Sarah T. Jewell
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sarah T. Jewell.
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2011
Jacqueline M. Goulart; Elizabeth A. Quigley; Stephen W. Dusza; Sarah T. Jewell; Gwen Alexander; Maryam M. Asgari; Melody J. Eide; Suzanne W. Fletcher; Alan C. Geller; Ashfaq A. Marghoob; Martin A. Weinstock; Allan C. Halpern
ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDEarly detection of melanoma may provide an opportunity to positively impact melanoma mortality. Numerous skin cancer educational interventions have been developed for primary care physicians (PCPs) to improve diagnostic accuracy. Standardized training is also a prerequisite for formal testing of melanoma screening in the primary care setting.OBJECTIVEWe conducted a systematic review to determine the extent of evaluated interventions designed to educate PCPs about skin cancer, including melanoma.DESIGNRelevant studies in the English language were identified through systemic searches performed in MEDLINE, EMBASE, BIOSIS, and Cochrane through December 2010. Supplementary information was obtained from corresponding authors of the included studies when necessary.APPROACHStudies eligible for inclusion formally evaluated skin cancer education interventions and were designed primarily for PCPs. Excluded studies lacked a specified training intervention, used decision-making software, focused solely on risk factor identification, or did not directly educate or assess participants. Twenty studies met the selection criteria. Data were extracted according to intervention content and delivery format, and study outcomes.KEY RESULTSAll interventions included instructions about skin cancer diagnosis, but otherwise varied in content. Curricula utilized six distinct educational techniques, usually incorporating more than one. Intervention duration varied from 12 min to over 6 h. Eight of the 20 studies were randomized trials. Most studies (18/20, 90%) found a significant improvement in at least one of the following five outcome categories: knowledge, competence, confidence, diagnostic performance, or systems outcomes. Competence was most commonly measured; no study evaluated all categories. Variability in study design, interventions, and outcome measures prevented correlation of outcomes with intervention characteristics.CONCLUSIONSDespite the development of many isolated educational interventions, few have been tested rigorously or evaluated under sufficient standardized conditions to allow for quantitative comparison. Improved and rigorously tested skin cancer educational interventions for PCPs with outcome measures focusing on changes in performance are needed.
Quality of Life Research | 2016
Shantanu N. Razdan; Vishal Patel; Sarah T. Jewell; Colleen M. McCarthy
AbstractPurpose Bilateral prophylactic mastectomy (BPM) is effective in reducing the risk of breast cancer in women with a well-defined family history of breast cancer or in women with BRCA 1 or 2 mutations. Evaluating patient-reported outcomes following BPM are thus essential for evaluating success of BPM from patient’s perspective. Our systematic review aimed to: (1) identify studies describing health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in patients following BPM with or without reconstruction; (2) assess the effect of BPM with or without reconstruction on HRQOL; and (3) identify predictors of HRQOL post-BPM.MethodsWe performed a systematic review of literature using the PRISMA guidelines. PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, Web of Science, Scopus and Cochrane databases were searched. ResultsThe initial search resulted in 1082 studies; 22 of these studies fulfilled our inclusion criteria. Post-BPM, patients are satisfied with the outcomes and report high psychosocial well-being and positive body image. Sexual well-being and somatosensory function are most negatively affected. Vulnerability, psychological distress and preoperative cancer distress are significant negative predictors of quality of life and body image post-BPM.ConclusionThere is a paucity of high-quality data on outcomes of different HRQOL domains post-BPM. Future studies should strive to use validated and breast-specific PRO instruments for measuring HRQOL. This will facilitate shared decision-making by enabling surgeons to provide evidence-based answers to women contemplating BPM.
