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Published by Mount Carmel Associates
Weight Loss and Asthma: A Systematic Review (August 2008) Print

Theresa Skybo, an instructor at the Mount Carmel College of Nursing, co-authored a systematic review of the impact of weight loss on asthma symptoms. It was published in the August 2008 issue of Thorax.

Eneli, I. U., Skybo T., & Camargo, C. A. (2008). Weight loss and asthma: a systematic review. Thorax, 63, 671–676. [PMID: 18663068]

Abstract:

Epidemiological studies first demonstrated the association between obesity and asthma and they have begun to provide additional evidence to support causality: a dose-effect relationship, consistency across studies (especially among women) and the correct temporal order (ie, obesity before asthma). To date, relatively few studies have addressed reversibility, an important but less frequently demonstrated epidemiological criterion of causality. Reversibility suggests that if excessive weight is a risk factor for asthma, then reducing body weight should decrease the prevalence of asthma, or at least decrease asthma related symptoms or health care utilisation. We performed a systematic review on weight loss and asthma, based on searches between January 1966 and January 2007 of both PubMed and the Cochrane Clinical Trial Database. Of the 15 relevant studies, asthma was the primary outcome in only five. Only one study was conducted in children. Regardless of the type of intervention (surgical vs medical), all 15 studies noted an improvement in at least one asthma outcome after weight loss. The improvement was noted across studies that differed in sample age, gender or country of origin. The heterogeneity of the interventions and outcomes precluded quantitative synthesis. We briefly review the role of specific factors (eg, gastro-oesophageal reflux) in the weight loss-asthma association, and potential directions for future research.

 
Resident Work-Week Regulations (August 2008) Print

Mount Carmel orthopedic residents, Dr. Kirk Dimitris and Dr. Benjamin Taylor, and their program director Dr. Richard Fankhauser published a historical perspective of resident work-week regulations. It was published in the July–August 2008 issue of the Journal of Surgical Education.

Dimitris, K. D., Taylor, B. C., & Fankhauser, R. A. (2008). Resident work-week regulations: Historical review and modern perspectives. Journal of Surgical Education, 65, 290–296. [PMID: 18707663]

 
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