Laura F. Goodman
University of California, Davis
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Featured researches published by Laura F. Goodman.
European Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2017
Laura F. Goodman; Etienne St-Louis; Yasmine Yousef; Maija Cheung; Benno M. Ure; Doruk Ozgediz; Emmanuel A. Ameh; Stephen W. Bickler; Dan Poenaru; Keith T. Oldham; Diana L. Farmer; Kokila Lakhoo
Abstract Background The Lancet Commission on Global Surgery reported that 5 billion people lack access to safe, affordable surgical care. The majority of these people live in low‐resource settings, where up to 50% of the population is children. The Disease Control Priorities (Debas HTP, Donkor A, Gawande DT, Jamison ME, Kruk, and Mock CN, editors. Essential Surgery. Disease Control Priorities. Third Edition, vol 1. Essential Surgery. Washington, DC: World Bank; 2015) on surgery included guidelines for the improvement of access to surgical care; however, these lack detail for childrens surgery. Aim To produce guidance for low‐ and middle‐income countries (LMICs) on the resources required for childrens surgery at each level of hospital care. Methods The Global Initiative for Childrens Surgery (GICS) held an inaugural meeting at the Royal College of Surgeons in London in May 2016, with 52 surgical providers from 21 countries, including 27 providers from 18 LMICs. Delegates engaged in working groups over 2 days to prioritize needs and solutions for optimizing childrens surgical care; these were categorized into infrastructure, service delivery, training, and research. At a second GICS meeting in Washington in October 2016, 94 surgical care providers, half from LMICs, defined the optimal resources required at primary, secondary, tertiary, and national referral level through a series of working group engagements. Results Consensus solutions for optimizing childrens surgical care included the following:Establishing standards and integrating them into national surgical plans.Each country should have at least one childrens hospital.Designate, facilitate, and support regional training hubs covering allchildrens surgical specialties.Establish regional research support centers. An “Optimal Resources” document was produced detailing the facilities and resources required at each level of care. Conclusion The Optimal Resources document has been produced by surgical providers from LMICs who have the greatest insight into the needs and priorities in their population. The document will be refined further through online GICS Working Groups and the World Health Organization for broad application to ensure all children have timely access to safe surgical care.
Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2016
Benjamin A. Keller; Sandra K. Kabagambe; James Becker; Y. Julia Chen; Laura F. Goodman; Julianna M. Clark-Wronski; Kenneth Furukawa; Rebecca A. Stark; Amy Rahm; Shinjiro Hirose; Gary W. Raff
BACKGROUND Multimodal pain management strategies are used for analgesia following pectus excavatum repair. However, the optimal regimen has not been identified. We describe our early experience with intercostal cryoablation for pain management in children undergoing the Nuss procedure and compare early cryoablation outcomes to our prior outcomes using thoracic epidural analgesia. METHODS A multi-institutional, retrospective review of fifty-two patients undergoing Nuss bar placement with either intercostal cryoablation (n=26) or thoracic epidural analgesia (n=26) from March 2013 to January 2016 was conducted. The primary outcome was hospital length of stay. Secondary outcomes included telemetry unit monitoring time, total intravenous narcotic use, duration of intravenous narcotic use, and postoperative complications. RESULTS Patients who underwent intercostal cryoablation had a significant reduction in the mean hospital length of stay, time in a monitored telemetry bed, total use of intravenous narcotics, and the duration of intravenous narcotic administration when compared to thoracic epidural patients. Cryoablation patients had a slightly higher rate of postoperative complications. CONCLUSION Intercostal cryoablation is a promising technique for postoperative pain management in children undergoing repair of pectus excavatum. This therapy results in reduced time to hospital discharge, decreased intravenous narcotic utilization, and has eliminated epidurals from our practice. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Retrospective study - level III.
