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Dive into the research topics where Denise Acampora is active.

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Featured researches published by Denise Acampora.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999

A Multicomponent Intervention to Prevent Delirium in Hospitalized Older Patients

Sharon K. Inouye; Sidney T. Bogardus; Peter Charpentier; Linda Leo-Summers; Denise Acampora; Theodore R. Holford; Leo M. Cooney

BACKGROUND Since in hospitalized older patients delirium is associated with poor outcomes, we evaluated the effectiveness of a multicomponent strategy for the prevention of delirium. METHODS We studied 852 patients 70 years of age or older who had been admitted to the general-medicine service at a teaching hospital. Patients from one intervention unit and two usual-care units were enrolled by means of a prospective matching strategy. The intervention consisted of standardized protocols for the management of six risk factors for delirium: cognitive impairment, sleep deprivation, immobility, visual impairment, hearing impairment, and dehydration. Delirium, the primary outcome, was assessed daily until discharge. RESULTS Delirium developed in 9.9 percent of the intervention group as compared with 15.0 percent of the usual-care group, (matched odds ratio, 0.60; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.39 to 0.92). The total number of days with delirium (105 vs. 161, P=0.02) and the total number of episodes (62 vs. 90, P=0.03) were significantly lower in the intervention group. However, the severity of delirium and recurrence rates were not significantly different. The overall rate of adherence to the intervention was 87 percent, and the total number of targeted risk factors per patient was significantly reduced. Intervention was associated with significant improvement in the degree of cognitive impairment among patients with cognitive impairment at admission and a reduction in the rate of use of sleep medications among all patients. Among the other risk factors per patient there were trends toward improvement in immobility, visual impairment, and hearing impairment. CONCLUSIONS The risk-factor intervention strategy that we studied resulted in significant reductions in the number and duration of episodes of delirium in hospitalized older patients. The intervention had no significant effect on the severity of delirium or on recurrence rates; this finding suggests that primary prevention of delirium is probably the most effective treatment strategy.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988

A computer protocol to predict myocardial infarction in emergency department patients with chest pain.

Lee Goldman; E. Francis Cook; Donald A. Brand; Thomas H. Lee; Gregory W. Rouan; Monica C. Weisberg; Denise Acampora; Carol Stasiulewicz; Jay Walshon; George Terranova; Louis Gottlieb; Michael S. Kobernick; Beth Goldstein-Wayne; David Copen; Karen Daley; Allan A. Brandt; David Jones; John W. Mellors; Rita Jakubowski

To achieve more appropriate triage to the coronary care unit of patients presenting with acute chest pain, we used clinical data on 1379 patients at two hospitals to construct a simple computer protocol to predict the presence of myocardial infarction. When we tested this protocol prospectively in 4770 patients at two university hospitals and four community hospitals, the computer-derived protocol had a significantly higher specificity (74 vs. 71 percent) in predicting the absence of infarction than physicians deciding whether to admit patients to the coronary care unit, and it had a similar sensitivity in detecting the presence of infarction (88.0 vs. 87.8 percent). Decisions based solely on the computer protocol would have reduced the admission of patients without infarction to the coronary care unit by 11.5 percent without adversely affecting the admission of patients in whom emergent complications developed that required intensive care. Although this protocol should not be used to override careful clinical judgment in individual cases, the computer protocol for the most part yields accurate estimates of the probability of myocardial infarction. Decisions about admission to the coronary care unit based on the protocol would have been as effective as those actually made by the unaided physicians who cared for the patients, and less costly. Whether physicians who are aided by the protocol perform better than unaided physicians cannot be determined without further study.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1987

Clinical characteristics and natural history of patients with acute myocardial infarction sent home from the emergency room

Thomas H. Lee; Gregory W. Rouan; Monica C. Weisberg; Donald A. Brand; Denise Acampora; Carol Stasiulewicz; Jay Walshon; George Terranova; Louis Gottlieb; Beth Goldstein-Wayne; David Copen; Karen Daley; Allan A. Brandt; John Mellors; Rita Jakubowski; E. Francis Cook; Lee Goldman

