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Dive into the research topics where Marina Soley-Bori is active.

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Featured researches published by Marina Soley-Bori.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2017

Measuring the Social Impact of Burns on Survivors.

Molly Marino; Marina Soley-Bori; Alan M. Jette; Mary Slavin; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Amy Acton; Flor Amaya; Melinda Rossi; Rene Soria-Saucedo; Linda Resnik; Lewis E. Kazis

Many burn survivors experience social challenges throughout their recovery. Measuring the social impact of a burn injury is important to identify opportunities for interventions. The aim of this study is to develop a pool of items addressing the social impact of burn injuries in adults to create a self-reported computerized adaptive test based on item response theory. The authors conducted a comprehensive literature review to identify preexisting items in other self-reported measures and used data from focus groups to create new items. The authors classified items using a guiding conceptual framework on social participation. The authors conducted cognitive interviews with burn survivors to assess clarity and interpretation of each item. The authors evaluated an initial pool of 276 items with burn survivors and reduced this to 192 items after cognitive evaluation by experts and burn survivors. The items represent seven domains from the guiding conceptual model: work, recreation and leisure, relating to strangers, romantic, sexual, family, and informal relationships. Additional item content that crossed domains included using self-comfort and others’ comfort with clothing, telling one’s story, and sense of purpose. This study was designed to develop a large item pool based on a strong conceptual framework using grounded theory analysis with focus groups of burn survivors and their caregivers. The 192 items represent 7 domains and reflect the unique experience of burn survivors within these important areas of social participation. This work will lead to developing the Life Impact Burn Recovery Evaluation profile, a self-reported outcome measure.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2016

Recovery curves for pediatric burn survivors advances in patient-oriented outcomes

Lewis E. Kazis; Austin Lee; Mary Rose; Matthew H. Liang; Nien-Chen Li; Xinhua S. Ren; Robert L. Sheridan; Janet Gilroy-Lewis; Frederick J. Stoddard; Michelle I. Hinson; Glenn D. Warden; Kim Stubbs; Patricia Blakeney; Walter J. Meyer; Robert L. McCauley; David N. Herndon; Tina L. Palmieri; Kate Nelson Mooney; David Wood; Frank S. Pidcock; Debra A. Reilly; Marc L. Cullen; Catherine Calvert; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Marina Soley-Bori; Ronald G. Tompkins

IMPORTANCE Patient-reported outcomes serving as benchmarks for recovery of pediatric burn survivors are lacking, and new approaches using longitudinal cohorts for monitoring their expected recovery based on statistical models are needed for patient management during the early years following the burn. OBJECTIVE To describe multidimensional patient-reported outcomes among pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years to establish benchmarks using recovery curve methods. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Prospective cohort study of pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years at 12 burn centers. Age-matched nonburned reference groups were studied to define expected results in normal growth and development. The Burn Outcomes Questionnaire for children aged 0 to 5 years (BOQ0-5) was administered to parents of children who had burns and were younger than 5 years. Mixed models were used to generate 48-month recovery curves for each of the 10 BOQ0-5 domains. The study was conducted between January 1999 and December 2008. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The 10 BOQ0-5 domains including play, language, fine motor skills, gross motor skills, emotional behavior, family functioning, pain/itching, appearance, satisfaction with care, and worry/concern up to 48 months after burn injury. RESULTS A total of 336 pediatric burn survivors younger than 5 years (mean [SD] age, 2.0 [1.2] years; 58.4% male; 60.2% white, 18.6% black, and 12.0% Hispanic) and 285 age-matched nonburned controls (mean [SD] age, 2.4 [1.3] years; 51.1% male; 67.1% white, 8.9% black, and 15.0% Hispanic) completed the study. Predicted scores improved exponentially over time for 5 of the BOQ0-5 domains (predicted scores at 1 month vs 24 months: play, 48.6 vs 52.1 [P = .03]; language, 49.2 vs 54.4 [P < .001]; gross motor skills, 48.7 vs 53.0 [P = .002]; pain/itching, 15.8 vs 33.5 [P < .001]; and worry/concern, 31.6 vs 44.9 [P < .001]). Pediatric burn survivors had higher scores in language, emotional behavior, and family functioning domains compared with healthy children in later months. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE This study demonstrates significant deficits in multiple functional domains across pediatric burn survivors compared with controls. Recovery curves can be used to recognize deviation from the expected course and tailor care to patient needs.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2016

