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Dive into the research topics where Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger is active.

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Featured researches published by Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2009

Accuracy of the clinical diagnosis of vaginitis compared with a DNA probe laboratory standard.

Nancy K. Lowe; Jeremy L. Neal; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the accuracy of the clinical diagnosis of the three most common causes of acute vulvovaginal symptoms (bacterial vaginosis, candidiasis vaginitis, and trichomoniasis vaginalis) using a traditional, standardized clinical diagnostic protocol compared with a DNA probe laboratory standard. METHODS: This prospective clinical comparative study had a sample of 535 active-duty United States military women presenting with vulvovaginal symptoms. Clinical diagnoses were made by research staff using a standardized protocol of history, physical examination including pelvic examination, determination of vaginal pH, vaginal fluid amines test, and wet-prep microscopy. Vaginal fluid samples were obtained for DNA analysis. The research clinicians were blinded to the DNA results. RESULTS: The participants described a presenting symptom of abnormal discharge (50%), itching/irritation (33%), malodor (10%), burning (4%), or others such as vulvar pain and vaginal discomfort. According to laboratory standard, there were 225 cases (42%) of bacterial vaginosis, 76 cases (14%) of candidiasis vaginitis, 8 cases (1.5%) of trichomoniasis vaginalis, 87 cases of mixed infections (16%), and 139 negative cases (26%). For each single infection, the clinical diagnosis had a sensitivity and specificity of 80.8% and 70.0% for bacterial vaginosis, 83.8% and 84.8% for candidiasis vaginitis, and 84.6% and 99.6% for trichomoniasis vaginalis when compared with the DNA probe standard. CONCLUSION: Compared with a DNA probe standard, clinical diagnosis is 81–85% sensitive and 70–99% specific for bacterial vaginosis, Candida vaginitis, and trichomoniasis. Even under research conditions that provided clinicians with sufficient time and materials to conduct a thorough and standardized clinical evaluation, the diagnosis and, therefore, subsequent treatment of these common vaginal problems remains difficult. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: II


Journal of Pediatric Health Care | 1999

School-age children's fears, anxiety, and human figure drawings

Mary K Carroll; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger

INTRODUCTION The purpose of this study was to identify the fears of school-age children and determine the relationship between fear and anxiety. METHOD A descriptive, correlational, secondary analysis study was conducted using a convenience sample of 90 children between the ages of 8 and 12 years. Each child was instructed to complete the Revised Childrens Anxiety Scale and then answer questions from a structured interview. On completion, each child was instructed to draw a human figure drawing. Frequency charts and correlational statistics were used to analyze the data. RESULTS Findings indicated that the most significant fears of the boys were in the categories of animals, safety, school, and supernatural phenomena, whereas girls were more fearful of natural phenomena. High correlations existed between anxiety scores and the number of fears and emotional indicators on human figure drawings. DISCUSSION Because human figure drawings are reliable tools for assessing anxiety and fears in children, practitioners should incorporate these drawings as part of their routine assessments of fearful children.


Western Journal of Nursing Research | 2007

Health Status in an Invisible Population Carnival and Migrant Worker Children

Jill F. Kilanowski; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger

One goal of Healthy People 2010 (2003) is to close the gap of disparities in access to care and health. The purpose of this descriptive exploratory study was to evaluate health status indicators in the children of itinerant carnival and migrant farmworkers aged birth to 12 years. Health status outcomes (immunization records, well-child examinations, dental health status, and growth parameters) were compared between the two groups and to national averages to identify health disparities. All forms were available in Spanish and English. A total of 97 children were recruited for this study: 45 carnival children and 52 migrant farmworker children.


Womens Health Issues | 2008

ARMY WOMEN'S REASONS FOR CONDOM USE AND NONUSE

Victoria von Sadovszky; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger; Sara Germann; Megan Evans; Christine A. Fortney

PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to examine Army womens condom use patterns, reasons for condom use and nonuse, and what is liked about and problems associated with condom use. METHODS Army women (n = 131) from military posts around the country were recruited. The women ranged in age from 18 to 68 years (M = 30.5, SD = 10.5). The sample was of mixed ethnicity. Questionnaires were distributed by the units and returned directly to the principal investigator. Participants completed a series of anonymous open- and closed-ended questions regarding their experiences with condoms. Closed-ended questions were analyzed with descriptive statistics and open-ended responses were content analyzed (McLaughlin & Marascuilo, 1990). CONCLUSIONS Regular condom use was low in this sample. The most often cited responses as to why women liked using condoms included peace of mind, protection, or ease of use. The most cited problems and subsequent disuse included irritation/inflammation, breakage, improper fit, or ruining the moment. Results differed by consistency of condom use. Regular users of condoms reported a lower percentage of problems using condoms.


