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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer A. Smallwood is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer A. Smallwood.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2012

Patient- and Practice-Related Determinants of Emergency Department Length of Stay for Patients With Psychiatric Illness

Anthony P. Weiss; Grace Chang; Scott L. Rauch; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Mark Schechter; Joshua M. Kosowsky; Eric P. Hazen; Florina Haimovici; David Gitlin; Christine T. Finn; Endel John Orav

STUDY OBJECTIVE To identify patient and clinical management factors related to emergency department (ED) length of stay for psychiatric patients. METHODS This was a prospective study of 1,092 adults treated at one of 5 EDs between June 2008 and May 2009. Regression analyses were used to identify factors associated with ED length of stay and its 4 subcomponents. Secondary analyses considered patients discharged to home and those who were admitted or transferred separately. RESULTS The overall mean ED length of stay was 11.5 hours (median 8.2 hours). ED length of stay varied by discharge disposition, with patients discharged to home staying 8.6 hours (95% confidence interval 7.7 to 9.5 hours) and patients transferred to a hospital outside the system of care staying 15 hours (95% confidence interval 12.7 to 17.6 hours) on average. Older age and being uninsured were associated with increased ED length of stay, whereas race, sex, and homelessness had no association. Patients with a positive toxicology screen result for alcohol stayed an average of 6.2 hours longer than patients without toxicology screens, an effect observed primarily in the periods before disposition decision. Diagnostic imaging was associated with an average 3.2-hour greater length of stay, prolonging both early and late components of the ED stay. Restraint use had a similar effect, leading to a length of stay 4.2 hours longer than that of patients not requiring restraints. CONCLUSION Psychiatric patients spent more than 11 hours in the ED on average when seeking care. The need for hospitalization, restraint use, and the completion of diagnostic imaging had the greatest effect on postassessment boarding time, whereas the presence of alcohol on toxicology screening led to delays earlier in the ED stay. Identification and sharing of best practices associated with each of these factors would provide an opportunity for improvement in ED care for this population.


Jacc-Heart Failure | 2016

Intravenous Diuretic Therapy for the Management of Heart Failure and Volume Overload in a Multidisciplinary Outpatient Unit

Leo F. Buckley; Danielle Carter; Lina Matta; Judy W.M. Cheng; Craig A. Stevens; Roman M. Belenkiy; Laura J. Burpee; Michelle Young; Cynthia Weiffenbach; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Lynne Warner Stevenson; Akshay S. Desai

OBJECTIVES This study sought to evaluate the effectiveness of intravenous (IV) diuretic treatment for volume management in heart failure (HF). BACKGROUND Limited data exist regarding IV diuretics for the outpatient treatment of volume overload in HF patients. METHODS We analyzed 60 consecutive patients with chronic HF and clinical evidence of worsening congestion who received a bolus and 3-h IV infusion of furosemide at an outpatient HF clinic. Diuretic dosing was derived from the maintenance oral loop diuretic dose with a standardized conversion algorithm. Outcomes included urine output during the visit, weight loss at 24 h, and hospitalization and mortality at 30 days. Safety outcomes included hypokalemia and worsening of renal function. Outcomes were analyzed across subgroups defined by maintenance diuretic dose and ejection fraction (EF). RESULTS The median age of the cohort was 70 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 58 to 80 years), and the median daily loop diuretic dose was 240 mg (IQR: 80 to 800 mg) oral furosemide or equivalent. Twenty-six patients (43.3%) were women, and 36 (60%) had an EF ≤45%. For the entire cohort, the median urine output and 24-h weight loss were 1.1 l (IQR: 0.6 to 1.4 l) and 1.1 kg (IQR: 0.2 to 1.9 kg), respectively. Outcomes were similar across patients with varying maintenance diuretic doses (<40 mg, 40 to 160 mg, 160 to 300 mg, or >300 mg of furosemide or equivalent) and in patients with reduced or preserved EF. Transient worsening of renal function and hypokalemia occurred in 10 patients (8.9%) and 4 patients (3.5%). Although hospitalization was reported as imminent for 28 patients (52.8%), the observed rate of all-cause hospitalization was 31.7% at 30 days with no deaths. CONCLUSIONS Short courses of IV diuretics for volume management in patients with HF were safe and associated with significant urine output and weight loss across a wide range of maintenance diuretic doses and EF. This strategy may provide an alternative to hospitalization for the management of selected HF patients.


