PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

How closely do urologists adhere to AUA guidelines?

Urologists evaluate physician adherence to the American Urological Association's BPH/LUTS guidelines to establish benchmark for future research in The Journal of Urology

2014-10-15
(Press-News.org) New York, NY, October 16, 2014 – Evidence-based guidelines play an increasing role in setting standards for medical practice and quality but are seldom systematically evaluated in the practice setting. Investigators evaluated the rate of physician adherence to the American Urological Association's (AUA) guidelines on the management of benign prostatic hyperplasia/lower urinary tract symptoms (BPH/LUTS) to establish a benchmark for future research. Their findings are published in The Journal of Urology®.

Medical certification bodies, for example, the American Board of Urology, increasingly use guideline-driven content in their examination processes. Despite this increasing emphasis on guidelines, there have been few studies that systematically evaluate physician adherence or patient outcomes.

A team of investigators used electronic medical record-based data extraction techniques to assess how well physicians adhered to the American Urological Association's BPH/LUTS guidelines over a five-year period.

"Our aim was to establish an adherence benchmark to enlighten further study of barriers to provider adherence and of patient outcomes related to guideline adherence," explains lead investigator Gregory P. Auffenberg, MD, from the Department of Urology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago.

The study was a retrospective analysis of patient records from the first-time evaluation of nearly 3,500 men 45 years old or older seen for BPH/LUTS by one of twelve urologists at the Northwestern Medical Faculty Foundation from 2008 to 2012. The authors hypothesized that urologists were not uniformly adherent to guidelines.

Provider adherence rates with the nine measures recommended in the guidelines varied by measure from 53.0% to 92.8%. The rate of performance of five not routinely recommended measures was 10.2% or less. This study provides the largest observational analysis of urologist adherence to AUA guidelines on the management of BPH/LUTS, which is not based entirely on administrative data.

"Our investigation includes one of the most robust analyses of physician adherence to AUA guidelines on the management of BPH/LUTS in the published literature, and represents the first published analysis to our knowledge of the rate of performance of measures that are challenging to extract from administrative data (i.e., subjective symptom description, I-PSS, sexual function evaluation, performance of a physical examination and specific examination maneuvers)," says Dr. Auffenberg. "We established a benchmark rate of urologist adherence to the guideline directives. Further investigation will be important to verify this benchmark in different physician populations.

"With an established benchmark, future research can begin to determine if directed interventions can modify adherence rates and subsequently determine whether increased adherence improves patient outcomes. It may allow comparative multi-institutional research by our study group or other groups to determine baseline adherence rates in different practice settings such as academic vs private, rural vs urban, insured vs uninsured, and many others. It will also set the stage for prospective work designed to determine the implications of guideline adherence on cost of care and ultimately in patient outcomes."

INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NASA's Aqua satellite watches Tropical Storm Ana intensifying

NASAs Aqua satellite watches Tropical Storm Ana intensifying
2014-10-15
NASA's Aqua satellite passed over intensifying Tropical Storm Ana as it was moving through the Central Pacific Ocean and toward the Hawaiian Islands. On Oct. 14 at 22:50 UTC (6:50 p.m. EDT) the MODIS instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Storm Ana in the Central Pacific Ocean. The MODIS image showed a tight concentration of thunderstorms surrounding the center of Ana's circulation. At 1500 UTC (11 a.m. EDT/5 a.m. HST) on Wed. Oct. 15, Tropical Storm Ana's maximum sustained winds were near 70 mph (110 kph). Ana is forecast to gradually ...

Satellite eyes first major Atlantic Hurricane in 3 years: Gonzalo

Satellite eyes first major Atlantic Hurricane in 3 years: Gonzalo
2014-10-15
VIDEO: This animation of visible and infrared images from NOAA's GOES-East satellite shows the movement and strengthening of Gonzalo from a tropical storm on Oct. 13 to a hurricane on Oct.... Click here for more information. Hurricane Gonzalo has made the jump to major hurricane status and on Oct. 15 was a Category 4 storm on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale. NOAA's GOES-East satellite provided imagery of the storm. According to the National Hurricane Center, Gonzalo is the ...

Study reveals optimal particle size for anticancer nanomedicines

Study reveals optimal particle size for anticancer nanomedicines
2014-10-15
Nanomedicines consisting of nanoparticles for targeted drug delivery to specific tissues and cells offer new solutions for cancer diagnosis and therapy. Understanding the interdependency of physiochemical properties of nanomedicines, in correlation to their biological responses and functions, is crucial for their further development of as cancer-fighters. "To develop next generation nanomedicines with superior anti-cancer attributes, we must understand the correlation between their physicochemical properties—specifically, particle size—and their interactions ...

Microfossils reveal warm oceans had less oxygen, Syracuse geologists say

Microfossils reveal warm oceans had less oxygen, Syracuse geologists say
2014-10-15
Researchers in Syracuse University's College of Arts and Sciences are pairing chemical analyses with micropaleontology—the study of tiny fossilized organisms—to better understand how global marine life was affected by a rapid warming event more than 55 million years ago. Their findings are the subject of an article in the journal Paleoceanography (John Wiley & Sons, 2014). "Global warming impacts marine life in complex ways, of which the loss of dissolved oxygen [a condition known as hypoxia] is a growing concern" says Zunli Lu, assistant professor of ...