Womens Health Issues | 2000

Military women’s perspectives on health care during deployment

Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger; Nancy K. Lowe

Approximately 367,000 women serve in the U.S. military and regularly deploy with their units to austere military environments. A survey was used to describe 841 military womens perceptions about the health care provider that is available them during deployment and their perceptions of barriers to adequate diagnosis and treatment of gynecologic infections in these austere environments. The study findings have implications for military provider training, sick call policy, predeployment training, and development of self-care alternatives for military women during deployment.


Western Journal of Nursing Research | 2007

Wrist Actigraphy Validation of Exercise Movement in COPD

Gerene S. Bauldoff; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger; Philip T. Diaz

A wrist actigraph is a device used in sleep research studies to measure whole body movements. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility, sensitivity, and validity of wrist actigraphy during pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) upper-extremity exercise in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. In this study, 20 patients wore Octagonal Basic Motionlogger® actigraphs during two 90-minute PR sessions while the investigator recorded details of the subjects upper-extremity movements. Concurrent validity with supervised exercise records was supported for upper-extremity endurance (UEE) intensity at baseline (r = .885, p < .001) and 1 week (r = .935, p < .001). Criterion validity was supported for UEE (r = .56, p = .01) and combined lower- and upper-extremity resistance (r = .72, p < .01) compared with rank-ordered type of exercise. Wrist actigraphy is shown to be a feasible, sensitive, and valid instrument to measure upper-extremity movement during PR in COPD patients.


Clinical Nursing Research | 2000

A Clinical Test of Women’s Self-Diagnosis of Genitourinary Infections:

Nancy K. Lowe; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger

Vaginitis and cystitis result in 8 million ambulatory health care visits annually. For military women deployed to austere environments, gynecological problems are more likely to occur yet unlikely to be adequately diagnosed and managed. The Institute of Medicine has recommended that self-care kits be made available to military women under these circumstances. In this clinical comparative study, women’s (N = 86) self-diagnoses of vaginitis and cystitis using an investigatordesigned, self-diagnostic decision-making guide and kit were compared with clinical diagnoses by advanced practice nurses (APN). The vaginitis guide had a sensitivity of 84% for candida vaginitis (CV) and 91.3% for bacterial vaginosis (BV) and a specificity of 81.5% for CV and 82.8% for BV. The women consistently agreed with the APN’s diagnosis of presence or absence of cystitis. These findings suggest that women are capable of making reliable selfdiagnostic decisions given appropriate cues. Continued development of a self-diagnosis and treatment kit for military women deployed to austere environments is warranted.


Clinical Otolaryngology | 2015

Ivacaftor improves appearance of sinus disease on computerised tomography in cystic fibrosis patients with G551D mutation

Shahid Sheikh; Frederick R. Long; Karen McCoy; T. Johnson; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger; Don Hayes

Most patients with Cystic fibrosis (CF) have chronic sinus disease which may require multiple sinus surgeries and antibiotic courses. Ivacaftor can improve lung function, lower sweat chloride levels and improve weight by targeting the primary defect, a faulty gene and its protein product, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) in patients with the G551D mutation. Its role in improving sinus disease has not been evaluated.


Western Journal of Nursing Research | 2012

A Self-Report Instrument That Describes Urogenital Atrophy Symptoms in Breast Cancer Survivors

Joanne Lester; Linda Bernhard; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger

Urogenital atrophy affects the lower urinary and genital tracts and is responsible for urinary, genital, and sexual symptoms. The accurate identification, measurement, and documentation of symptoms are limited by the absence of reliable and valid instruments. The Urogenital Atrophy Questionnaire was developed to allow self-reporting of symptoms and to provide clinicians and researchers an instrument to identify, measure, and document indicators of urogenital atrophy. A pilot study (n = 30) measured test–retest reliability (p < .05) of the instrument. Subsequently, a survey of women with (n = 168) and without breast cancer (n = 166) was conducted using the Urogenital Atrophy Questionnaire, Female Sexual Function Instrument, and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy, Breast, Endocrine Scale. Exploratory factor analysis (KMO 0.774; Bartlett’s test of sphericity 0.000) indicated moderate-high relatedness of items. Concurrent (p > .01) and divergent validity (p < .000) were established. A questionnaire resulted that enables women, regardless of sexual orientation, partner status, and levels of sexual activity to accurately report symptoms.


Journal of Obstetric, Gynecologic, & Neonatal Nursing | 2013

Quality Improvement Study of Effectiveness of Cue‐Based Feeding in Infants With Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

Elizabeth Davidson; Diana Hinton; Nancy A. Ryan-Wenger; Sudarshan R. Jadcherla

The effectiveness and safety of experimental cue-based versus health care provider-driven (baseline) feeding strategies were evaluated in infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia. The experimental group (n = 55) and the control group(n = 60) included infants who had been previously diagnosed with varying levels of severity of bronchopulmonary dysplasia and were identified retrospectively. Previous research was used to derive an Oral Feeding Readiness Scale as well as an Oral Feeding Quality Scale. Results validated both scales as well as the cue-based feeding strategy.

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Karen McCoy

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Don Hayes

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Nancy K. Lowe

University of Colorado Denver

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Stephen Kirkby

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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