Zobrazeno 1 - 9
of 9
pro vyhledávání: '"Rebecca J. Humphrey"'
Autor:
Kenzi Guerrero, Catherine R. Stein, Barbara E. Wojcik, Rebecca J. Humphrey, Douglas W Soderdahl, Brandon J Hosek
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 185:e1200-e1208
Introduction It is critical the U.S. Army retains skilled physicians in the Medical Corps (MC) to ensure direct support to military operations and medical readiness. The purpose of this study was to examine U.S. Army physicians’ opinions concerning
Autor:
John W. Simecek, Philip DeNicolo, Paul Colthirst, Georgia G. Rogers, Barbara E. Wojcik, Steven Eikenberg, Rebecca J. Humphrey, Adam Fedorowicz, Wioletta Szeszel-Fedorowicz, Alicia C. Guerrero
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 180:570-577
Dental Disease and Non-Battle Injuries (D-DNBI) continue to be a problem among U.S. Army active duty (AD), U.S. Army National Guard (ARNG), and U.S. Army Reserve (USAR) deployed soldiers to Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation New Dawn in Iraq and Opera
Data-driven Casualty Estimation and Disease Nonbattle Injury/Battle Injury Rates in Recent Campaigns
Publikováno v:
U.S. Army Medical Department journal. (2-16)
To ensure Soldiers are properly equipped and mission capable to perform full spectrum operations, Army medical planners use disease nonbattle injury (DNBI) and battle injury (BI) admission rates in the Total Army Analysis process to support medical d
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Defense Modeling and Simulation: Applications, Methodology, Technology. 7:157-166
This paper describes the creation of a new traumatic brain injury (TBI) classification system, the Barell+ system, derived by the Center for Army Medical Department Strategic Studies. The Barell+ system is an expansion of the standard international B
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 173:825-835
Previous analysis of Operation Desert Shield/Operation Desert Storm data yielded a disease and nonbattle injury (DNBI) model using distinct 95th percentile daily admission rates during the three phases of a war-fighting operation to predict medical r
Autor:
L. Harrison Hassell, Barbara E. Wojcik, Rebecca J. Humphrey, Lawrence V. Fulton, Linda C. Psalmonds
Publikováno v:
Military Medicine. 173:647-652
The Patient Workload Generator (PATGEN) simulation model is an important part of the Army Medical Department force requirement planning. The current version of the PATGEN model is based on historical major combat operations such as World War II and t
Autor:
Kenneth C. Curley, Barbara E. Wojcik, Wioletta Szeszel-Fedorowicz, Catherine R. Stein, Rebecca J. Humphrey
Publikováno v:
Military medicine. 180(2)
This retrospective study examined spinal-related hospitalizations of U.S. Army soldiers deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq. Spinal cord injuries (SCI) and vertebral column injuries (VCI) were identified using International Classification of Disease, 9t
Autor:
Barbara E. Wojcik, Rebecca J. Humphrey, James M. Davis, L. Harrison Hassell, Catherine R. Stein, Carolyn J. Oakley
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 45:549-557
Background Military planners must ensure adequate medical care for deployed troops—including care for disease and non-battle injuries (DNBI). This study develops a heuristic model with the three distinct phases of a warfighting operation (build-up,
Publikováno v:
American journal of preventive medicine. 38
Background Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a life-altering condition that has affected many of our soldiers returning from war. In the current conflicts, the improvised explosive device (IED) has greatly increased the potential for soldiers to sustai