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Dive into the research topics where Marcia M. Ward is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcia M. Ward.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2004

Antimicrobial Resistance Trends and Outbreak Frequency in United States Hospitals

Daniel J. Diekema; Bonnie J. BootsMiller; Thomas Vaughn; Robert F. Woolson; Jon W. Yankey; Erika J. Ernst; Stephen D. Flach; Marcia M. Ward; Carrie L. Franciscus; Michael A. Pfaller; Bradley N. Doebbeling

We assessed resistance rates and trends for important antimicrobial-resistant pathogens (oxacillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus [ORSA], vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus species [VRE], ceftazidime-resistant Klebsiella species [K-ESBL], and ciprofloxacin-resistant Escherichia coli [QREC]), the frequency of outbreaks of infection with these resistant pathogens, and the measures taken to control resistance in a stratified national sample of 670 hospitals. Four hundred ninety-four (74%) of 670 surveys were returned. Resistance rates were highest for ORSA (36%), followed by VRE (10%), QREC (6%), and K-ESBL (5%). Two-thirds of hospitals reported increasing ORSA rates, whereas only 4% reported decreasing rates, and 24% reported ORSA outbreaks within the previous year. Most hospitals (87%) reported having implemented measures to rapidly detect resistance, but only approximately 50% reported having provided appropriate resources for antimicrobial resistance prevention (53%) or having implemented antimicrobial use guidelines (60%). The most common resistant pathogen in US hospitals is ORSA, which accounts for many recognized outbreaks and is increasing in frequency in most facilities. Current practices to prevent and control antimicrobial resistance are inadequate.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 1983

Epinephrine and norepinephrine responses in continuously collected human plasma to a series of stressors.

Marcia M. Ward; Ivan N. Mefford; Stanley D. Parker; Margaret A. Chesney; Barr Taylor; David L. Keegan; Jack D. Barchas

&NA; The present study employed continuous blood withdrawal to examine epinephrine and norepinephrine responses to a cognitive stressor (mental arithmetic), active physical stressors (handgrip and knee bends), passive painful stressors (venipuncture and cold pressor), and a medical procedure that was considered nonstressful (blood pressure measurements). The data were analyzed by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and by time series analysis. The ANOVA indicated that epinephrine and norepinephrine increased significantly in response to the stressors. Epinephrine showed a greater increase to the cognitive stressor than to the others. Time series analysis, however, showed a more varied pattern. It indicated that the height and duration of response differed considerably across subjects and across interventions. The results from both analytic procedures are compared and discussed in terms of current hypotheses of catecholamine response.


Addictive Behaviors | 1996

Abstinence effects as predictors of 28-day relapse in smokers

Gary E. Swan; Marcia M. Ward; Lisa M. Jack

The present analysis sought to determine the relationship between abstinence effects in 64 ex-smokers (mean age = 41.1 years) and the rate at which they relapsed over 4 weeks of biochemically confirmed follow-up. This analysis focused on six abstinence effects that play a central role in the DSM-III-R and DSM IV definitions of withdrawal from nicotine: anger, depression, craving, appetite, confusion, and tension. Significant increases were observed for all six symptoms following cessation, and, with the exception of craving, substantial intercorrelations among the abstinence effects were noted. Cox proportional hazards survival models identified increases in anger, depressed mood, and craving to be significantly associated with a shorter time to relapse (all p < .03). Stepwise Cox proportional hazards survival analysis identified increases in depressed mood and craving as the most significant combination of abstinence effects in relation to time to relapse. A more stringent test of the potency of the relationship between these abstinence effects and time to relapse was conducted in which two other risk factors in this sample, method of quitting and education level, were also included in the model testing sequence. Even after adjustment for these significant risk factors, the increase in craving remained a significant predictor of a higher rate of relapse. This result suggests a robustness to this particular abstinence effect as a determinant of the speed with which ex-smokers relapse over a 1-month interval after cessation.


Life Sciences | 1981

III. Determination of plasma catecholamines and free 3, 4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid in continuously collected human plasma by high performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection

Ivan N. Mefford; Marcia M. Ward; Laughton Miles; Barr Taylor; Margaret A. Chesney; David L. Keegan; Jack D. Barchas

Abstract We have presented a sensitive and relatively simple and inexpensive method for continuous sampling and determination of plasma catecholamines and a major dopamine metabolite, DOPAC. This method provides the basis for determination of the short-term magnitude of catecholamine response as well as the time course of such a response following several physical or psychological interventions. Resting levels of plasma catecholamines--norepinephrine 292 pg/ml, epinephrine 81 pg/ml and dopamine 29 pg/ml--are comparable to those obtained by other methods. Dopamine and free DOPAC were unaffected by physical or psychological interventions while norepinephrine was considerably increased by isometric handgrip, knee bends, and cold pressor and epinephrine increased during knee bends, mental arithmetic, cold pressor, and blood pressure measurement.


