Michelle Niescierenko
Boston Children's Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michelle Niescierenko.
Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness | 2015
Hilarie Cranmer; Miriam Aschkenasy; Ryan Wildes; Stephanie Kayden; David R. Bangsberg; Michelle Niescierenko; Katie Kemen; Kai-Hsun Hsiao; Michael J. VanRooyen; Frederick M. Burkle; Paul D. Biddinger
The unprecedented Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa, with its first cases documented in March 2014, has claimed the lives of thousands of people, and it has devastated the health care infrastructure and workforce in affected countries. Throughout this outbreak, there has been a critical lack of health care workers (HCW), including physicians, nurses, and other essential non-clinical staff, who have been needed, in most of the affected countries, to support the medical response to EVD, to attend to the health care needs of the population overall, and to be trained effectively in infection protection and control. This lack of sufficient and qualified HCW is due in large part to three factors: 1) limited HCW staff prior to the outbreak, 2) disproportionate illness and death among HCWs caused by EVD directly, and 3) valid concerns about personal safety among international HCWs who are considering responding to the affected areas. These guidelines are meant to inform institutions who deploy professional HCWs.
Current Opinion in Pediatrics | 2013
Michelle Niescierenko; Richard G. Bachur
Purpose of review To review the advances in the assessment, treatment, and evaluation of care for pediatric dehydration. Recent findings Recent studies have added new information across the spectrum of care for dehydration. Advances in the assessment of dehydration allow more accurate clinical evaluation, but do not help predict the treatment outcomes. Antiemetics as an adjunct to oral rehydration therapy have been proven well tolerated, efficacious, and cost-effective. Rapid, large-volume intravenous rehydration for outpatients with dehydration did not show any benefit over more standard regimens. Clinical guidelines incorporate all these aspects of care; however, physicians show poor adherence to the guidelines despite the evidence that guidelines improve outcomes and reduce cost. Summary Dehydration burdens the healthcare system worldwide. Through advances in its assessment, treatment with antiemetics and intravenous fluids, and standardization of practice with clinical guidelines, this burden could be reduced.
Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness | 2015
Ryan Wildes; Stephanie Kayden; Eric Goralnick; Michelle Niescierenko; Miriam Aschkenasy; Katherine Kemen; Michael J. VanRooyen; Paul D. Biddinger; Hilarie Cranmer
The current Ebola outbreak is the worst global public health emergency of our generation, and our global health care community must and will rise to serve those affected. Aid organizations participating in the Ebola response must carefully plan to carry out their responsibility to ensure the health, safety, and security of their responders. At the same time, individual health care workers and their employers must evaluate the ability of an aid organization to protect its workers in the complex environment of this unheralded Ebola outbreak. We present a minimum set of operational standards developed by a consortium of Boston-based hospitals that a professional organization should have in place to ensure the health, safety, and security of its staff in response to the Ebola virus disease outbreak.
Global pediatric health | 2014
Patricia A. McQuilkin; Roseda Marshall; Michelle Niescierenko; Venée N. Tubman; Bradley Olson; Donna Staton; Jackson H. Williams; Elinor A. Graham
This article describes a model employed by the Academic Collaborative to Support Medical Education in Liberia to augment medical education in a postconflict setting where the health and educational structures and funding are very limited. We effectively utilized a cohort of visiting US pediatric faculty and trainees for short-term but recurrent clinical work and teaching. This model allows US academic medical centers, especially those with smaller residency programs, to provide global health experiences for faculty and trainees while contributing to the strengthening of medical education in the host country. Those involved can work toward a goal of sustainable training with a strengthened host country specialty education system. Partnerships such as ours evolve over time and succeed by meeting the needs of the host country, even during unanticipated challenges, such as the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa.
