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Dive into the research topics where Frank S. Pidcock is active.

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Featured researches published by Frank S. Pidcock.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2000

American Burn Association/Shriners Hospitals for Children burn outcomes questionnaire: construction and psychometric properties

Lawren H. Daltroy; Matthew H. Liang; Charlotte B. Phillips; Mary Beth Daugherty; Michelle I. Hinson; Marilyn Jenkins; Robert L. McCauley; Walter J. Meyer; Andrew M. Munster; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; William P. Tunell; Glenn D. Warden; David Wood; Ronald G. Tompkins

To develop a standardized, practical, self-administered questionnaire to monitor pediatric patients with burns and to evaluate the effectiveness of comprehensive pediatric burn management treatments, a group of experts generated a set of items to measure relevant burn outcomes. Children between the ages of 5 and 18 years were assessed in a cross-sectional study. Both parent and adolescent responses were obtained from children 11 to 18 years old. The internal reliability of final scales ranged from 0.82 to 0.93 among parents and from 0.75 to 0.92 among adolescents. Mean differences between parent and adolescent were small; the greatest difference occurred in the appearance subscale. Parental scales showed evidence of validity and potential for sensitivity to change. In an effort to support the construct validity of the new scales, they were compared with the Child Health Questionnaire and related to each other in clinically sensible ways. These burn outcomes scales reliably and validly assess function in patients with burns, and the scales have been developed in such a way that they are likely to be sensitive to change over time.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2002

The development, validation, and testing of a health outcomes burn questionnaire for infants and children 5 years of age and younger: American Burn Association/Shriners Hospitals for Children.

Lewis E. Kazis; Matthew H. Liang; Austin Lee; Xinhua S. Ren; Charlotte B. Phillips; Michelle I. Hinson; Catherine Calvert; Marc L. Cullen; Mary Beth Daugherty; Cleon W. Goodwin; Marilyn Jenkins; Robert L. McCauley; Walter J. Meyer; Tina Palmieri; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Glenn D. Warden; David Wood; Ronald G. Tompkins

The 12-member American Burn Association/Shriners Hospitals for Children Outcomes Task Force was charged with developing a health outcomes questionnaire for use in children 5 years of age and younger that was clinically based and valid. A 55-item form was tested using a cross-sectional design on the basis of a range of 184 infants and children between 0 and 5 years of age at 8 burn centers, nationally. A total of 131 subjects completed a follow-up health outcomes questionnaire 6 months after the baseline assessment. A comparison group of 285 normal nonburn children was also obtained. Internal consistency reliability of the scales ranged from 0.74 to 0.94. Tests of clinical validity were significant in the hypothesized direction for the majority of scales for length of hospital stay, duration since the burn, percent of body surface area burned, overall clinician assessment of severity of burn injury, and number of comorbidities. The criterion validity of the instrument was supported using the Child Developmental Inventories for Burn Children in early childhood and preschool stages of development comparing normal vs abnormal children. The instrument was sensitive to changes over time following a clinical course observed by physicians in practice. The Health Outcomes Burn Questionnaire for Infants and Children 5 years of age and younger is a clinically based reliable and valid assessment tool that is sensitive to change over time for assessing burn outcomes in this age group.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2013

Benchmarks for multidimensional recovery after burn injury in young adults: The development, validation, and testing of the american burn association/shriners hospitals for children young adult burn outcome questionnaire

Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Lewis E. Kazis; Austin Lee; Nien Chen Li; Michelle I. Hinson; Helena Bauk; Michael Peck; Walter J. Meyer; Tina L. Palmieri; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Ronald G. Tompkins

