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Dive into the research topics where Ryan Butcher is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan Butcher.


Hospital pediatrics | 2017

Effectiveness of Fundoplication or Gastrojejunal Feeding in Children With Neurologic Impairment

Bryan L. Stone; Gabrielle Hester; Daniel Jackson; Troy Richardson; Matthew Hall; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Ryan Butcher; Ron Keren; Rajendu Srivastava

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Gastroesophageal reflux (GER), aspiration, and secondary complications lead to morbidity and mortality in children with neurologic impairment (NI), dysphagia, and gastrostomy feeding. Fundoplication and gastrojejunal (GJ) feeding can reduce risk. We compared GJ to fundoplication using first-year postprocedure reflux-related hospitalization (RRH) rates. METHODS We identified children with NI, dysphagia requiring gastrostomy tube feeding and GER undergoing initial GJ placement or fundoplication from January 1, 2007 to December 31, 2012. Data came from the Pediatric Health Information Systems augmented by laboratory, microbiology, and radiology results. GJ placement was ascertained using radiology results and fundoplication by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes. Subjects were matched within hospital using propensity scores. The primary outcome was first-year postprocedure RRH rate (hospitalization for GER disease, other esophagitis, aspiration pneumonia, other pneumonia, asthma, or mechanical ventilation). Secondary outcomes included failure to thrive, death, repeated initial intervention, crossover intervention, and procedural complications. RESULTS We identified 1178 children with fundoplication and 163 with GJ placement, matching 114 per group. Matched sample RRH incident rate per child-year (95% confidence interval) for GJ was 2.07 (1.62-2.64) and for fundoplication 1.67 (1.28-2.18), P = .19. Odds of death were similar between groups. Failure to thrive, repeat of initial intervention, and crossover intervention were more common in the GJ group. CONCLUSIONS In children with NI, GER, and dysphagia: fundoplication and GJ feeding have similar RRH outcomes. Either intervention can reduce future aspiration risk; the choice can reflect non-RRH-related complication risks, caregiver preference, and clinician recommendation.


Journal of Wound Ostomy and Continence Nursing | 2017

Midrange Braden Subscale Scores Are Associated With Increased Risk for Pressure Injury Development Among Critical Care Patients.

Jenny Alderden; Mollie R. Cummins; Ginette A. Pepper; Jo Anne D. Whitney; Yingying Zhang; Ryan Butcher; Donna Thomas

PURPOSE: The purpose of the current study was to examine the relationship between pressure injury development and the Braden Scale for Pressure Sore Risk subscale scores in a surgical intensive care unit (ICU) population and to ascertain whether the risk represented by the subscale scores is different between older and younger patients. DESIGN: Retrospective review of electronic medical records. SUBJECTS AND SETTING: The sample comprised patients admitted to the ICU at an academic medical center in the Western United States (Utah) and Level 1 trauma center between January 1, 2008 and May 1, 2013. Analysis is based on data from 6377 patients. METHODS: Retrospective chart review was used to determine Braden Scale total and subscale scores, age, and incidence of pressure injury development. We used survival analysis to determine the hazards of developing a pressure injury associated with each subscale of the Braden Scale, with the lowest-risk category as a reference. In addition, we used time-dependent Cox regression with natural cubic splines to model the interaction between age and Braden Scale scores and subscale scores in pressure injury risk. RESULTS: Of the 6377 ICU patients, 214 (4%) developed a pressure injury (stages 2-4, deep tissue injury, or unstageable) and 516 (8%) developed a hospital-acquired pressure injury of any stage. With the exception of the friction and shear subscales, regardless of age, individuals with scores in the intermediate-risk levels had the highest likelihood of developing pressure injury. CONCLUSION: The relationship between age, Braden Scale subscale scores, and pressure injury development varied among subscales. Maximal preventive efforts should be extended to include individuals with intermediate Braden Scale subscale scores, and age should be considered along with the subscale scores as a factor in care planning.


Hospital pediatrics | 2018

Comparison of Empiric Antibiotics for Acute Osteomyelitis in Children

Sarah C. McBride; Cary Thurm; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Bryan L. Stone; Phil Jaggard; Samir S. Shah; Joel S. Tieder; Ryan Butcher; Jason Weiser; Matthew Hall; Ron Keren; Christopher P. Landrigan

