Philip S. Barie
Cornell University
393 Papers
2.6K Citations
Philip S. Barie is an academic researcher from Cornell University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Intensive care unit. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 375 publications. Previous affiliations of Philip S. Barie include Society of Critical Care Medicine & University of Washington.
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Papers
Surgical infection society position on vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus
John Mihran Davis,Mark M. Huycke,Carol L. Wells,John M.A. Bohnen,Dominick Gadaleta,Richard E. Fichtl,Philip S. Barie +6 more
TL;DR: Control of vancomycin use alone is unlikely to greatly affect the number of patients at risk for VRE colonization, but infection control measures are the most important line of defense inside hospitals.
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Use of meropenem by continuous infusion to treat a patient with a Bla(kpc-2)-positive Klebsiella pneumoniae blood stream infection.
Vanessa P. Ho,Stephen G. Jenkins,Cheguevara Afaneh,Harma K. Turbendian,David P. Nicolau,Philip S. Barie +5 more
TL;DR: This is the first report of a mer Openem-non-susceptible carbapenamase-positive Klebsiella pneumoniae blood stream infection treated successfully with high-dose, continuous-infusion meropenem.
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Exposure-Based CBT for Older Adults After Fall Injury: Description of a Manualized, Time-Limited Intervention for Anxiety
Nimali Jayasinghe,Martha A. Sparks,Kaori Kato,Kaitlyn Wilbur,Sandy B. Ganz,Gabrielle R. Chiaramonte,Bradford L. Stevens,Philip S. Barie,Mark S. Lachs,Michael W. O'Dell,Arthur T. Evans,Martha L. Bruce,JoAnn Difede +12 more
TL;DR: Back on My Feet, an exposure-based cognitive-behavioral therapy protocol that is designed for older adults with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), subthreshold PTSD, or fear of falling resulting from a traumatic fall, is presented.
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The cost of failure.
TL;DR: The changing microbiology of community-acquired infections may mean that antibiotic failure may become more important as a risk factor for failure of commonly used regimens, as implied by several lines of evidence.
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Serum bicarbonate concentration correlates with arterial base deficit in critically ill patients.
TL;DR: In this large data set, there was a close inverse correlation between SB and BD in critically ill or septic patients and the predictive equation explains 83% of the variability for BD values.
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