Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brenda MacGibbon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brenda MacGibbon.


Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2008

Impact of patient communication problems on the risk of preventable adverse events in acute care settings

Gillian Bartlett; Régis Blais; Richard J. Clermont; Brenda MacGibbon

Background: Up to 50% of adverse events that occur in hospitals are preventable. Language barriers and disabilities that affect communication have been shown to decrease quality of care. We sought to assess whether communication problems are associated with an increased risk of preventable adverse events. Methods: We randomly selected 20 general hospitals in the province of Quebec with at least 1500 annual admissions. Of the 145 672 admissions to the selected hospitals in 2000/01, we randomly selected and reviewed 2355 charts of patients aged 18 years or older. Reviewers abstracted patient characteristics, including communication problems, and details of hospital admission, and assessed the cause and preventability of identified adverse events. The primary outcome was adverse events. Results: Of 217 adverse events, 63 (29%) were judged to be preventable, for an overall population rate of 2.7% (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.1%–3.4%). We found that patients with preventable adverse events were significantly more likely than those without such events to have a communication problem (odds ratio [OR] 3.00; 95% CI 1.43–6.27) or a psychiatric disorder (OR 2.35; 95% CI 1.09–5.05). Patients who were admitted urgently were significantly more likely than patients whose admissions were elective to experience an event (OR 1.64, 95% CI 1.07–2.52). Preventable adverse events were mainly due to drug errors (40%) or poor clinical management (32%). We found that patients with communication problems were more likely than patients without these problems to experience multiple preventable adverse events (46% v. 20%; p = 0.05). Interpretation: Patients with communication problems appeared to be at highest risk for preventable adverse events. Interventions to reduce the risk for these patients need to be developed and evaluated.


Cancer Journal | 2004

Ductoscopic cytology to detect breast cancer.

Edward R. Sauter; Hormoz Ehya; Lisa Schlatter; Brenda MacGibbon

PURPOSEFiberoptic ductoscopy allows direct visualization of the breast ductal lumen, providing a targeted approach to the diagnosis of intraductal disease. The purpose of this prospective study was to determine whether (1) endoscopic evaluation of the breast could be reliably performed, and (2) ductoscopic data (intraductal distance traveled, visual observations, epithelial and foam cell quantity, cytology) predict whether a woman has breast cancer. PATIENTS AND METHODSDuctoscopic information was collected on intraductal distance traveled, visual observations, epithelial and foam cell quantity, and cytology. RESULTSDuctoscopic samples were successfully collected in 106/108 attempts. The first six specimens collected were acellular. Of the 100 remaining ductoscopic specimens, 37 were from breasts with ductal carcinoma in situ or invasive breast cancer, 10 from breasts with precancerous lesions, 37 duct hyperplasia/papilloma, 11 histologically normal specimens, and five specimens from breasts that did not undergo subsequent surgical excision. The ability to travel intraductally ≥ 10 cm was greater in women with hyperplasia and papilloma (with and without atypia) lesions. Intraductal lesions that were visually considered tumors were more often hyperplasia/papilloma and malignant than other lesions. Extrinsic duct occlusion was observed only in malignant lesions. Excluding learning curve samples, 67/100 (45% of normal, 68% of hyperplastic, 90% of precancerous, 82% of ductal carcinoma in situ, and 70% of invasive) fiberoptic ductoscopy specimens had adequate epithelial cells, and all duct cannulation attempts except two were successful. There was one false-positive cytologic result in a woman found to have a papilloma. Foam cell quantity was significantly related to epithelial cell quantity. CONCLUSIONFiberoptic ductoscopy is feasible in the vast majority of subjects. Fiberoptic ductoscopy is a specific but not sufficiently sensitive method to be used alone to diagnose breast cancer. The presence of highly atypical epithelial cells in specimens from breasts containing papillomas is a pitfall of this method. Caution must be exercised to avoid a false-positive diagnosis in patients with spontaneous nipple discharge.


Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety | 2013

The effect of obesity on antibiotic treatment failure: a historical cohort study.

Cristina Longo; Gillian Bartlett; Brenda MacGibbon; Nancy E. Mayo; Ellen Rosenberg; Lyne Nadeau; Stella S. Daskalopoulou

Obesity, a major health issue, is also an important risk factor for infections. Evidence demonstrates that excess weight affects the disposition of antibiotics but little work has been done to explore if this results in antibiotic treatment failure (ATF). ATF has serious adverse health outcomes and may increase treatment resistance. Given that obese patients often have other health issues, it is important to determine if excess weight independently increases the likelihood of ATF.


Journal of Business & Economic Statistics | 1997

Empirical Bayes Small-Area Estimation Using Logistic Regression Models and Summary Statistics

Patrick J. Farrell; Brenda MacGibbon; Thomas J. Tomberlin

Many available methods for estimating small area parameters are model-based, where auxiliary variables are used to predict the variable of interest. For nonlinear models, prediction is not straightforward. MacGibbon and Tomberlin (1989) and Farrell, MacGibbon, and Tomberlin (1994) have proposed methods which require micro-data for each individual in a small area. Here, the authors use a second-order Taylor series expansion to obtain model-based predictions which only require local area summary statistics in the case of either continuous or categorical auxiliary variables. The methodology is evaluated using U.S. census data.


Cancer | 2005

Fiberoptic ductoscopy findings in women with and without spontaneous nipple discharge

Edward R. Sauter; Hormoz Ehya; Andres J. Klein-Szanto; Colette C. Wagner-Mann; Brenda MacGibbon

Fiberoptic ductoscopy (FD), which allows direct visualization of the breast ductal lumen, is performed in women with and without spontaneous nipple discharge (SND). Previous reports suggested that cytologic evaluation of SND may be falsely interpreted as containing malignancy. The purpose of the current study, which was performed prospectively, was to determine whether ductoscopic findings were different in women with versus without SND, and to assess the implications of the differences in SND versus non‐SND samples regarding the role of FD in assessing whether a woman has breast carcinoma.


Scandinavian Journal of Statistics | 2000

Non-parametric estimation for the location of a change-point in an otherwise smooth hazard function under random censoring

Anestis Antoniadis; Irène Gijbels; Brenda MacGibbon

A non-parametric wavelet based estimator is proposed for the location of a change-point in an otherwise smooth hazard function under non-informative random right censoring. The proposed estimator is based on wavelet coefficients differences via an appropriate parametrization of the time-frequency plane. The study of the estimator is facilitated by the strong representation theorem for the Kaplan-Meier estimator established by Lo and Singh (1986). The performance of the estimator is checked via simulations and two real examples conclude the paper.


Neurotoxicology | 2003

Blood manganese and alcohol consumption interact on mood States among manganese alloy production workers

Maryse Bouchard; Donna Mergler; Mary Baldwin; Marie-Pascale Sassine; Rosemarie M. Bowler; Brenda MacGibbon

Long-term exposure to manganese (Mn) can induce neurotoxic effects including neuromotor, neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric effects, but there is a great interpersonal variability in the occurrence of these effects. It has recently been suggested that blood Mn (MnB) may interact with alcohol use disorders, accentuating neuropsychiatric symptoms. The objective of the present study was to explore a possible interaction between alcohol consumption and MnB on mood states, using an existing data set on Mn exposed workers. Respirable Mn exposure in the plant averaged 0.23mg/m(3) and was correlated with MnB. All participants for whom all data on MnB concentration and mood (assessed with the Profile of Mood States (POMS)) were available and who reported currently drinking alcohol were included in the analyses (n=74). Workers were grouped according to their MnB concentration (<10 and > or =10 microg/l) and alcohol consumption (<400 and > or =400g per week). Two-way ANOVAs were performed on each POMS scale and Mann-Whitney tests were used to assess group differences. Workers in the higher alcohol consumption group had higher scores on three POMS scales: tension, anger and fatigue. There was no difference for POMS scale scores between MnB subgroups. Dividing the group with respect to alcohol consumption and MnB showed that the group with high alcohol consumption and high MnB displayed the highest scores. In the lower MnB category, those in the higher alcohol consumption group did not have higher scores than the others. The interaction term for alcohol consumption and MnB concentration was statistically significant (P<0.05) for the depression, anger, fatigue and confusion POMS scales. There was a tendency for tension (P<0.06), and it was not significant for vigor. This study shows the first evidence of an interaction between MnB and alcohol consumption on mood states among Mn exposed workers and supports the results from a previous population-based study.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2004