Development of a conceptual framework to measure the social impact of burns

Molly Marino; Marina Soley-Bori; Alan M. Jette; Mary Slavin; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Linda Resnik; Amy Acton; Flor Amaya; Melinda Rossi; Rene Soria-Saucedo; Lewis E. Kazis

Measuring community reintegration following burn injury is important to assess the efficacy of therapies designed to optimize recovery. This project aims to develop and validate a conceptual framework for understanding the social impact of burn injuries in adults. The framework is critical for developing the item banks used for a computerized adaptive test. We performed a comprehensive literature review and consulted with clinical experts and burn survivors about social life areas impacted by burn injury. Focus groups with burn survivors and clinicians were conducted to inform and validate the framework. Transcripts were coded using grounded theory methodology. The World Health Organization’s International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, was chosen to ground the content model. The primary construct identified was social participation, which contains two concepts: societal role and personal relationships. The subdomains chosen for item development were work, recreation and leisure, relating with strangers, and romantic, sexual, family, and informal relationships. Qualitative results strongly suggest that the conceptual model fits the constructs for societal role and personal relationships with the respective subdomains. This conceptual framework has guided the implementation of a large-scale calibration study currently underway which will lead to a computerized adaptive test for monitoring the social impacts of burn injuries during recovery.


Journal of Health Communication | 2015

Shared Decision Making and the Use of Screening Mammography in Women Younger Than 50 Years of Age

Christine M. Gunn; Marina Soley-Bori; Tracy A. Battaglia; Howard Cabral; Lewis E. Kazis

Current breast cancer screening guidelines promote the use of shared decision making for women younger than 50 years of age, yet their effect on mammography utilization is largely unknown. This study aimed to examine the effect of two elements of shared decision making on the use of mammogram screening: patient-perceived choice and patient–provider communication. Data were obtained from HINTS 4, a nationally representative survey of the U.S. population, administered from 2011 to 2013. Choice was measured with the question “Has a doctor ever told you that you could choose whether or not to have a mammogram?” Communication was measured using a 7-item scale (range: 7–28; higher scores denote better communication). Binary logistic regression models assessed the effect of patient choice and communication on ever having a mammogram using weighted sample data. The sample included 1,085 women younger than 50 years of age: 31% of women perceived having a choice to undergo mammography. The mean patient–provider communication score was 22.8. Those who thought they were given a choice regarding mammography were more likely to have a mammogram relative to those who did not think a choice was given by the provider. Patient–provider communication had no significant association with mammography utilization. Patient perceived choice, but not patient-provider communication, is positively associated with mammography utilization in women younger than 50 years of age.


Health Services Research | 2018

Longitudinal Analysis of Quality of Diabetes Care and Relational Climate in Primary Care

Marina Soley-Bori; Justin K. Benzer; James F. Burgess

OBJECTIVE To assess the influence of relational climate on quality of diabetes care. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING The study was conducted at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). The VA All Employee Survey (AES) was used to measure relational climate. Patient and facility characteristics were gathered from VA administrative datasets. STUDY DESIGN Multilevel panel data (2008-2012) with patients nested into clinics. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS Diabetic patients were identified using ICD-9 codes and assigned to the clinic with the highest frequency of primary care visits. Multiple quality indicators were used, including an all-or-none process measure capturing guideline compliance, the actual number of tests and procedures, and three intermediate continuous outcomes (cholesterol, glycated hemoglobin, and blood pressure). PRINCIPAL FINDINGS The study sample included 327,805 patients, 212 primary care clinics, and 101 parent facilities in 2010. Across all study years, there were 1,568,180 observations. Clinics with the highest relational climate were 25 percent more likely to provide guideline-compliant care than those with the lowest relational climate (OR for a 1-unit increase: 1.02, p-value <.001). Among insulin-dependent diabetic veterans, this effect was twice as large. Contrary to that expected, relational climate did not influence intermediate outcomes. CONCLUSIONS Relational climate is positively associated with tests and procedures provision, but not with intermediate outcomes of diabetes care.