Psychosomatics | 2013

Drug Screens for Psychiatric Patients in the Emergency Department: Evaluation and Recommendations

David S. Kroll; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Grace Chang

OBJECTIVE To better understand how toxicology screening for psychiatric patients in the emergency department (ED) setting affects diagnostic decisions. METHODS Retrospective chart review of 439 ED visits of adult patients receiving psychiatry consultations at two hospitals, one an academic medical center (n =224) and the other a community hospital (n = 220), between July 2008 and February 2009. Clinical, demographic, and ED length of stay (LOS) information was abstracted from the psychiatry consultation notes and the medical records. RESULTS Positive urine toxicology results, when combined with a basic substance abuse history, were not associated independently with a patients receiving a substance-related diagnosis as part of the psychiatric assessment. By contrast, a positive blood alcohol level was associated independently with a patients receiving one of these diagnoses while a positive alcohol use history was not. CONCLUSIONS Urine toxicology screens do not add significant diagnostic value to all ED psychiatric evaluations when combined with standard substance use histories.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2017

Early aspirin use and the development of cardiac allograft vasculopathy

Miae Kim; Brian Bergmark; Thomas Zelniker; Mandeep R. Mehra; Garrick C. Stewart; Deborah Page; Erica L. Woodcome; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Steven Gabardi; Michael M. Givertz

BACKGROUND Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality after orthotopic heart transplantation (OHT). Little is known about the influence of aspirin on clinical expression of CAV. METHODS We followed 120 patients with OHT at a single center for a median of 7 years and categorized them by the presence or absence of early aspirin therapy post-transplant (aspirin treatment ≥6 months in the first year). The association between aspirin use and time to the primary end-point of angiographic moderate or severe CAV (International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation grade ≥2) was investigated. Propensity scores for aspirin treatment were estimated using boosting models and applied by inverse probability of treatment weighting (IPTW). RESULTS Despite a preponderance of risk factors for CAV among patients receiving aspirin (male sex, ischemic heart disease as the etiology of heart failure, and smoking), aspirin therapy was associated with a lower rate of moderate or severe CAV at 5 years. Event-free survival was 95.9% for patients exposed to aspirin compared with 79.6% for patients without aspirin exposure (log-rank p = 0.005). IPTW-weighted Cox regression revealed a powerful inverse association between aspirin use and moderate to severe CAV (adjusted hazard ratio 0.13; 95% confidence interval 0.03-0.59), which was directionally consistent for CAV of any severity (adjusted hazard ratio 0.50; 95% confidence interval 0.23-1.08). CONCLUSIONS This propensity score-based comparative observational analysis suggests that early aspirin exposure may be associated with a reduced risk of development of moderate to severe CAV. These findings warrant prospective validation in controlled investigations.


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2018

Spot Urine Sodium as Triage for Effective Diuretic Infusion in an Ambulatory Heart Failure Unit

D. Marshall Brinkley; Laura J. Burpee; Sunit-Preet Chaudhry; Jennifer A. Smallwood; JoAnn Lindenfeld; Neal K. Lakdawala; Akshay S. Desai; Lynne Warner Stevenson

BACKGROUND Admission for diuresis remains a common and costly event in patients with advanced heart failure (HF). We tested whether spot urine sodium could identify patients likely to respond to ambulatory diuretic infusion without hospitalization. METHODS AND RESULTS We prospectively followed 176 consecutive patients with advanced heart failure receiving intravenous furosemide for congestion in an ambulatory clinic. Spot urine sodium was measured in 1st voided urine after diuretic infusion and compared with 3-hour urine output and subsequent risk of 30-day hospitalization or emergency department (ED) visit. Spot urine sodium was significantly associated with urine output in a model adjusted for age, renal function, and blood urea nitrogen (P = .02). Higher urine sodium was associated with lower risk of hospitalization or ED visit within 30 days (odds ratio [OR] 0.82 [95% confidence interval 0.72-0.94] per 10 mmol/L increase; P < .001), in a model adjusted for hemoglobin (OR 0.80 [0.66-0.97]; P = .02) and systolic blood pressure (OR 0.82 [0.67-1.0]; P = .05). Spot urine sodium ≥65 mmol/L and urine output ≥1200 mL identified a lower-risk group for outpatient management. CONCLUSION High spot urine sodium after diuretic administration identifies HF patients likely to respond to an ambulatory diuretic infusion with lower rates of hospitalization or ED visits at 30 days.


Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2014

Cognitive and Other Predictors of Change in Quality of Life One Year After Treatment for Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia or Myelodysplastic Syndrome

Grace Chang; Mary-Ellen Meadows; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Joseph H. Antin; E. John Orav

The role of cognitive function in quality of life is important among the growing numbers of survivors after cancer treatment. The authors conducted a prospective cohort study of 106 adults evaluated 5.6 months (median) after diagnosis and 77 of 83 (93%) survivors 12 months later with neuropsychological assessments yielding information about simple reaction time to stimuli and other aspects of cognitive function and with two quality of life measures. The two most consistent predictors of change in quality of life were baseline quality of life ratings and simple reaction time. This novel finding about simple reaction time warrants further confirmation.


