Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 161
pro vyhledávání: '"Susan Burt"'
Autor:
PR Newswire
Publikováno v:
PR Newswire US. 10/04/2021.
Autor:
Kathleen Eid-Heberle, Susan Burt
Publikováno v:
Journal of Radiology Nursing.
Autor:
Jessica G. Ramsey, Steven J. Wurzelbacher, Alysha R. Meyers, Lian Luo, Annette L. Christianson, Edward F. Krieg, Kenneth Crombie, Susan Burt
Publikováno v:
Hum Factors
Objective This prospective study assessed the risk of developing rotator cuff syndrome (RCS) with separate or specific combinations of biomechanical exposures measures, controlling for individual confounders. Background Compared with other musculoske
Autor:
Ann Marie Dale, Carisa Harris-Adamson, David Rempel, Fred Gerr, Kurt Hegmann, Barbara Silverstein, Susan Burt, Arun Garg, Jay Kapellusch, Linda Merlino, Matthew S Thiese, Ellen A Eisen, Bradley Evanoff
Publikováno v:
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health, Vol 39, Iss 5, Pp 495-505 (2013)
OBJECTIVES: Most studies of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) incidence and prevalence among workers have been limited by small sample sizes or restricted to a small subset of jobs. We established a common CTS case definition and then pooled CTS prevalenc
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/866fce8cfe1d4911aa6bacd38176bc3a
Autor:
Susan Burt
Publikováno v:
Journal of Doctoral Nursing Practice. 10:144-148
Short-term medical teams (STMTs), serving for a week or two, often do not partner with the local health care system. As a result, nationals receive poor care coordination and duplication of medical services (Green, Green, Scandlyn, & Kestler, 2009).
Autor:
Frederic E. Gerr, Ann Marie Dale, Matthew S. Thiese, Carisa Harris-Adamson, David Rempel, Barbara Silverstein, Linda Merlino, Jay Kapellusch, Arun Garg, Susan Burt, Stephen Bao, Kurt T. Hegmann, Bradley A. Evanoff
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. 59:1239-1242
Insufficient sample size causes lower statistical power that may hinder findings of relationships between occupational physical exposures and musculoskeletal disorders. To solve this problem, researchers often want to pool data with similar study des
Publikováno v:
Home Healthcare Now. 33:390-393
Home healthcare agencies are accountable for preventing rehospitalization, yet many struggle to make progress with this metric. The purpose of this article is to share how our organization turned to two frameworks, Transitions in Care and Relationshi
Autor:
Arun Garg, Matthew S. Thiese, Z. Joyce Fan, Jay Kapellusch, David Rempel, Barbara Silverstein, Kurt T. Hegmann, Fred Gerr, Ellen A. Eisen, Bradley A. Evanoff, Susan Burt, Stephen Bao, Carisa Harris-Adamson, Ann Marie Dale, Linda Merlino
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 58:509-518
Background Few large epidemiologic studies have used rigorous case criteria, individual-level exposure measurements, and appropriate control for confounders to examine associations between workplace psychosocial and biomechanical factors and carpal t
General Population Job Exposure Matrix Applied to a Pooled Study of Prevalent Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Autor:
Jay Kapellusch, Carisa Harris-Adamson, Arun Garg, Bradley A. Evanoff, Matthew S. Thiese, Ellen A. Eisen, Linda Merlino, Fred Gerr, Ann Marie Dale, David Rempel, Angelique Zeringue, Susan Burt, Stephen Bao, Kurt T. Hegmann
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Epidemiology. 181:431-439
A job exposure matrix may be useful for the study of biomechanical workplace risk factors when individual-level exposure data are unavailable. We used job title–based exposure data from a public data source to construct a job exposure matrix and te
Autor:
Carisa Harris-Adamson, Matthew S. Thiese, Ann Marie Dale, Jay Kapellusch, David Rempel, Linda Merlino, Stephen Bao, Kurt T. Hegmann, Arun Garg, Susan Burt, Barbara Silverstein, Bradley A. Evanoff, Frederic E. Gerr
Publikováno v:
Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 72:130-137
Background Six research groups independently conducted prospective studies of carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) incidence in 54 US workplaces in 10 US States. Physical exposure variables were collected by all research groups at the individual worker level