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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie Kayden is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie Kayden.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2015

Emergency care in 59 low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review

Ziad Obermeyer; Samer Abujaber; Maggie Makar; Samantha J. Stoll; Stephanie Kayden; Lee A. Wallis; Teri A. Reynolds

Abstract Objective To conduct a systematic review of emergency care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Methods We searched PubMed, CINAHL and World Health Organization (WHO) databases for reports describing facility-based emergency care and obtained unpublished data from a network of clinicians and researchers. We screened articles for inclusion based on their titles and abstracts in English or French. We extracted data on patient outcomes and demographics as well as facility and provider characteristics. Analyses were restricted to reports published from 1990 onwards. Findings We identified 195 reports concerning 192 facilities in 59 countries. Most were academically-affiliated hospitals in urban areas. The median mortality within emergency departments was 1.8% (interquartile range, IQR: 0.2–5.1%). Mortality was relatively high in paediatric facilities (median: 4.8%; IQR: 2.3–8.4%) and in sub-Saharan Africa (median: 3.4%; IQR: 0.5–6.3%). The median number of patients was 30 000 per year (IQR: 10 296–60 000), most of whom were young (median age: 35 years; IQR: 6.9–41.0) and male (median: 55.7%; IQR: 50.0–59.2%). Most facilities were staffed either by physicians-in-training or by physicians whose level of training was unspecified. Very few of these providers had specialist training in emergency care. Conclusion Available data on emergency care in LMICs indicate high patient loads and mortality, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where a substantial proportion of all deaths may occur in emergency departments. The combination of high volume and the urgency of treatment make emergency care an important area of focus for interventions aimed at reducing mortality in these settings.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2011

Predictors of Hand Hygiene in the Emergency Department

Arjun K. Venkatesh; Daniel J. Pallin; Stephanie Kayden; Jeremiah D. Schuur

We conducted an observational study to identify predictors of hand hygiene (HH) in the emergency department. Compliance with HH was 89.7% over 5,865 opportunities. Observation unit, hallway or high-visibility location, glove use, and worker type predicted worse HH. Hallway location was the strongest predictor (relative risk, 88.9% [95% confidence interval, 85.9%-92.1%]).


Global Public Health | 2012

Sexual violence among host and refugee population in Djohong District, Eastern Cameroon

Parveen Parmar; Pooja Agrawal; P. Gregg Greenough; Ravi Goyal; Stephanie Kayden

Abstract The following is a population-based survey of the Central African Republic (CAR) female refugee population displaced to rural Djohong District of Eastern Cameroon and associated female Cameroonian host population to characterise the prevalence and circumstances of sexual violence. A population-based, multistage, random cluster survey of 600 female heads of household was conducted during March 2010. Women heads of household were asked about demographics, household economy and assets, level of education and sexual violence experienced by the respondent only. The respondents were asked to describe the circumstances of their recent assault. The lifetime prevalence of sexual violence among Djohong district female heads of household is 35.2% (95% CI 28.7–42.2). Among heads of household who reported a lifetime incident of sexual violence, 64.0% (95% CI 54.3–72.5) suffered sexual violence perpetrated by their husband or partner. Among the host population, 3.9% (95% CI 1.4–10.5) reported sexual violence by armed groups compared to 39.0% (95% CI 25.6–54.2) of female refugee heads of household. Women who knew how to add and subtract were less likely to report sexual violence during their lifetime (OR 0.16, 95% CI 0.08–0.34). Sexual violence is common among refugees and host population in Eastern Cameroon. Most often, perpetrators are partners/husbands or armed groups.


Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness | 2015

Academic Institutions' Critical Guidelines for Health Care Workers Who Deploy to West Africa for the Ebola Response and Future Crises.

Hilarie Cranmer; Miriam Aschkenasy; Ryan Wildes; Stephanie Kayden; David R. Bangsberg; Michelle Niescierenko; Katie Kemen; Kai-Hsun Hsiao; Michael J. VanRooyen; Frederick M. Burkle; Paul D. Biddinger

The unprecedented Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in West Africa, with its first cases documented in March 2014, has claimed the lives of thousands of people, and it has devastated the health care infrastructure and workforce in affected countries. Throughout this outbreak, there has been a critical lack of health care workers (HCW), including physicians, nurses, and other essential non-clinical staff, who have been needed, in most of the affected countries, to support the medical response to EVD, to attend to the health care needs of the population overall, and to be trained effectively in infection protection and control. This lack of sufficient and qualified HCW is due in large part to three factors: 1) limited HCW staff prior to the outbreak, 2) disproportionate illness and death among HCWs caused by EVD directly, and 3) valid concerns about personal safety among international HCWs who are considering responding to the affected areas. These guidelines are meant to inform institutions who deploy professional HCWs.