Pediatrics | 2017
Andrew P. Steenhoff; Heather L. Crouse; Heather Lukolyo; Charles P. Larson; Cynthia R. Howard; Loeto Mazhani; Suzinne Pak-Gorstein; Michelle Niescierenko; Philippa Musoke; Roseda Marshall; Miguel A. Soto; Sabrina M. Butteris; Maneesh Batra
This literature-based expert consensus review presents the definition, scope, genesis, evolution, and models of GCH partnerships, including benefits and challenges, guiding principles and core practices. Child mortality remains a global health challenge and has resulted in demand for expanding the global child health (GCH) workforce over the last 3 decades. Institutional partnerships are the cornerstone of sustainable education, research, clinical service, and advocacy for GCH. When successful, partnerships can become self-sustaining and support development of much-needed training programs in resource-constrained settings. Conversely, poorly conceptualized, constructed, or maintained partnerships may inadvertently contribute to the deterioration of health systems. In this comprehensive, literature-based, expert consensus review we present a definition of partnerships for GCH, review their genesis, evolution, and scope, describe participating organizations, and highlight benefits and challenges associated with GCH partnerships. Additionally, we suggest a framework for applying sound ethical and public health principles for GCH that includes 7 guiding principles and 4 core practices along with a structure for evaluating GCH partnerships. Finally, we highlight current knowledge gaps to stimulate further work in these areas. With awareness of the potential benefits and challenges of GCH partnerships, as well as shared dedication to guiding principles and core practices, GCH partnerships hold vast potential to positively impact child health.
Academic Medicine | 2017
Patricia A. McQuilkin; Michelle Niescierenko; Ann Marie Beddoe; Jarrod Goentzel; Elinor A. Graham; Patricia C. Henwood; Lise Rehwaldt; Sisay Teklu; Janis P. Tupesis; Roseda Marshall
During the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) epidemic in West Africa (2014-2016), many faculty, staff, and trainees from U.S. academic medical centers (i.e., teaching hospitals and their affiliated medical schools; AMCs) wished to contribute to the response to the outbreak, but many barriers prevented their participation. Here, the authors describe a successful long-term academic collaboration in Liberia that facilitated participation in the EVD response. This Perspective outlines the role the authors played in the response (providing equipment and training, supporting the return of medical education), the barriers they faced (logistical and financial), and elements that contributed to their success (partnering and coordinating their response with both U.S. and African institutions). There is a paucity of literature discussing the role of AMCs in disaster response, so the authors discuss the lessons learned and offer suggestions about the responsibilities that AMCs have and the roles they can play in responding to disaster situations.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2017
Patricia A. McQuilkin; Kanagasabai Udhayashankar; Michelle Niescierenko; Louise Maranda
The Ebola virus disease (EVD) epidemic, which began in West Africa in December 2013, claimed more than 11,000 lives, with more than 4,800 of these deaths occurring in Liberia. The epidemic had an additional effect of paralyzing the health-care systems in affected countries, which led to even greater mortality and morbidity. Little is known about the impact that the epidemic had on the provision of basic health care. During the period from March to May 2015, we undertook a nationwide, community-based survey to learn more about health-care access during the EVD epidemic in Liberia. A cluster sampling strategy was used to administer a structured in-person survey to heads of households located within the catchment areas surrounding all 21 government hospitals in Liberia. A total of 543 heads of household from all 15 counties in Liberia participated in the study; more than half (67%) of urban respondents and 46% of rural respondents stated that it was very difficult or impossible to access health care during the epidemic. In urban areas, only 20-30% of patients seeking care during the epidemic received care, and in rural areas, only 70-80% of those seeking care were able to access it. Patients requiring prenatal and obstetric care and emergency services had the most difficulty accessing care. The results of this survey support the observation that basic health care was extremely difficult to access during the EVD epidemic in Liberia. Our results underscore the critical need to support essential health-care services during humanitarian crises to minimize preventable morbidity and mortality.
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2006
Michelle Niescierenko; Renee B. Cadzow; Chester H. Fox
World Journal of Surgery | 2015
Tiffany E. Chao; Pratik B. Patel; Michael Kiiza Kikubaire; Michelle Niescierenko; Lars Hagander; John G. Meara
Annals of global health | 2016
Patricia A. McQuilkin; K. Udhayashankar; Michelle Niescierenko