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | 2016
Milagros Silva; Margaux Genoff; Alexandra Zaballa; Sarah T. Jewell; Stacy M. Stabler; Francesca Gany; Lisa Diamond
CONTEXT Language barriers can influence the health quality and outcomes of limited English proficiency (LEP) patients at end of life, including symptom assessment and utilization of hospice services. OBJECTIVES To determine how professional medical interpreters influence the delivery of palliative care services to LEP patients. METHODS We conducted a systematic review of the literature in all available languages of six databases from 1960 to 2014. Studies evaluated use of language services for LEP patients who received palliative care services. Data were abstracted from 10 articles and collected on study design, size, comparison groups, outcomes, and interpreter characteristics. RESULTS Six qualitative and four quantitative studies assessed the use of interpreters in palliative care. All studies found that the quality of care provided to LEP patients receiving palliative services is influenced by the type of interpreter used. When professional interpreters were not used, LEP patients and families had inadequate understanding about diagnosis and prognosis during goals of care conversations, and patients had worse symptom management at the end of life, including pain and anxiety. Half of the studies concluded that professional interpreters were not used adequately, and several studies suggested that premeetings between clinicians and interpreters were important to discuss topics and terminology to be used during goals of care discussions. CONCLUSION LEP patients had worse quality of end-of-life care and goals of care discussions when professional interpreters were not used. More intervention studies are needed to improve the quality of care provided to LEP patients and families receiving palliative services.
JAMA Dermatology | 2015
Elizabeth A. Quigley; Barbara A. Tokay; Sarah T. Jewell; Michael A. Marchetti; Allan C. Halpern
IMPORTANCE Photographs are invaluable dermatologic diagnostic, management, research, teaching, and documentation tools. Digital Imaging and Communications in Medicine (DICOM) standards exist for many types of digital medical images, but there are no DICOM standards for camera-acquired dermatologic images to date. OBJECTIVE To identify and describe existing or proposed technology and technique standards for camera-acquired dermatologic images in the scientific literature. EVIDENCE REVIEW Systematic searches of the PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases were performed in January 2013 using photography and digital imaging, standardization, and medical specialty and medical illustration search terms and augmented by a gray literature search of 14 websites using Google. Two reviewers independently screened titles of 7371 unique publications, followed by 3 sequential full-text reviews, leading to the selection of 49 publications with the most recent (1985-2013) or detailed description of technology or technique standards related to the acquisition or use of images of skin disease (or related conditions). FINDINGS No universally accepted existing technology or technique standards for camera-based digital images in dermatology were identified. Recommendations are summarized for technology imaging standards, including spatial resolution, color resolution, reproduction (magnification) ratios, postacquisition image processing, color calibration, compression, output, archiving and storage, and security during storage and transmission. Recommendations are also summarized for technique imaging standards, including environmental conditions (lighting, background, and camera position), patient pose and standard view sets, and patient consent, privacy, and confidentiality. Proposed standards for specific-use cases in total body photography, teledermatology, and dermoscopy are described. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE The literature is replete with descriptions of obtaining photographs of skin disease, but universal imaging standards have not been developed, validated, and adopted to date. Dermatologic imaging is evolving without defined standards for camera-acquired images, leading to variable image quality and limited exchangeability. The development and adoption of universal technology and technique standards may first emerge in scenarios when image use is most associated with a defined clinical benefit.
Journal of racial and ethnic health disparities | 2018
Megan Johnson Shen; Emily B Peterson; Rosario Costas-Muñiz; Migda Hunter Hernandez; Sarah T. Jewell; Konstantina Matsoukas; Carma L. Bylund
ObjectiveRacial disparities exist in health care, even when controlling for relevant sociodemographic variables. Recent data suggest disparities in patient-physician communication may also contribute to racial disparities in health care. This study aimed to systematically review studies examining the effect of black race and racial concordance on patient-physician communication.MethodsA comprehensive search using the PRISMA guidelines was conducted across seven online databases between 1995 and 2016. The search resulted in 4672 records for review and 40 articles for final inclusion in the review. Studies were included when the sample consisted of black patients in healthcare contexts and the communication measure was observational or patient-reported. Data were extracted by pairs of authors who independently coded articles and reconciled discrepancies. Results were synthesized according to predictor (race or racial concordance) and communication domain.ResultsStudies were heterogeneous in health contexts and communication measures. Results indicated that black patients consistently experienced poorer communication quality, information-giving, patient participation, and participatory decision-making than white patients. Results were mixed for satisfaction, partnership building, length of visit, and talk-time ratio. Racial concordance was more clearly associated with better communication across all domains except quality, for which there was no effect.ConclusionsDespite mixed results due to measurement heterogeneity, results of the present review highlight the importance of training physicians and patients to engage in higher quality communication with black and racially discordant patients by focusing on improving patient-centeredness, information-giving, partnership building, and patient engagement in communication processes.
