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Dive into the research topics where Rosalee Zackula is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosalee Zackula.


American Journal of Health-system Pharmacy | 2012

Fall risk associated with inpatient medications.

Rebecca L. Lamis; Joan S. Kramer; LaDonna S. Hale; Rosalee Zackula; Gina M. Berg

PURPOSE The association between fall risk and inpatient medications was evaluated. METHODS A retrospective, case-control study was performed to compare the medication use of patients sustaining at least one fall during hospitalization (case group) with a control group of patients who did not fall. Data were collected from medical records and generated reports. A fall was defined by the hospital as an event in which the patient comes to rest on the floor from a lying, standing, or sitting position. Adult patients (≥18 years of age) admitted between January 1 and December 31, 2006, experiencing a fall at least 48 hours after hospital admission were included in the case group. Each case was matched with one control by age (within five years), sex, admission date (within 30 days), patient care unit, and length of stay. Medications administered within 48 hours before the fall for the case group or designated fall date and time for the control group were documented. RESULTS Of the 414 documented fall events, 209 patients met the inclusion criteria. Of those patients, 96 matched control patients on all criteria. Significantly more case patients received a greater number of central nervous system (CNS) agents compared with matched control patients (p = 0.017). There was no statistically significant difference in the number of medications from all other drug classes or the total number of medications received by the groups. CONCLUSION In a sample of hospitalized patients, CNS agents were significantly associated with falls.


Hospital Pharmacy | 2014

A Quantitative Evaluation of Medication Histories and Reconciliation by Discipline

Joan S. Kramer; Michael R. Stewart; Sarah M. Fogg; Brandon C. Schminke; Rosalee Zackula; Tina M. Nester; Leslie Eidem; James C. Rosendale; Robert Ragan; Jack Bond; Kreg W. Goertzen

Background/Objective Medication reconciliation at transitions of care decreases medication errors, hospitalizations, and adverse drug events. We compared inpatient medication histories and reconciliation across disciplines and evaluated the nature of discrepancies. Methods We conducted a prospective cohort study of patients admitted from the emergency department at our 760-bed hospital. Eligible patients had their medication histories conducted and reconciled in order by the admitting nurse (RN), certified pharmacy technician (CPhT), and pharmacist (RPh). Discharge medication reconciliation was not altered. Admission and discharge discrepancies were categorized by discipline, error type, and drug class and were assigned a criticality index score. A discrepancy rating system systematically measured discrepancies. Results Of 175 consented patients, 153 were evaluated. Total admission and discharge discrepancies were 1,461 and 369, respectively. The average number of medications per participant at admission was 8.59 (1,314) with 9.41 (1,374) at discharge. Most discrepancies were committed by RNs: 53.2% (777) at admission and 56.1% (207) at discharge. The majority were omitted or incorrect. RNs had significantly higher admission discrepancy rates per medication (0.59) compared with CPhTs (0.36) and RPhs (0.16) (P < .001). RPhs corrected significantly more discrepancies per participant than RNs (6.39 vs 0.48; P < .001); average criticality index reduction was 79.0%. Estimated prevented adverse drug events (pADEs) cost savings were


Journal of the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care | 2014

Prevalence of Communication Disorders in HIV-Infected Adults

K. James Kallail; David Downs; Julie Scherz; Donna Sweet; Rosalee Zackula

589,744. Conclusions RPhs committed the fewest discrepancies compared with RNs and CPhTs, resulting in more accurate medication histories and reconciliation. RPh involvement also prevented the greatest number of medication errors, contributing to considerable pADE-related cost savings.


Archive | 2017

Methodological evaluation of in-hospital mortality as an indicator of treatment effectiveness

Rosalee Zackula; Gina M. Berg

Few adult patients with HIV/AIDS are evaluated for communication disorders. A broad inventory of the communication disorders was obtained in a convenience sample of 82 adult HIV/AIDS patients who presented for medical appointments. Each participant underwent a head and neck exam and a communications skills evaluation. Speech, language, and cognition were assessed using a 10-item test battery. A 14-item hearing test battery was conducted in a separate session. The primary outcomes were the presence and degree of communication disorders. Head and neck exams revealed 40% with ear-related issues. Only 2 participants showed normal findings on all 24 communication skills assessments. Four demonstrated normal findings on all speech-language-cognitive assessments, whereas 8 had normal findings on the complete hearing test battery. A relatively high prevalence of cognitive and language deficits and central auditory disturbances were found. Clinicians must recognize the potential for communication deficits even in a relatively healthy patient with HIV.