In a prospective multicenter investigation of emergency room patients with acute chest pain, physicians admitted 96% of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and discharged 4%. Of 35 patients who were sent home with AMI, only 11 (31%) returned to the same hospital because of persistent symptoms. Compared with a control group of 105 randomly selected patients with AMI who were admitted from the emergency room, patients in whom AMI was missed were significantly younger, had less typical symptoms and were less likely to to have had prior AMI or angina or to have electrocardiographic evidence of ischemia or infarction not known to be old. Despite the less typical presentations of patients in whom AMI was missed, after controlling for age and sex, the short-term mortality rate was significantly higher among patients in whom AMI was missed but in whom it was detected through our follow-up procedures than in admitted AMI patients. As determined by independent reviewers, 49% of the missed AMIs could have been diagnosed through improved electrocardiographic reading skills or by admission of patients with recognized ischemic pain at rest or ischemic electrocardiographic changes not known to be old.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1985

Use of the initial electrocardiogram to predict in-hospital complications of acute myocardial infarction.

John E. Brush; Donald A. Brand; Denise Acampora; Bruce Chalmer; Frans J. Th. Wackers

Abstract We evaluated the initial electrocardiogram as a predictor of complications in 469 patients with suspected acute myocardial infarction. An electrocardiogram was classified as positive if it showed one or more of the following: evidence of infarction, ischemia, or strain; left ventricular hypertrophy; left bundle-branch block; or paced rhythm. Forty-two (14 per cent) of 302 patients with positive electrocardiograms had at least one life-threatening complication (ventricular fibrillation, sustained ventricular tachycardia, or heart block), as compared with 1 (0.6 per cent) of 167 patients with a negative electrocardiogram. Life-threatening complications were therefore 23 times more likely if the initial electrocardiogram was positive (P<0.001). Other complications were 3 to 10 times more likely (P<0.01), interventions were 4 to 10 times more likely (P<0.05), and death was 17 times more likely (P<0.001) in patients with a positive electrocardiogram. We conclude that patients with a negative initial e...


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1993

A predictive index for functional decline in hospitalized elderly medical patients

Sharon K. Inouye; D. Raye Wagner; Denise Acampora; Ralph I. Horwitz; Leo M. Cooney; Leslie Hurst; Mary E. Tinetti

Objective: To prospectively develop and validate a predictive index to identify on admission elderly hospitalized medical patients at risk for functional decline.Design: Two prospective cohort studies, in tandem. The predictive model developed in the initial cohort was subsequently validated in a separate cohort.Setting: General medical wards of a university teaching hospital.Patients: For the development cohort, 188 hospitalized general medical patients aged ≥70 years. For the validation cohort, 142 comparable patients.Measurement and main results: The subjects and their nurses were interviewed twice weekly using standardized, validated instruments. Functional decline occurred among 51/188 (27%) patients in the development cohort. Four independent baseline risk factors (RFs) for functional decline were identified: decubitus ulcer (adjusted relative risk [RR] 2.7; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.4, 5.2); cognitive impairment (RR 1.7; CI 0.9, 3.1); functional impairment (RR 1.8; CI 1.0, 3.3); and low social activity level (RR2.4; CI 1.2, 5.1). A risk-stratification system was developed by adding the numbers of RFs. Rates of functional decline for the low- (0 RF), intermediate- (1–2 RFs), and high- (3–4 RFs) risk groups were 8%, 28%, and 63%, respectively (p<0.0001).The corresponding rates in the validation cohort, of whom 34/142 (24%) developed functional decline, were 6%, 29%, and 83% (p<0.0001). The rates of death or nursing home placement, clinical outcomes associated with functional decline in the hospital, were 6%, 19%, and 41% (p<0.002) in the development cohort and 10%, 32%, and 67% (p<0.001) in the validation cohort, respectively, for the three risk groups.Conclusions: Functional decline among hospitalized elderly patients is common, and a simple predictive model based on four risk factors can be used on admission to identify elderly persons at greatest risk.


