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Dive into the research topics where Marie Flannery is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie Flannery.


Pain Management Nursing | 2012

Relationship of Chronic Pain and Opioid Use with Respiratory Disturbance during Sleep

Carla R. Jungquist; Marie Flannery; Michael L. Perlis; Jeanne T. Grace

This research assessed: 1) whether patients thought to have sleep disordered breathing would have more severe symptoms if they were taking opioids; 2) whether severity of sleep disordered breathing was associated with class or dose of opioid; and 3) whether pain intensity was associated with sleep disordered breathing. A descriptive cross-sectional study of patients referred for assessment of sleep disorders was conducted. Data were collected on a total of 419 subjects (no pain [n = 171], chronic pain without opioid treatment [n = 187], and chronic pain with opioid treatment [n = 61]). The findings suggest that regardless of opioid drug or dose, the management of chronic pain with opioids is not likely to exacerbate obstructive sleep apnea at stable doses. However, central sleep apnea was associated with opioid use. Patients with chronic pain taking opioids had a mean of 5 ± 13 central apneic events per hour compared with 1.6 ± 7 events per hour in patients without pain and not taking opioids. Oxygen saturation mean nadir 83.5% (opioid group) versus 82.9% (no pain, pain without opioid) was not significantly different. The clinical relevance of the effect is unknown, so the potential for marginal respiratory disturbance (an increase of 2.8 central events per hour for every 100 mg morphine-equivalent opioid dose) must be weighed against the therapeutic value of pain management with opioids.


Journal of Oncology Practice | 2009

Examining Telephone Calls in Ambulatory Oncology

Marie Flannery; Shannon Phillips; Catherine A. Lyons

A large component of ambulatory oncology practice is management of telephone calls placed to and from the practice between outpatient appointments, but they are not a reimbursable service, they require staff resources, and they place an unpredictable demand on workload. In this study, telephone calls were examined at a private medical oncology practice to define telephone call volume and distribution in an active ambulatory oncology practice, describe the callers and reasons for calls, and examine any differences in call volume by practice characteristics.


Cancer | 2016

Improving the quality of survivorship for older adults with cancer.

Supriya G. Mohile; Arti Hurria; Harvey J. Cohen; Julia H. Rowland; Corinne R. Leach; Neeraj K. Arora; Beverly Canin; Hyman B. Muss; Allison Magnuson; Marie Flannery; Lisa M. Lowenstein; Heather G. Allore; Karen M. Mustian; Wendy Demark-Wahnefried; Martine Extermann; Betty Ferrell; Sharon K. Inouye; Stephanie A. Studenski; William Dale

In May 2015, the Cancer and Aging Research Group, in collaboration with the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute on Aging through a U13 grant, convened a conference to identify research priorities to help design and implement intervention studies to improve the quality of life and survivorship of older, frailer adults with cancer. Conference attendees included researchers with multidisciplinary expertise and advocates. It was concluded that future intervention trials for older adults with cancer should: 1) rigorously test interventions to prevent the decline of or improve health status, especially interventions focused on optimizing physical performance, nutritional status, and cognition while undergoing cancer treatment; 2) use standardized care plans based on geriatric assessment findings to guide targeted interventions; and 3) incorporate the principles of geriatrics into survivorship care plans. Also highlighted was the need to integrate the expertise of interdisciplinary team members into geriatric oncology research, improve funding mechanisms to support geriatric oncology research, and disseminate high‐impact results to the research and clinical community. In conjunction with the 2 prior U13 meetings, this conference provided the framework for future research to improve the evidence base for the clinical care of older adults with cancer. Cancer 2016;122:2459–68.


Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy | 2014

Altered Tendon Characteristics and Mechanical Properties Associated with Insertional Achilles Tendinopathy

Ruth L. Chimenti; Adolph Flemister; Joshua Tome; James M. McMahon; Marie Flannery; Ying Xue; Jeff Houck

STUDY DESIGN Case-control laboratory study. OBJECTIVES To compare tendon characteristics (shape, composition) and mechanical properties (strain, stiffness) on the involved side of participants with insertional Achilles tendinopathy (IAT) to the uninvolved side and to controls, and to examine if severity of tendon pathology is associated with severity of symptoms during function. BACKGROUND Despite the severity and chronicity of IAT, the quality of theoretical evidence available to guide the development of exercise interventions is low. While tendon pathology of midportion Achilles tendinopathy has been described, there are few studies specific to IAT. METHODS Twenty individuals with unilateral IAT and 20 age- and sex-matched controls volunteered to participate. Ultrasound imaging was used to quantify changes in tendon shape (diameter) and composition (echogenicity). A combination of ultrasound and dynamometry was used to measure tendon mechanical properties (strain and stiffness) during passive ankle rotation toward dorsiflexion. Generalized estimating equations were used to examine the association between IAT, alterations in tendon properties, and participant demographics. Pearson correlation was used to examine the association between severity of tendon pathology and severity of symptoms (Victorian Institute of Sport Assessment-Achilles). RESULTS The side with IAT had a larger tendon diameter (P<.001), lower echogenicity (P<.001), higher strain (P = .011), and lower stiffness (P = .007) compared to the side without IAT and the controls. On the involved side of participants with IAT, a lower echogenicity correlated with higher severity of symptoms (r = 0.603, P = .010). CONCLUSION Ultrasound imaging combined with dynamometry can discriminate alterations in tendon shape, composition, and mechanics in participants with IAT. Future clinical trials for IAT may consider strategies to alter tendon characteristics and restore tendon mechanics.


Oncology Nursing Forum | 2013

Telephone Calls by Individuals With Cancer

Marie Flannery; Leanne McAndrews; Karen Farchaus Stein

PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES To describe symptom type and reporting patterns found in spontaneously initiated telephone calls placed to an ambulatory cancer center practice. DESIGN Retrospective, descriptive. SETTING Adult hematology oncology cancer center. SAMPLE 563 individuals with a wide range of oncology diagnoses who initiated 1,229 telephone calls to report symptoms. METHODS Raw data were extracted from telephone forms using a data collection sheet with 23 variables obtained for each phone call, using pre-established coding criteria. A literature-based, investigator-developed instrument was used for the coding criteria and selection of which variables to extract. MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES Symptom reporting, telephone calls, pain, and symptoms. FINDINGS A total of 2,378 symptoms were reported by telephone during the four months. At least 10% of the sample reported pain (38%), fatigue (16%), nausea (16%), swelling (12%), diarrhea (12%), dyspnea (10%), and anorexia (10%). The modal response was to call only one time and to report only one symptom (55%). CONCLUSIONS Pain emerged as the symptom that most often prompted an individual to pick up the telephone and call. Although variation was seen in symptom reporting, an interesting pattern emerged with an individual reporting on a solitary symptom in a single telephone call. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING The emergence of pain as the primary symptom reported by telephone prompted educational efforts for both in-person clinic visit management of pain and prioritizing nursing education and protocol management of pain reported by telephone. KNOWLEDGE TRANSLATION Report of symptoms by telephone can provide nurses unique insight into patient-centered needs. Although pain has been an important focus of education and research for decades, it remains a priority for individuals with cancer. A wide range in symptom reporting by telephone was evident.


Journal of Geriatric Oncology | 2016

Interventions to improve the quality of life and survivorship of older adults with cancer: The funding landscape at NIH, ACS and PCORI

Marie Flannery; Supriya G. Mohile; William Dale; Neeraj K. Arora; Lauren Azar; Erica S. Breslau; Harvey J. Cohen; Efrat Dotan; Basil A. Eldadah; Corinne R. Leach; Sandra A. Mitchell; Julia H. Rowland; Arti Hurria

Identifying knowledge gaps and research opportunities in cancer and aging research was the focus of a three-part conference series led by the Cancer and Aging Research Group from 2010 to 2015. The third meeting, featured representatives from the NIA, NCI, ACS and PCORI each of whom discussed research priorities and funding opportunities in cancer and aging at their respective agencies. This manuscript reports on the proceedings of that conference with a specific focus on funding priorities for interventions to improve the quality of life and survivorship of older adults with cancer. Helpful tips from each funder regarding writing a scientifically strong research proposal are presented.


Oncology Nursing Forum | 2016

Explicit Assumptions About Knowing.

