89 results on '"Levy, Karen"'
Search Results
2. Abdominal FLASH irradiation reduces radiation-induced gastrointestinal toxicity for the treatment of ovarian cancer in mice.
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Levy, Karen, Natarajan, Suchitra, Wang, Jinghui, Chow, Stephanie, Eggold, Joshua T., Loo, Phoebe E., Manjappa, Rakesh, Melemenidis, Stavros, Lartey, Frederick M., Schüler, Emil, Skinner, Lawrie, Rafat, Marjan, Ko, Ryan, Kim, Anna, H. Al-Rawi, Duaa, von Eyben, Rie, Dorigo, Oliver, Casey, Kerriann M., Graves, Edward E., and Bush, Karl
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RADIOTHERAPY , *OVARIAN cancer , *ABDOMINAL tumors , *IRRADIATION , *LABORATORY mice - Abstract
Radiation therapy is the most effective cytotoxic therapy for localized tumors. However, normal tissue toxicity limits the radiation dose and the curative potential of radiation therapy when treating larger target volumes. In particular, the highly radiosensitive intestine limits the use of radiation for patients with intra-abdominal tumors. In metastatic ovarian cancer, total abdominal irradiation (TAI) was used as an effective postsurgical adjuvant therapy in the management of abdominal metastases. However, TAI fell out of favor due to high toxicity of the intestine. Here we utilized an innovative preclinical irradiation platform to compare the safety and efficacy of TAI ultra-high dose rate FLASH irradiation to conventional dose rate (CONV) irradiation in mice. We demonstrate that single high dose TAI-FLASH produced less mortality from gastrointestinal syndrome, spared gut function and epithelial integrity, and spared cell death in crypt base columnar cells compared to TAI-CONV irradiation. Importantly, TAI-FLASH and TAI-CONV irradiation had similar efficacy in reducing tumor burden while improving intestinal function in a preclinical model of ovarian cancer metastasis. These findings suggest that FLASH irradiation may be an effective strategy to enhance the therapeutic index of abdominal radiotherapy, with potential application to metastatic ovarian cancer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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3. PRIVACY DEPENDENCIES.
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Barocas, Solon and Levy, Karen
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PRIVACY , *INFORMATION sharing , *DECISION making , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *FAMILIES - Abstract
This Article offers a comprehensive survey of privacy dependencies--the many ways that our privacy depends on the decisions and disclosures of other people. What we do and what we say can reveal as much about others as it does about ourselves, even when we don't realize it or when we think we're sharing information about ourselves alone. We identify three bases upon which our privacy can depend: our social ties, our similarities to others, and our differences from others. In a tie-based dependency, an observer learns about one person by virtue of her social relationships with others--family, friends, or other associates. In a similarity-based dependency, inferences about our unrevealed attributes are drawn from our similarities to others for whom that attribute is known. And in differencebased dependencies, revelations about ourselves demonstrate how we are different from others--by showing, for example, how we "break the mold" of normal behavior or establishing how we rank relative to others with respect to some desirable attribute. We elaborate how these dependencies operate, isolating the relevant mechanisms and providing concrete examples of each mechanism in practice, the values they implicate, and the legal and technical interventions that may be brought to bear on them. Our work adds to a growing chorus demonstrating that privacy is neither an individual choice nor an individual value-- but it is the first to systematically demonstrate how different types of dependencies can raise very different normative concerns, implicate different areas of law, and create different challenges for regulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
4. Environmental and spatial determinants of enteric pathogen infection in rural Lao People's Democratic Republic: A cross-sectional study.
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Chard, Anna N., Levy, Karen, Baker, Kelly K., Tsai, Kevin, Chang, Howard H., Thongpaseuth, Vonethalom, Sistrunk, Jeticia R., and Freeman, Matthew C.