Medical Care | 1998

Health Care Utilization and Costs in a Medicare Population by Fall Status

John A. Rizzo; Rebecca Friedkin; Christianna S. Williams; Janett Nabors; Denise Acampora; Mary E. Tinetti

OBJECTIVES The economic impact of trauma in older persons is a matter of increasing concern to public health practitioners and planners, yet it is an issue that has not been widely studied. Available evidence does suggest, however, that falls are the costliest category of injury among older persons. METHODS This study used data from the Health Care Financing Administration and the Connecticut Long-Term Care Registry to isolate the effects of fall severity on hospital, nursing home, home health, and emergency room costs. Multivariate and logistic regression methods were used to control for the influence of a number of clinical and demographic factors believed to be independently related to health care costs. Health care costs of fallers were tracked for 1 year after the fall. The cost experience of this cohort was compared with nonfallers during the same time period. RESULTS The results provide strong evidence that falls are associated with increased health care costs, and that this relation increases monotonically with the frequency and severity of falls. Incurring one or more injurious falls was associated with increased annual hospital costs of


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Effect of dissemination of evidence in reducing injuries from falls

Mary E. Tinetti; Dorothy I. Baker; Mary King; Margaret Gottschalk; Terrence E. Murphy; Denise Acampora; Bradley P. Carlin; Linda Leo-Summers; Heather G. Allore

11,042 (1996), nursing home costs of


Annals of Internal Medicine | 1987

Sensitivity of routine clinical criteria for diagnosing myocardial infarction within 24 hours of hospitalization.

Thomas H. Lee; Gregory W. Rouan; Monica C. Weisberg; Donald A. Brand; Cook Ef; Denise Acampora; Lee Goldman

5,325, and total health care costs of


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 1999

Home-based multicomponent rehabilitation program for older persons after hip fracture: A randomized trial

Mary E. Tinetti; Dorothy L. Baker; Margaret Gottschalk; Christianna S. Williams; Daphna Pollack; Patricia Garrett; Thomas M. Gill; Richard A. Marottoli; Denise Acampora

19,440. Incurring two or more noninjurious falls increased costs substantially as well. CONCLUSIONS The health care costs of falls are pervasive and substantial, and they increase with fall frequency and severity.


Medical Care | 2001

Multicomponent targeted intervention to prevent delirium in hospitalized older patients: what is the economic value?

John A. Rizzo; Sidney T. Bogardus; Linda Leo-Summers; Christianna S. Williams; Denise Acampora; Sharon K. Inouye

BACKGROUND Falling is a common and morbid condition among elderly persons. Effective strategies to prevent falls have been identified but are underutilized. METHODS Using a nonrandomized design, we compared rates of injuries from falls in a region of Connecticut where clinicians had been exposed to interventions to change clinical practice (intervention region) and in a region where clinicians had not been exposed to such interventions (usual-care region). The interventions encouraged primary care clinicians and staff members involved in home care, outpatient rehabilitation, and senior centers to adopt effective risk assessments and strategies for the prevention of falls (e.g., medication reduction and balance and gait training). The outcomes were rates of serious fall-related injuries (hip and other fractures, head injuries, and joint dislocations) and fall-related use of medical services per 1000 person-years among persons who were 70 years of age or older. The interventions occurred from 2001 to 2004, and the evaluations took place from 2004 to 2006. RESULTS Before the interventions, the adjusted rates of serious fall-related injuries (per 1000 person-years) were 31.2 in the usual-care region and 31.9 in the intervention region. During the evaluation period, the adjusted rates were 31.4 and 28.6, respectively (adjusted rate ratio, 0.91; 95% Bayesian credibility interval, 0.88 to 0.94). Between the preintervention period and the evaluation period, the rate of fall-related use of medical services increased from 68.1 to 83.3 per 1000 person-years in the usual-care region and from 70.7 to 74.2 in the intervention region (adjusted rate ratio, 0.89; 95% credibility interval, 0.86 to 0.92). The percentages of clinicians who received intervention visits ranged from 62% (131 of 212 primary care offices) to 100% (26 of 26 home care agencies). CONCLUSIONS Dissemination of evidence about fall prevention, coupled with interventions to change clinical practice, may reduce fall-related injuries in elderly persons.

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Sharon K. Inouye

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Christianna S. Williams

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Ralph I. Horwitz

Case Western Reserve University

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