Archive | 2015

Factors associated with walking ability among African Americans with peripheral artery disease

Tracie C. Collins; Rosalee Zackula; Nikki Nollen; Nicole L. Rogers; Jasjit S. Ahluwalia

Objective: Despite antibiotic treatment, active infective endocarditis continues to be a devastating and often fatal condition, which needs to be treat with urgent life threatening , high-risk surgery.Essential adequate debridement of the infective material is followed by repairmen (excisement of the vegetations) or replacement of the valve . The postoperative intensive care treatment usually is faced with septic shock patient with predicted high mortality rate.Background: It is important to protect recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) during thyroid surgery. Thus, intra- operative neuromonitoring (IONM) has got popularity. But, the half life of neuromuscular blocking agents used has a reverse correlation with reliability and effectiveness of IONM. This study aimed to research the effect of Sugammadex Sodium, a specific nemuromuscular blocking agent antagonist, on nerve conduction and IONM. Materials and methods: Twenty patients who underwent thyroidectomy under IONM followed an enhanced NMB recovery protocol-rocuronium 0.6 mg/kg at anesthesia induction and sugammadex 2 mg/kg at the beginning of operation. To prevent laryngeal nerve injury during the surgical procedures, all patients underwent intraoperative monitoring. At the same time, the measurement of TOF-Watch acceleromyograph of the adductor pollicis muscle response to ulnar nerve stimulation was performed; recovery was defined as a train-of-four (TOF) ratio ≥ 0.9. Age, sex, recurrent laryngeal nerve transmission speeds prior to and after operation, BMI, duration of surgery, the change in nerve transmission after drug administration and complications were analyzed. Results: The mean age and the mean BMI were 47.6±11.82 years and 28.74±3.20, respectively. The mean operation duration was 52.65±5.51 minutes. There was no difference in either right or left RLN monitoring values before and after surgery. Following the drug injection, the TOF guard measurements on the 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th minutes were 23.5±4.90; 69.5±6.86; 88±4.1 and 135.9±10.62, respectively. Conclusion: Neuromuscular blocking antagonist use and monitoring nerve transmission speed with TOF-guard can provide a safer resection.Editor’s Note: This is the first in a three-part series of Editorial Views regarding design of clinical trials to address the effect of anesthesia on the developing brain. Animal studies have suggested that anesthetic exposure could affect neurocognitive development, and there is an urgent need for clinical trials to determine whether this effect occurs in humans. This series presents the opinions of three world thought leaders in the possible designs of such clinical trials.


Archive | 2015

Predictors of quality of life among African Americans with peripheral artery disease

Tracie C. Collins; Jasjit S. Ahluwalia; Nikki Nollen; Nicole L. Rogers; Rosalee Zackula

Objectives: A key element of the implementation and on-going use of an electronic prescribing (ePrescribing) system is ensuring that users are, and remain, sufficiently trained to use the system. Studies have suggested that insufficient training is associated with suboptimal use. However, it is not clear from these studies how clinicians are trained to use ePrescribing systems or the effectiveness of different approaches. We sought to describe the various approaches used to train qualified prescribers on ePrescribing systems and to identify whether users were educated about the pitfalls and challenges of using these systems. Methods: We performed a literature review, using a systematic approach across three large databases: Cumulative Index Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase and Medline were searched for relevant English language articles. Articles that explored the training of qualified prescribers on ePrescribing systems in a hospital setting were included. Key Findings: Our search of ‘all training’ approaches returned 1,155 publications, of which seven were included. A separate search of ‘online’ training found three relevant publications. Training methods in the ‘all training’ category included clinical scenarios, demonstrations and assessments. Regarding ‘online’ training approaches; a team at the University of Victoria in Canada developed a portal containing simulated versions of electronic health records, where individuals could prescribe for fictitious patients. Educating prescribers about the challenges and pitfalls of electronic systems was rarely discussed. Conclusions: A number of methods are used to train prescribers; however the lack of papers retrieved suggests a need for additional studies to inform training methods.