Medical Care Research and Review | 2018

Relational climate and health care costs: Evidence From diabetes care

Marina Soley-Bori; Theodore Stefos; James F. Burgess; Justin K. Benzer

Quality of care worries and rising costs have resulted in a widespread interest in enhancing the efficiency of health care delivery. One area of increasing interest is in promoting teamwork as a way of coordinating efforts to reduce costs and improve quality, and identifying the characteristics of the work environment that support teamwork. Relational climate is a measure of the work environment that captures shared employee perceptions of teamwork, conflict resolution, and diversity acceptance. Previous research has found a positive association between relational climate and quality of care, yet its relationship with costs remains unexplored. We examined the influence of primary care relational climate on health care costs incurred by diabetic patients at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs between 2008 and 2012. We found that better relational climate is significantly related to lower costs. Clinics with the strongest relational climate saved


Surgery | 2016

Patient cost-sharing and insurance arrangements are associated with hospital readmissions after abdominal surgery: Implications for access and quality health care

Bora Youn; Marina Soley-Bori; Rene Soria-Saucedo; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Alex B. Haynes; Howard Cabral; Lewis E. Kazis

334 in outpatient costs per patient compared with facilities with the weakest score in 2010. The total outpatient cost saving if all clinics achieved the top 5% relational climate score was


Psychiatric Services | 2018

Factors That Predict the Use of Psychotropics Among Children and Adolescents With PTSD: Evidence From Private Insurance Claims

Rene Soria-Saucedo; Janice Haechung Chung; Heather J. Walter; Marina Soley-Bori; Lewis E. Kazis

20 million. Relational climate may contribute to lower costs by enhancing diabetic treatment work processes, especially in outpatient settings.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2017

Development of clinical process measures for pediatric burn care: Understanding variation in practice patterns

Lewis E. Kazis; Robert L. Sheridan; Gabriel D. Shapiro; Austin Lee; Matthew H. Liang; Colleen M. Ryan; Jeffrey C. Schneider; Martha Lydon; Marina Soley-Bori; Lily A. Sonis; Emily C. Dore; Tina L. Palmieri; David N. Herndon; Walter J. Meyer; Petra Warner; Richard J. Kagan; Frederick J. Stoddard; Michael S. Murphy; Ronald G. Tompkins

BACKGROUND Readmission rates after operative procedures are used increasingly as a measure of hospital care quality. Patient access to care may influence readmission rates. The objective of this study was to determine the relationship between patient cost-sharing, insurance arrangements, and the risk of postoperative readmissions. METHODS Using the MarketScan Research Database (n = 121,002), we examined privately insured, nonelderly patients who underwent abdominal surgery in 2010. The main outcome measures were risk-adjusted unplanned readmissions within 7 days and 30 days of discharge. Odds of readmissions were compared with multivariable logistic regression models. RESULTS In adjusted models,


Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology | 2017

Associations Between Medication Class and Subsequent Augmentation of Depression Treatment in Privately Insured US Adults

Omid Ameli; Rene Soria-Saucedo; Eric G. Smith; Howard Cabral; Marina Soley-Bori; Lewis E. Kazis

1,284 increase in patient out-of-pocket payments during index admission (a difference of one standard deviation) was associated with 19% decrease in the odds of 7-day readmission (odds ratio [OR] 0.81, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.78-0.85) and 17% decrease in the odds of 30-day readmission (OR 0.83, 95% CI 0.81-0.86). Patients in the noncapitated point-of-service plans (OR 1.19, 95% CI 1.07-1.33), preferred provider organization plans (OR 1.11, 95% CI 1.03-1.19), and high-deductible plans (OR 1.12, 95% CI 1.00-1.26) were more likely to be readmitted within 30 days compared with patients in the capitated health maintenance organization and point-of-service plans. CONCLUSION Among privately insured, nonelderly patients, increased patient cost-sharing was associated with lower odds of 7-day and 30-day readmission after abdominal surgery. Insurance arrangements also were significantly associated with postoperative readmissions. Patient cost sharing and insurance arrangements need consideration in the provision of equitable access for quality care.

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Jeffrey C. Schneider

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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