M Jenkins
Shriners Hospitals for Children
17 Papers
68 Citations
M Jenkins is an academic researcher from Shriners Hospitals for Children. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enteral administration & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 17 publications. Previous affiliations of M Jenkins include Harvard University.
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Papers
The 2002 Clinical Research Award. An evaluation of the safety of early vs delayed enteral support and effects on clinical, nutritional, and endocrine outcomes after severe burns.
TL;DR: Early enteral support is believed to improve gastrointestinal, immunological, nutritional, and metabolic responses to critical injury; however, this premise is in need of further substantiation by definitive data.
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American burn association/shriners hospitals for children burn outcomes questionnaire: Construction and psychometric properties
Lawren H. Daltroy,Matthew H. Liang,Charlotte B. Phillips,Mary Beth Daugherty,Michelle I. Hinson,M Jenkins,Robert L. McCauley,Walter J. Meyer,Andrew M. Munster,Frank S. Pidcock,Debra Reilly,William P. Tunell,Glenn D. Warden,David Wood,Ronald G. Tompkins +14 more
TL;DR: These burn outcomes scales reliably and validly assess function in patients with burns, and the scales have been developed in such a way that they are likely to be sensitive to change over time.
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Diarrhea in Tube‐Fed Burn Patients: Incidence, Etiology, Nutritional Impact, and Prevention
Michele M. Gottschlich,Glenn D. Warden,Maryann Michel,Pamela Havens,Robert Kopcha,M Jenkins,J. Wesley Alexander +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that a low fat, vitamin A enriched, and early enteral support program maximizes conditions which promote tube feeding tolerance while minimizing nutrient malabsorption during the nutritional rehabilitation of thermal injury.
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The development, validation, and testing of a health outcomes burn questionnaire for infants and children 5 years of age and younger: American Burn Association/Shriners Hospitals for Children.
Lewis E. Kazis,Matthew H. Liang,Austin Lee,Xinhua S. Ren,Charlotte B. Phillips,Michelle I. Hinson,Catherine Calvert,Marc Cullen,Mary Beth Daugherty,Cleon W. Goodwin,M Jenkins,Robert L. McCauley,Walter J. Meyer,Tina L Palmieri,Frank Stacy Pidcock,Debra Reilly,Glenn D. Warden,Darien Wood,Ronald G. Tompkins +18 more
TL;DR: The Health Outcomes Burn Questionnaire for Infants and Children 5 years of age and younger is a clinically based reliable and valid assessment tool that is sensitive to change over time for assessing burn outcomes in this age group.
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•Journal Article
The prognostic value of nutritional and inflammatory indices in patients with burns.
TL;DR: The PINI was found to be associated with death, as were the variables C-reactive protein, prealbumin, and albumin, while percent third-degree burn and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein were likewise not related to the mortality rate.
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