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INTESTINAL infections , *ANIMAL droppings , *CROSS-sectional method , *AGE groups , *INDIVIDUAL differences - Abstract
Though the health risks associated with poor access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) are well established, recent large-scale WASH trials have found limited impact on enteric disease. The aims of this study were to: 1. estimate the prevalence of enteropathogens among children <5, school-aged children, and adults; 2. model associations between WASH transmission pathways and enteropathogen infections; and 3. quantify clustering of enteropathogen infections at the household- and village-level. We conducted a cross-sectional survey in 50 villages in Saravane Province, Lao People's Democratic Republic. From 297 households, we collected 891 fecal samples from one child <5, one school-aged child, and one adult living in the same household, and collected survey and observational data on household demographics, WASH access, and animal ownership. Fecal samples were analyzed for 25 enteropathogens using a qRT-PCR assay. We observed near universal infection with at least one enteropathogen (98.3%). Few household or village-level WASH covariates were statistically associated with enteropathogen infection. Concordant household infection was higher than expected under the independence assumption for 14 of the 21 pathogens for which we had sufficient data, indicating strong household correlation for many infections. Median Odds Ratios (MORs), a measure of cluster-level (e.g. village and household) influence on an individual's odds of infection, were elevated at the village level, particularly for viruses (MOR: 3.89; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 2.64, 6.69), protozoa (MOR: 2.07; 95% CI: 1.59, 3.10), and soil-transmitted helminths (MOR: 2.46; 95% CI: 1.89, 3.56), indicating strong village-level differences in individuals' odds of enteric infections. WASH access, as hypothesized, is associated with fewer enteroinfections, but WASH access as currently defined does not reveal a measurably protective association with infection for many etiologies. Household- and community-level factors beyond WASH access, such as intra-household pathogen transmission, exposure to animal feces, and contextual factors in the public domain may be important risk factors for enteric infections. Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov (NCT02342860). Author summary: Despite clear linkages between poor access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) and risk of enteric diseases, there is mixed evidence of the ability of WASH interventions to mitigate these diseases based on findings from the "gold standard" randomized controlled trials. This study examines drivers of enteric diseases by exploring associations between household- and community-level WASH access and enteropathogen infections. We found that enteropathogen infections were nearly universal across age groups, with 98.3% of subjects having at least one infection. Few household or village-level WASH covariates were statistically associated with enteropathogen infection; WASH access generally trended towards lower infection, though trends varied by transmission pathway. Factors other than WASH access, such as intra-household transmission, animal feces exposure, and environmental contamination may be important risk factors for enteric infections. These results highlight the challenges of addressing enteric infections using many of the existing WASH intervention approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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5. STRANGE LOOPS: APPARENT VERSUS ACTUAL HUMAN INVOLVEMENT IN AUTOMATED DECISION MAKING.
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Brennan-Marquez, Kiel, Levy, Karen, and Susser, Daniel
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DECISION making , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *AUTOMATION , *HUMAN-robot interaction , *PRODUCT design - Abstract
The article offers information on human involvement in automated decision making. Topics discussed include information on challenges related to Misalignment between the appearance and actuality of full automation; legal scholarship focused on deceptive interfaces and the policy implications of human-robot interaction; and human aspects of coding, product design, or supervised learning.
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- 2019
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6. The surveillant consumer.
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Stark, Luke and Levy, Karen
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CONSUMER culture theory , *INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *EMPLOYEES , *DIGITAL media - Abstract
We argue that modern technical and social infrastructures of surveillance have brought a novel subject position to prominence: the surveillant consumer. Surveillance has become a normalized mode of interpersonal relation that urges the person as consumer to manage others around her using surveillant products and services. We explore two configurations of this model: the consumer as observer, effectuated through products for use in the supervision of intimate relations as a component of a normalized duty of care; and the consumer as manager, effectuated through capacities for the customer to manage the labor of workers providing services to her. These models frequently intersect and hybridize as market logics overlap with intimate spheres: the surveillant consumer thus acts as an emotional manager of the experience of everyday surveillance. In turn, this managerial role reifies the equation of financial wealth with moral weight in a hierarchy of oversight, giving the wealthiest the most control and least accountability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. Invited Perspective: Environmental Health Interventions Are Only as Good as Their Adoption.
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Levy, Karen
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ENVIRONMENTAL health , *WATER supply , *CHLORINE , *STERILIZATION (Disinfection) , *TECHNOLOGY , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
The author offers insights on a study on the barriers to the adoption of point-of-use (POU) chlorination for household drinking water treatment, which references a research paper by Y. Crider et al., published within the issue. Topics discussed include the use of technology in environmental health interventions, the potential of chlorination as a POU treatment, and the reasons behind the low adoption of water chlorination practices.
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- 2023
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8. DESIGNING AGAINST DISCRIMINATION IN ONLINE MARKETS.