Telemedicine Journal and E-health | 2008

Evaluation of Home Telehealth Following Hospitalization for Heart Failure: A Randomized Trial

Bonnie J. Wakefield; Marcia M. Ward; John E. Holman; Annette Ray; Melody Scherubel; Trudy L. Burns; Michael G. Kienzle; Gary E. Rosenthal

Previous studies have found that home-based intervention programs reduce readmission rates for patients with heart failure. Only one previous trial has compared telephone and videophone to traditional care to deliver a home-based heart failure intervention program. The objective of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of a telehealth-facilitated postdischarge support program in reducing resource use in patients with heart failure. Patients at a Midwestern Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center were randomized to telephone, videophone, or usual care for follow-up care after hospitalization for heart failure exacerbation. Outcome measures included readmission rates; time to first readmission; urgent care clinic visits; survival; and quality of life. The intervention resulted in a significantly longer time to readmission but had no effect on readmission rates or mortality. There were no differences in hospital days or urgent care clinic use. All subjects reported higher disease-specific quality of life scores at 1 year. There was evidence of the value of telephone follow-up, but there was no evidence to support the benefit of videophone care over telephone care. Rigorous evaluation is needed to determine which patients may benefit most from specific telehealth applications and which technologies are most cost-effective.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1993

Differential rates of relapse in subgroups of male and female smokers

Gary E. Swan; Marcia M. Ward; Dorit Carm Elli; Lisa M. Jack

Subjects for this study were 265 participants of stop-smoking clinics (mean age = 42.6 years; average number of cigarettes smoked daily = 26.0) who were examined before and immediately after cessation and then followed for 1 year. The objective of this study was to identify subgroups of smokers with different rates of relapse using tree-structured survival analysis, a multivariate approach to classification. Five distinct subgroups that differed with respect to the rate of relapse were identified: (I) subjects (n = 15) with very low precessation cotinine levels (< or = 129 ng/ml), who had an exceptionally low rate of relapse (mean abstinence time = 270 days); (II) women 32 years old and younger (n = 24), who had a very high rate of relapse (mean abstinence time = 30.5 days); (III) women over 32 years old (n = 121), with the next highest rate of relapse (mean abstinence time = 98.9 days); (IV) men 36 years old and younger (n = 31), who had a mean abstinence time of 196.7 days; and (V) men over 36 years old (n = 74), who abstained an average of 130.2 days before relapsing. Relapse curves for all groups (except III vs V) differed significantly from each other, p < 0.05. Results indicate that this approach can identify interactions among individual differences that are variably associated with relapse rates. Identification of relapse subgroups may have important implications for both theories and treatment of smoking relapse.


Addictive Behaviors | 2001

Self-reported abstinence effects in the first month after smoking cessation

Marcia M. Ward; Gary E. Swan; Lisa M. Jack

The present study evaluated self-reported subjective complaints (29 single items and 11 scales) at precessation, on quit day, and on Days 1, 2, 3, 7, 14, 21, and 28 after cessation in 46 healthy quitters who remained abstinent for the first month after cessation (biochemically confirmed). Also tested on the same schedule were 29 nonsmokers matched for age and gender. Specific criteria were set for transient and offset effects based on the direction, magnitude, and time course of changes in symptoms after cessation. Results indicated that single-item anger, anxiety, depression, difficulty concentrating, irritability, restlessness, dizziness, and nausea, and the Shiffman-Jarvik Stimulation/Sedation Subscale, the Perceived Stress scale, and the POMS anger, confusion, and tension subscales met the criteria for transient effects, and that single-item desire to smoke, cough, and headache, and the Shiffman-Jarvik Psychological Subscale met the criteria for offset effects. These findings help to clarify which subjective complaints after smoking cessation are transient effects and which are offset effects, a distinction with important implications for understanding nicotine dependence and for designing pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions for smoking cessation.


Journal of Rural Health | 2008

Health Care Information Technology in Rural America: Electronic Medical Record Adoption Status in Meeting the National Agenda.

