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Dive into the research topics where Shari L. Meyerson is active.

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Featured researches published by Shari L. Meyerson.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2014

Reliability, Validity, and Feasibility of the Zwisch Scale for the Assessment of Intraoperative Performance

Brian C. George; Ezra N. Teitelbaum; Shari L. Meyerson; Mary C. Schuller; Debra A. DaRosa; Emil R. Petrusa; Lucia C. Petito; Jonathan P. Fryer

PURPOSE The existing methods for evaluating resident operative performance interrupt the workflow of the attending physician, are resource intensive, and are often completed well after the end of the procedure in question. These limitations lead to low faculty compliance and potential significant recall bias. In this study, we deployed a smartphone-based system, the Procedural Autonomy and Supervisions System, to facilitate assessment of resident performance according to the Zwisch scale with minimal workflow disruption. We aimed to demonstrate that this is a reliable, valid, and feasible method of measuring resident operative autonomy. METHODS Before implementation, general surgery residents and faculty underwent frame-of-reference training to the Zwisch scale. Immediately after any operation in which a resident participated, the system automatically sent a text message prompting the attending physician to rate the residents level of operative autonomy according to the 4-level Zwisch scale. Of these procedures, 8 were videotaped and independently rated by 2 additional surgeons. The Zwisch ratings of the 3 raters were compared using an intraclass correlation coefficient. Videotaped procedures were also scored using 2 alternative operating room (OR) performance assessment instruments (Operative Performance Rating System and Ottawa Surgical Competency OR Evaluation), against which the item correlations were calculated. RESULTS Between December 2012 and June 2013, 27 faculty used the smartphone system to complete 1490 operative performance assessments on 31 residents. During this period, faculty completed evaluations for 92% of all operations performed with general surgery residents. The Zwisch scores were shown to correlate with postgraduate year (PGY) levels based on sequential pairwise chi-squared tests: PGY 1 vs PGY 2 (χ(2) = 106.9, df = 3, p < 0.001); PGY 2 vs PGY 3 (χ(2) = 22.2, df = 3, p < 0.001); and PGY 3 vs PGY 4 (χ(2) = 56.4, df = 3, p < 0.001). Comparison of PGY 4 to PGY 5 scores were not significantly different (χ(2) = 4.5, df = 3, p = 0.21). For the 8 operations reviewed for interrater reliability, the intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.90 (95% CI: 0.72-0.98, p < 0.01). Correlation of Procedural Autonomy and Supervisions System ratings with both Operative Performance Rating System items (each r > 0.90, all ps < 0.01) and Ottawa Surgical Competency OR Evaluation items (each r > 0.86, all ps < 0.01) was high. CONCLUSIONS The Zwisch scale can be used to make reliable and valid measurements of faculty guidance and resident autonomy. Our data also suggest that Zwisch ratings may be used to infer resident operative performance. Deployed on an automated smartphone-based system, it can be used to feasibly record evaluations for most operations performed by residents. This information can be used to council individual residents, modify programmatic curricula, and potentially inform national training guidelines.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016

2016 Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Coccidioidomycosis

John N. Galgiani; Neil M. Ampel; Janis E. Blair; Antonino Catanzaro; Francesca Geertsma; Susan E. Hoover; Royce H. Johnson; Shimon Kusne; Jeffrey R. Lisse; Joel D. MacDonald; Shari L. Meyerson; Patricia B. Raksin; John Siever; David A. Stevens; Rebecca Sunenshine; Nicholas Theodore

It is important to realize that guidelines cannot always account for individual variation among patients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with respect to particular patients or special clinical situations. Infectious Diseases Society of America considers adherence to these guidelines to be voluntary, with the ultimate determination regarding their application to be made by the physician in the light of each patients individual circumstances.Coccidioidomycosis, also known as San Joaquin Valley fever, is a systemic infection endemic to parts of the southwestern United States and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere. Residence in and recent travel to these areas are critical elements for the accurate recognition of patients who develop this infection. In this practice guideline, we have organized our recommendations to address actionable questions concerning the entire spectrum of clinical syndromes. These can range from initial pulmonary infection, which eventually resolves whether or not antifungal therapy is administered, to a variety of pulmonary and extrapulmonary complications. Additional recommendations address management of coccidioidomycosis occurring for special at-risk populations. Finally, preemptive management strategies are outlined in certain at-risk populations and after unintentional laboratory exposure.


Vascular and Endovascular Surgery | 2002

Angiographic access site complications in the era of arterial closure devices.

