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Dive into the research topics where Barbara L. McFarlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara L. McFarlin.


Journal of Nurse-midwifery | 1999

A national survey of herbal preparation use by nurse-midwives for labor stimulation. Review of the literature and recommendations for practice.

Barbara L. McFarlin; Mary H. Gibson; Jann O'Rear; Patsy J. Harman

To document the use of herbal preparations for cervical ripening, induction, and augmentation of labor by certified nurse-midwives (CNMs) and nurse-midwifery education programs, a national survey of 500 members of the American College of Nurse-Midwives was conducted. Forty eight nurse-midwifery education programs were also surveyed to determine whether they were formally or informally educating students in the use of herbal preparations for cervical ripening, induction, or augmentation of labor. The results of this study, a review of the literature, professional issues, and recommendations for clinical practice are presented in this article. Of 500 questionnaires mailed to ACNM members, 90 were returned from CNMs who used herbal preparations to stimulate labor and 82 were returned from CNMs who did not use herbal preparations to stimulate labor. Three questionnaires were excluded due to incomplete data or blank questionnaires.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1994

Epidemic syphilis: Maternal factors associated with congenital infection

Barbara L. McFarlin; Sidney F. Bottoms; Brett S. Dock

Abstract OBJECTIVE: Little is known about which cases of maternal syphilis will affect the newborn. Because of the current epidemic of syphilis in pregnancy in our city, we sought to identify risk factors during pregnancy associated with congenital infection. STUDY DESIGN: We reviewed 253 cases of maternal syphilis prospectively identified over a 1-year period. On the basis of neonatal diagnosis, these data were divided into two groups, those without evidence of presumptive congenital syphilis and those with evidence of presumptive congenital syphilis. Presumptive congenital syphilis was defined according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention surveillance case definition. Cases with bloody spinal taps and cases of suspected congenital syphilis that did not meet these criteria were excluded. Venereal Disease Research Laboratory titers are given as the inverse of the geometric mean. RESULTS: Venereal Disease Research Laboratory titer at time of diagnosis and unknown duration of disease were risk factors for congenital syphilis. There was a significantly decreased rate of congenital syphilis with single-dose therapy if disease length was p CONCLUSION: Our study suggests an alarming rate of failure of current therapy to prevent congenital syphilis. Venereal Disease Research Laboratory titer at time of diagnosis and unknown duration of disease are risk factors for congenital syphilis. The high rate of presumptive congenital syphilis in the unknown duration group indicates that identification before or earlier in pregnancy will be necessary to prevent devastating consequences for the neonate. (AM J OBSTET GYNECOL 1994;170:535-40.)


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

In vivo ultrasonic attenuation slope estimates for detecting cervical ripening in rats: Preliminary results

Timothy A. Bigelow; Barbara L. McFarlin; William D. O'Brien; Michael L. Oelze

To effectively postpone preterm birth, cervical ripening needs to be detected and delayed. As the cervix ripens, the spacing between the collagen fibers increases and fills with water, hyaluronan, decorin, and enzymes suggesting that the ultrasonic attenuation of the cervix should decrease. The decrease in ultrasonic attenuation may be detectable, leading to an effective means of detecting cervical ripening. Herein, the traditional attenuation slope-estimation algorithm based on measuring the downshift in center frequency of the ultrasonic backscattered signal with propagation depth was modified and applied to the cervix of rats. The modified algorithm was verified using computer simulations and an ex vivo tissue sample before being evaluated in in vivo animal studies. Spherically-focused f/3 transducers with 33-MHz center frequencies and with 9-mm focal lengths were used in both the simulations and experiments. The accuracy was better than 15% in the simulations, and the attenuation slope of the cervix in the ex vivo experiment was 2.6+/-0.6 dB/cm-MHz, which is comparable to 2.5+/-0.4 dB/cm-MHz measured using a through-transmission insertion loss technique. For the in vivo experiments, a statistically significant effect of ultrasonic attenuation with gestational age was not observed. The large variances in the in vivo results were most likely due to the natural variation in attenuation for biological tissue between animals.


