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Browsing by Author "Gano, Laura"
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Item Administrative Challenges to the Integration of Oral Health With Primary Care(Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2016) Norwood, Connor W.; Maxey, Hannah L.; Randolph, Courtney; Gano, Laura; Kochhar, Komal; Department of Family Medicine, IU School of MedicineInadequate access to preventive oral health services contributes to oral health disparities and is a major public health concern in the United States. Federally Qualified Health Centers play a critical role in improving access to care for populations affected by oral health disparities but face a number of administrative challenges associated with implementation of oral health integration models. We conducted a SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats) analysis with health care executives to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats of successful oral health integration in Federally Qualified Health Centers. Four themes were identified: (1) culture of health care organizations; (2) operations and administration; (3) finance; and (4) workforce.Item Opioid Overdose Prevention in Family Medicine Clerkships: A CERA Study(STFM, 2018) Gano, Laura; Hernandez, Ruben H.; Renshaw, Scott E.; Cronholm, Peter F.; Family Medicine, School of MedicineBACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The national opioid crisis requires medical education to develop a proactive response centering on prevention and treatment. Primary care providers (PCPs)—many of whom are family medicine physicians—commonly treat patients on opiates, and write nearly 50% of opioid prescriptions. Despite linkages between PCP opioid prescribing patterns and the associated potential for overdose, little is known about how family medicine clerkship students are trained to prevent opioid overdose, including training on the use of naloxone. This study describes the presence of opioid overdose education at the national level and barriers to inclusion. It also discusses implementation strategies along with instructional methodology and learner evaluation. METHODS: Data were collected as part of a cross-sectional survey administered electronically by the Council of Academic Family Medicine Educational Research Alliance to 139 family medicine clerkship directors. RESULTS: A total of 99 clerkship directors (71.2% response rate) responded to the survey. A large majority (86.4%) agreed that it is important to offer opioid overdose prevention education in the clerkship, yet only 25.8% include this topic. Of these, only 50.0% address naloxone use. The most common barriers to including opioid overdose prevention education were prioritization of educational topics (82.1%) followed by lack of available faculty with sufficient experience/expertise (67.7%). CONCLUSIONS: Findings point to a disparity between perceived importance of opioid overdose prevention education and inclusion of this topic in family medicine clerkship-level medical education. Innovative use of online education and partnering with community resources may address barriers related to curricular prioritization while supporting interprofessional education principles.Item Understanding Traumatic Brain Injury in the Primary Care Setting(Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2016-04-08) Gano, Laura; Kean, Jacob; Renshaw, Scott E.; Hernandez, Ruben; Willis, DeAnnaBackground: TBI is being re-conceptualized as a chronic disease causative agent rather than as a single, acute event. This study examined how familiar family medicine physicians (PCPs) are with TBI and their level of confidence in treating TBI sequelae likely to be seen in primary care. We also examined PCP attitudes regarding care for post-acute mild TBI and moderate/severe TBI in primary care and how recently the respondent had cared for a mild TBI and/or moderate/severe TBI patient. Methods: The study featured a mixed methods study design. A survey was administered on paper and electronically. A semi-structured qualitative interview guide was developed based upon survey responses. Descriptive statistics were calculated. Results: Most respondents associated neurological symptoms/conditions as TBI sequelae: irritability, 100.0%, fatigue, 98.0%; insomnia, 88.2%, depression, 98.0%, headaches, 98.0%, anxiety, 80.4%. Two-thirds (66.7%) identified epilepsy as a condition associated with TBI. Just over one-half associated tinnitus (51.0%) or loss of libido (52.9%) with TBI while only one-third (33.3%) associated incontinence with TBI. Most physicians felt confident treating depression (84.0%), anxiety (82.4%), headache (80.4%) and insomnia (76.0%). Physicians felt less confident in treating fatigue (68.0%), irritability (68.0%), incontinence (51.2%) and loss of libido (50.0%). The least amount of confidence was claimed in treating epilepsy (37.5%) and tinnitus (36.4%). All respondents (100.0%) believed that a PCP can manage post-acute mild TBI (concussion) care while 52.0% agreed that a PCP can manage post-acute care for moderate/severe TBI. Only one respondent (2.0%) had never cared for a mild TBI patient. Most (70.6%) had cared for a moderate/severe TBI patient within the past two years while 5.9% had cared for one of these patients more than a year ago. Nearly twenty percent (19.7%) had never cared for a moderate/severe TBI patient and 3.9% were unsure if they had.