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Levy, Karen and Barocasf, Solon
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ELECTRONIC commerce laws , *ELECTRONIC commerce , *ELECTRONIC billing , *COMPUTER crime prevention , *ONLINE data processing , *ELECTRONIC funds transfers , *LAW - Abstract
Platforms that connect users to one another have flourished online in domains as diverse as transportation, employment, dating, and housing. When users interact on these platforms, their behavior may be influenced by preexisting biases, including tendencies to discriminate along the lines of race, gender, and other protected characteristics. In aggregate, such user behavior may result in systematic inequities in the treatment of different groups. While there is uncertainty about whether platforms bear legal liability for the discriminatory conduct of their users, platforms necessarily exercise a great deal of control over how users' encounters are structured-including who is matched with whom for various forms of exchange, what information users have about one another during their interactions, and how indicators of reliability and reputation are made salient, among many other features. Platforms cannot divest themselves of this power; even choices made without explicit regard for discrimination can affect how vulnerable users arc to bias. This Article analyzes ten categories of design and policy choices through which platforms may make themselves more or less conducive to discrimination by users. In so doing, it offers a comprehensive account of the complex ways platforms' design and policy choices might perpetuate, exacerbate, or alleviate discrimination in the contemporary economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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9. Surveillance deputies: When ordinary people surveil for the state.
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Brayne, Sarah, Lageson, Sarah, and Levy, Karen
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DIGITAL technology , *MASS surveillance , *LEGAL research , *PRIVATE sector , *BIOSURVEILLANCE , *SOCIAL control , *SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The state has long relied on ordinary civilians to do surveillance work, but recent advances in networked technologies are expanding mechanisms for surveillance and social control. In this article, we analyze the phenomenon in which private individuals conduct surveillance on behalf of the state, often using private sector technologies to do so. We develop the concept of surveillance deputies to describe when ordinary people, rather than state actors, use their labor and economic resources to engage in such activity. Although surveillance deputies themselves are not new, their participation in everyday surveillance deputy work has rapidly increased under unique economic and technological conditions of our digital age. Drawing upon contemporary empirical examples, we hypothesize four conditions that contribute to surveillance deputization and strengthen its effects: (1) when interests between the state and civilians converge; (2) when law institutionalizes surveillance deputization or fails to clarify its boundaries; (3) when technological offerings expand personal surveillance capabilities; and (4) when unequal groups use surveillance to gain power or leverage resistance. In developing these hypotheses, we bridge research in law and society, sociology, surveillance studies, and science and technology studies and suggest avenues for future empirical investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Refined assessment of associations between drinking water residence time and emergency department visits for gastrointestinal illness in Metro Atlanta, Georgia.
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Levy, Karen, Klein, Mitchel, Ebelt Sarnat, Stefanie, Panwhar, Samina, Huttinger, Alexandra, Tolbert, Paige, and Moe, Christine
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DRINKING water , *WATER distribution , *DIARRHEA , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases , *WATER quality , *WATERBORNE infection - Abstract
Recent outbreak investigations suggest that a substantial proportion of waterborne disease outbreaks are attributable to water distribution system issues. In this analysis, we examine the relationship between modeled water residence time (WRT), a proxy for probability of microorganism intrusion into the distribution system, and emergency department visits for gastrointestinal (GI) illness for two water utilities in Metro Atlanta, USA during 1993-2004. We also examine the association between proximity to the nearest distribution system node, based on patients' residential address, and GI illness using logistic regression models. Comparing long (≥90th percentile) with intermediate WRTs (11th to 89th percentile), we observed a modestly increased risk for GI illness for Utility 1 (OR = 1.07, 95% CI: 1.02-1.13), which had substantially higher average WRT than Utility 2, for which we found no increased risk (OR = 0.98, 95% CI: 0.94-1.02). Examining finer, 12-hour increments of WRT, we found that exposures >48 h were associated with increased risk of GI illness, and exposures of >96 h had the strongest associations, although none of these associations was statistically significant. Our results suggest that utilities might consider reducing WRTs to <2-3 days or adding booster disinfection in areas with longer WRT, to minimize risk of GI illness from water consumption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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11. Untangling the Impacts of Climate Change on Waterborne Diseases: a Systematic Review of Relationships between Diarrheal Diseases and Temperature, Rainfall, Flooding, and Drought.
