JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association
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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common complication during hospitalization and is associated with adverse outcomes. ⋯ Among patients hospitalized with AKI, recommendations from a kidney action team did not significantly reduce the composite outcome of worsening AKI stage, dialysis, or mortality, despite a higher rate of recommendation implementation in the intervention group than in the usual care group.
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The feasibility of implementing genome sequencing as an adjunct to traditional newborn screening (NBS) in newborns of different racial and ethnic groups is not well understood. ⋯ These interim findings demonstrate the feasibility of targeted interpretation of a predefined set of genes from genome sequencing in a population of different racial and ethnic groups. DNA sequencing offers an additional method to improve screening for conditions already included in NBS and to add those that cannot be readily screened because there is no biomarker currently detectable in dried blood spots. Additional studies are required to understand if these findings are generalizable to populations of different racial and ethnic groups and whether introduction of sequencing leads to changes in management and improved health outcomes.
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Patient to staff ratios vary across US dialysis facilities and have been associated with patient outcomes in older adults. ⋯ Adolescents and young adults receiving care at dialysis facilities with higher patient to staff ratios had reduced access to waitlisting and transplant, particularly if they were younger than 22 years of age at dialysis initiation.