B

Bruce J. Chalmer

University of Vermont

Publishes on Psychometric Methodologies and Testing, Statistics Education and Methodologies, Advanced Statistical Methods and Models. 30 papers and 1.6k citations.

30Publications
1.6kTotal Citations

Is this you? Claim your profile.

Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.

Top publicationsby citations

Evaluation of patients with advanced cancer using the karnofsky performance status
Cited by 897

The Karnofsky Performance Status Scale (KPS) was designed to measure the level of patient activity and medical care requirements. It is a general measure of patient independence and has been widely used as a general assessment of patient with cancer. Although there is a long history of use of the KPS for judging cancer patients, its reliability and validity have been assumed without formal investigation. The interrater reliability of the KPS was investigated in two ways, both of which gave evidence of moderately high reliability. The patients evaluated in their home were usually assigned a lower KPS score compared with a similar evaluation at the same time done in the outpatient clinic. Costruct validity of the KPS was demonstrated by strong correlation with several variables relating to physical function. On-study KPS score accurately predicted early death, but high initial KPS scores did not necessarily predict long survival. Patient deterioration with subsequent death within a few months could be predicted to a limited extent by a rapidly dropping KPS. These results suggest that the KPS has considerable validity as a global indicator of the functional status of patients with cancer and might be helpful for following other patients with chronic disease.

Use of the Initial Electrocardiogram to Predict In-Hospital Complications of Acute Myocardial Infarction
John E. Brush, Donald A. Brand, Denise Acampora et al.|New England Journal of Medicine|1985
Cited by 356

We evaluated the initial electrocardiogram as a predictor of complications in 469 patients with suspected acute myocardial infarction. An electrocardiogram was classified as positive if it showed one or more of the following: evidence of infarction, ischemia, or strain; left ventricular hypertrophy; left bundle-branch block; or paced rhythm. Forty-two (14 per cent) of 302 patients with positive electrocardiograms had at least one life-threatening complication (ventricular fibrillation, sustained ventricular tachycardia, or heart block), as compared with 1 (0.6 per cent) of 167 patients with a negative electrocardiogram. Life-threatening complications were therefore 23 times more likely if the initial electrocardiogram was positive (P less than 0.001). Other complications were 3 to 10 times more likely (P less than 0.01), interventions were 4 to 10 times more likely (P less than 0.05), and death was 17 times more likely (P less than 0.001) in patients with a positive electrocardiogram. We conclude that patients with a negative initial electrocardiogram have a low likelihood of complications and could be admitted to an intermediate care unit instead of a coronary care unit. This would reduce admissions to the coronary care unit by 36 per cent and thereby save considerable hospital costs without compromising patient care.

Religion in patients with advanced cancer
Jerome W. Yates, Bruce J. Chalmer, Paul St. James et al.|Medical and Pediatric Oncology|1981
Cited by 229

Data on religious belief, activity, and connections, and ratings of happiness, life satisfaction, and pain level were obtained periodically from 71 patients with advanced cancer. Religious belief showed substantial positive correlation with life satisfaction, and religious activity and connections were significantly correlated with both happiness and life satisfaction. Religious patients also reported significantly lower levels of pain, even though they were no less likely to report the presence of pain. Data from the 36 patients who have since died show no correlation between the religion variables and duration of survival. In general, the patients showed little change in religious belief over time. Religion seems to be an important source of support for many patients.