Stroke | 2018

Cerebrovascular Accidents During Mechanical Circulatory Support: New Predictors of Ischemic and Hemorrhagic Strokes and Outcome

Saef Izzy; Daniel B. Rubin; Firas S. Ahmed; Feras Akbik; Simone Renault; Katelyn W. Sylvester; Henrikas Vaitkevicius; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Michael M. Givertz; Steven K. Feske

Background and Purpose— Left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) have emerged as an effective treatment for patients with advanced heart failure refractory to medical therapy. Post-LVAD strokes are an important cause of morbidity and reduced quality of life. Data on risks that distinguish between ischemic and hemorrhagic post-LVAD strokes are limited. The aim of this study was to determine the incidence of post-LVAD ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes, their association with stroke risk factors, and their effect on mortality. Methods— Data are collected prospectively on all patients with LVADs implanted at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. We added retrospectively collected clinical data for these analyses. Results— From 2007 to 2016, 183 patients (median age, 57; 80% male) underwent implantation of HeartMate II LVAD as a bridge to transplant (52%), destination therapy (39%), or bridge to transplant candidacy (8%). A total of 48 strokes occurred in 39 patients (21%): 28 acute ischemic strokes in 24 patients (13%) and 20 intracerebral hemorrhages in 19 patients (10.3%). First events occurred at a median of 238 days from implantation (interquartile range, 93–515) among those who developed post-LVAD stroke. All but 9 patients (4.9%) were on warfarin (goal international normalized ratio, 2–3.5) and all received aspirin (81–325 mg). Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were more likely to have an ischemic stroke (odds ratio, 2.96; 95% confidence interval, 1.14–7.70). Dialysis-dependent patients showed a trend toward a higher risk of hemorrhagic stroke (odds ratio, 6.31; 95% confidence interval, 0.99–40.47). Hemorrhagic stroke was associated with higher mortality (odds ratio, 3.92; 95% confidence interval, 1.34–11.45) than ischemic stroke (odds ratio, 3.17; 95% confidence interval, 1.13–8.85). Conclusions— Stroke is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in patients on LVAD support. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease increases the risk of ischemic stroke, whereas dialysis may increase the risk of hemorrhagic stroke. Although any stroke increases mortality, post-LVAD hemorrhagic stroke was associated with higher mortality compared with ischemic stroke.


Journal of alcoholism and drug dependence | 2014

Risky Drinking Women: Contrasting Therapeutic Approaches

Christina Scheffel Birath; Britt af Klinteberg; Valerie DeMarinis; Sarah Hauke; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Grace Chang

Background: The importance of early identification and effective treatment for risky drinking grows with the increasing rate of alcohol use by women. Objectives: This study aims to contrast treatment approaches for two samples of problem drinking women. Methods: The samples consisted of (i) 134 alcohol treatment-seeking Swedish women receiving long-term comprehensive services; and (ii) 152 US women who were not seeking treatment for alcohol but were medical outpatients with one of four conditions exacerbated by excessive alcohol use and received a brief intervention as part of a study. Data consisted of questionnaires assessing alcohol consumption, perceived stress and attitudes towards change. Results: While the treatment-seeking Swedish group drank more alcohol at the start of treatment, all women reduced their consumption of alcohol at the end of treatment/follow-up. Women who reported more stress drank more initially in both samples. Conclusion and Scientific Significance: This report contrasts two “extreme” approaches to treatment: longterm, open-ended, outpatient treatment and, time-limited, structured brief intervention for risky drinking women. Both treatment methods yielded positive results with significantly reduced drinking. Factors associated with successful outcome included the women’s attitudes toward treatment and conviction for the necessity of change in drinking habits.


General Hospital Psychiatry | 2012

Bottlenecks in the Emergency Department: the psychiatric clinicians' perspective

Grace Chang; Anthony P. Weiss; E. John Orav; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Stephanie Gonzalez; Joshua M. Kosowsky; Scott L. Rauch


Psychiatric Services | 2012

Characteristics of Adult Psychiatric Patients With Stays of 24 Hours or More in the Emergency Department

Grace Chang; Anthony P. Weiss; Joshua M. Kosowsky; Endel John Orav; Jennifer A. Smallwood; Scott L. Rauch

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Michael M. Givertz

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Akshay S. Desai

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Laura J. Burpee

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Craig A. Stevens

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Daniel B. Rubin

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Gregory S. Couper

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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