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Dive into the research topics where Sara K. Rasmussen is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara K. Rasmussen.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2013

The effect of race and gender on pediatric surgical outcomes within the United States.

Matthew L. Stone; Damien J. LaPar; Bartholomew J. Kane; Sara K. Rasmussen; Eugene D. McGahren; Bradley M. Rodgers

PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to examine risk-adjusted associations between race and gender on postoperative morbidity, mortality, and resource utilization in pediatric surgical patients within the United States. METHODS 101,083 pediatric surgical patients were evaluated using the U.S. national KID Inpatient Database (2003 and 2006): appendectomy (81.2%), pyloromyotomy (9.8%), intussusception (6.2%), decortication (1.9%), congenital diaphragmatic hernia repair (0.7%), and colonic resection for Hirschsprungs disease (0.2%). Patients were stratified according to gender (male: 63.1%, n=63,783) and race: white (n=58,711), Hispanic (n=26,118), black (n=9,103), Asian (n=1,582), Native American (n=474), and other (n=5,096). Multivariable logistic regression modeling was utilized to evaluate risk-adjusted associations between race, gender, and outcomes. RESULTS After risk adjustment, race was independently associated with in-hospital death (p=0.02), with an increased risk for black children. Gender was not associated with mortality (p=0.77). Postoperative morbidity was significantly associated with gender (p<0.001) and race (p=0.01). Gender (p=0.003) and race (p<0.001) were further associated with increased hospital length of stay. Importantly, these results were dependent on operation type. CONCLUSION Race and gender significantly affect postoperative outcomes following pediatric surgery. Black patients are at disproportionate risk for postoperative mortality, while black and Hispanic patients have increased morbidity and hospital resource utilization. While gender does not affect mortality, gender is a determinant of both postoperative morbidity and increased resource utilization.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2014

Estimating pediatric surgical need in developing countries: a household survey in Rwanda

Robin T. Petroze; J. Forrest Calland; Francine Niyonkuru; Reinou S. Groen; Patrick Kyamanywa; Yue Li; Thomas M. Guterbock; Bradley M. Rodgers; Sara K. Rasmussen

PURPOSE Surgical services for children are often absent in resource-limited settings. Identifying the prevalence of surgical disease at the community level is important for developing evidence-based pediatric surgical services and training. We hypothesize that the untreated surgical conditions in the pediatric population are largely uncharacterized and that such burden is significant and poorly understood. Furthermore, no such data exist at the population level to describe this population. METHODS We conducted a nationwide cross-sectional cluster-based population survey to estimate the magnitude of surgical disease in Rwanda. Conducted as a verbal questionnaire, questions included representative congenital, acquired, malignant and injury-related conditions. Pediatric responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics and univariate analysis. RESULTS A total of 1626 households (3175 individuals) were sampled with a 99% response rate; 51.1% of all individuals surveyed were younger than age 18. An estimated 50.5% of the total current surgical need occurs in children. Of all Rwandan children, 6.3% (95% CI 5.4%-7.4%), an estimated 341,164 individuals, were identified to have a potentially treatable surgical condition at the time of the interview. The geographic distribution of surgical conditions significantly differed between adults and children (p<0.001). CONCLUSIONS The results emphasize the magnitude of the pediatric surgery need as well as the need for improved education and resources. This may be useful in developing a collaborative local training program.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2015

Construct Validation of a Cost-Effective Vessel Ligation Benchtop Simulator

Yinin Hu; Ivy A. Le; Robyn N. Goodrich; Brandy L. Edwards; Jacob R. Gillen; Philip W. Smith; Anneke T. Schroen; Sara K. Rasmussen

OBJECTIVE Many benchtop surgical simulators assess laparoscopic proficiency, yet few address core open surgical skills. The purpose of this study is to describe a cost-effective benchtop vessel ligation simulator and provide construct validation. DESIGN A prospective comparison of blinded proficiency assessments among participants performing a benchtop vessel ligation simulation task. Evaluations were performed using Objective Structured Assessments of Technical Skills. SETTING This study took place at the University of Virginia, School of Medicine: a large academic medical institution. PARTICIPANTS The participants included fourth-year medical students participating in a focused surgical elective course (n = 16), postgraduate year 2 to 3 surgery residents (n = 6), and surgical faculty (n = 5). RESULTS The total fixed costs of the vessel ligation simulator was


Journal of Pediatric Urology | 2015

Laparoscopic percutaneous inguinal hernia repair in children: Review of technique and comparison with open surgery

Matthew D. Timberlake; Katherine W. Herbst; Sara K. Rasmussen; Sean T. Corbett

30. Flexible costs of operation were less than


Journal of Surgical Research | 2015

Vessel ligation training via an adaptive simulation curriculum

Yinin Hu; Robyn N. Goodrich; Ivy A. Le; Kendall D. Brooks; Robert G. Sawyer; Philip W. Smith; Anneke T. Schroen; Sara K. Rasmussen

0.20 per attempt. The median task-specific checklist scores among the medical students, residents, and faculty were 4.83, 7.33, and 7.67, respectively. Median global rating scores across the 3 groups were 2.29, 4.43, and 4.76, respectively. Significant proficiency differences were noted between the students and the residents/faculty for both the metrics (p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS A cost-effective benchtop simulator can effectively measure proficiency with basic open surgical techniques such as vessel ligation. Among the junior surgical trainees, this tool can identify learning gaps and improve operative skills in a preclinical setting.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2016

Comparative effectiveness of catheter salvage strategies for pediatric catheter-related bloodstream infections☆

Yinin Hu; Christopher A. Guidry; Bartholomew J. Kane; Eugene D. McGahren; Bradley M. Rodgers; Robert G. Sawyer; Sara K. Rasmussen