Journal of Trauma Management & Outcomes | 2013

Treatment provider is most predictive of ED dismissal in minimally-injured trauma patients: a retrospective review

Diane L S Hunt; Gina M. Berg; Rosalee Zackula; Francie Ekengren; Diana Lippoldt; Elizabeth Ablah; Ruth Wetta

Objectives: A key element of the implementation and on-going use of an electronic prescribing (ePrescribing) system is ensuring that users are, and remain, sufficiently trained to use the system. Studies have suggested that insufficient training is associated with suboptimal use. However, it is not clear from these studies how clinicians are trained to use ePrescribing systems or the effectiveness of different approaches. We sought to describe the various approaches used to train qualified prescribers on ePrescribing systems and to identify whether users were educated about the pitfalls and challenges of using these systems. Methods: We performed a literature review, using a systematic approach across three large databases: Cumulative Index Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Embase and Medline were searched for relevant English language articles. Articles that explored the training of qualified prescribers on ePrescribing systems in a hospital setting were included. Key Findings: Our search of ‘all training’ approaches returned 1,155 publications, of which seven were included. A separate search of ‘online’ training found three relevant publications. Training methods in the ‘all training’ category included clinical scenarios, demonstrations and assessments. Regarding ‘online’ training approaches; a team at the University of Victoria in Canada developed a portal containing simulated versions of electronic health records, where individuals could prescribe for fictitious patients. Educating prescribers about the challenges and pitfalls of electronic systems was rarely discussed. Conclusions: A number of methods are used to train prescribers; however the lack of papers retrieved suggests a need for additional studies to inform training methods.


Archive | 2010

Use of the QuantiFERON®-TB Gold Assay in Pregnant Patients

Bassem M Chehab; K. James Kallail; Riad O El Fakih; Rosalee Zackula; Garold O Minns

BackgroundSecondary triage protocols have been described in the literature as physiologic (first-tier) criteria and mechanism-related (second-tier) criteria to determine the level of trauma activation. There is debate as to the efficiency of triage decisions based on mechanism of injury which may result in overtriage and overuse of limited trauma resources. Our institution developed and implemented an advanced three-tier trauma alert system in which stable patients presenting with blunt traumatic mechanism of injury would be evaluated by the emergency department (ED) physician rather than the trauma surgeon. The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma (ACSCOT) requires that operational changes be monitored and evaluated for patient safety and performance. The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the process, as well as outcomes, of patient care pre and post implementation of the new triage protocol. The secondary aim was to determine predictor variables that were associated with ED dismissal.MethodsA retrospective blinded pre/post process change implementation explicit chart review was conducted to compare process and outcomes of minimally injured trauma patients who were field triaged by mechanism of injury. Generalized linear modeling was performed to determine which predictor variables were associated with ED dismissal.ResultsThere were no significant differences in minutes to physician evaluation, CT scan, OR/ICU disposition, readmission rates, safety or quality. Significant differences only occurred in time to chest x-ray, length of stay in ED, and ED dismissal rates. Trauma surgeon and ED physician patient groups did not differ on ISS, age, or sex. The only significant predictor for ED dismissal was treatment provider, with ED physicians 3.6 times more likely to dismiss the patient from the emergency department.ConclusionsED physicians provided compble care as measured by safety, timeliness, and quality in minimally-injured patients triaged to our trauma center based only on mechanism of injury. Moreover, ED physicians were more likely to dismiss patients from the ED. A three-tiered internal triaging protocol can redirect resource usage to reduce the burden on the trauma service. This may be increasingly beneficial in trauma models in which the trauma surgeons also serve as critical care intensivists.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2018

Pioneer baby: suggestions for pre- and postnatal health promotion programs from rural English and Spanish-speaking pregnant and postpartum women

Lisette T. Jacobson; Rosalee Zackula; Michelle L. Redmond; Jennifer Duong; Tracie C. Collins


Archive | 2012

Fatigue and TSH Levels in Hypothyroid Patients

Boutros El-Haddad; Issam El Bizri; K. James Kallail; Rosalee Zackula; Jan M Hoffman

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David Downs

Wichita State University

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Julie Scherz

Wichita State University

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