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Dive into the research topics where Gerald L. Early is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gerald L. Early.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Simplified method of left ventricular thrombectomy.

Gerald L. Early; Michael Ballenger; Hamner Hannah; Shauna R. Roberts

Postinfarction left ventricular thrombi are at risk for embolization with resultant injury. Surgical removal is recommended especially if they are pedunculated or mobile. We describe an easily applied transatrial method that can allow avoidance of a ventriculotomy.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2000

Excellence and low case volume: an example of the inapplicability of volume-based credentialing.

Gerald L. Early; Shauna R. Roberts

BACKGROUND Health care reform, public disclosure of hospital and surgeon-specific results, plus changes in reimbursement patterns have raised the specter of volume-based credentialing. METHODS Using The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Cardiac Database, we examined the data for all coronary artery bypass graft-only patients (n = 615) operated on by us from July 1991 to June 1997. RESULTS The observed mortality was 0.33% and the observed-to-expected ratio was 0.12 (p<0.005). Morbidity was low as well. CONCLUSIONS Excellent results can be obtained for patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting in the presence of both low surgeon and low hospital case volume.


Journal for Healthcare Quality | 2012

Addressing Social Determinants to Improve HealthCare Quality and Reduce Cost

Shauna R. Roberts; Jane Crigler; William E. Lafferty; Aaron J. Bonham; Jennifer L. Hunter; Andrew J. Smith; Julie W. Banderas; Gerald L. Early; Roderick K. King

&NA; Most healthcare quality improvement and cost reduction efforts currently focus on care processes, or transitions—for example, the hospital discharge process. While identification and adoption of best practices to address these aspects of healthcare are essential, more is needed for systems that serve vulnerable populations: to account for social factors that often inhibit patients’ ability to take full advantage of available healthcare. Our urban safety net healthcare system developed and implemented an innovative quality improvement approach. The programs, Guided Chronic CareTM, and Passport to Wellness, use Assertive Care and provide social support for patients between medical encounters, enabling patients to make better use of the healthcare system and empowering them to better manage their conditions. Results: The majority of patients reported problems with mobility and nearly half reported anxiety or depression. Early indications show improved quality of care and significant reduction in costs. Challenges encountered and lessons learned in implementing the programs are described, to assist others developing similar interventions.


Journal for Healthcare Quality | 2015

Working With Socially and Medically Complex Patients: When Care Transitions Are Circular, Overlapping, and Continual Rather Than Linear and Finite.

Roberts; Crigler J; Ramirez C; Sisco D; Gerald L. Early

Abstract:The care coordination program described here evolved from 5 years of trial and learning related to how to best serve our high-cost, high-utilizing, chronically ill, urban core patient population. In addition to medical complexity, they have daily challenges characteristic of persons served by Safety-Net health systems. Many have unstable health insurance status. Others have insecure housing. A number of patients have a history of substance use and mental illness. Many have fractured social supports. Although some of the best-known care transition models have been successful in reducing rehospitalizations and cost among patients studied, these models were developed for a relatively high functioning patient population with social support. We describe a successful approach targeted at working with patients who require a more intense and lengthy care coordination intervention to self-manage and reduce the cost of caring for their medical conditions. Using a diverse team and a set of replicable processes, we have demonstrated statistically significant reduction in the use of hospital and emergency services. Our intervention leverages the strengths and resilience of patients, focuses on trust and self-management, and targets heterogeneous “high-utilizer” patients with medical and social complexity.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2002

Spontaneous esophageal perforation presenting as meningitis

Carlo C Jurani; Gerald L. Early; Shauna R. Roberts

This report describes a unique case of spontaneous esophageal perforation (Boerhaaves syndrome) presenting as meningitis. After a delay in diagnosis (16 days), the patient was successfully treated with debridement, primary closure, and drainage. Although rare, central nervous system infections have been reported in association with esophageal perforation caused by instrumentation, trauma, and malignancy. We report this case of spontaneous esophageal perforation giving rise to meningitis.


Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management | 2017

Ten-year outcome of intraoperative treatment of atrial fibrillation using radiofrequency ablation

Nour Boulad; Nicolas W. Shammas; Gerald L. Early; Shauna R. Roberts; Gail A. Shammas; Yuhning Linda Hu; Holly Park; Michael Jerin

Background Intraoperative radiofrequency ablation (RFA) has been advocated to treat atrial fibrillation (AF). This report examines the long-term effects of intraoperative RFA in the prevention of recurrence of AF when used as an adjunctive treatment in patients undergoing cardiac procedures for primary indications unrelated to their arrhythmia. Methods The study reviewed the records of patients from a tertiary medical center which had 2 cardiac surgeons performing an intraoperative adjunctive RFA procedure. A total of 20 patients undergoing RFA between April 11, 2003 and May 10, 2005 were included and followed for up to 10 years. The primary effectiveness outcome of the study was the recurrence of AF during the follow-up period. Data were collected from office or hospital medical records. Results A total of 20 patients were included (mean age 69.4 years, males 40%). Eight patients were followed for 10 years and 2 patients for 9 years; 7 patients died during the 10-year follow-up period and 3 patients were lost to follow-up. As their primary procedures, the patients underwent valve surgery (65%), bypass surgery (15%), or both (20%). Intraoperative RFA failed to restore sinus rhythm in 2 patients. In the remaining 18 patients, AF recurred in 10 patients within 2 months of surgery, in 1 patient at 5 months, in 1 patient at 7 months, and in 6 patients after 1 year. Conclusion AF had recurred in 100% of patients by the end of the long-term follow-up period. The adjunctive intraoperative RFA and postoperative interventions employed in this early study failed to maintain sinus rhythm.


Archives of Surgery | 1985

A Technique for Postembolectomy Streptokinase Infusion

Gerald L. Early; Hamner Hannah


Southern Medical Journal | 1990

Anxiety levels and cancer fear in patients admitted for elective operations.

Roberts; Gerald L. Early; Lamb J


JAMA | 1999

Defining and Improving Health Care Quality

Gerald L. Early; Shauna R. Roberts


The Chronicle of higher education | 2008

The End of Race as We Know It.

Gerald L. Early

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