Although data exist on burn survival, there are little data on long-term burn recovery. Patient-centered health outcomes are useful in monitoring and predicting recovery and evaluating treatments. An outcome questionnaire for young adult burn survivors was developed and tested. This 5-year (2003–2008) prospective, controlled, multicenter study included burned and nonburned adults ages 19 to 30 years. The Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaires were completed at initial contact, 10 days, and 6 and 12 months. Factor analysis established construct validity. Reliability assessments used Cronbach &agr; and test-retest. Recovery patterns were investigated using generalized linear models, with generalized estimating equations using mixed models and random effects. Burned (n = 153) and nonburned subjects (n = 112) completed 620 questionnaires (47 items). Time from injury to first questionnaire administration was 157 ± 36 days (mean ± SEM). Factor analysis included 15 factors: Physical Function, Fine Motor Function, Pain, Itch, Social Function Limited by Physical Function, Perceived Appearance, Social Function Limited by Appearance, Sexual Function, Emotion, Family Function, Family Concern, Satisfaction With Symptom Relief, Satisfaction With Role, Work Reintegration, and Religion. Cronbach &agr; ranged from 0.72 to 0.92, with 11 scales >0.8. Test-retest reliability ranged from 0.29 to 0.94, suggesting changes in underlying health status after burns. Recovery curves in five domains, Itch, Perceived Appearance, Social Function Limited by Appearance, Family Concern, and Satisfaction with Symptom Relief, remained below the reference group at 24 months. The Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaire is a reliable and valid instrument for multidimensional functional outcomes assessment. Recovery in some domains was incomplete.


Brain Injury | 2006

The efficacy of donepezil hydrochloride on memory functioning in three adolescents with severe traumatic brain injury.

Melissa Trovato; Beth S. Slomine; Frank S. Pidcock; James R. Christensen

Objective: To explore efficacy of donepezil on memory in adolescents with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). Design: Single subject, unblinded, multiple baseline design. Methods and procedures: Memory functioning was examined in three adolescents with TBI on and off medication (5 and 10 mg) using the Selective Reminding Test. Four variables were examined: Total recall (TR) = number of words total words recalled, Long Term Storage (LTS) = words recalled on two trials in a row, Consistency of Long Term Retrieval (CLTR) = words continuously recalled, Delay = number of words recalled after delay. Results: On medication, three out of three participants demonstrated better memory. Two showed greatest improvement on 10 mg. All participants demonstrated improvement in TR and LTS. Two participants demonstrated improved CLTR. No participants displayed improvement in Delay. No adverse side effects were reported. Conclusions: Results suggests that donepezil may be effective in improving memory in adolescents with severe TBI and warrant further examination.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2015

Recovery trajectories after burn injury in young adults: Does burn size matter?

Colleen M. Ryan; Austin Lee; Lewis E. Kazis; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Gabriel D. Shapiro; Robert L. Sheridan; Walter J. Meyer; Tina L. Palmieri; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Ronald G. Tompkins

The impact of burn size on mortality is well known, but the association of burn size with the trajectories of long-term functional outcomes remains poorly studied. This prospective multi-center study included burned adults ages 19 to 30 years who completed the Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaire at initial baseline contact, 2 weeks, and at 6 and 12 months after initial questionnaire administration. Non-burned adults of comparable ages also completed the questionnaire as a reference group. The association between functional recovery and TBSA burned was analyzed longitudinally using generalized linear models with the generalized estimation equation technique. Functional status was characterized in 15 domains: physical function, fine motor function, pain, itch, social function limited by physical function, perceived appearance, social function limited by appearance, sexual function, emotion, family function, family concern, satisfaction with symptom relief, satisfaction with role, work reintegration, and religion. Scores were standardized to a mean of 50 and a SD of 10 based on non-burned controls. There were 153 burned and 112 non-burned subjects with a total of 620 questionnaires. TBSA burned was 11 ± 14% (mean ± SD); 31% had face involvement and 57% had hand involvement. The lag time from burn injury to questionnaire administration was on average 7 ± 7.7 months, with a maximum of 36 months. Lower recovery levels were associated with increasing burn size for physical function, pain, itch, work reintegration, emotion, satisfaction with symptom relief, satisfaction with role, family function, and family concern (P value ranged from .04–<.0001). No significant differences in recovery levels were found with increasing burn size for fine motor function, social function limited by physical function, sexual function, and religion; these areas tracked toward the age-matched non-burned group regardless of burn size. Perceived appearance and social function limited by appearance remained below the non-burn levels throughout the 3-year period regardless of burn size. Three-year recovery trajectories of survivors with larger burn size showed improvements in most areas, but these improvements lagged behind those with smaller burns. Poor perceived appearance was persistent and prevalent regardless of burn size and was found to limit social function in these young adult burn survivors. Expectations for multidimensional recovery from burns in young adults can be benchmarked based on burn size with important implications for patient monitoring and intervening in clinical care.