NASA study finds 1934 had worst drought of last thousand years

2014-10-15
A new study using a reconstruction of North American drought history over the last 1,000 years found that the drought of 1934 was the driest and most widespread of the last millennium. Using a tree-ring-based drought record from the years 1000 to 2005 and modern records, scientists from NASA and Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory found the 1934 drought was 30 percent more severe than the runner-up drought (in 1580) and extended across 71.6 percent of western North America. For comparison, the average extent of the 2012 drought was 59.7 percent. "It was the worst by a ...

New study shows the importance of jellyfish falls to deep-sea ecosystem

New study shows the importance of jellyfish falls to deep-sea ecosystem
2014-10-15
This week, researchers from University of Hawai'i, Norway, and the UK have shown with innovative experiments that a rise in jellyfish blooms near the ocean's surface may lead to jellyfish falls that are rapidly consumed by voracious deep-sea scavengers. Previous anecdotal studies suggested that deep-sea animals might avoid dead jellyfish, causing dead jellyfish from blooms to accumulate and undergo slow degradation by microbes, depleting oxygen at the seafloor and depriving fish and invertebrate scavengers, including commercially exploited species, of food. Globally ...

These roos were 'made' for walking, study suggests of extinct enigmas

These roos were made for walking, study suggests of extinct enigmas
2014-10-15
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Imagine that a time machine has transported you to the Australian outback 100,000 years ago. As you emerge, you see a huge kangaroo with a round rabbit-like face foraging in a tall bush nearby. The animal's surprising size makes you gasp aloud but when it hears you, becoming equally unnerved, it doesn't hop or lumber away on all fours and tail like every kangaroo you've seen in the present. It walks on its feet. One at a time. Like you. In a new paper in the journal PLoS ONE, a team of researchers led by Christine Janis, professor ...

Extinct giant kangaroos may have been hop-less

Extinct giant kangaroos may have been hop-less
2014-10-15
Now extinct giant kangaroos most likely could not hop and used a more rigid body posture to move their hindlimbs one at a time, according to a study published October 15, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Christine Janis from Brown University and colleagues. The "short-faced," large-bodied sthenurine kangaroos–a now extinct relative to modern-day kangaroos–first appeared in the middle Miocene and became extinct in the late Pleistocene. The largest of these kangaroos had an estimated body mass of 240 kg, almost three times the size of the largest ...

Light pollution contributing to fledgling 'fallout'

2014-10-15
Turning the street lights off decreased the number of grounded fledglings, according to a study published October 15, 2014 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Airam Rodríguez and colleagues from Phillip Island Nature Parks, in Victoria, Australia, and Estación Biológica de Doñana, in Spain. Thousands of birds are attracted to lights–sometimes referred to as light-pollution–every year worldwide during their first flights from their nests to the open ocean, a phenomenon called 'fallout.' Short-tailed shearwater breeding on the coast of ...

Risking your life without a second thought

2014-10-15
People who risk their lives to save strangers may do so without deliberation, according to an analysis of statements from more than 50 recognized civilian heroes, conducted by David Rand from Yale University and colleagues published October 15, 2014 in the open access journal PLOS ONE. Scientists studying human cooperation recruited hundreds of participants to rate 51 statements made during published interviews by recipients of the Carnegie Hero Medal, given to civilians who risk their lives to save strangers. Study participants as well as a computer text analysis algorithm ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

International Progressive MS Alliance launches MS Clinical and Imaging Data Resource (CIDR) to accelerate global research

Scientists discover new phenomenon in chiral symmetry breaking

Liquid gold: Prototype harvests valuable resource from urine

This protein slows the aging brain and we know how to counter it

Scientists debut a new foundational atlas of the plant life cycle

Cambridge scientist reveals how curiosity transformed toxic protein discovery

The diamonds that could find cancer

Supernovae: How to spot them at record speed

Kelp forests in Marine Protected Areas are more resilient to marine heatwaves

Smarter hydrogel surface achieves 5× faster oil–water separation

Novel unsymmetrical molecule produces perfect photocatalyst potential

Takotsubo Syndrome: The hidden heart risks in Intensive Care Units

Charting the evolution of life through the ancient chaetognath

Two genomes are better than one for studying reptile sex

Is your health care provider really listening to you?

Mary Jo Pugh earns national Outstanding Research Accomplishment Award for uncovering long-term consequences of TBI

Ochsner Children’s performs first robotic-assisted pediatric spine surgery in Louisiana

U. Iowa research identifies promising new target for treating rare, aggressive childhood cancer

North Pacific waters are acidifying more rapidly below the surface

Researchers find intensive blood pressure targets are cost-effective

A shape-changing antenna for more versatile sensing and communication

New method advances reliability of AI with applications in medical diagnostics

Catching a 'eureka' before it strikes: New research spots the signs

An alphabet for hand actions in the human brain

When rattlesnakes marry their cousins

Mass spectrometry sequencing of circulating antibodies from a malaria-exposed child provides new insight into malaria immunity

SwRI-led work confirms decades-old theoretical models about solar reconnection

New Study identifies early signs of valve failure one year after TAVI, raising durability concerns in younger patients

Untangling glucose traffic jams in Type 2 diabetes

University of Houston professor creates new drug delivery system to tackle lupus

[Press-News.org] How closely do urologists adhere to AUA guidelines?
Urologists evaluate physician adherence to the American Urological Association's BPH/LUTS guidelines to establish benchmark for future research in The Journal of Urology