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Levy, Karen, Woster, Andrew P., Goldstein, Rebecca S., and Carlton, Elizabeth J.
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EPIDEMIOLOGY , *CLIMATE change , *METEOROLOGY , *RAINFALL , *DROUGHTS - Abstract
Global climate change is expected to affect waterborne enteric diseases, yet to date there has been no comprehensive, systematic review of the epidemiological literature examining the relationship between meteorological conditions and diarrheal diseases. We searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Collection for studies describing the relationship between diarrheal diseases and four meteorological conditions that are expected to increase with climate change: ambient temperature, heavy rainfall, drought, and flooding. We synthesized key areas of agreement and evaluated the biological plausibility of these findings, drawing from a diverse, multidisciplinary evidence base. We identified 141 articles that met our inclusion criteria. Key areas of agreement include a positive association between ambient temperature and diarrheal diseases, with the exception of viral diarrhea and an increase in diarrheal disease following heavy rainfall and flooding events. Insufficient evidence was available to evaluate the effects of drought on diarrhea. There is evidence to support the biological plausibility of these associations, but publication bias is an ongoing concern. Future research evaluating whether interventions, such as improved water and sanitation access, modify risk would further our understanding of the potential impacts of climate change on diarrheal diseases and aid in the prioritization of adaptation measures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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12. Planning for climate change: The need for mechanistic systems-based approaches to study climate change impacts on diarrheal diseases.
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Mellor, Jonathan E., Levy, Karen, Zimmerman, Julie, Elliott, Mark, Bartram, Jamie, Carlton, Elizabeth, Clasen, Thomas, Dillingham, Rebecca, Eisenberg, Joseph, Guerrant, Richard, Lantagne, Daniele, Mihelcic, James, and Nelson, Kara
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DIARRHEA , *CLIMATE change , *STRATEGIC planning , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *METEOROLOGICAL precipitation , *SEASONAL temperature variations - Abstract
Increased precipitation and temperature variability as well as extreme events related to climate change are predicted to affect the availability and quality of water globally. Already heavily burdened with diarrheal diseases due to poor access to water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, communities throughout the developing world lack the adaptive capacity to sufficiently respond to the additional adversity caused by climate change. Studies suggest that diarrhea rates are positively correlated with increased temperature, and show a complex relationship with precipitation. Although climate change will likely increase rates of diarrheal diseases on average, there is a poor mechanistic understanding of the underlying disease transmission processes and substantial uncertainty surrounding current estimates. This makes it difficult to recommend appropriate adaptation strategies. We review the relevant climate-related mechanisms behind transmission of diarrheal disease pathogens and argue that systems-based mechanistic approaches incorporating human, engineered and environmental components are urgently needed. We then review successful systems-based approaches used in other environmental health fields and detail one modeling framework to predict climate change impacts on diarrheal diseases and design adaptation strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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13. Digital surveillance in the hypermasculine workplace.
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E. C. Levy, Karen
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ELECTRONIC surveillance , *TRUCKING , *WORK environment , *TRUCK drivers , *SEX discrimination - Abstract
The article discusses the impact of digital surveillance technologies in favor of masculinity in the U.S. long-haul trucking industry. Topics discussed include masculine work culture in the industry, use of electronic logging devices to monitor working hours of truck drivers, and mentions the role of technological management techniques in gender bias in the industry.
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- 2016
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14. The Phallus-y Fallacy: On Unsexy Intimate Tracking.
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Levy, Karen
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MOBILE apps , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *HUMAN sexuality , *TEXT messages , *ETHICS - Published
- 2018
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15. Comparison of real-time PCR methods for the detection of Naegleria fowleri in surface water and sediment.
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Streby, Ashleigh, Levy, Karen, Mull, Bonnie, and Hill, Vincent
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DETECTION of microorganisms , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *NAEGLERIA fowleri , *AQUATIC microbiology , *MENINGOENCEPHALITIS , *WATERBORNE infection - Abstract
Naegleria fowleri is a thermophilic free-living ameba found in freshwater environments worldwide. It is the cause of a rare but potentially fatal disease in humans known as primary amebic meningoencephalitis. Established N. fowleri detection methods rely on conventional culture techniques and morphological examination followed by molecular testing. Multiple alternative real-time PCR assays have been published for rapid detection of Naegleria spp. and N. fowleri. Foursuch assays were evaluated for the detection of N. fowleri from surface water and sediment. The assays were compared for thermodynamic stability, analytical sensitivity and specificity, detection limits, humic acid inhibition effects, and performance with seeded environmental matrices. Twenty-one ameba isolates were included in the DNA panel used for analytical sensitivity and specificity analyses. N. fowleri genotypes I and III were used for method performance testing. Two of the real-time PCR assays were determined to yield similar performance data for specificity and sensitivity for detecting N. fowleri in environmental matrices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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16. Wiki Surveys: Open and Quantifiable Social Data Collection.