Physical & Occupational Therapy in Pediatrics | 2012

Outcomes of a Clinic-Based Pediatric Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy Program

Teressa Garcia Reidy; Erin Naber; Emily Viguers; Kristen M. Allison; Kathleen Brady; Joan Carney; Cynthia Salorio; Frank S. Pidcock

ABSTRACT A single-group pre- and post-test design was used to evaluate functional outcomes of a constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) protocol implemented in an outpatient therapy center. The participants were 29 children with hemiplegia, ages 1.6–19.1 years old. The less-involved upper limb was placed in a cast that was worn 24 hr a day, 7 days a week. Individual therapy sessions took place 5 days/week. Children received 3 or 6 hr therapy sessions for 16–19 days followed by 2–5 days in which bimanual tasks were performed. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and following CIMT. Statistically significant gains were made on the Melbourne Assessment of Unilateral Upper Limb Function, Quality of Upper Extremity Skills Test (except the Protective Extension subtest), Assisting Hand Assessment, and the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure. The effect sizes varied from 0.46 to 0.70 indicating a moderate effect size. The results support the effectiveness of CIMT provided through a center-based program.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2016

Recovery curves for pediatric burn survivors advances in patient-oriented outcomes

Lewis E. Kazis; Austin Lee; Mary Rose; Matthew H. Liang; Nien-Chen Li; Xinhua S. Ren; Robert L. Sheridan; Janet Gilroy-Lewis; Frederick J. Stoddard; Michelle I. Hinson; Glenn D. Warden; Kim Stubbs; Patricia Blakeney; Walter J. Meyer; Robert L. McCauley; David N. Herndon; Tina L. Palmieri; Kate Nelson Mooney; David Wood; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Marc L. Cullen; Catherine Calvert; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Marina Soley-Bori; Ronald G. Tompkins

IMPORTANCE Patient-reported outcomes serving as benchmarks for recovery of pediatric burn survivors are lacking, and new approaches using longitudinal cohorts for monitoring their expected recovery based on statistical models are needed for patient management during the early years following the burn. OBJECTIVE To describe multidimensional patient-reported outcomes among pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years to establish benchmarks using recovery curve methods. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Prospective cohort study of pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years at 12 burn centers. Age-matched nonburned reference groups were studied to define expected results in normal growth and development. The Burn Outcomes Questionnaire for children aged 0 to 5 years (BOQ0-5) was administered to parents of children who had burns and were younger than 5 years. Mixed models were used to generate 48-month recovery curves for each of the 10 BOQ0-5 domains. The study was conducted between January 1999 and December 2008. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The 10 BOQ0-5 domains including play, language, fine motor skills, gross motor skills, emotional behavior, family functioning, pain/itching, appearance, satisfaction with care, and worry/concern up to 48 months after burn injury. RESULTS A total of 336 pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years (mean [SD] age, 2.0 [1.2] years; 58.4% male; 60.2% white, 18.6% black, and 12.0% Hispanic) and 285 age-matched nonburned controls (mean [SD] age, 2.4 [1.3] years; 51.1% male; 67.1% white, 8.9% black, and 15.0% Hispanic) completed the study. Predicted scores improved exponentially over time for 5 of the BOQ0-5 domains (predicted scores at 1 month vs 24 months: play, 48.6 vs 52.1 [P = .03]; language, 49.2 vs 54.4 [P < .001]; gross motor skills, 48.7 vs 53.0 [P = .002]; pain/itching, 15.8 vs 33.5 [P < .001]; and worry/concern, 31.6 vs 44.9 [P < .001]). Pediatric burn survivors had higher scores in language, emotional behavior, and family functioning domains compared with healthy children in later months. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This study demonstrates significant deficits in multiple functional domains across pediatric burn survivors compared with controls. Recovery curves can be used to recognize deviation from the expected course and tailor care to patient needs.


