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Dive into the research topics where Anthony McGuire is active.

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Featured researches published by Anthony McGuire.


American Journal of Critical Care | 2013

Depression Screening: Utility of the Patient Health Questionnaire in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome

Anthony McGuire; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Aurelia Macabasco-O'Connell; Ron D. Hays; Lynn V. Doering

BACKGROUND Depression screening in cardiac patients has been recommended by the American Heart Association, but the best approach remains unclear. OBJECTIVES To evaluate nurse-administered versions of the Patient Health Questionnaire for depression screening in patients hospitalized for acute coronary syndrome. METHODS Staff nurses in an urban cardiac care unit administered versions 2, 9, and 10 of the questionnaire to 100 patients with acute coronary syndrome. The Depression Interview and Structured Hamilton was administered by advanced practice nurses blinded to the results of the Patient Health Questionnaire. With the results of the Depression Interview and Structured Hamilton as a criterion, receiver operating characteristic analyses were done for each version of the Patient Health Questionnaire. The Delong method was used for pairwise comparisons. Cutoff scores balancing false-negatives and false-positives were determined by using the Youden Index. RESULTS Each version of the questionnaire had excellent area-under- the-curve statistics: 91.2%, 92.6%, and 93.4% for versions 2, 9, and 10, respectively. Differences among the 3 versions were not significant. Each version yielded higher symptom scores in depressed patients than in nondepressed patients: version 2 scores, 3.4 vs 0.6, P = .001; version 9 scores, 13 vs 3.4, P < .001; and version 10 scores, 14.5 vs 3.6, P < .001. CONCLUSIONS For depression screening in hospitalized patients with acute coronary syndrome, the Patient Health Questionnaire 2 is as accurate as longer versions when administered by nurses. Further study is needed to determine if screening with this tool changes clinical decision making or improves outcomes in these patients.


American Journal of Critical Care | 2014

Depressed or Not Depressed: Untangling Symptoms of Depression in Patients Hospitalized With Coronary Heart Disease

Anthony McGuire; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Ron D. Hays; A Macabasco-O'Connell; Lynn V. Doering

BACKGROUND Assessing depression in patients hospitalized with coronary heart disease is clinically challenging because depressive symptoms are often confounded by poor somatic health. OBJECTIVE To identify symptom clusters associated with clinical depression in patients hospitalized with coronary heart disease. METHOD Secondary analyses of 3 similar data sets for hospitalized patients with coronary heart disease who had diagnostic screening for depression (99 depressed, 224 not depressed) were done. Depressive symptoms were assessed by using the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale or the Beck Depression Inventory. Hierarchical cluster analysis was performed on 11 symptom variables: anhedonia, dysphoria, loss of appetite, sleep disturbance, fatigue, guilt, suicidal symptoms, hypochondriasis, loss of libido, psychomotor impairment, and nervous irritability. Associations between symptom clusters and presence or absence of clinical depression were estimated by using logistic regression. RESULTS Fatigue (69%) and sleep disturbance (55%) were the most prevalent symptoms. Guilt (25%) and suicidal symptoms (9%) were the least common. Three symptom clusters (cognitive/affective, somatic/affective, and somatic) were identified. Compared with patients without cognitive/affective symptoms, patients with the cognitive/affective symptom cluster (anhedonia, dysphoria, guilt, suicidal symptoms, nervous irritability) had an odds ratio of 1.41 (P<.001; 95% CI, 1.223-1.631) for clinical depression. CONCLUSION Clinicians should be alert for clinical depression in hospitalized patients with coronary heart disease who have the cognitive/affective symptom cluster.


European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing | 2016

Cognitive behavioral therapy for depression improves pain and perceived control in cardiac surgery patients

Lynn V. Doering; Anthony McGuire; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Belinda Chen; Rebecca Cross Bodán; L. Czer; Michael R. Irwin

Background: Depression after cardiac surgery (CS) is associated with increased pain and decreased sleep quality. While cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) aimed at depression is effective in relieving depressive symptoms after cardiac surgery, little is known about its ability to ameliorate other common postoperative problems that affect recovery and quality of life. Aims: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of CBT for depression on pain severity, pain interference, sleep, and perceived control in patients recovering from CS. Methods: Depressed patients recovering from CS were randomized to receive either eight weeks of CBT or usual care. At baseline and post-intervention, patients completed questionnaires for depressive symptoms, pain, sleep, and perceived control. Group comparisons were conducted using t-tests or chi square analysis. Repeated measures analysis was used to assess the effect of the intervention in changes over time. Results: The sample (n=53) included 16.9% women and had a mean age of 67.8±9.2 years. CBT for depression increased perceived control (p<0.001) and decreased pain interference (p=0.02) and pain severity (p=0.03). Group effects remained significant (p<0.05) for perceived control and pain interference and a trend was observed for pain severity (p<0.10) after controlling for variables that differed at baseline. There were no group differences in sleep disturbance over time. Conclusions: A depression-focused CBT intervention yields benefits in other common postoperative problems, specifically improved perceived control and decreased pain in depressed cardiac surgery patients.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2014

Persistent depressive symptoms and pain after cardiac surgery.