Prehospital and Disaster Medicine | 2014

Development of an Evaluation Framework Suitable for Assessing Humanitarian Workforce Competencies During Crisis Simulation Exercises

Hilarie Cranmer; Jennifer L. Chan; Stephanie Kayden; Altaf Musani; Philippe E. Gasquet; Peter Walker; Frederick M. Burkle; Kirsten Johnson

The need to provide a professionalization process for the humanitarian workforce is well established. Current competency-based curricula provided by existing academically affiliated training centers in North America, the United Kingdom, and the European Union provide a route toward certification. Simulation exercises followed by timely evaluation is one way to mimic the field deployment process, test knowledge of core competences, and ensure that a competent workforce can manage the inevitable emergencies and crises they will face. Through a 2011 field-based exercise that simulated a humanitarian crisis, delivered under the auspices of the World Health Organization (WHO), a competency-based framework and evaluation tool is demonstrated as a model for future training and evaluation of humanitarian providers.


Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness | 2015

Sign Me Up: Rules of the Road for Humanitarian Volunteers During the Ebola Outbreak

Ryan Wildes; Stephanie Kayden; Eric Goralnick; Michelle Niescierenko; Miriam Aschkenasy; Katherine Kemen; Michael J. VanRooyen; Paul D. Biddinger; Hilarie Cranmer

The current Ebola outbreak is the worst global public health emergency of our generation, and our global health care community must and will rise to serve those affected. Aid organizations participating in the Ebola response must carefully plan to carry out their responsibility to ensure the health, safety, and security of their responders. At the same time, individual health care workers and their employers must evaluate the ability of an aid organization to protect its workers in the complex environment of this unheralded Ebola outbreak. We present a minimum set of operational standards developed by a consortium of Boston-based hospitals that a professional organization should have in place to ensure the health, safety, and security of its staff in response to the Ebola virus disease outbreak.


Health Affairs | 2013

Learning From Japan: Strengthening US Emergency Care And Disaster Response

Parveen Parmar; Maya Arii; Stephanie Kayden

As Hurricane Katrina demonstrated in 2005, US health response systems for disasters-typically designed to handle only short-term mass-casualty events-are inadequately prepared for disasters that result in large-scale population displacements. Similarly, after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake, Japan found that many of its disaster shelters failed to meet international standards for long-term provision of basic needs and health care for the vulnerable populations that sought refuge in the shelters. Hospital disaster plans had not been tested and turned out to be inadequate, and emergency communication equipment did not function. We make policy recommendations that aim to improve US responses to mass-displacement disasters based on Japans 2011 experience. First, response systems must provide for the extended care of large populations of chronically ill and vulnerable people. Second, policies should ensure that shelters meet or exceed international standards for the provision of food, water, sanitation, and privacy. Third, hospital disaster plans should include redundant communication systems and sufficient emergency provisions for both staff and patients. Finally, there must be routine drills for responses to mass-displacement disasters so that areas needing improvement can be uncovered before an emergency occurs.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018

Facing the Shortage of IV Fluids — A Hospital-Based Oral Rehydration Strategy

Andrés M. Patiño; Regan H. Marsh; Eric James Nilles; Christopher W. Baugh; Shada A. Rouhani; Stephanie Kayden

Facing the Shortage of IV Fluids Emergency departments are substantial consumers of IV fluids, so in the face of the worsened U.S. saline shortage, a hospital ED team developed an oral rehydration protocol for patients with mild dehydration that has since been adopted hospital-wide.


Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness | 2013

2013 Boston Marathon Bombings: Overview of an Emergency Department Response to a Mass Casualty Incident

Shawn M. D'Andrea; Eric Goralnick; Stephanie Kayden

On the morning of April 15, 2013, more than 23 000 athletes gathered in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, and began the 26.2-mile course of the Boston Marathon. Less than 6 hours after the start of the race, as runners continued to cross the finish line, 2 explosions, 12 seconds apart, sent shrapnel and debris through the crowd of families, friends, spectators, and runners gathered to cheer on those finishing the race.


Conflict and Health | 2018

Responding to chemical weapons violations in Syria: legal, health, and humanitarian recommendations

Julia Brooks; Timothy Erickson; Stephanie Kayden; Raul Ruiz; Stephen Wilkinson; Frederick M. Burkle

BackgroundThe repeated use of prohibited chemical weapons in the Syrian conflict poses serious health, humanitarian, and security threats to civilians, healthcare personnel, and first responders. Moreover, the use of chemical weapons constitutes a clear and egregious violation of international law—likely amounting to a war crime—for which continued impunity is setting a dangerous precedent in relation to current and future conflicts. This debate article calls upon concerned states, organizations, and individuals to respond urgently and unequivocally to this serious breach of international legal and humanitarian norms.Main BodyBased on health, humanitarian, and legal findings, this article calls for concrete action to: 1) reduce the risk of chemical weapons being used in current and future conflicts; 2) review and support the preparedness equipment and antidote supplies of first responders, humanitarian organizations, and military forces operating in Syria; 3) support international mechanisms for monitoring and enforcing the prohibition on chemical weapons, including through criminal accountability; 4) support civilian victims of chemical weapons attacks, including refugees; and 5) re-commit to the complete elimination of chemical weapons in compliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention (1993), a comprehensive treaty that bans chemical weapons and requires their complete destruction.ConclusionAll involved states and organizations should take urgent steps to ensure the protection of the most vulnerable victims of conflict, including victims of chemical weapons attacks in Syria, and to reinforce international law in the face of such serious violations.

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Timothy Erickson

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Eric Goralnick

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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