Elliott R. Haut
Johns Hopkins University
386 Papers
835 Citations
Elliott R. Haut is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 331 publications. Previous affiliations of Elliott R. Haut include University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
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Papers
Participant retention in trauma intensive care unit (ICU) follow-up studies: a post-hoc analysis of a previous scoping review.
Himanshu Rawal,Daniel L. Young,Roozbeh Nikooie,Awsse H Al Ani,Lisa Aronson Friedman,Sumana Vasishta,Elliott R. Haut,Elizabeth Colantuoni,Dale M. Needham,Victor D. Dinglas +9 more
- 04 Nov 2020
TL;DR: There was little consistency with reporting participant retention methodology and related data, and Utilization of existing research resources may help improve participant retention.
Failure to Rescue in Geriatric Trauma: The Impact of Any Complication Increases with Age and Injury Severity in Elderly Trauma Patients:
David P. Stonko,David P. Stonko,Eric Etchill,Eric Etchill,Katherine Giuliano,Katherine Giuliano,Sandra R. DiBrito,Sandra R. DiBrito,Daniel L. Eisenson,Daniel L. Eisenson,Trevor Heinrichs,Jonathan J. Morrison,Elliott R. Haut,Alistair Kent,Alistair Kent +14 more
TL;DR: In this article, the interaction of increasing age, Injury Severity Score (ISS), and complications was not well described in geriatric trauma patients, and it was hypothesized that failure to rescue rate from an...
Association Between Race and Age in Survival After Trauma
Caitlin W. Hicks,Zain G. Hashmi,Catherine G. Velopulos,David T. Efron,Eric B. Schneider,Elliott R. Haut,Edward E. Cornwell,Adil H. Haider +7 more
TL;DR: Different racial disparities in survival after trauma exist between white and black patients depending on their age group, and although younger white patients have better outcomes after trauma than younger black patients, older black patients havebetter outcomes than older white patients.
Incremental Cost of Emergency Versus Elective Surgery
Adil H. Haider,Augustine Obirieze,Catherine G. Velopulos,Patrick Richard,Asad Latif,Valerie K. Scott,Cheryl K. Zogg,Elliott R. Haut,David T. Efron,Edward E. Cornwell,Ellen J. MacKenzie,Darrell J. Gaskin +11 more
TL;DR: Even a modest reduction in the proportion of emergent procedures for 3 conditions is estimated to save nearly $1 billion over 10 years, and Preventing emergency surgery through improved care coordination and screening offers a tremendous opportunity to save lives and decrease costs.