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2011

Racial Discrimination and the Black-White Gap in Adverse Birth Outcomes: A Review

Carmen Giurgescu; Barbara L. McFarlin; Jeneen Lomax; Cindy Craddock; Amy Albrecht

INTRODUCTION The purpose of this integrative review was to evaluate what is known about the relationship between racial discrimination and adverse birth outcomes. METHODS A search of the Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO was conducted. The keywords used were: preterm birth, premature birth, preterm delivery, preterm labor, low birth weight, very low birth weight, racism, racial discrimination, and prejudice. Ten research studies were reviewed. All of the studies included African American women in their samples, were conducted in the United States, and were written in English. We did not limit the year of publication for the studies. Data were extracted based on the birth outcomes of preterm birth, low birth weight, or very low birth weight. RESULTS A consistent positive relationship existed between perceptions of racial discrimination and preterm birth, low birth weight, and very low birth weight. No relationship was found between racial discrimination and gestational age at birth. DISCUSSION Future research should explore the effects of racial discrimination as a chronic stressor contributing to the persistent gap in birth outcomes between racial groups.


Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2010

Ultrasonic attenuation estimation of the pregnant cervix: A preliminary report

Barbara L. McFarlin; Timothy A. Bigelow; Y. Laybed; William D. O'Brien; Michael L. Oelze; Jacques S. Abramowicz

Estimates of ultrasonic attenuation (the loss of energy as an ultrasonic wave propagates through tissue) have been used to evaluate the structure and function of tissues in health and disease. The purpose of this research was to develop a method to estimate ultrasonic cervical attenuation during human pregnancy using a clinical ultrasound system.


Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine | 2006

Quantitative ultrasound assessment of the rat cervix.

Barbara L. McFarlin; William D. O'Brien; Michael L. Oelze; James F. Zachary; Rosemary White-Traut

Objective. The purpose of this research was to detect cervical ripening with a new quantitative ultrasound technique. Methods. Cervices of 13 nonpregnant and 65 timed pregnant (days 15, 17, 19, 20, and 21 of pregnancy) Sprague Dawley rats were scanned ex vivo with a 70‐MHz ultrasound transducer. Ultrasound scatterer property estimates (scatterer diameter [SD], acoustic concentration [AC], and scatterer strength factor [SSF]) from the cervices were quantified and then compared to hydroxyproline and water content. Insertion loss (attenuation) was measured in 3 rats in each of the 6 groups. Discriminant analysis was used to predict gestational age group (cervical ripening) from the ultrasound variables SD, SSF, and AC. Results. Differences were observed between the groups (SD, AC, and SSF; P < .0001). Quantitative ultrasound measures changed as the cervix ripened: (1) SD increased from days 15 to 21; (2) AC decreased from days 15 to 21; and (3) SSF was the greatest in the nonpregnant group and the least in the day 21 group. Cervix hydroxyproline content increased as pregnancy progressed (P < .003) and correlated with group, SD, AC, and SSF (P < .001). Discriminant analysis of ultrasound variables predicted 56.4% of gestational group assignment (P < .001) and increased to 77% within 2 days of the predicted analysis. Cervix insertion loss was greatest for the nonpregnant group and least for the day 21 group. Conclusions. Quantitative ultrasound predicted cervical ripening in the rat cervix, but before use in humans, quantitative ultrasound will need to predict gestational age in the later days of gestation with more precision.


Ultrasonics | 2011

Estimate of the attenuation coefficient using a clinical array transducer for the detection of cervical ripening in human pregnancy

Yassin Labyed; Timothy A. Bigelow; Barbara L. McFarlin

Premature delivery is the leading cause of infant mortality in the United States. Currently, premature delivery cannot be prevented and new treatments are difficult to develop due to the inability to diagnose symptoms prior to uterine contractions. Cervical ripening is a long period that precedes the active phase of uterine contractions and cervical dilation. The changes in the microstructure of the cervix during cervical ripening suggest that the ultrasonic attenuation should decrease. The objective of this study is to use the reference phantom algorithm to estimate the ultrasonic attenuation in the cervix of pregnant human patients. Prior to applying the algorithm to in vivo human data, two homogeneous phantoms with known attenuation coefficients were used to validate the algorithm and to find the length and the width of the region of interest (ROI) that achieves the smallest error in the attenuation coefficient estimates. In the phantom data, we found that the errors in the attenuation coefficients estimates are less than 12% for ROIs that contain 40 wavelengths or more axially and 30 echo lines or more laterally. The reference phantom algorithm was then used to obtain attenuation maps of the echoes from two human pregnant cervices at different gestational ages. It was observed that the mean of the attenuation coefficient estimates in the cervix of the patient at a more advanced gestational age is smaller than the mean of the attenuation coefficient estimates in the cervix of the patient at an earlier gestational age which suggests that ultrasonic attenuation decreases with increasing gestational age. We also observed a large variance between the attenuation coefficient estimates in the different regions of the cervix due to the natural variation in tissue micro-structures across the cervix. The preliminary results indicate that the algorithm could potentially provide an important diagnostic tool for diagnosing the risk of premature delivery.


Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing | 2009

Salivary Cortisol and Behavioral State Responses of Healthy Newborn Infants to Tactile‐Only and Multisensory Interventions

Rosemary White-Traut; Dorie W. Schwertz; Barbara L. McFarlin; Joseph Kogan

OBJECTIVE To compare changes in stress reactivity (measured via the biomarker salivary cortisol) and behavioral state in healthy newborn infants immediately following 1 of 2 interventions: (1) tactile-only stimulation or (2) a multisensory, auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular stimulation with a control group. DESIGN A randomized prospective design pilot study. SETTING Normal newborn nurseries of 2 midwestern perinatal centers. PARTICIPANTS Forty healthy newborn infants receiving standard nursing care. METHODS Infants were randomly assigned to receive 15 minutes of tactile-only, auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular, or no stimulation 30 minutes before feeding. Saliva samples were collected before, immediately following, and 10 minutes postintervention. Behavioral state was judged every minute. RESULTS Tactile-only group infants had the largest increase in cortisol levels, followed by control group infants. In contrast, infants who received the multisensory intervention showed a significant steady decline in cortisol. Asleep was the predominant state for all 3 groups and cry was minimal. CONCLUSIONS Tactile-only stimulation may increase infant stress reactivity while the benefit of the multisensory auditory, tactile, visual, and vestibular intervention may be in the reduction of infant stress reactivity. Interventions appeared to have minimal effect on stress reactivity based on behavioral state.


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2009

Pregnancy-Associated Breast Cancer: Significance of Early Detection

MaryAnn Ulery; Linnette E. Carter; Barbara L. McFarlin; Carmen Giurgescu

Pregnancy-associated breast cancer (PABC) is defined as cancer of the breast diagnosed during pregnancy and up to 1 year postpartum. Delays in diagnosis are frequently associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The aim of this article is to determine the significance of early detection of PABC and to alert health care providers to include PABC in the differential diagnosis when evaluating a breast mass in the perinatal period. This integrative literature review evaluated 15 research studies by using the hypothetical deductive model of clinical reasoning to determine factors related to diagnosis of PABC. As women delay childbearing, the incidence of PABC increases with age. In the reviewed studies, breast cancer was diagnosed with greater frequency in the postpartum period than during any trimester in pregnancy. Delay in diagnosis is complicated by axillary lymph node metastasis, high-grade tumors at diagnosis, and poor outcomes. Early detection is a significant predictor of improved outcomes. Diagnostic modalities such as ultrasound, mammography, and biopsy can be safely used for diagnostic purposes in the evaluation of potential cases of PABC during pregnancy.


Journal of Nurse-midwifery | 1985

Concurrent validity of Leopold's maneuvers in determining fetal presentation and position.

Barbara L. McFarlin; Janet L. Engstrom; Milo B. Sampson; Frances Cattledge

The accuracy of Leopolds maneuvers in the assessment of fetal presentation and position was studied in 176 subjects. The maneuvers were performed by clinicians during the routine prenatal examination of women who were scheduled for an ultrasound immediately after their prenatal visit. The actual fetal presentation and position were determined during the sonographic examination. Clinicians were correct in their assessment of fetal presentation and position in 85.23% and 60.31% of determinations, respectively. However, only 53% of all malpresentations were assessed correctly. Clinicians with 1 or less than 5 years of experience had higher percentages of correct assessments than clinicians with 3 to 4 years of experience. Overall, the accuracy of the assessments was higher in late pregnancy. However, the percentage of malpresentations assessed correctly decreased near term. Assessments were less accurate for overweight women. Parity did not influence the accuracy of the assessments.

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Rosemary White-Traut

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Janet L. Engstrom

Rush University Medical Center

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Edward K. Chien

Case Western Reserve University

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Dorie W. Schwertz

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Jason L. Salemi

Baylor College of Medicine

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