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Salganik, Matthew J. and Levy, Karen E. C.
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ACQUISITION of data , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *DATA analysis , *INFORMATION theory - Abstract
In the social sciences, there is a longstanding tension between data collection methods that facilitate quantification and those that are open to unanticipated information. Advances in technology now enable new, hybrid methods that combine some of the benefits of both approaches. Drawing inspiration from online information aggregation systems like Wikipedia and from traditional survey research, we propose a new class of research instruments called wiki surveys. Just as Wikipedia evolves over time based on contributions from participants, we envision an evolving survey driven by contributions from respondents. We develop three general principles that underlie wiki surveys: they should be greedy, collaborative, and adaptive. Building on these principles, we develop methods for data collection and data analysis for one type of wiki survey, a pairwise wiki survey. Using two proof-of-concept case studies involving our free and open-source website , we show that pairwise wiki surveys can yield insights that would be difficult to obtain with other methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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17. Ascaris and Escherichia coli Inactivation in an Ecological Sanitation System in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
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Berendes, David, Levy, Karen, Knee, Jackie, Handzel, Thomas, and Hill, Vincent R.
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ESCHERICHIA coli , *ASCARIS , *SANITATION , *TOILETS , *COMPOSTING - Abstract
The goal of this study was to evaluate the microbial die-off in a latrine waste composting system in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Temperature data and samples were collected from compost aged 0 – 12+ months. Samples collected from compost bin centers and corners at two depths were assessed for moisture content, E. coli concentration, and Ascaris spp. viability. Center temperatures in compost bins were all above 58 °C, while corner temperatures were 10 – 20 °C lower. Moisture content was 67 ± 10% in all except the oldest compost. A 4-log reduction in E. coli was observed over the first sixteen weeks of composting at both locations and depths, after which E. coli was undetectable (LOD: 142 MPN g-1 dry weight). In new compost, 10.4% and 8.3% of Ascaris eggs were viable and fully embryonated, respectively. Percent viability dropped to zero in samples older than six weeks. These findings indicate that the Haitian EcoSan composting process was effective in inactivating E. coli and Ascaris spp. in latrine waste within sixteen weeks. This study is one of the first to document efficacy of an ecological sanitation system under field conditions and provides insight into composting methods and monitoring for other international settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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18. The Contexts of Control: Information, Power, and Truck-Driving Work.
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Levy, Karen E. C.
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TRUCKING , *ELECTRONIC surveillance , *ORGANIZATIONAL performance , *INFORMATION theory , *JOB performance - Abstract
This article examines the implications of electronic monitoring systems for organizational information flows and worker control, in the context of the U.S. trucking industry. Truckers, a spatially dispersed group of workers with a traditionally independent culture and a high degree of autonomy, are increasingly subjected to performance monitoring via fleet management systems that record and transmit fine-grained data about their location and behaviors. These systems redistribute operational information within firms by accruing real-time aggregated data in a remote company dispatcher. This redistribution results in a seemingly incongruous set of effects. First, abstracted and aggregated data streams allow dispatchers to quantitatively evaluate truckers’ job performance across new metrics, and to challenge truckers’ accounts of local and biophysical conditions. Second, even as these data are abstracted, information about truckers’ activities is simultaneously resocialized via its strategic deployment into truckers’ social relationships with their coworkers and families. These disparate dynamics operate together to facilitate firms’ control over truckers’ daily work practices in a manner that was not previously possible. The trucking case reveals multifaceted pathways to the entrenchment of organizational control via electronic monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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19. Reducing Health Regrets in a Changing Climate.