Shari L. Meyerson; Ted Feldman; Tina R. Desai; Jeffrey A. Leef; Lewis B. Schwartz; James F. McKinsey

Coronary and peripheral angiography is associated with a low but significant risk of access site complications. While percutaneous devices have been shown to permit more rapid puncture site closure, previous reports have suggested the incidence and severity of complications associated with these devices are greater than with manual compression. This study compares access site complications with and without closure devices in the current era. The authors conducted a retrospective review of patients with access site complications after coronary or peripheral angiography between 1998 and 2000. Forty-five complications requiring vascular surgical consultation were identified in the 4,800 procedures performed during this time period. Fourteen complications occurred in 1,536 procedures (0.9%) using suture-mediated or collagen devices and 31 occurred in 3,264 procedures without devices (0.9%). The types of procedures and catheter sizes (mean 7 Fr) used were not different in the 2 groups. Other than complications involving a retained device, there was no difference between device and manual compression with respect to incidence or types of complication, requirement for operation, type of operation, or outcome. Access site complications identified included pseudoaneurysm (n = 22; 49%), bleeding or hematoma (n = 8; 18%), arteriovenous fistula (n =5; 11%), arterial thrombosis (n = 4; 9%), infection (n = 4; 9%), and retained device (n = 2; 4%). Twenty-four patients (71% vs 45%; p=NS) required operative intervention including pseudoaneurysm repair, hematoma drainage, and thrombectomy. Eleven patients (26%) underwent successful ultrasound-guided pseudoaneurysm compression and 9 patients (21%) required no intervention. These data demonstrate that closure devices facilitate arterial puncture site repair without an increase in access site complications. These devices can be safely utilized when rapid hemostasis is desired after coronary or peripheral angiography.


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2010

An Inexpensive, Reproducible Tissue Simulator for Teaching Thoracoscopic Lobectomy

Shari L. Meyerson; Frank LoCascio; Stafford S. Balderson; Thomas A. D'Amico

PURPOSE Simulation is rapidly becoming an integral part of surgical education at all levels including the education of practicing surgeons in new techniques such as thoracoscopic lobectomy. Current thoracoscopic lobectomy simulator models have significant limitations including expense and requirement for specialized facilities. This study describes a novel low-cost, easily reproducible, bench top simulator. DESCRIPTION Tissue blocks consisting of a porcine heart and bilateral lungs with intact pericardium were secured from a commercially available source. The pulmonary artery and veins were statically distended with ketchup to more realistically mimic the technique of dissection and allow for simultaneous identification of technical errors. EVALUATION This simulator has been used at seven different industry and society sponsored thoracoscopic lobectomy training programs by more than 100 participants. Qualitative data on the performance of the model was collected from faculty and course participants. CONCLUSIONS A low-cost porcine heart-lung block statically perfused with ketchup provides an inexpensive, easily reproducible model for teaching thoracoscopic lobectomy, which reasonably and accurately simulates a clinical experience.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 1999

Adenoviral-mediated gene transfer of a constitutively active form of the retinoblastoma gene product attenuates neointimal thickening in experimental vein grafts ☆ ☆☆

Lewis B. Schwartz; John Moawad; Eric C. Svensson; Rachel L. Tufts; Shari L. Meyerson; David A. Baunoch; Jeffrey M. Leiden

PURPOSE Inappropriate or excessive vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation leads to the development of occlusive lesions in up to 50% of vein grafts. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that induced overexpression of a cytostatic nonphosphorylatable form of the retinoblastoma protein (DeltaRb) would attenuate neointimal thickening in experimental vein grafts. METHODS A replication-deficient adenovirus vector that encoded a nonphosphorylatable, constitutively active form of DeltaRb was constructed (AdDeltaRb) and contained an NH2-terminal epitope tag from the influenza hemagglutinin molecule (HA). Forty-eight male New Zealand white rabbits underwent surgical exposure of the external jugular vein for transfection with either 3 x 10(10) plaque-forming units/mL AdDeltaRb (n = 16), 3 x 10(10) plaque-forming units/mL control adenovirus (AdBglII, n = 15), or vehicle (n = 17) for 10 minutes at 120 mm Hg. After vector exposure, the vein was excised and interposed end-to-end into the carotid circulation. After 5 days, 12 grafts (four from each group) were excised and assayed for genomic DeltaRb DNA with the polymerase chain reaction or for hemagglutinin molecule expression and localization with immunohistochemistry. The remainder of the grafts (n = 36) were perfusion-fixed after 4 weeks, and 5 microm sections prepared for digital planimetric analysis. RESULTS Polymerase chain reaction results identified the DeltaRb gene only in the grafts that were transfected with AdDeltaRb. Immunohistochemical analysis results revealed transgene expression in most of the endothelial cells and in many of the smooth muscle cells. After 4 weeks, the grafts that were exposed to AdDeltaRb exhibited a 22% reduction in neointimal thickness (vehicle, 77 +/- 7 microm; AdBglII, 75 +/- 5 microm; AdDeltaRb, 60 +/- 5 microm; P =.05), and medial thickness, luminal diameter, and other parameters were unchanged (medial thickness: vehicle, 72 +/- 10 microm; AdBglII, 85 +/- 7 microm; AdDeltaRb, 69 +/- 9 microm; P = NS; luminal diameter: vehicle, 4.5 +/- 0.2 mm; AdBglII, 4.4 +/- 0.2 mm; AdDeltaRb, 4.7 +/- 0.1 mm; P = NS). CONCLUSION With this delivery system, adenoviral-mediated gene transfer is highly efficient and induced overexpression of DeltaRb leads to a reduction in vein graft neointimal thickening.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2013