World Journal of Surgery | 2018
Laura F. Goodman; Erdenetsetseg Chuluun; Burmaa Sanjaa; Sanchin Urjin; Sarnai Erdene; Narantuya Khad; Adiyasuren Jamiyanjav; Jacob T. Stephenson; Diana L. Farmer
BackgroundMongolia is a country characterized by its vast distances and extreme climate. An underdeveloped medical transport infrastructure makes patient transfer from outlying regions dangerous. Providing pediatric surgical care locally is crucial to improve the lives of children in the countryside. This is the first structured assessment of nationwide pediatric surgical capacity.MethodsOperation rates were calculated using data from the Mongolian Center for Health Development and population data from the Mongolian Statistical Information Service. The Pediatric Personnel, Infrastructure, Procedures, Equipment, and Supplies (PediPIPES) survey tool was used to collect data at all survey sites. Descriptive data analyses were completed using Excel. Studies of association were completed using Stata. All reported percentages are of the hospitals outside of the capital (n = 21).ResultsAll provincial hospitals have general surgeons; seven (33.3%) of them have pediatric surgeon(s). One facility has no anesthesiologist. All facilities perform basic procedures and provide anesthesia. Four (19%) can treat common congenital anomalies. All facilities have basic operating room equipment. Nine hospitals do not have pulse oximetry available. Twelve hospitals do not have pediatric surgical instruments always available. Pediatric supplies are lacking.ConclusionsProvincial hospitals in Mongolia can perform basic procedures. However, essential pediatric supplies are lacking. Consequently, certain life-saving procedures are not available to children outside of the capital. Only a few improvements would be amendable to low-cost process improvement adjustment, and the majority of needs require resource additions. Procedure, equipment, and supply availability should be further explored to develop a comprehensive nationwide pediatric surgical program.
Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2018
Melissa Vanover; Christopher D. Pivetti; Lee Lankford; Priyadarsini Kumar; Laura Galganski; Sandra K. Kabagambe; Benjamin A. Keller; James Becker; Y. Julia Chen; Karen Chung; Chelsey Lee; Zachary Paxton; Bailey Deal; Laura F. Goodman; Jamie E. Anderson; Guy W. Jensen; Aijun Wang; Diana L. Farmer
PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to determine whether seeding density of placental mesenchymal stromal cells (PMSCs) on extracellular matrix (ECM) during in utero repair of myelomeningocele (MMC) affects motor function and neuronal preservation in the ovine model. METHODS MMC defects were surgically created in 33 fetuses and repaired following randomization into four treatment groups: ECM only (n = 10), PMSC-ECM (42 K cells/cm2) (n = 8), PMSC-ECM (167 K cells/cm2) (n = 7), or PMSC-ECM (250-300 K cells/cm2) (n = 8). Motor function was evaluated using the Sheep Locomotor Rating Scale (SLR). Serial sections of the lumbar spinal cord were analyzed by measuring their cross-sectional areas which were then normalized to normal lambs. Large neurons (LN, diameter 30-70 μm) were counted manually and density calculated per mm2 gray matter. RESULTS Lambs treated with PMSCs at any density had a higher median SLR score (15 [IQR 13.5-15]) than ECM alone (6.5 [IQR 4-12.75], p = 0.036). Cross-sectional areas of spinal cord and gray matter were highest in the PMSC-ECM (167 K/cm2) group (p = 0.002 and 0.006, respectively). LN density was highest in the greatest density PMSC-ECM (250-300 K/cm2) group (p = 0.045) which positively correlated with SLR score (r = 0.807, p < 0.0001). CONCLUSIONS Fetal repair of myelomeningocele with high density PMSC-ECM resulted in increased large neuron density, which strongly correlated with improved motor function. TYPE OF STUDY Basic science. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE N/A.
BMC Family Practice | 2018
Laura F. Goodman; Guy W. Jensen; Joseph M. Galante; Diana L. Farmer; Stephanie Taché
BackgroundOver one million asylum seekers were registered in Germany in 2016, most from Syria and Afghanistan. The Refugee Convention guarantees access to healthcare, however delivery mechanisms remain heterogeneous. There is an urgent need for more data describing the health conditions of asylum seekers to guide best practices for healthcare delivery. In this study, we describe the state of health of asylum seekers presenting to a multi-specialty primary care refugee clinic.MethodsDemographic and medical diagnosis data were extracted from the electronic medical records of patients seen at the ambulatory refugee clinic in Dresden, Germany between 15 September 2015 and 31 December 2016. Data were de-identified and analyzed using Stata version 14.0.ResultsTwo-thousand-seven-hundred and fifty-three individual patients were seen in the clinic. Of these, 2232 (81.1%) were insured by the state indicating arrival within the last 3 months. The median age was 25, interquartile range 16–34. Only 786 (28.6%) were female, while 1967 (71.5%) were male. The most frequent diagnoses were respiratory (17.4%), followed by miscellaneous symptoms and otherwise not classified ailments (R series, 14.1%), infection (10.8%), musculoskeletal or connective tissue (9.3%), gastrointestinal (6.8%), injury (5.9%), and mental or behavioral (5.1%) categories.ConclusionsThis study illustrates the diverse medical conditions that affect the asylum seeker population. Asylum seekers in our study group did not have a high burden of communicable diseases, however several warranted additional screening and treatment, including for tuberculosis and scabies. Respiratory illnesses were more common amongst newly arrived refugees. Trauma-related mental health disorders comprised half of mental health diagnoses.