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Levy, Karen
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CLIMATE change , *EFFECT of human beings on climate change , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *DIARRHEA prevention , *HUMAN ecology , *ENVIRONMENTALLY induced diseases - Abstract
The article discusses the impact and changes on the health of human due to the condition of weather or climate changes. It also states the report furnish by Intergovernmental Panel on climate change and human health. Topics discussed includes shifting of pattern of diseases, infectious diseases and diarrhea.
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- 2017
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20. Household effectiveness vs. laboratory efficacy of point-of-use chlorination.
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Levy, Karen, Anderson, Larissa, Robb, Katharine A., Cevallos, William, Trueba, Gabriel, and Eisenberg, Joseph N.S.
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WATER chlorination , *DIARRHEA , *DRINKING water purification , *DRINKING water microbiology , *HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
Abstract: Treatment of water at the household level offers a promising approach to combat the global burden of diarrheal diseases. In particular, chlorination of drinking water has been a widely promoted strategy due to persistence of residual chlorine after initial treatment. However, the degree to which chlorination can reduce microbial levels in a controlled setting (efficacy) or in a household setting (effectiveness) can vary as a function of chlorine characteristics, source water characteristics, and household conditions. To gain more understanding of these factors, we carried out an observational study within households in rural communities of northern coastal Ecuador. We found that the efficacy of chlorine treatment under controlled conditions was significantly better than its household effectiveness when evaluated both by ability to meet microbiological safety standards and by log reductions. Water treated with chlorine achieved levels of microbial contamination considered safe for human consumption after 24 h of storage in the household only 39–51% of the time, depending on chlorine treatment regimen. Chlorine treatment would not be considered protective against diarrheal disease according to WHO log reduction standards. Factors that explain the observed compromised effectiveness include: source water turbidity, source water baseline contamination levels, and in-home contamination. Water in 38% of the households that had low turbidity source water (<10 NTU) met the safe water standard as compared with only 17% of the households that had high turbidity source water (>10 NTU). A 10 MPN/100 mL increase in baseline Escherichia coli levels was associated with a 2.2% increase in failure to meet the E. coli standard. Higher mean microbial contamination levels were seen in 54% of household samples in comparison to their matched controls, which is likely the result of in-home contamination during storage. Container characteristics (size of the container mouth) did not influence chlorine effectiveness. We found no significant differences between chlorine treatment regimens in ability to meet the safe water standards or in overall log reductions, although chlorine dosage did modify the effect of source conditions. These results underscore the importance of measuring both source water and household conditions to determine appropriate chlorine levels, as well as to evaluate the appropriateness of chlorine treatment and other point-of-use water quality improvement interventions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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21. Driving Regulation: Using Topic Models to Examine Political Contention in the U.S. Trucking Industry.
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Levy, Karen E. C. and Franklin, Michael
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TOPIC distillation (Internet searching) , *CONTENTION resolution protocols (Computer network protocols) , *PUBLIC opinion , *SOFTWARE cataloguing rules , *ASYMPTOTIC theory in the Dirichlet problem , *ELECTRONIC surveillance - Abstract
Public comments submitted during agency rulemakings can provide rich insight into stakeholders’ viewpoints around contentious political issues but have been largely untapped as a data source by social scientists. This is in part due to the lack of access to comments in machine-readable formats and in part due to the difficulty in analyzing large corpora of textual data. However, new online repositories and analytic methodologies are beginning to open up this trove of data for researchers. Using data from the online portal regulations.gov, we employ probabilistic topic modeling to identify latent themes in a series of regulatory debates about electronic monitoring in the U.S. trucking industry. Our model suggests that different types of commenters use alternative discursive frames in talking about monitoring. Comments submitted by individuals were more likely to place the electronic monitoring debate in the context of broader logistical problems plaguing the industry, such as long wait times at shippers’ terminals, while organizational stakeholders were more likely than individuals to frame their comments in terms of technological standards and language suggesting cost / benefit quantification. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
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22. Does Pharmacological Treatment of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in Alzheimer's Disease Relieve Caregiver Burden?