James A. Bahensky; Mirou Jaana; Marcia M. Ward

Continuing is a national political drive for investments in health care information technology (HIT) that will allow the transformation of health care for quality improvement and cost reduction. Despite several initiatives by the federal government to spur this development, HIT implementation has been limited, particularly in the rural market. The status of technology use in the transformation effort is reviewed by examining electronic medical records (EMRs), analyzing the existing rural environment, identifying barriers and factors affecting their development and implementation, and recommending needed steps to make this transformation occur, particularly in rural communities. A review of the literature for HIT in rural settings indicates that very little progress has been made in the adoption and use of HIT in rural America. Financial barriers and a large number of HIT vendors offering different solutions present significant risks to rural health care providers wanting to invest in HIT. Although evidence in the literature has demonstrated benefits of adopting HIT such as EMRs, important technical, policy, organizational, and financial barriers still exist that prevent the implementation of these systems in rural settings. To expedite the spread of HIT in rural America, federal and state governments along with private payers, who are important beneficiaries of HIT, must make difficult decisions as to who pays for the investment in this technology, along with driving standards, simplifying approaches for reductions in risk, and creating a workable operational plan.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2004

Does Patient-centered Care Improve Provision of Preventive Services?

Stephen D. Flach; Kimberly McCoy; Thomas Vaughn; Marcia M. Ward; Bonnie J. BootsMiller; Bradley N. Doebbeling

AbstractOBJECTIVES: While patient-centered care (PCC) is desirable for many reasons, its relationship to treatment outcomes is controversial. We evaluated the relationship between PCC and the provision of preventive services. METHODS: We obtained facility-level estimates of how well each VA hospital provided PCC from the 1999 ambulatory Veterans Satisfaction Survey. PCC delivery was measured by the average percentage of responses per facility indicating satisfactory performance from items in 8 PCC domains: access, incorporating patient preferences, patient education, emotional support, visit coordination, overall coordination of care, continuity, and courtesy. Additional predictors included patient population and facility characteristics. Our outcome was a previously validated hospital-level benchmarking score describing facility-level performance across 12 U.S. Preventive Services Task Force-recommended interventions, using the 1999 Veterans Health Survey. RESULTS: Facility-level delivery of preventive services ranged from an overall mean of 90% compliance for influenza vaccinations to 18% for screening for seat belt use. Mean overall PCC scores ranged from excellent (>90% for the continuity of care and courtesy of care PCC domains) to modest (<70% for patient education). Correlates of better preventive service delivery included how often patients were able to discuss their concerns with their provider, the percent of visits at which patients saw their usual provider, and the percent of patients receiving >90% of care from a VA hospital. CONCLUSION: Improved communication between patients and providers, and continuity of care are associated with increased provision of preventive services, while other aspects of PCC are not strongly related to delivery of preventive services.


Annals of Surgery | 2010

Effect of meeting Leapfrog volume thresholds on complication rates following complex surgical procedures.

Veerasathpurush Allareddy; Marcia M. Ward; Veerajalandhar Allareddy; Badrinath R. Konety

Background:There is limited published data on the relationship between hospital volume and postoperative complications. The objectives of the current study are to examine the association between hospital volume and complications and also to examine the association between complications and in-hospital mortality following 5 complex surgical procedures. Methods:The Nationwide Inpatient Sample for years 2000 to 2003 was used. Patients who underwent coronary artery bypass graft (CABG), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), elective abdominal aortic aneurysm repair (AAA), pancreatectomy (PAN), and esophagectomy (ESO) as primary procedures were selected. Hospital volumes were calculated as suggested by the Leapfrog Group evidence-based hospital referral criteria. The association between hospital volume and complications were examined by multivariable logistic regression analyses, adjusting for patient and hospital characteristics. Results:A total of 261551 CABG, 573072 PCI, 35104 AAA, 4931 PAN, and 2473 ESO procedures were selected for analysis. A total of 580 hospitals performed the CABG procedures during the study period in this dataset. The corresponding numbers of hospitals for PCI, AAA, PAN, and ESO were 714, 1207, 758, and 555 respectively. In-hospital complication rates following CABG, PCI, AAA, PAN, and ESO were 26.45%, 6.74%, 23.81%, 39.28%, and 46.30%, respectively. High-volume hospitals for all the procedures were associated with lower odds for in-hospital mortality when compared with low-volume hospitals (P < 0.05). High-volume hospitals were associated with significantly lower odds for at least one complication following 3 of the 5 procedures (PCI, AAA, and PAN) and specifically for significantly lower odds for respiratory complications following CABG, AAA, and PAN, digestive complications following PAN, hemorrhage/hematoma complications following PCI, and septicemia following PCI and PAN when compared with low-volume hospitals (P < 0.05). Conclusion:Lower mortality rates in high-volume hospitals can be partly, though not completely, attributed to lower complication rates. Future studies must focus on identifying other potential pathways for reduced mortality in high-volume hospitals.

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