Scott Silvers
Mayo Clinic
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Featured researches published by Scott Silvers.
Sports Health: A Multidisciplinary Approach | 2011
Michael M. Mohseni; Scott Silvers; Rebecca B. McNeil; Nancy N. Diehl; Tyler Vadeboncoeur; Walt Taylor; Shane A. Shapiro; Jennifer Roth; Sherry Mahoney
Background: Prior reports on metabolic derangements observed in distance running frequently have small sample sizes, lack prerace laboratory measures, and report sodium as the sole measure. Hypothesis: Metabolic abnormalities—hyponatremia, hypokalemia, renal dysfunction, hemoconcentration—are frequent after completing a full or half marathon. Clinically significant changes occur in these laboratory values after race completion. Study Design: Observational, cross-sectional study. Methods: Consenting marathon and half marathon racers completed a survey as well as finger stick blood sampling on race day of the National Marathon to Fight Breast Cancer (Jacksonville, Florida, February 2008). Parallel blood measures were obtained before and after race completion (prerace, n = 161; postrace, n = 195). Results: The prevalence of prerace and postrace hyponatremia was 8 of 161 (5.0%) and 16 of 195 (8.2%), respectively. Hypokalemia was not present prerace but was present in 1 runner postrace (1 of 195). Renal dysfunction occurred prerace in 14 of 161 (8.7%) and postrace in 83 of 195 (42.6%). Among those with postrace renal dysfunction, 45.8% (38 of 83) were classified as moderate or severe. Hemoconcentration was present in 2 of 161 (1.2%) prerace and 6 of 195 (3.1%) postrace. The mean changes in laboratory values were (postrace minus prerace): sodium, 1.6 mmol/L; potassium, −0.2 mmol/L; blood urea nitrogen, 2.8 mg/dL; creatinine, 0.2 mg/dL; and hemoglobin, 0.3 g/dL for 149 pairs (except blood urea nitrogen, n = 147 pairs). Changes were significant for all comparisons (P < 0.01) except potassium (P = 0.08) and hemoglobin (P = 0.01). Conclusions: Metabolic abnormalities are common among endurance racers, and they may be present prerace, including hyponatremia. The clinical significance of these findings is unknown. Clinical relevance: It is unclear which runners are at risk for developing clinically important metabolic derangements. Participating in prolonged endurance exercise appears to be safe in the majority of racers.
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2016
Stephen J. Traub; Christopher F. Stewart; Roshanak Didehban; Adam C. Bartley; Soroush Saghafian; Vernon D. Smith; Scott Silvers; Ryan LeCheminant; Christopher A. Lipinski
STUDY OBJECTIVE We compare emergency department (ED) operational metrics obtained in the first year of a rotational patient assignment system (in which patients are assigned to physicians automatically according to an algorithm) with those obtained in the last year of a traditional physician self-assignment system (in which physicians assigned themselves to patients at physician discretion). METHODS This was a pre-post retrospective study of patients at a single ED with no financial incentives for physician productivity. Metrics of interest were length of stay; arrival-to-provider time; rates of left before being seen, left subsequent to being seen, early returns (within 72 hours), and early returns with admission; and complaint ratio. RESULTS We analyzed 23,514 visits in the last year of physician self-assignment and 24,112 visits in the first year of rotational patient assignment. Rotational patient assignment was associated with the following improvements (percentage change): median length of stay 232 to 207 minutes (11%), median arrival to provider time 39 to 22 minutes (44%), left before being seen 0.73% to 0.36% (51%), and complaint ratio 9.0/1,000 to 5.4/1,000 (40%). There were no changes in left subsequent to being seen, early returns, or early returns with admission. CONCLUSION In a single facility, the transition from physician self-assignment to rotational patient assignment was associated with improvement in a broad array of ED operational metrics. Rotational patient assignment may be a useful strategy in ED front-end process redesign.
Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare | 2017
Kevin M. Barrett; Michael A. Pizzi; Vivek Kesari; Sarvam P. Terkonda; Elizabeth Mauricio; Scott Silvers; Ranya Habash; Benjamin L. Brown; Rabih G. Tawk; James F. Meschia; Robert E. Wharen; William D. Freeman
Background Ischemic stroke is a time-sensitive disease, with improved outcomes associated with decreased time from onset to treatment. It was hypothesised that ambulance-based assessment of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) using a Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)–compliant mobile platform immediately prior to arrival is feasible. Methods This is a proof-of-concept feasibility pilot study in two phases. The first phase consisted of an ambulance-equipped HIPAA-compliant video platform for remote NIHSS assessment of a simulated stroke patient. The second phase consisted of remote NIHSS assessment by a hospital-based neurologist of acute stroke patients en route to our facility. Five ambulances were equipped with a 4G/LTE-enabled tablet preloaded with a secure HIPAA-compliant telemedicine application. Secondary outcomes assessed satisfaction of staff with the remote platform. Results Phase one was successful in the assessment of three out of three simulated patients. Phase two was successful in the assessment of 10 out of 11 (91%) cases. One video attempt was unsuccessful because local LTE was turned off on the device. The video signal was dropped transiently due to weather, which delayed NIHSS assessment in one case. Average NIHSS assessment time was 7.6 minutes (range 3–9.8 minutes). Neurologists rated 83% of encounters as ‘satisfied’ to ‘very satisfied’, and the emergency medical service (EMS) rated 90% of encounters as ‘satisfied’ to ‘very satisfied’. The one failed video attempt was associated with ‘poor’ EMS satisfaction. Conclusion This proof-of-concept pilot demonstrates that remote ambulance-based NIHSS assessment is feasible. This model could reduce door-to-needle times by conducting prehospital data collection.
Neurocritical Care | 2008
J.Stephen Huff; Jonathan A. Edlow; Scott Silvers
BackgroundOverview of current emergency medicine practice and neurological emergencies.ConclusionsEmergency medicine physicians review and respond to a manuscript noting the unique time pressures and diagnostic constraints in contemporary US emergency medicine practice. Definitions of error and misdiagnosis are discussed. Proposals are enumerated for practice improvement involving local feedback and educational initiatives.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Innovations, Quality & Outcomes | 2018
Eric D. Goldstein; Lynda Schnusenberg; Lesia Mooney; Carol Raper; Sheila McDaniel; Dallas Thorpe; Michelle T. Franke; Linda K. Anderson; Lynnae L. McClure; Misty M. Oglesby; Catina Y. Lewis; Cammi Velichko; Belinda G. Bradley; William W. Horn; Ashley N. Reid; Jason Siegel; Rocco Cannistraro; Perry S. Bechtle; Maria Thereza Barbosa; Scott Silvers; Benjamin L. Brown; William D. Freeman; David A. Miller; Kevin M. Barrett; Josephine F. Huang
Objective To reduce door-to-angiographic reperfusion (DTR) time to 120 minutes for patients presenting with acute ischemic stroke attributed to anterior circulation large-vessel occlusion amenable to endovascular mechanical thrombectomy. Patients and Methods Patients treated with mechanical thrombectomy before (April 10, 2015, through April 11, 2016) and after (April 12, 2016, through May 10, 2017) implementation of a multitiered notification system were studied. Lean process mapping was used to assess inefficiencies with multidisciplinary triage. A 3-tiered paging platform, which rapidly alerts essential personnel of the acute ischemic stroke team at advancing decision points, was introduced. Results Sixty-two patients were analyzed before and after implementation (34 vs 28, respectively). Following intervention, DTR time was reduced by 43 minutes (mean DTR, 170 minutes vs 127 minutes; P=.02). At 90-day follow up, 5 of the 28 patients in the postintervention cohort (19%) had excellent neurologic outcomes, defined as a modified Rankin Scale score of 0, compared to 0 of 34 (0%) in the preintervention cohort (P=.89). Reductions were also seen in the length of stay on the neurocritical care service (mean, 6 vs 3 days; P=.006), and total hospital charges for combined groups (mean,
American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2018
Nicole R. Hodgson; Souroush Saghafian; Lanyu Mi; Matthew Buras; Eric D. Katz; Jesse M. Pines; Leon D. Sanchez; Scott Silvers; Steven A. Maher; Stephen J. Traub
100,083 vs
Annals of the American Thoracic Society | 2017
Ali A Alsaad; Vandana Y. Bhide; Jimmy L. Moss; Scott Silvers; Margaret M. Johnson; Michael J. Maniaci
161,458; P<.001). Conclusion The multitiered notification system was a feasible solution for improving DTR within our institution, resulting in reductions of overall DTR time, neurocritical care service length of stay, and total hospital charges.