Annual Review of Animal Biosciences | 2018
Sandra K. Kabagambe; Chelsey Lee; Laura F. Goodman; Y. Julia Chen; Melissa Vanover; Diana L. Farmer
The International Fetal Medicine and Surgery Society was created in 1982 and proposed guidelines for fetal interventions that required demonstrations of the safety and feasibility of intended interventions in animal models prior to application in humans. Because of their short gestation and low cost, small animal models are useful in early investigation of fetal strategies. However, owing to the anatomic and physiologic differences between small animals and humans, repeated studies in large animal models are usually needed to facilitate translation to humans. Ovine (sheep) models have been used the most extensively to study the pathophysiology of congenital abnormalities and to develop techniques for fetal interventions. However, nonhuman primates have uterine and placental structures that most closely resemble those of humans. Thus, the nonhuman primate is the ideal model to develop surgical and anesthetic techniques that minimize obstetrical complications.
Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2017
Sandra K. Kabagambe; Benjamin A. Keller; James Becker; Laura F. Goodman; Christopher D. Pivetti; Lee Lankford; Karen Chung; Chelsey Lee; Y. Julia Chen; Priyadarsini Kumar; Melissa Vanover; Aijun Wang; Diana L. Farmer
PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of placental mesenchymal stromal cells (PMSCs) seeded on a clinical grade porcine small intestinal submucosa (SIS)-derived extracellular matrix (ECM) on hindlimb motor function in an ovine fetal repair model of myelomeningocele (MMC). METHODS MMC defects were surgically created in 21 fetuses at median gestational age 78 (range 76-83) days. Fetuses were randomly assigned to repair 25days later with ECM only or PMSC-ECM. Surviving fetuses were delivered at term. Motor function was evaluated using the Sheep Locomotor Rating (SLR) scale (0-15). Histologic analysis of the spinal cord (SC) was completed. RESULTS Fetal viability was 71%. 5 of 8 (63%) lambs repaired with PMSC-ECM ambulated independently versus only 1 of 6 (17%) repaired with ECM only (p=0.04, χ2 test). SLR scores and large neuron densities were higher in the PMSC-ECM group. The cross-sectional areas of the SC and the gray matter were equally preserved. CONCLUSIONS Fetal repair of MMC with PMSCs seeded on SIS-ECM improves hindlimb motor function in lambs. Using ECM helps to preserve the architecture of the SC, but adding PMSCs improves the lambs ability to walk and increases large neuron density. Clinical studies are needed to show benefits in humans. LEVELS OF EVIDENCE/TYPE OF STUDY Basic Science.
Journal of surgical case reports | 2016
Laura F. Goodman; Cyrus Bateni; John W. Bishop; Robert J. Canter
Complications from lost gallstones after cholecystectomy are rare but varied from simple perihepatic abscess to empyema and expectoration of gallstones. Gallstone complications have been reported in nearly every organ system, although reports of malignant masquerade of retained gallstones are few. We present the case of an 87-year-old woman with a flank soft tissue tumor 4 years after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The initial clinical, radiographic and biopsy findings were consistent with soft tissue sarcoma (STS), but careful review of her case in multidisciplinary conference raised the suspicion for retained gallstones rather than STS. The patient was treated with incisional biopsy/drainage of the mass, and gallstones were retrieved. The patient recovered completely without an extensive resectional procedure, emphasizing the importance of multidisciplinary sarcoma care to optimize outcomes for potential sarcoma patients.
World Journal of Surgery | 2018
Marissa A. Boeck; Laura F. Goodman; Yihan Lin; Brittanie Wilczak; Girma Tefera
Journal of Surgical Research | 2017
Jamie E. Anderson; Laura F. Goodman; Guy W. Jensen; Edgardo S. Salcedo; Joseph M. Galante