OBJECTIVES Broad-spectrum antibiotics are commonly used for the empiric treatment of acute hematogenous osteomyelitis and often target methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) with medication-associated risk and unknown treatment benefit. We aimed to compare clinical outcomes among patients with osteomyelitis who did and did not receive initial antibiotics used to target MRSA. METHODS A retrospective cohort study of 974 hospitalized children 2 to 18 years old using the Pediatric Health Information System database, augmented with clinical data. Rates of hospital readmission, repeat MRI and 72-hour improvement in inflammatory markers were compared between treatment groups. RESULTS Repeat MRI within 7 and 180 days was more frequent among patients who received initial MRSA coverage versus methicillin-sensitive S aureus (MSSA)-only coverage (8.6% vs 4.1% within 7 days [P = .02] and 12% vs 5.8% within 180 days [P < .01], respectively). Ninety- and 180-day hospital readmission rates were similar between coverage groups (9.0% vs 8.7% [P = .87] and 10.9% vs 11.2% [P = .92], respectively). Patients with MRSA- and MSSA-only coverage had similar rates of 72-hour improvement in C-reactive protein values, but patients with MRSA coverage had a lower rate of 72-hour white blood cell count normalization compared with patients with MSSA-only coverage (4.2% vs 16.4%; P = .02). CONCLUSIONS In this study of children hospitalized with acute hematogenous osteomyelitis, early antibiotic treatment used to target MRSA was associated with a higher rate of repeat MRI compared with early antibiotic treatment used to target MSSA but not MRSA. Hospital readmission rates were similar for both treatment groups.


Journal of Clinical and Translational Science | 2017

2507: Towards a scalable informatics platform for enhancing accrual into clinical research studies

Ram Gouripeddi; Elizabeth Lane; Randy Madsen; Ryan Butcher; Bernie LaSalle; Katherine A. Sward; Julie M. Fritz; Julio C. Facelli; Mollie R. Cummins; Jianyin Shao; Rob Singleton

OBJECTIVES/SPECIFIC AIMS: Issues with recruiting the targeted number of participants in a timely manner often results in underpowered studies, with more than 60% of clinical studies failing to complete or requiring extensions due to enrollment issues. The objective of this study is to develop and implement a scalable, organization wide platform to enhance accrual into clinical research studies. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: We are developing and evaluating an informatics platform called Utah Utility for Research Recruitment (U2R2). U2R2 consists of 2 components: (i) Semantic Matcher: an automated trial criterion to patient matching component that also reports uncertainty associated with the match, and (ii) Match Delivery: mechanisms to deliver the list of matched patients for different research and clinical settings. As a first step, we limited the Semantic Matcher to utilize only structured data elements from the patient record and trial criteria. We are now including distributional semantic methods to match complete patient records and trial criteria as documents. We evaluated the first phase of U2R2 based on a randomized trial with a target enrollment of 220 participants that compares 2 treatment strategies for managing back pain (physical therapy and usual care) for individuals consulting a nonsurgical provider and symptomatic <90 days. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: U2R2 identified 9370 patients from the University of Utah Hospitals and Clinics as potential matches. Of these 9370, 1145 responded to the Back Pain study research team’s email or phone communications, and were further screened by phone. In total, 250 participants completed a screening visit, resulting in the current study enrollment of 130 participants. Forty-three of 1145 patients refused to participate, and 50 participants no-showed their screening visit. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE OF IMPACT: A recruitment platform can enhance potential participant identification, but requires attention to multiple issues involved with clinical research studies. Clinical eligibility criteria are usually unstructured and require human mediation and abstraction into discrete data elements for matching against patient records. In addition, key eligibility data are often embedded within text in the patient record. Distributional semantic approaches, by leveraging this content, can identify potential participants for screening with more specificity. The delivery of the list of matched patient results should consider characteristics of the research study, population, and targeted enrollment (eg, back pain being a common disorder and the possibility of the patient visiting different types of clinics), as well as organizational and socio-technical issues surrounding clinical practice and research. Embedding the delivery of match results into the clinical workflow by utilizing user-centered design approaches and involving the clinician, the clinic, and the patient in the recruitment process, could yield higher accrual indices.


AMIA | 2013

FURTHeR: An Infrastructure for Clinical, Translational and Comparative Effectiveness Research.

Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Julio C. Facelli; Richard L. Bradshaw; Dustin Schultz; Bernie LaSalle; Phillip B. Warner; Ryan Butcher; Randy Madsen; Peter Mo


Archive | 2014

Minimizing Data-Transformational Information Loss in Comparative Effectiveness Research Infrastructure

Ram Gouripeddi; Ryan Butcher; Phillip B. Warner; Peter Mo


AMIA | 2013

Knowledge Driven Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria Refinement within the FURTHeR Framework.

Randy Madsen; Richard L. Bradshaw; N. Dustin Schultz; Ryan Butcher; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Joyce A. Mitchell; Julio C. Facelli


AMIA | 2013

Going FURTHeR with Three Federated Query Types.

Richard L. Bradshaw; N. Dustin Schultz; Julio C. Facelli; Randy Madsen; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Ryan Butcher; Bernie LaSalle


AMIA | 2013

Creating a Secure, Easily Accessible Environment for PHI Data Exports within FURTHeR utilizing REDCap.

Dustin Schultz; Bernie LaSalle; Shan He; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Ryan Butcher; Julio C. Facelli


AMIA | 2013

Federating caTissue with FURTHeR.

Peter Mo; Randy Madsen; Richard L. Bradshaw; N. Dustin Schultz; Ryan Butcher; Bernie LaSalle; Ramkiran Gouripeddi; Julio C. Facelli

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Matthew Hall

Boston Children's Hospital

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