Duration of Faculty Training Needed to Ensure Reliable OR Performance Ratings

Brian C. George; Ezra N. Teitelbaum; Debra A. DaRosa; Eric S. Hungness; Shari L. Meyerson; Jonathan P. Fryer; Mary C. Schuller; Joseph B. Zwischenberger

OBJECTIVES The American Board of Surgery has mandated intraoperative assessment of general surgery residents, yet the time required to train faculty to accurately and reliably complete operating room performance evaluation forms is unknown. Outside of surgical education, frame-of-reference (FOR) training has been shown to be an effective training modality to teach raters the specific performance indicators associated with each point on a rating scale. Little is known, however, about what form and duration of FOR training is needed to accomplish reliable ratings among surgical faculty. DESIGN Two groups of surgical faculty separately underwent either an accelerated 1-hour (n = 10) or immersive four-hour (n = 34) FOR faculty development program. Both programs included a formal presentation and a facilitated discussion of sample behaviors for each point on the Zwisch operating room performance rating scale (see DaRosa et al.(8)). The immersive group additionally participated in a small group exercise that included additional practice. After training, both groups were tested using 10 video clips of trainees at various levels. Responses were scored against expert consensus ratings. The 2-sided Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare between group means. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS All trainees were faculty members in the Department of Surgery of a large midwestern private medical school. RESULTS Faculty undergoing the 1-hour FOR training program did not have a statistically different mean correct response rate on the video test when compared with those undergoing the 4-hour training program (88% vs 80%; p = 0.07). CONCLUSIONS One-hour FOR training sessions are likely sufficient to train surgical faculty to reliably use a simple evaluation instrument for the assessment of intraoperative performance. Additional research is needed to determine how these results generalize to different assessment instruments.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2016

The Feasibility of Real-Time Intraoperative Performance Assessment With SIMPL (System for Improving and Measuring Procedural Learning): Early Experience From a Multi-institutional Trial

Jordan D. Bohnen; Brian C. George; Reed G. Williams; Mary C. Schuller; Debra A. DaRosa; Laura Torbeck; John T. Mullen; Shari L. Meyerson; Edward D. Auyang; Jeffrey G. Chipman; Jennifer N. Choi; Michael A. Choti; Eric D. Endean; Eugene F. Foley; Samuel P. Mandell; Andreas H. Meier; Douglas S. Smink; Kyla P. Terhune; Paul E. Wise; Nathaniel J. Soper; Joseph B. Zwischenberger; Keith D. Lillemoe; Gary L. Dunnington; Jonathan P. Fryer

PURPOSE Intraoperative performance assessment of residents is of growing interest to trainees, faculty, and accreditors. Current approaches to collect such assessments are limited by low participation rates and long delays between procedure and evaluation. We deployed an innovative, smartphone-based tool, SIMPL (System for Improving and Measuring Procedural Learning), to make real-time intraoperative performance assessment feasible for every case in which surgical trainees participate, and hypothesized that SIMPL could be feasibly integrated into surgical training programs. METHODS Between September 1, 2015 and February 29, 2016, 15 U.S. general surgery residency programs were enrolled in an institutional review board-approved trial. SIMPL was made available after 70% of faculty and residents completed a 1-hour training session. Descriptive and univariate statistics analyzed multiple dimensions of feasibility, including training rates, volume of assessments, response rates/times, and dictation rates. The 20 most active residents and attendings were evaluated in greater detail. RESULTS A total of 90% of eligible users (1267/1412) completed training. Further, 13/15 programs began using SIMPL. Totally, 6024 assessments were completed by 254 categorical general surgery residents (n = 3555 assessments) and 259 attendings (n = 2469 assessments), and 3762 unique operations were assessed. There was significant heterogeneity in participation within and between programs. Mean percentage (range) of users who completed ≥1, 5, and 20 assessments were 62% (21%-96%), 34% (5%-75%), and 10% (0%-32%) across all programs, and 96%, 75%, and 32% in the most active program. Overall, response rate was 70%, dictation rate was 24%, and mean response time was 12 hours. Assessments increased from 357 (September 2015) to 1146 (February 2016). The 20 most active residents each received mean 46 assessments by 10 attendings for 20 different procedures. CONCLUSIONS SIMPL can be feasibly integrated into surgical training programs to enhance the frequency and timeliness of intraoperative performance assessment. We believe SIMPL could help facilitate a national competency-based surgical training system, although local and systemic challenges still need to be addressed.