Journal of Electronic Resources in Medical Libraries | 2011
Sarah T. Jewell
This column addresses the need for health care information professionals to maximize their productivity in an age where there are so many distractions when seeking and delivering information. A variety of mobile phone applications are reviewed, focusing on the popular platforms of the iPhone, BlackBerry, and Android models. Productivity categories that are covered include to-do lists, dictation software, article viewing and storage, blogging and tweeting tools, and data backup solutions.
Oncology Nursing Forum | 2016
Thomas M. Atkinson; Vivian M. Rodríguez; Mallorie Gordon; Isabelle Avildsen; Jessica C. Emanu; Sarah T. Jewell; Kimberly A. Anselmi; Pamela K. Ginex
PROBLEM IDENTIFICATION Oral anticancer medication (OAM) use has been steadily increasing, leading to several patient benefits. A notable challenge for nurses is accurate monitoring of patient OAM regimens because nonadherence is associated with poor health outcomes and decreased survival. Currently, no gold standard measure of OAM adherence exists. The authors conducted a systematic review of the association between objective and patient-reported measures of OAM adherence. . LITERATURE SEARCH A systematic electronic literature search was conducted using PubMed, EMBASE, Scopus, PsycINFO®, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and CINAHL® databases through November 2014. . DATA EVALUATION Articles were independently reviewed to determine whether they included an original characterization of the level of association between objective and patient-reported measures of OAM adherence. . SYNTHESIS From a total of 11,135 articles retrieved, eight studies met inclusion criteria. Objective adherence was primarily assessed using pill counts or Medication Event Monitoring System (MEMSCap™). Patient-reported adherence was most commonly assessed using study-specific questionnaires. Significant positive correlations were observed between objective and patient-reported adherence across most studies, with three studies reporting higher rates of adherence via patient reporting. . CONCLUSIONS Despite variation in the OAMs and measures used, patient-reported adherence rates were equal to or higher than objective adherence measures across studies. Social desirability bias may be a concern; however, given the significant concordance observed, using patient-reported methods in future studies of OAM adherence may be justified. . IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING This review provides evidence to support nursing use of patient-reported measures to accurately monitor OAM adherence and potentially improve the quality of patient-provider communication.
Proceedings of The Asist Annual Meeting | 2006
Xiangmin Zhang; Yuelin Li; Sarah T. Jewell
This paper describes a prototype user interface system, CIRR tool, which allows searchers to share their relevance judgments, search queries, and search results by providing a system Task Console with a “Group Report” feature. The system was developed based on the assumption that knowledge sharing in information retrieval (IR) is helpful and important to improve search performance. A usability evaluation of this system was conducted. The test results show that in general the system is easy to learn and use. However, some usability problems are also observed. The paper discusses these issues and proposes future research directions.
Archive | 2018
Sarah T. Jewell
Abstract Informationists have the tools they need to help their users combat information fatigue. After the theoretical underpinnings of what makes a successful current awareness service are covered, user and resource assessment techniques will be shared. Unique, modern approaches to current awareness, such as social media, gray literatures, open access literature, and disaster/change management literature will be discussed. Finally, a case study on using Twitter and Facebook to provide current awareness of the literature to students, clinicians, and researchers in a university setting will be presented.
International Journal of Evidence-based Healthcare | 2017
Andrea Norberg; John Nelson; Cheryl Holly; Sarah T. Jewell; Susan Salmond
REVIEW QUESTION/OBJECTIVE The objective of this qualitative systematic review is to examine the experience and impact of health care delivery on health care engagement for adults infected with the human immunodeficiency virus receiving primary care. This review will identify and synthesize the best available evidence on health care structures, processes and practices that promote patient engagement in primary health care.The review question to be addressed is: What are the experiences of people living with human immunodeficiency virus (PLWH) and their health care providers with health care delivery processes and practices that impact engagement in primary health care settings (clinics, physician offices, and other community-based health care settings)? Specifically this review will compile evidence to illuminate health care system structures, provider practices, care delivery and programmatic processes that impact engagement in primary health care, as perceived by PLWH and their providers.