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Dive into the research topics where Walter P. Wodchis is active.

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Featured researches published by Walter P. Wodchis.


BMJ | 2005

Atypical antipsychotic drugs and risk of ischaemic stroke: population based retrospective cohort study

Sudeep S. Gill; Paula A. Rochon; Nathan Herrmann; Philip E. Lee; Kathy Sykora; Nadia Gunraj; Sharon-Lise T. Normand; Jerry H. Gurwitz; Connie Marras; Walter P. Wodchis; Muhammad Mamdani

Abstract Objective To compare the incidence of admissions to hospital for stroke among older adults with dementia receiving atypical or typical antipsychotics. Design Population based retrospective cohort study. Setting Ontario, Canada. Patients 32 710 older adults (≤ 65 years) with dementia (17 845 dispensed an atypical antipsychotic and 14 865 dispensed a typical antipsychotic). Main outcome measures Admission to hospital with the most responsible diagnosis (single most important condition responsible for the patients admission) of ischaemic stroke. Observation of patients until they were either admitted to hospital with ischaemic stroke, stopped taking antipsychotics, died, or the study ended. Results After adjustment for potential confounders, participants receiving atypical antipsychotics showed no significant increase in risk of ischaemic stroke compared with those receiving typical antipsychotics (adjusted hazard ratio 1.01, 95% confidence interval 0.81 to 1.26). This finding was consistent in a series of subgroup analyses, including ones of individual atypical antipsychotic drugs (risperidone, olanzapine, and quetiapine) and selected subpopulations of the main cohorts. Conclusion Older adults with dementia who take atypical antipsychotics have a similar risk of ischaemic stroke to those taking typical antipsychotics.


Medical Care Research and Review | 2005

Nursing Home Profit Status and Quality of Care: Is There Any Evidence of an Association?

Michael P. Hillmer; Walter P. Wodchis; Sudeep S. Gill; Geoffrey M. Anderson; Paula A. Rochon

This article critically reviews the association between the profit status of North American nursing homes and the quality of care. Studies were identified by searching MEDLINE (January 1990-October 2002), reference lists, letters, commentaries, and editorials. The quality indicator(s) used to measure quality of care, and its relationship to profit status, was extracted from each publication. The study design and risk-adjustment methodologies used were also extracted. The interrater reliability for the extraction of these three items was determined to be 1.0, 0.6, and 0.8, respectively. Aqualitative systematic review was performed using Donabedian’s framework of structure, process, and outcome for analyzing medical quality of care. Empirical research in the past 12 years has found that systematic differences exist between for-profit and not-for-profit nursing homes. Forprofit nursing homes appear to provide lower quality of care in many important areas of process and outcome.


Pediatrics | 2012

Patterns and Costs of Health Care Use of Children With Medical Complexity

Eyal Cohen; Jay G. Berry; Ximena Camacho; Geoff Anderson; Walter P. Wodchis; Astrid Guttmann

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Health care use of children with medical complexity (CMC), such as those with neurologic impairment or other complex chronic conditions (CCCs) and those with technology assistance (TA), is not well understood. The objective of the study was to evaluate health care utilization and costs in a population-based sample of CMC in Ontario, Canada. METHODS: Hospital discharge data from 2005 through 2007 identified CMC. Complete health system use and costs were analyzed over the subsequent 2-year period. RESULTS: The study identified 15 771 hospitalized CMC (0.67% of children in Ontario); 10 340 (65.6%) had single-organ CCC, 1063 (6.7%) multiorgan CCC, 4368 (27.6%) neurologic impairment, and 1863 (11.8%) had TA. CMC saw a median of 13 outpatient physicians and 6 distinct subspecialists. Thirty-six percent received home care services. Thirty-day readmission varied from 12.6% (single CCC without TA) to 23.7% (multiple CCC with TA). CMC accounted for almost one-third of child health spending. Rehospitalization accounted for the largest proportion of subsequent costs (27.2%), followed by home care (11.3%) and physician services (6.0%). Home care costs were a much larger proportion of costs in children with TA. Children with multiple CCC with TA had costs 3.5 times higher than children with a single CCC without TA. CONCLUSIONS: Although a small proportion of the population, CMC account for a substantial proportion of health care costs. CMC make multiple transitions across providers and care settings and CMC with TA have higher costs and home care use. Initiatives to improve their health outcomes and decrease costs need to focus on the entire continuum of care.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2004

Neuroleptic Drug Therapy in Older Adults Newly Admitted to Nursing Homes: Incidence, Dose, and Specialist Contact

Susan E. Bronskill; Geoffrey M. Anderson; Kathy Sykora; Walter P. Wodchis; Sudeep S. Gill; Kenneth I. Shulman; Paula A. Rochon

Objectives:  To describe the incidence and dose of neuroleptic drug therapy newly dispensed for behavioral disorders to older adults admitted to nursing homes and to determine whether this use is associated with patient characteristics and contact with specialists.


