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David Whiting

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  8
Citations -  647

David Whiting is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cardiopulmonary bypass & Heart disease. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 517 citations. Previous affiliations of David Whiting include Harvard University & Newcastle University.

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TEG and ROTEM: Technology and clinical applications

TL;DR: Rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) and TEG analysis is being incorporated in vertical algorithms to diagnose and treat bleeding in high‐risk populations such as those undergoing cardiac surgery or suffering from blunt trauma.
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Validation of the Kiswahili version of the SF-36 Health Survey in a representative sample of an urban population in Tanzania

TL;DR: Assessment of the validity of a Kiswahili translation of the SF-36 Health Survey among an urban population in Tanzania, using the method of known-groups validation found women had significantly lower meanSF-36 scale scores than men on all scales and scores were lower for older people than younger on all domains.
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A Kiswahili version of the SF-36 Health Survey for use in Tanzania: translation and tests of scaling assumptions.

TL;DR: The results of data quality and psychometric tests support the scoring of the eight scales using standard scoring algorithms and the Kiswahili translation of the SF-36 may be useful in estimating the health of people in Dar es Salaam.
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Cardiopulmonary bypass in the pediatric population

TL;DR: The anesthesiologist caring for the patient must understand the physiology of CPB to facilitate the initiation and separation from bypass, and to be able to treat complications, as well as to understand the heterogeneity of congenital heart disease.
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Case report: postoperative analgesia and preserved motor function with clonidine and buprenorphine via a sciatic perineural catheter.

TL;DR: Two cases of posterolateral corner reconstruction of the knee with postoperative sciatic perineural analgesia using a mixture of clonidine and buprenorphine, are presented, and gross motor function below the knee was maintained in both cases.