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Southwest Pulmonary and Critical Care Fellowships

 Editorials

Last 50 Editorials

(Most recent listed first. Click on title to be directed to the manuscript.)

A Call for Change in Healthcare Governance (Editorial & Comments)
The Decline in Professional Organization Growth Has Accompanied the
   Decline of Physician Influence on Healthcare
Hospitals, Aviation and Business
Healthcare Labor Unions-Has the Time Come?
Who Should Control Healthcare? 
Book Review: One Hundred Prayers: God's answer to prayer in a COVID
   ICU
One Example of Healthcare Misinformation
Doctor and Nurse Replacement
Combating Physician Moral Injury Requires a Change in Healthcare
   Governance
How Much Should Healthcare CEO’s, Physicians and Nurses Be Paid?
Improving Quality in Healthcare 
Not All Dying Patients Are the Same
Medical School Faculty Have Been Propping Up Academic Medical
Centers, But Now Its Squeezing Their Education and Research
   Bottom Lines
Deciding the Future of Healthcare Leadership: A Call for Undergraduate
   and Graduate Healthcare Administration Education
Time for a Change in Hospital Governance
Refunds If a Drug Doesn’t Work
Arizona Thoracic Society Supports Mandatory Vaccination of Healthcare
   Workers
Combating Morale Injury Caused by the COVID-19 Pandemic
The Best Laid Plans of Mice and Men
Clinical Care of COVID-19 Patients in a Front-line ICU
Why My Experience as a Patient Led Me to Join Osler’s Alliance
Correct Scoring of Hypopneas in Obstructive Sleep Apnea Reduces
   Cardiovascular Morbidity
Trump’s COVID-19 Case Exposes Inequalities in the Healthcare System
Lack of Natural Scientific Ability
What the COVID-19 Pandemic Should Teach Us
Improving Testing for COVID-19 for the Rural Southwestern American Indian
   Tribes
Does the BCG Vaccine Offer Any Protection Against Coronavirus Disease
   2019?
2020 International Year of the Nurse and Midwife and International Nurses’
   Day
Who Should be Leading Healthcare for the COVID-19 Pandemic?
Why Complexity Persists in Medicine
Fatiga de enfermeras, el sueño y la salud, y garantizar la seguridad del
   paciente y del publico: Unir dos idiomas (Also in English)
CMS Rule Would Kick “Problematic” Doctors Out of Medicare/Medicaid
Not-For-Profit Price Gouging
Some Clinics Are More Equal than Others
Blue Shield of California Announces Help for Independent Doctors-A
   Warning
Medicare for All-Good Idea or Political Death?
What Will Happen with the Generic Drug Companies’ Lawsuit: Lessons from
   the Tobacco Settlement
The Implications of Increasing Physician Hospital Employment
More Medical Science and Less Advertising
The Need for Improved ICU Severity Scoring
A Labor Day Warning
Keep Your Politics Out of My Practice
The Highest Paid Clerk
The VA Mission Act: Funding to Fail?
What the Supreme Court Ruling on Binding Arbitration May Mean to
   Healthcare 
Kiss Up, Kick Down in Medicine 
What Does Shulkin’s Firing Mean for the VA? 
Guns, Suicide, COPD and Sleep
The Dangerous Airway: Reframing Airway Management in the Critically Ill 
Linking Performance Incentives to Ethical Practice 

 

For complete editorial listings click here.

The Southwest Journal of Pulmonary and Critical Care welcomes submission of editorials on journal content or issues relevant to the pulmonary, critical care or sleep medicine. Authors are urged to contact the editor before submission.

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Wednesday
Jan132021

The Best Laid Plans of Mice and Men

When writing a grant proposal, many of us do a power analysis to ensure that we will have a sufficient number or “n” to detect a statistically significant difference between two populations. We estimate the number needed in each group by considering the likely intergroup difference and then add additional subjects depending on the number who will not give informed consent, refuse, die, are lost to follow up, etc. Often the number of nonparticipants is estimated based on previous experience, but sometimes a small study is done first called a feasibility study which tests the assumptions about recruitment. For both clinical trials and epidemiologic studies, a pilot or feasibility study also helps assure that participants will be representative of the relevant population (1). (For examples, will only the most seriously ill participate in a drug trial, or will the most vulnerable workers decline participation in a study. Will some drugs only make a difference in early stage or late stage disease, and having Latinx or Native American participants disproportionately refuse to participate in a workplace study creates biases).

In this monh’s SWJPCC we publish a feasibility study from New Mexico which was hoping to test the hypothesis that thoracic malignancies (TMs) are likely higher in New Mexico because of the relative high proportion of the population with occupational exposures in mining and oil/gas extraction which are known risk factors (2).

The authors conducted a feasibility study of adult lifetime occupational history among TM cases using the population-based New Mexico Tumor Registry (NMTR), from 2017- 2018. Despite identifying 400 eligible cases only 43 were able to complete the study mostly due to early mortality and refusals. This 11% completion rate was insufficient to reach a statistically significant conclusion whether New Mexico has statistically significant more TMs than the National average of 10-14%.

After some discussion we decided to publish the manuscript with this editorial to "educate" the SWJPCC readership about the challenges of population-based mortality studies, the persistent risk of occupational thoracic malignancies, and the concept of population burden. The authors worked just as hard getting these unsatisfying results as if they had a study demonstrating the study was feasible. If only the "successful and positive studies" are published, because planning is necessary and lack of planning often resulting in publication bias. Someone in the future will likely ask a similar question hoping to use similar methodology. However, they will now have numbers that might be more realistic or do interventions to decrease refusals, increase valid addresses or increase the number that could be reached by phone.

Richard A. Robbins, MD 1

Philip Harber, MD, MPH 2

Allen R. Thomas, MD 3

1 Phoenix Pulmonary and Critical Care Research and Education Foundation, Gilbert, AZ USA

2 Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ USA

3 Happily retired, Scottsdale, AZ USA

References

  1. Orsmond GI, Cohn ES. The Distinctive Features of a Feasibility Study: Objectives and Guiding Questions. OTJR (Thorofare N J). 2015 Jul;35(3):169-77. [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  2. Pestak CR, Boyce TW, Myers OB, Hopkins LO, Wiggins CL, Wissore BR, Sood A, Cook LS. A Population-Based Feasibility Study of Occupation and Thoracic Malignancies in New Mexico. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2021;22(1):23-35. doi: [CrossRef]

Cite as: Robbins RA, Harber P, Thomas AR. The Best Laid Plans of Mice and Men. Southwest J Pulm Crit Care. 2021;22(1):21-22. doi: https://doi.org/10.13175/swjpcc003-21 PDF