Journal of Physical Activity and Health | 2012
Tyler Vadeboncoeur; Scott Silvers; Walter Taylor; Shane A. Shapiro; Jennifer Roth; Nancy S. Diehl; Sherry Mahoney; Michael M. Mohseni
Objective To describe the relationship between emergency department resource utilization and admission rate at the level of the individual physician. Methods Retrospective observational study of physician resource utilization and admitting data at two emergency departments. We calculated observed to expected (O/E) ratios for four measures of resource utilization (intravenous medications and fluids, laboratory testing, plain radiographs, and advanced imaging studies) as well as for admission rate. Expected values reflect adjustment for patient‐ and time‐based variables. We compared O/E ratios for each type of resource utilization to the O/E ratio for admission for each provider. We report degree of correlation (slope of the trendline) and strength of correlation (adjusted R2 value) for each association, as well as categorical results after clustering physicians based on the relationship of resource utilization to admission rate. Results There were statistically significant positive correlations between resource utilization and physician admission rate. Physicians with lower resource utilization rates were more likely to have lower admission rates, and those with higher resource utilization rates were more likely to have higher admission rates. Conclusions In a two‐facility study, emergency physician resource utilization and admission rate were positively correlated: those who used more ED resources also tended to admit more patients. These results add to a growing understanding of emergency physician variability.
Postgraduate Medical Journal | 2017
Ali A Alsaad; Scott Silvers; Fred Kusumoto; Joseph L. Blackshear
Rationale: Studies have shown the importance of simulation‐based training on the outcomes of central venous catheter (CVC) insertion by trainees. Objectives: To compare the performance of internal medicine trainees who underwent standardized simulation training of CVC insertion with that of internal medicine trainees who had traditional CVC training and were already deemed competent to perform the procedure during a proficiency evaluation using a training mannequin. Methods: Trainees who perform CVC insertion were enrolled in the institutional Central Line Workshop, which includes both an online and an experiential simulation component. The training is followed by a certification station proficiency assessment. Residents and fellows previously certified competent to perform CVC placement without supervision completed the online module, but they could opt out of the experiential component and proceed directly to the evaluation. Results: Forty‐eight trainees participated in the study. Twenty‐one (44%), 15 (31%), 6 (13%), 1 (2%), 2 (4%), and 3 (6%) were in postgraduate year 1 (PGY1), PGY2, PGY3, PGY4, PGY5, and PGY6, respectively. Twenty‐nine completed the hands‐on instruction, 28 (97%) of whom successfully passed the simulation‐based assessment on their first attempt. Nineteen trainees previously credentialed to perform CVC placement without supervision opted out of the simulation‐based experiential training. Of these, five (26%) failed in their first attempt (P = 0.02 vs. trainees who completed the simulation training). Conclusions: Standardized simulation‐based training can improve CVC insertion proficiency, even among trainees with previous experience sufficient to have been deemed competent in the procedure. Improved performance at simulation‐based testing may translate to improved outcomes of CVC placement by trainees.
Archive | 2015
Douglas S. King; Mark W. Bryan; Timothy M. Ruden; Shawn Baier; L Rick; Louise Burke; Shane A. Shapiro; Jennifer Roth; Sherry Mahoney; Michael M. Mohseni; Scott Silvers; Rebecca B. McNeil; Nancy N. Diehl; Tyler Vadeboncoeur; Walt Taylor