Journal of Surgical Education | 2008

Delayed Presentation and Treatment of Tracheobronchial Injuries Due to Blunt Trauma

Evan S. Glazer; Shari L. Meyerson

BACKGROUND Blunt thoracic trauma that results in tracheobronchial injury is difficult to diagnose. Many injuries are catastrophic and result in early mortality. Others are not immediately life threatening and are missed at initial presentation. Some of those injuries will later become symptomatic and will require medical attention. Ideal treatment in that situation is not yet clearly defined. OBJECTIVES The objective is to review the current literature of delayed diagnoses of traumatic tracheobronchial injuries, their management, and the results of the most common repair methods. An interesting case report from this institution is presented as well. DESIGN A Medline search of the English literature of delayed presentation of tracheobronchial injuries over the past 10 years was performed. Delayed diagnosis was defined as injuries not identified during the initial hospitalization. RESULTS The median time from initial presentation to diagnosis was 6 months. Dyspnea (56%) and pneumonia (39%) were the most common complaints. No difference in complications was observed between parenchymal sparing procedures and resections. CONCLUSIONS Despite delays in presentation and the radiographic appearance of destroyed distal lung, proximal injuries can often be repaired without sacrifice of distal lung parenchyma. Bronchial sleeve resections or end-to-end anastomosis can be performed safely in most situations.


Gene Therapy | 2001

Prevention of restenosis by a herpes simplex virus mutant capable of controlled long-term expression in vascular tissue in vivo.

Christopher L. Skelly; Michael A. Curi; Shari L. Meyerson; David H. Woo; Danielle M. Hari; James Vosicky; Sunil J. Advani; Helena J. Mauceri; Seymour Glagov; Bernard Roizman; Ralph R. Weichselbaum; Lewis B. Schwartz

Neointimal hyperplasia resulting from vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation and luminal migration is the major cause of autologous vein graft failure following vascular coronary or peripheral bypass surgery. Strategies to attenuate SMC proliferation by the delivery of oligonucleotides or genes controlling cell division rely on the use of high concentrations of vectors, and require pre-emptive disruption of the endothelial cell layer. We report a genetically engineered herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) mutant that, in an in vivo rabbit model system, infects all vascular layers without prior injury to the endothelium; expresses a reporter gene driven by a viral promoter with high efficiency for at least 4 weeks; exhibits no systemic toxicity; can be eliminated at will by administration of the antiviral drug acyclovir; and significantly reduces SMC proliferation and restenosis in vein grafts in immunocompetent hosts.


Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2016

Executive Summary: 2016 Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Coccidioidomycosis.

John N. Galgiani; Neil M. Ampel; Janis E. Blair; Antonino Catanzaro; Francesca Geertsma; Susan E. Hoover; Royce H. Johnson; Shimon Kusne; Jeffrey R. Lisse; Joel D. MacDonald; Shari L. Meyerson; Patricia B. Raksin; John Siever; David A. Stevens; Rebecca Sunenshine; Nicholas Theodore

It is important to realize that guidelines cannot always account for individual variation among patients. They are not intended to supplant physician judgment with respect to particular patients or special clinical situations. Infectious Diseases Society of America considers adherence to these guidelines to be voluntary, with the ultimate determination regarding their application to be made by the physician in the light of each patients individual circumstances.Coccidioidomycosis, also known as San Joaquin Valley fever, is a systemic infection endemic to parts of the southwestern United States and elsewhere in the Western Hemisphere. Residence in and recent travel to these areas are critical elements for the accurate recognition of patients who develop this infection. In this practice guideline, we have organized our recommendations to address actionable questions concerning the entire spectrum of clinical syndromes. These can range from initial pulmonary infection, which eventually resolves whether or not antifungal therapy is administered, to a variety of pulmonary and extrapulmonary complications. Additional recommendations address management of coccidioidomycosis occurring for special at-risk populations. Finally, preemptive management strategies are outlined in certain at-risk populations and after unintentional laboratory exposure.

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Bruce L. Gewertz

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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