Lynn V. Doering; Belinda Chen; Anthony McGuire; Rebecca Cross Bodán; Michael R. Irwin

Objective Our objectives were to describe trajectories of depressive symptoms and pain at hospital discharge and 6 weeks later and to examine the relationship of persistent depressive symptoms to pain. Methods Before and 6 weeks after hospital discharge, 251 patients undergoing cardiac surgery (mean [SD] age = 67.3 [9.5] years; 73% male) completed the Beck Depression Inventory and the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Patients were categorized into two groups based on the presence or absence of persistent depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory score >10 at both times). Between-group differences in pain interference (BPI-INT) and pain severity (BPI-SEV) were evaluated using repeated-measures analysis of variance. Linear regressions were performed to determine if changes in depressive symptoms were related to BPI-INT and BPI-SEV, controlling for demographic and clinical data. Results Persistent (16.3%) or worsening depressive symptoms (15.3%) from hospital discharge to 6 weeks were observed; many experienced at least some persistent pain (BPI-INT 67.8%, BPI-SEV 47.8%). From discharge to 6 weeks, patients with persistent depressive symptoms sustained higher levels of BPI-INT (p < .001) and BPI-SEV (p < .003). In multivariate analysis, only changes in depressive symptoms, not clinical and demographic variables, were related to BPI-INT (p < .001) and BPI-SEV (p = .001). Conclusions Persistent depressive symptoms are independently associated with continued pain up to 6 weeks after hospital discharge. Successful treatment of ongoing pain should include screening for depressive symptoms and initiation of appropriate treatment. Trial Registraton Clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00522717.


Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing | 2015

Cognitive behavioral therapy in depressed cardiac surgery patients: role of ejection fraction.

Boyoung Hwang; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Anthony McGuire; Belinda Chen; Rebecca Cross-Bodán; Lynn V. Doering

Aims:The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship of ejection fraction (EF) and depressive symptoms in cardiac surgery patients assigned to nurse-guided cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) or usual care (UC). Methods:Depressive symptoms were assessed using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Seventy-seven patients (31% women; mean [SD] age, 63.6 [9.8] years) received 8 weeks of either CBT or UC. Using repeated-measures analysis of variance, changes in depressive symptoms over time were evaluated. Results:There was a significant interaction among time, treatment group, and EF status (p = 0.019). In the patients with preserved EF (≥40%), mean BDI scores in the UC group worsened by 1.9%, whereas those in the CBT group improved by 31.0%. In the patients with low EF (<40%), mean BDI scores worsened by 26.8% and improved by 75.3% in the UC and CBT groups, respectively. Conclusions:Nurse-guided CBT is effective in reducing depressive symptoms after cardiac surgery, particularly in patients with low EF.


American Journal of Critical Care | 2002

Recovering From Cardiac Surgery: What Patients Want You To Know

Lynn V. Doering; Anthony McGuire; Darlene Rourke


Circulation | 2014

Abstract 16389: Beyond Depression: Benefits of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Cardiac Surgery Patients

Lynn V. Doering; Belinda Chen; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Anthony McGuire; Rebecca Cross-Bodán; Michael R. Irwin


Archive | 2012

QUALITY OF LIFE MEASURES IN DEPRESSED ACUTE CORONARY SYNDROME PATIENTS

Anthony McGuire; Lynn V. Doering; Jo-Ann Eastwood


Circulation | 2012

Abstract 16731: Interaction between Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Ejection Fraction in Depressed Cardiac Surgery Patients

Boyoung Hwang; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Anthony McGuire; Rebecca Cross-Bodán; Belinda Chen; Lynn V. Doering


Circulation | 2011

Abstract 10048: Depression Screening by Nurses in Hospitalized Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients

Anthony McGuire; Jo-Ann Eastwood; Aurelia Macabasco-O'Connell; Ron D. Hays; Lynn V. Doering

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Belinda Chen

University of California

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Ron D. Hays

University of California

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Boyoung Hwang

Seoul National University

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