Journal of Voice | 2000

Voice-Related Quality of Life (V-RQOL) following type I thyroplasty for unilateral vocal fold paralysis

Norman D. Hogikyan; Walter P. Wodchis; Jeffrey E. Terrell; Carol R. Bradford; Ramon M. Esclamado

Unilateral vocal fold paralysis is a common clinical problem which frequently causes severe dysphonia. Various treatment options exist for this condition, with the type I thyroplasty being one of the more commonly performed surgical procedures for vocal rehabilitation. The Voice-Related Quality of Life (V-RQOL) Measure is a validated outcomes instrument for voice disorders. This study measured the V-RQOL of patients with unilateral vocal fold paralysis who had undergone a type I thyroplasty and compared these scores to those of patients with untreated and uncompensated unilateral vocal fold paralysis and to normals. Treated patients had significantly higher domain and overall V-RQOL scores than untreated patients, but also scored lower than normals. These differences were true across gender and age. Patients who were more distant from surgery had lower V-RQOL scores than those who had more recently been treated. It is concluded that type I thyroplasty leads to a significantly higher V-RQOL for patients with unilateral vocal fold paralysis. This study also demonstrates further the utility of patient-oriented measures of treatment outcome.


Journal of Voice | 2001

Longitudinal Effects of Botulinum Toxin Injections on Voice-Related Quality of Life (V-RQOL) for Patients with Adductory Spasmodic Dysphonia

Norman D. Hogikyan; Walter P. Wodchis; Constance; Paul R. Kileny

Adductory spasmodic dysphonia is a focal dystonia of laryngeal muscles. Patients with this disorder typically have severe vocal difficulties, with significant functional, social, and emotional consequences. There is no widely accepted cure for this condition, however, botulinum toxin injections of the thyroarytenoid muscles are considered by most voice clinicians to be the state of the art treatment. Based on extensive experience treating patients for adductory spasmodic dysphonia, we feel that traditional means of voice assessment do not adequately measure either the disease severity or the treatment outcomes. That is, listening to or acoustically analyzing limited phonatory samples does not capture the functional, social, and emotional consequences of this disorder. These consequences will be reflected in a patients voice-related quality of life (V-RQOL). Using a validated voice outcomes instrument, the V-RQOL Measure, the purpose of this study was to quantify longitudinal changes in the V-RQOL of patients with adductory spasmodic dysphonia who are undergoing botulinum toxin injections. Twenty-seven consecutive new patients presenting with dysphonia to our institution during an 18-month period were diagnosed with adductory spasmodic dysphonia, and treated patients were evaluated prospectively using the V-RQOL Measure. Results indicated that (1) V-RQOL was initially very low for these patients, (2) botulinum toxin injections improved it significantly for each injection cycle studied, and (3) the magnitude of the treatment effect appears to change across injections.


Drug Safety | 2012

Incidence and Economic Burden of Adverse Drug Reactions among Elderly Patients in Ontario Emergency Departments A Retrospective Study

Chen Wu; Chaim M. Bell; Walter P. Wodchis

AbstractBackground: The rapid rise in the availability and use of pharmaceutical agents, and particularly polypharmacy, directly increases the risk for patients to experience adverse drug reactions (ADRs). There are few studies on the overall incidence and costs of ADRs. Objective: The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence and costs of emergency department (ED) visits related to ADRs for patients greater than 65 years of age using administrative data, and to describe risk factors for experiencing severe ADRs. Methods: We employed a retrospective cohort design based on population-based healthcare administrative clinical databases. Identification of ADR-related ED visits from the administrative database was based on International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision-Canadian Enhancement (ICD-10-CA) codes for each ED visit. The incidence and costs of ADR-related ED visits and subsequent hospital admissions were estimated for all adults aged 66 years and above for the period April 2003–March 2008. Costs were standardized and reported in 2008 Canadian dollars. Logistic regression was used to detect risk factors for severe ADRs. Results: Approximately 0.75% of total annual ED visits among adults aged 66 years and above were found to be ADR-related, and among these patients 21.6% were hospitalized. In 2007, the cost of ADR-related visits was


Medical Care | 2010

The relationship of 60 disease diagnoses and 15 conditions to preference-based health-related quality of life in Ontario hospital-based long-term care residents.

Jonathan M. C. Lam; Walter P. Wodchis

333 per ED visit and


Journal of Comorbidity | 2012

A scoping review and thematic classification of patient complexity: offering a unifying framework

Alexis K. Schaink; Kerry Kuluski; Renee Lyons; Martin Fortin; Alejandro R. Jadad; Ross Upshur; Walter P. Wodchis

7528 per hospitalization for a total annual cost of


BMC Health Services Research | 2014

High-cost health care users in Ontario, Canada: demographic, socio-economic, and health status characteristics

Laura Rosella; Tiffany Fitzpatrick; Walter P. Wodchis; Andrew Calzavara; Heather Manson; Vivek Goel

13.6 million in Ontario, or an estimated

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Andrea Gruneir

Women's College Hospital

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