Marie Flannery

Conceptual Foundations is a new column for Oncology Nursing Forum that focuses on the frameworks that underpin research and practice initiatives. The purpose of this inaugural column is to provide an overview of what conceptual frameworks are, related terms, the role of conceptual frameworks in the research process, and why these frameworks matter.


Oncology Nursing Forum | 2016

Changing Practice: Frameworks From Implementation Science

Marie Flannery; Lydia Rotondo

A critical time lag exists from the generation of new knowledge to integration into direct patient care. One effort to address this problem is through clinical initiatives to translate research findings into everyday practice at the unit, department, or institutional level. Such efforts can be particularly challenging when faced with the real-world conditions that healthcare professionals must confront in their day-to-day practice. These initiatives may be in response to an external requirement, a desire to improve practice, or to change care delivery to a more evidence-based model.
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Journal of Geriatric Oncology | 2018

Elucidating the associations between sleep disturbance and depression, fatigue, and pain in older adults with cancer

Kah Poh Loh; Jason Zittel; Sindhuja Kadambi; Chintan Pandya; Huiwen Xu; Marie Flannery; Allison Magnuson; Javier Bautista; Colin McHugh; Karen M. Mustian; William Dale; Paul R. Duberstein; Supriya G. Mohile

OBJECTIVES Sleep disturbance is prevalent and often coexists with depression, fatigue, and pain in the cancer population. The aim of this study was to describe the prevalence of sleep disturbance with co-existing depression, fatigue, and pain in older patients with cancer. We also examined the associations of several socio-demographic and clinical variables with sleep disturbance. METHODS This cross-sectional study consisted of 389 older patients with solid and hematologic malignancies who were referred to the Specialized Oncology Care & Research in the Elderly (SOCARE) clinics at the Universities of Rochester and Chicago between May 2011 and October 2015 and completed a sleep and geriatric assessment (that inquires about fatigue, pain, and depression). Multivariate logistic regression was used to identify variables associated with sleep disturbance. RESULTS The prevalence of sleep disturbance was 40%. Of those with sleep disturbance (n = 154), 84% also had at least one of the other three symptoms (25% had one symptom, 38% had two symptoms, and 21% had three symptoms). Sleep disturbance was more likely to be reported in those with comorbidities (45% vs. 28%, P = 0.002), depression (49% vs. 36%, P = 0.015), fatigue (49% vs. 23%, P < 0.001), and pain (45% vs. 31%, P = 0.010). On multivariable analysis, only fatigue (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 1.90, 95% CI 1.10-3.30, P = 0.020) was independently associated with sleep disturbance. CONCLUSIONS Sleep disturbance is prevalent and often co-occurs with depression, fatigue, or pain in older patients with cancer. Fatigue was significantly associated with sleep disturbance and future studies should explore interventions that target sleep disturbance and fatigue.


Current Oncology Reports | 2018

Using Information Technology in the Assessment and Monitoring of Geriatric Oncology Patients

Kah Poh Loh; Colin McHugh; Supriya G. Mohile; Karen M. Mustian; Marie Flannery; Heidi D. Klepin; Rebecca Schnall; Eva Culakova; Erika Ramsdale

Purpose of ReviewOlder adults with cancer have complex medical needs and often experience higher rates of treatment-related toxicities compared to their younger counterparts. The advent of health information technologies can address multiple gaps in the care of this population. We review the role of existing and emerging technologies in facilitating the use of comprehensive geriatric assessment (CGA) in routine clinics, promoting symptom reporting, and monitoring medication adherence.Recent FindingsIncreasingly, studies demonstrate the feasibility of implementing electronic CGA in routine oncology practices. Evidence also suggests that electronic symptom reporting can improve outcomes in patients with cancer. In addition, technology devices can be used to promote adherence to cancer therapy.SummaryThere are many opportunities for information technology to be integrated into the management and treatment of older adults with cancer. However, further evaluation of these technologies is needed to ensure that they meet the needs of the targeted end users.

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Supriya G. Mohile

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Charles Kamen

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Karen M. Mustian

University of Rochester Medical Center

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William Dale

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Gary R. Morrow

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Anita Roselyn Peoples

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Charles E. Heckler

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Luke J. Peppone

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Michelle C. Janelsins

University of Rochester Medical Center

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