Hilaire J. Thompson
University of Washington
181 Papers
955 Citations
Hilaire J. Thompson is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Traumatic brain injury. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 167 publications. Previous affiliations of Hilaire J. Thompson include Veterans Health Administration & Washington University in St. Louis.
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Papers
Acute, transient hemorrhagic hypotension does not aggravate structural damage or neurologic motor deficits but delays the long-term cognitive recovery following mild to moderate traumatic brain injury.
Christian Schütz,John F. Stover,Hilaire J. Thompson,Hilaire J. Thompson,Rachel C. Hoover,Diego M. Morales,Diego M. Morales,Joost Schouten,Asenia McMillan,Kristie Soltesz,Melissa Motta,Zachery Spangler,Edmund Neugebauer,Tracy K. McIntosh +13 more
TL;DR: A single, acute hypotensive event lasting 30 mins did not aggravate the short- and long-term structural and motor deficits but delayed the speed of recovery of cognitive function associated with experimental traumatic brain injury.
Comparing information needs of health care providers and older adults: findings from a wellness study.
Blaine Reeder,Thai Le,Hilaire J. Thompson,George Demiris +3 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: Consumer health informatics technologies have the potential to enhance shared decision-making and communication between older adults, health care providers, and other stakeholders and provide recommendations to facilitate design and adoption of informatics tools that connect these stakeholders.
Intensive care unit management of fever following traumatic brain injury
TL;DR: There continues to be an under treatment of fever in patients with TBI by critical care nurses despite knowledge of its negative effects on outcomes, so research efforts need to now focus on understanding nurses' decision-making processes and the best methods of fever reduction.
Sleep intervention for children with asthma and their parents (SKIP Study): a novel web-based shared management pilot study.
Jennifer Sonney,Hilaire J. Thompson,Carol A. Landis,Kenneth C. Pike,Maida Lynn Chen,Michelle M. Garrison,Teresa M. Ward +6 more
TL;DR: SKIP was feasible, acceptable, and improved child and parent sleep outcomes except TST, and further testing of SKIP in a controlled clinical trial is warranted.
Using targeted messaging to increase physical activity in older adults: a review.
TL;DR: Messaging directed toward older adults to be physically active resulted in improvements in physical activity up to 1 year and there is evidence to support the use of environmentally mediated messaging for stronger results.