INTRODUCTION Minimally-invasive approaches for inguinal hernia repair have evolved from conventional laparoscopy requiring placement of three ports and intracorporeal suturing to simple, one and two port extraperitoneal closure techniques. We utilize a single port laparoscopic percutaneous repair (LPHR) technique for selected children requiring operative intervention for inguinal hernia. We suspect that compared to open surgery, LPHR offers shorter operative duration with comparable safety and efficacy. Our objectives are to (1) illustrate this technique and (2) compare operative times and surgical outcomes in patients undergoing LPHR versus traditional open repair. METHODS We reviewed operative times, complications, and recurrence rates in 38 patients (49 hernias) who underwent LPHR at our institution between January 2010 and September 2013. These data were compared with an age-, gender-, weight-, and laterality-matched cohort undergoing open repair during the same 3 year period. All cases were performed by a pediatric urologist or pediatric surgeon. RESULTS Thirty-eight patients with a median age of 21.5 months underwent LPHR, and 38 patients with a median age of 23 months underwent open repair. In both groups, 27/38 patients (71%) had unilateral repairs, and 11/38 patients (29%) had bilateral repairs. For unilateral procedures, average operative duration was 25 min for LPHR and 59 min for OHR (p < 0.001). For bilateral procedures, average operative duration was 31 min for LPHR and 79 min for OHR (p < 0.001). There were no intraabdominal injuries in either group. In the LPHR group, there were no vascular or cord structure injuries and no conversions to open technique. Median follow-up was 51 days for the LPHR group and 47 days for the OHR group (p = 0.346). No hernia recurrence was observed in either group. CONCLUSIONS In select patients, LPHR is an efficient, safe, and effective minimally invasive alternative to OHR, with reduced operative times but without increased rates of complications or recurrences. The technique has a short learning curve and is a practical alternative to OHR for pediatric urologists who infrequently utilize pure laparoscopic technique.


American Journal of Surgery | 2016

Adaptive simulation training using cumulative sum: a randomized prospective trial

Yinin Hu; Kendall D. Brooks; Helen Kim; Adela Mahmutovic; Joanna Choi; Ivy A. Le; Bartholomew J. Kane; Eugene D. McGahren; Sara K. Rasmussen

BACKGROUND A cost-effective model for open vessel ligation is currently lacking. We hypothesized that a novel, inexpensive vessel ligation simulator can efficiently impart transferrable surgical skills to novice trainees. MATERIALS AND METHODS VesselBox was designed to simulate vessel ligation using surgical gloves as surrogate vessels. Fourth-year medical students performed ligations using VesselBox and were evaluated by surgical faculty using the Objective Structured Assessments of Technical Skills global rating scale and a task-specific checklist. Subsequently, each student was trained using VesselBox in an adaptive practice session guided by cumulative sum. Posttesting was performed on fresh human cadavers by evaluators blinded to pretest results. RESULTS Sixteen students completed the study. VesselBox practice sessions averaged 21.8 min per participant (interquartile range 19.5-27.7). Blinded posttests demonstrated increased proficiency, as measured by both Objective Structured Assessments of Technical Skills (3.23 versus 2.29, P < 0.001) and checklist metrics (7.33 versus 4.83, P < 0.001). Median speed improved from 128.2 s to 97.5 s per vessel ligated (P = 0.001). After this adaptive training protocol, practice volume was not associated with posttest performance. CONCLUSIONS VesselBox is a cost-effective, low-fidelity vessel ligation model suitable for graduating medical students and junior residents. Cumulative sum can facilitate an adaptive, individualized curriculum for simulation training.


Journal of Pediatric Surgery | 2016

Cumulative sum: An individualized proficiency metric for laparoscopic fundamentals

Yinin Hu; Harry L. Warren; Timothy L. McMurry; Robyn N. Goodrich; Joanna Choi; Adela Mahmutovic; Helen Kim; Sara K. Rasmussen

BACKGROUND Intravascular catheter salvage may be attempted in clinically suitable cases in pediatric patients with catheter-related bloodstream infections. The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of ethanol and hydrochloric acid (HCl) locks in achieving catheter salvage through decision-analysis modeling. METHODS A Markov decision model was created to simulate catheter salvage using three management strategies: systemic antibiotics alone, antibiotics plus HCl lock, and antibiotics plus ethanol lock. One-way and two-way sensitivity analyses were performed for all model variables. Infection control rates and recurrence rates for each strategy were derived from prospective institutional data and existing pediatric literature. Costs were derived from institutional charges. RESULTS With antibiotics alone, 73% of patients would require line replacement within 100days, compared to only 31% and 19% of patients treated with HCl and ethanol lock, respectively. Incremental cost per additional catheter salvaged is


American Journal of Surgery | 2016

Predicting surgical skill acquisition in preclinical medical students

Allison N. Martin; Yinin Hu; Ivy A. Le; Kendall D. Brooks; Adela Mahmutovic; Joanna Choi; Helen Kim; Sara K. Rasmussen

89 for HCl lock and


Advances in Health Sciences Education | 2015

Verification of accurate technical insight: a prerequisite for self-directed surgical training

Yinin Hu; Helen Kim; Adela Mahmutovic; Joanna Choi; Ivy A. Le; Sara K. Rasmussen

456 for ethanol lock. Superior efficacy of adjunct lock therapy is insensitive to changes in the anticipated duration of central access requirement and to clinically relevant variations in all model input variables. CONCLUSION HCl or ethanol locks are cost-effective adjuncts to systemic antibiotics for attempted catheter salvage in the setting of catheter-related bloodstream infections.

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Yinin Hu

University of Virginia

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Helen Kim

University of Virginia

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Ivy A. Le

University of Virginia

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Joanna Choi

University of Virginia

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