Quantifying postural tremor in workers exposed to low levels of manganese

Anne Beuter; Gabriel Lambert; Brenda MacGibbon

The aim of this study was: (1) To determine the minimum number of characteristics necessary to discriminate between postural tremor recorded in control subjects (CO), in subjects exposed to manganese (MN), and in patients with Parkinsons disease (PD), and (2) to examine the continuum of changes between the three groups examined. Workers previously exposed to Mn (n = 10), patients with PD (n = 10), and control subjects (CO) (n = 11) underwent a clinical examination. Blood Mn was measured at the end of exposure time for the MN group and 12 months later at the beginning of the experiment for all groups. Postural tremor with visual feedback was recorded in the index finger with a laser system. Statistical criteria were used to reduce computed tremor characteristics to a minimal set of reliable discriminating variables. Two variables were retained namely corrected wobble (CW), describing the morphology of the tremor oscillations, and variability ratio (VR), describing proportional power of tremor. Both variables had an overall correct classification rate of 77.4%. Blood Mn levels at the time of the experiment were similar for all groups and had insignificant correlation with tremor variables. However, blood Mn levels in workers which were also measured at the end of exposure time (i.e., 12 months before) showed significant correlation (Spearmans rank coefficient) with both harmonic index (rho = 0.70, P = 0.03) and first maximum of the autocorrelation function (rho = 0.89, P = 0.001). We conclude that (1) the tremor of workers exposed to Mn could be adequately described with only two variables; (2) a continuum of changes between tremor recorded in control subjects, in subjects exposed to Mn and in patients with PD was observed, with the MN group always found in between the control (CO) and the PD groups; (3) while blood Mn levels in workers were back at control levels at the time of the experiment, the effect of Mn on postural tremor was still detected. Thus our method has the potential to detect the effect of Mn on tremor with only two variables even after Mn level in the blood is back to normal values.


Cancer | 2004

Ductoscopic cytology and image analysis to detect breast carcinoma

Edward R. Sauter; Andres Klein-Szanto; Hormoz Ehya; Brenda MacGibbon

The goal of the prospective study was to determine whether 1) image analysis (IA; including DNA index [DI], S‐phase fraction, and the presence or absence of aneuploidy or hypertetraploidy [HT]) of fiberoptic ductoscopy (FD) breast specimens was feasible, 2) IA findings from FD specimens predicted histopathologic evidence of disease, and 3) a combination of IA, cytology, and clinical factors provided complementary information in the diagnosis of breast carcinoma.


Diagnostic Cytopathology | 2009

Nipple aspirate fluid and ductoscopy to detect breast cancer.

Edward R. Sauter; Andres Klein-Szanto; Brenda MacGibbon; Hormoz Ehya

We prospectively performed cytologic assessment and image analysis (IA) on matched nipple aspirate fluid (NAF) and mammary ductoscopy (MD) specimens to determine (1) the accuracy of these methods in cancer detection and (2) whether the two collection methods provide complementary information.

Collaboration


Dive into the Brenda MacGibbon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alain Biron

McGill University Health Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patricia O'Connor

McGill University Health Centre

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge