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Dive into the research topics where Catherine M. Tansey is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine M. Tansey.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

Functional Disability 5 Years after Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Margaret S. Herridge; Catherine M. Tansey; Andrea Matte; George Tomlinson; Natalia Diaz-Granados; Andrew B. Cooper; Cameron B. Guest; C. David Mazer; Sangeeta Mehta; Thomas E. Stewart; Paul Kudlow; Deborah J. Cook; Arthur S. Slutsky; Angela M. Cheung

BACKGROUND There have been few detailed, in-person interviews and examinations to obtain follow-up data on 5-year outcomes among survivors of the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). METHODS We evaluated 109 survivors of ARDS at 3, 6, and 12 months and at 2, 3, 4, and 5 years after discharge from the intensive care unit. At each visit, patients were interviewed and examined; underwent pulmonary-function tests, the 6-minute walk test, resting and exercise oximetry, chest imaging, and a quality-of-life evaluation; and reported their use of health care services. RESULTS At 5 years, the median 6-minute walk distance was 436 m (76% of predicted distance) and the Physical Component Score on the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey was 41 (mean norm score matched for age and sex, 50). With respect to this score, younger patients had a greater rate of recovery than older patients, but neither group returned to normal predicted levels of physical function at 5 years. Pulmonary function was normal to near-normal. A constellation of other physical and psychological problems developed or persisted in patients and family caregivers for up to 5 years. Patients with more coexisting illnesses incurred greater 5-year costs. CONCLUSIONS Exercise limitation, physical and psychological sequelae, decreased physical quality of life, and increased costs and use of health care services are important legacies of severe lung injury.


Quality of Life Research | 2006

Utility-based quality of life measures in Alzheimer's disease

Gary Naglie; George Tomlinson; Catherine M. Tansey; Jane Irvine; Paul Ritvo; Sandra E. Black; Morris Freedman; Michel Silberfeld; Murray Krahn

AbstractObjectives: To explore whether Alzheimer’s disease patients could rate their quality of life (QOL) using utility-based health indexes, and to provide new knowledge about the measurement properties of these instruments for patient and caregiver proxy ratings. Methods: A convenience sample of 60 mild-moderate AD patients and their caregivers were randomized to complete the Quality of Well-Being Scale (QWB), Health Utilities Index (HUI3) or EQ-5D and visual analogue scale (VAS) on two occasions. Test–retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficients) and convergent validity (Spearman correlations) of utility scores with global health status, activities of daily living, comorbidity, mood, cognition and other utility measures were assessed. Results: Completion time was shortest for the combined EQ-5D and VAS. For patients with mild dementia and for proxies, reliability was ≥ 0.70 for the EQ-5D, QWB and HUI3. The EQ-5D had a ceiling effect for patient ratings. Convergent validity was demonstrated for patient and proxy ratings, with the strongest validity for EQ-5D ratings and the weakest validity for HUI3 patient ratings. Mean patient utility scores were significantly higher than mean proxy scores for all measures (p<0.001). Conclusions: For patient and proxy ratings, the EQ-5D had the best combination of measurement properties, although it had a substantial ceiling effect for patient ratings. Proxy QOL ratings did not accurately reflect patients’ ratings.


Chest | 2009

Self-Reported Symptoms of Depression and Memory Dysfunction in Survivors of ARDS

Neill K. J. Adhikari; Mary Pat McAndrews; Catherine M. Tansey; Andrea Matte; Ruxandra Pinto; Angela M. Cheung; Natalia Diaz-Granados; Aiala Barr; Margaret S. Herridge

BACKGROUND Survivors of ARDS have well documented physical limitations, but psychological effects are less clear. We determined the prevalence of self-reported depression and memory dysfunction in ARDS survivors. METHODS Six to 48 (median 22) months after ICU discharge, we administered instruments assessing depression symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory-II [BDI-II]) and memory dysfunction (Memory Assessment Clinics Self-Rating Scale [MAC-S]) to 82 ARDS patients who were enrolled in a prospective cohort study in four university-affiliated ICUs. RESULTS Sixty-one (74%), 64 (78%), and 61 (74%) patients fully completed the BDI-II, MAC-S (Ability subscale), and MAC-S (Frequency of Occurrence subscale) instruments. Responders (similar to nonresponders) were young (median 42 years, interquartile range [IQR] 35 to 56), with high admission illness severity and organ dysfunction. The median BDI-II score was 12 (IQR 5 to 25). Twenty-five (41%) patients reported moderate-severe depression symptoms and were less likely to return to work than those with minimal-mild symptoms (8/25 [32%] vs 25/36 [69%]; p = 0.005). Median MAC-S (Ability) and MAC-S (Frequency of Occurrence) scores were 76 (IQR 61 to 93) and 91 (IQR 77 to 102), respectively; 8%, 16%, and 20% scored > 2, > 1.5, and > 1 SD(s), respectively, below age-adjusted population norms for each subscale. BDI-II and MAC-S scores were negatively correlated (Spearman coefficient -0.58 and -0.50 for Ability and Frequency of Occurrence subscales, respectively; p < 0.0001). Univariable analyses showed no demographic or illness-severity predictors of BDI-II (including the Cognitive subscale) or MAC-S (both subscales); results were similar when restricted to patients whose primary language was English. CONCLUSIONS ARDS survivors report a high prevalence of depression symptoms and a lower prevalence of memory dysfunction 6 to 48 months after ICU discharge. Depression symptoms may hinder the return to work, or patients may report these symptoms because of inability to re-enter the workforce.


Chest | 2011

Self-reported Depressive Symptoms and Memory Complaints in Survivors Five Years After ARDS

Neill K. J. Adhikari; Catherine M. Tansey; Mary Pat McAndrews; Andrea Matte; Ruxandra Pinto; Angela M. Cheung; Natalia Diaz-Granados; Margaret S. Herridge

BACKGROUND Survivors of ARDS report depressive symptoms and memory complaints, the prevalence of which after 5 years is unknown. METHODS We administered instruments assessing symptoms of depression (Beck Depression Inventory II [BDI-II]) and memory complaints (Memory Assessment Clinics Self-Rating Scale [MAC-S]) to 64 survivors of ARDS from four university-affiliated ICUs 5 years after ICU discharge. We compared BDI-II scores to quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form [SF-36]) mental health domains (role emotional, mental health, mental component summary), compared BDI-II and MAC-S scores to earlier scores (median, 22 months postdischarge), and examined return to work. RESULTS Forty-three (67.2%), 46 (71.9%), and 38 (59.4%) patients fully completed the BDI-II, MAC-S ability subscale, and MAC-S frequency of occurrence subscale, respectively. Responders were young (median, 48 years; first-third quartile [Q1-Q3], 39-61 years) with high illness severity. The median BDI-II score was 10 (Q1-Q3, 3-18); eight of 43 (18.6%) had moderate to severe depressive symptoms compared with 14 of 43 (32.6%) earlier (P = .15, n = 38 with paired data). Median MAC-S ability and MAC-S frequency scores were 81 (Q1-Q3, 57-92) and 91.5 (Q1-Q3, 76-105), respectively, similar to earlier scores (P = .67 and P = .64, respectively); 0% to 4.3% scored > 2 SDs below population norms. Higher BDI-II score was predicted by higher earlier BDI-II score, slower recovery of organ function, and longer duration of mechanical ventilation and ICU stay. Higher MAC-S score was predicted by higher earlier MAC-S score. SF-36 mental health domain scores were very stable (P = .57-.83). BDI-II and SF-36 mental health domains were negatively correlated (Spearman coefficient, -0.50 to -0.82). Most patients returned to work regardless of depressive symptoms (minimal to mild, 31 of 35 [88.6%]; moderate to severe, five of eight [62.5%]; P = .12). CONCLUSIONS Compared with ∼ 2 years postdischarge from the ICU, depressive symptoms and memory complaints were similar at 5 years. Mental health domains of the SF-36 may not be sensitive to small changes in mood symptoms.


Chest | 2013

Radiologic Outcomes at 5 Years After Severe ARDS

M. Elizabeth Wilcox; Demetris Patsios; Grainne Murphy; Paul Kudlow; Narinder Paul; Catherine M. Tansey; Leslie M. Chu; Andrea Matte; George Tomlinson; Margaret S. Herridge

OBJECTIVE Few studies have systematically evaluated high-resolution CT (HRCT) imaging of the thorax 5 years after severe ARDS to determine the association between radiologic fi ndings and functional disability. The primary aim of this study was to determine chest radiologic abnormalities at 5 years in survivors of severe ARDS from the University of Toronto ARDS cohort. The secondary aim was to determine the relationship between the observed radiologic abnormalities on HRCT scan and pulmonary symptoms, pulmonary function test abnormalities, and healthrelated quality of life at 5-year follow-up. METHODS HRCT scans were obtained in 24 of 64 eligible patients. Three anatomically comparable levels were selected for scoring, and each level was divided into four quadrants. The extent and distribution of individual CT image patterns (ground glass opacifi cation, intense parenchymal opacifi cation, reticular pattern, and decreased attenuation) were also reported. RESULTS Eighteen patients (75%) had abnormal fi ndings on HRCT imaging. These findings were minor and in the nondependent lung zones. No correlation was found between radiologic findings and patient symptoms, pulmonary function tests, 6-min walk distances, or heath-related quality of life measures. CONCLUSIONS Exercise and functional limitations experienced by survivors of severe ARDS are unlikely to be related to structural lung disease and may be more consistent with extrapulmonary muscle weakness.


Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2010

A framework for research ethics review during public emergencies

Catherine M. Tansey; Margaret S. Herridge; Ronald J. Heslegrave; James V. Lavery

The global outbreak of the pandemic (H1N1) influenza has refocused international attention on emergency preparedness for urgent threats to public health. Such threats have included the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) of 2003, the emergence of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis,


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2003

One-Year Outcomes in Survivors of the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Margaret S. Herridge; Angela M. Cheung; Catherine M. Tansey; Andrea Matte-Martyn; Natalia Diaz-Granados; Fatma Al-Saidi; Andrew B. Cooper; Cameron B. Guest; C. David Mazer; Sangeeta Mehta; Thomas E. Stewart; Aiala Barr; Deborah J. Cook; Arthur S. Slutsky


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2006

Two-Year Outcomes, Health Care Use, and Costs of Survivors of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Angela M. Cheung; Catherine M. Tansey; George Tomlinson; Natalia Diaz-Granados; Andrea Matte; Aiala Barr; Sangeeta Mehta; C. David Mazer; Cameron B. Guest; Thomas E. Stewart; Fatma Al-Saidi; Andrew B. Cooper; Deborah J. Cook; Arthur S. Slutsky; Margaret S. Herridge


Critical Care Medicine | 2006

Well-being in informal caregivers of survivors of acute respiratory distress syndrome.

Jill I. Cameron; Margaret S. Herridge; Catherine M. Tansey; Mary Pat McAndrews; Angela M. Cheung


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2007

One-Year Outcomes and Health Care Utilization in Survivors of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome

Catherine M. Tansey; Marie Louie; Mark Loeb; Wayne L. Gold; Matthew P. Muller; JoAnne de Jager; Jill I. Cameron; George Tomlinson; Tony Mazzulli; Sharon Walmsley; Anita Rachlis; Barbara Mederski; Michael Silverman; Zev Shainhouse; Issa E. Ephtimios; Monica Avendano; James Downey; Rima Styra; Deborah Yamamura; Marvin Gerson; Matthew B. Stanbrook; Theodore K. Marras; E. Phillips; Noe Zamel; Susan E. Richardson; Arthur S. Slutsky; Margaret S. Herridge

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Andrea Matte

University Health Network

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