Journal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation | 2003

The rehabilitation/school matrix: a model for accommodating the noncompliant child with severe burns.

Frank S. Pidcock; James A. Fauerbach; M. Ober; J. Carney

Some children with severe burns may have difficulty following therapeutic recommendations after discharge from a burn center. Noncompliance may result in complications that affect function, surgical management, community reintegration, and successful reentry into school. We present a case study in which a child with significant compliance issues was managed in a coordinated interdisciplinary model. This model extended from acute recovery through reintegration into the classroom. A behavior-modification program was implemented across different levels of care. Educational reentry was facilitated by including a transitional period in a special-needs classroom in a freestanding special-needs school. Requirements for using educational resources to which some children are legally entitled are reviewed. Rehabilitation services that interface with the educational system for children with burns may improve outcomes as these children reintegrate into the community.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 2009

Pediatric Constraint-Induced Movement Therapy: A Promising Intervention for Childhood Hemiparesis

Frank S. Pidcock; Teressa Garcia; Melissa K. Trovato; Scott Schultz; Kathleen D. Brady

Abstract Experimental and clinical evidence is accumulating that supports the assertion that the damaged human brain is capable of responding to sensory stimulation in a sufficient manner to result in sustainable and useful benefits. The intensity and duration of therapeutic maneuvers that elicit improvement are under active investigation. Recent studies in animals, adults, and children with hemiparesis have shown that constraint of the less involved upper limb coupled with a behavioral program that repetitively encourages graded unilateral movements can result in long-term “new” functional activities. Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) is a promising approach for treatment of children with stroke-related hemiparesis from either prenatal or postnatal causes due to the enhanced neuroplasticity of the brain during early life.


Brain & Development | 2016

Functional outcomes in Rett syndrome

Frank S. Pidcock; Cynthia Salorio; Genila Bibat; Jennifer Swain; Jocelyn Scheller; Wendy S. Shore; Sakku Bai Naidu

AIM To relate functional outcomes to mutation type and age at evaluation in patients with Rett syndrome (RTT). METHOD We identified 96 RTT patients with mutations in the MECP2 (methyl-CpG-binding protein 2) gene. Chart analysis, clinical evaluation, and functional measures were completed. RESULTS Among 11 mutation groups, a statistically significant group effect of mutation type was observed for self-care, upper extremity function, and mobility, on standardized measures administered by occupational and physical therapists. Patients with R133C and uncommon mutations tended to perform best on upper extremity and self-care items, whereas patients with R133C, R306C and R294X had the highest scores on the mobility items. The worst performers on upper extremity and self-care items were patients with large deletions, R255X, R168X, and T158M mutations. The lowest scores for mobility were found in patients with T158M, R255X, R168X, and R270X mutations. On categorical variables as reported by parents at the time of initial evaluation, patients with R133C and R294X were most likely to have hand use, those with R133C, R294X, R306C and small deletions were most likely to be ambulatory, and those with R133C were most likely to be verbal. INTERPRETATION Functional performance in RTT patients may relate to the type of mutation. Knowledge of these relationships is useful for developing appropriate rehabilitation strategies and prognosis.

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Debra A. Reilly

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Walter J. Meyer

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Jeffrey C. Schneider

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Tina L. Palmieri

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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Erin Naber

Kennedy Krieger Institute

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Matthew H. Liang

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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