Susan H. Wootton
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
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Publication
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Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2012
Luis A. Castagnini; C. Mary Healy; Marcia A. Rench; Susan H. Wootton; Flor M. Munoz; Carol J. Baker
BACKGROUND Mothers often are the source of pertussis illness in young infants. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommend tetanus and diphtheria toxoids and acellular pertussis (Tdap) vaccine for postpartum women before hospital discharge. In January 2008, this recommendation was implemented in a predominantly Hispanic, medically underserved population at Ben Taub General Hospital (BTGH) in Houston (hereafter the intervention population). METHODS A cross-sectional study compared preintervention (July 2000 through December 2007) and postintervention (January 2008 through May 2009) periods. Pertussis diagnosis was determined using International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes and microbiology reports from 4 major childrens hospitals in Houston. Only those infants ≤6 months of age with laboratory-confirmed pertussis illness were included. The proportions of pertussis-infected infants born at BTGH in the pre- and postintervention periods were compared. RESULTS Of 514 infants with pertussis, 378 (73.5%) were identified during preintervention and 136 (26.5%) during postintervention years. These groups were similar in age (mean, 79.3 vs 72 days; P = .08), sex (males, 55% vs 52%; P = .48), length of hospitalization (mean, 9.7 vs 10.7 days; P = .62), mortality (2 deaths each; P = .29) and hospital of pertussis diagnosis. After adjustment for age, sex, and ethnicity, the proportions of pertussis-infected infants born at BTGH and potentially protected through maternal postpartum Tdap immunization were similar for the 2 periods (6.9% vs 8.8%; odds ratio, 1.06; 95% confidence interval, 0.5-2.2; P = .87). CONCLUSIONS Immunizing only postpartum mothers with Tdap vaccine did not reduce pertussis illness in infants ≤6 months of age. Efforts should be directed at immunizing all household and key contacts of newborns with Tdap, not just mothers.
JAMA | 2014
Ricardo A. Mosquera; Elenir B. C. Avritscher; Cheryl Samuels; Tomika S. Harris; Claudia Pedroza; Patricia W. Evans; Fernando Navarro; Susan H. Wootton; Susan E. Pacheco; Guy L. Clifton; Shadé Moody; Luisa Franzini; John A.F. Zupancic; Jon E. Tyson
IMPORTANCE Patient-centered medical homes have not been shown to reduce adverse outcomes or costs in adults or children with chronic illness. OBJECTIVE To assess whether an enhanced medical home providing comprehensive care prevents serious illness (death, intensive care unit [ICU] admission, or hospital stay >7 days) and/or reduces costs among children with chronic illness. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Randomized clinical trial of high-risk children with chronic illness (≥3 emergency department visits, ≥2 hospitalizations, or ≥1 pediatric ICU admissions during previous year, and >50% estimated risk for hospitalization) treated at a high-risk clinic at the University of Texas, Houston, and randomized to comprehensive care (n = 105) or usual care (n = 96). Enrollment was between March 2011 and February 2013 (when predefined stopping rules for benefit were met) and outcome evaluations continued through August 31, 2013. INTERVENTIONS Comprehensive care included treatment from primary care clinicians and specialists in the same clinic with multiple features to promote prompt effective care. Usual care was provided locally in private offices or faculty-supervised clinics without modification. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Primary outcome: children with a serious illness (death, ICU admission, or hospital stay >7 days), costs (health system perspective). Secondary outcomes: individual serious illnesses, medical services, Medicaid payments, and medical school revenues and costs. RESULTS In an intent-to-treat analysis, comprehensive care decreased both the rate of children with a serious illness (10 per 100 child-years vs 22 for usual care; rate ratio [RR], 0.45 [95% CI, 0.28-0.73]), and total hospital and clinic costs (
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2015
C. Mary Healy; Marcia A. Rench; Susan H. Wootton; Luis A. Castagnini
16,523 vs
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2004
Susan H. Wootton; Kathryn E. Arnold; Holly A. Hill; Sigrid K. McAllister; Marsha Ray; Molly E. Kellum; Madie LaMarre; Mary Ellen Lane; Jasmine Chaitram; Susan Lance-Parker; Matthew J. Kuehnert
26,781 per child-year, respectively; cost ratio, 0.58 [95% CI, 0.38-0.88]). In analyses of net monetary benefit, the probability that comprehensive care was cost neutral or cost saving was 97%. Comprehensive care reduced (per 100 child-years) serious illnesses (16 vs 44 for usual care; RR, 0.33 [95% CI, 0.17-0.66]), emergency department visits (90 vs 190; RR, 0.48 [95% CI, 0.34-0.67]), hospitalizations (69 vs 131; RR, 0.51 [95% CI, 0.33-0.77]), pediatric ICU admissions (9 vs 26; RR, 0.35 [95% CI, 0.18-0.70]), and number of days in a hospital (276 vs 635; RR, 0.36 [95% CI, 0.19-0.67]). Medicaid payments were reduced by
Vaccine | 2016
David I. Bernstein; Flor M. Munoz; S. Todd Callahan; Richard Rupp; Susan H. Wootton; Kathryn M. Edwards; Christine B. Turley; Lawrence R. Stanberry; Shital M. Patel; Monica M. McNeal; Sylvie Pichon; Cyrille Amegashie; Abbie R. Bellamy
6243 (95% CI,
Pediatrics | 2005
Susan H. Wootton; Blanca E. Gonzalez; Rebecca R. Pawlak; Larry D. Teeter; Kim Connelly Smith; James M. Musser; Jeffrey R. Starke; Edward A. Graviss
1302-
Journal of Clinical Virology | 2012
Siraya Jaijakul; Cesar A. Arias; Monir Hossain; Roberto C. Arduino; Susan H. Wootton; Rodrigo Hasbun
11,678) per child-year. Medical school losses (costs minus revenues) increased by
Journal of Infection | 2013
Rodrigo Hasbun; Merijn W. Bijlsma; Matthijs C. Brouwer; Nabil T. Khoury; Christiane M. Hadi; Arie van der Ende; Susan H. Wootton; Lucrecia Salazar; Monir Hossain; Mark A. Beilke; Diederik van de Beek
6018 (95% CI,
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2014
Amy Y. Wang; Jorge D. Machicado; Nabil T. Khoury; Susan H. Wootton; Lucrecia Salazar; Rodrigo Hasbun
5506-
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2012
Nabil T. Khoury; Monir Hossain; Susan H. Wootton; Lucrecia Salazar; Rodrigo Hasbun
6629) per child-year. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Among high-risk children with chronic illness, an enhanced medical home that provided comprehensive care to promote prompt effective care vs usual care reduced serious illnesses and costs. These findings from a single site of selected patients with a limited number of clinicians require study in larger, broader populations before conclusions about generalizability to other settings can be reached. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT02128776.
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University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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