
We examined the association between psychiatric disorders and tobacco use during pregnancy.

Methods

Data were derived from a population-based cohort of 744 African American and white low-income women living in urban and rural areas. The Diagnostic Interview Schedule was used to assess women for twenty different psychiatric disorders.

Results

In comparison with nonusers, persistent tobacco users (women who had used tobacco after confirmation of their pregnancy) and nonpersistent users (women who had used tobacco but not after pregnancy confirmation) were 2.5 and 2 times as likely to have a psychiatric disorder. Twenty-five percent of persistent users had at least one of the following diagnoses: generalized anxiety disorder, bipolar I disorder, oppositional disorder, drug abuse or dependence, and attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder.

Conclusions

In this cohort study, five diagnoses were more prevalent among persistent tobacco users than among nonusers, suggesting that several psychiatric disorders contribute to difficulty discontinuing tobacco use during pregnancy. Smoking cessation efforts focusing on pregnant women may need to address co-occurring psychiatric disorders if they are to be successful.

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