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Levy, Karen, Lanctôt, Krista L., Farber, Shale B., Li, Abby, and Herrmann, Nathan
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ALZHEIMER'S disease , *MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems , *MEDLINE , *STATISTICS , *DATA analysis , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *BURDEN of care - Abstract
Caregiving for patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with negative outcomes for the caregiver such as depression, anxiety, medical ill- ness, poorer general health and mortality, which further translate into ad- verse outcomes for the patient. The burden experienced by caregivers of AD patients, both professional and informal, has been found to be positively related to the presence and severity of the patients' neuropsychiatric symptoms, also referred to as the behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD). As such, management of BPSD may help in alleviating caregiver burden. The purpose of this review is to summarize the current literature on the effects of pharmacological interventions for BPSD on the burden of AD patient caregivers. A literature review was conducted, using keywords related to dementia, drug treatment, caregiving and BPSD. Studies were included if they were a randomized controlled trial of a currently mar- keted drug in AD patients, and included a measure of caregiver burden and BPSD. Twenty-four articles met the eligibility criteria for this review. Cognitive enhancers (cholinesterase inhibitors, memantine) were associated with de- creased caregiver burden in some studies, though it is unclear whether the improvements were related to changes in BPSD or cognition and function. Antipsychotics have been associated with decreased caregiver burden in some studies, though variability may be related to disease severity. Other drug treat- ments, including antidepressants, have also been shown to have inconsistent effects on caregiver burden. Besides the small number of clinical trials that included a measure of caregiver burden, there is large variability in the literature due to differing conceptualizations of caregiver burden and the lack of a re- cognized gold standard for caregiving burden assessment. It is therefore difficult to draw strong conclusions about whether the pharmacological management of BPSD relieves caregiver burden. Given the importance of caregiver burden and its negative consequences for the caregiver and the patient, future clinical trials should pay more attention to this crucial outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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23. Seasonality of rotavirus disease in the tropics: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Levy, Karen, Hubbard, Alan E., and Eisenberg, Joseph N. S.
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SEASONS , *ROTAVIRUSES , *TROPICAL medicine , *META-analysis , *EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Background To date little conclusive evidence exists on the seasonality of rotavirus incidence in the tropics. We present a systematic review and meta-analysis on the seasonal epidemiology of rotavirus in the tropics, including 26 studies reporting continuous monthly rotavirus incidence for which corresponding climatological data was available. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2009
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24. An Observational Study on the Effectiveness of Point-Of-Use Chlorination.
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McLaughlin, Laura A., Levy, Karen, Beck, Nicola K., Shin, Gwy-Am, Meschke, J. Scott, and Eisenberg, Joseph N.
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WATER chlorination , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *BIOINDICATORS , *CHLORINE & the environment , *SIMULATION methods & models , *WATER quality - Abstract
Although the efficacy of chlorine disinfection under controlled laboratory conditions is well known, the effectiveness of chlorine under field point-of-use (POU) conditions is still not clearly understood and may be impacted by a variety of factors. This study evaluated the effectiveness of POU chlorine disinfection in rural Ecuador under typical use conditions and compared this effectiveness with the efficacy in controlled laboratory conditions. While reductions of indicator organisms were slightly higher in households that used chlorination, no significant differences were seen between households employing POU chlorination and the households with no chlorination (1-1.5 log10 median reductions for chlorinating households and 0.31-0.55 log10 for nonchlorinating households, depending on the indicator organism). In contrast, significant reduction of all test organisms was found when simulating POU conditions in the laboratory. This study demonstrates that POU chlorination can be considerably less effective under actual field conditions than would be predicted based on its laboratory efficacy (3-5 log10 median reductions for chlorinated and 0-0.3 log10 for nonchlorinated samples). Human factors (including improper storage and chlorine dosing) and uncontrolled water quality effects are hypothesized to impact significantly the effectiveness of chlorine disinfection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
25. Drivers of Water Quality Variability in Northern Coastal Ecuador.
- Author
-
Levy, Karen, HUBBARD, ALAN E., NELSON, KARA L., and EISENBERG, JOSEPH N. S.
- Subjects
- *
WATER quality , *ESCHERICHIA coli , *DRINKING water microbiology , *WATER pollution , *SANITATION - Abstract
Microbiological safety of water is commonly measured using indicator organisms, but the spatiotemporal variability of these indicators can make interpretation of data difficult. Here, we systematically explore the variability in Escherichia coli concentrations in surface source and household drinking water in a rural Ecuadorian village over one year. We observed more variability in water quality on an hourly basis (up to 2.4 log difference) than on a daily (2.2 log difference) or weekly basis (up to 1.8 log difference). E. coli counts were higher in the wet season than in the dry season for source (0.42 log difference, p < 0.0001) and household (0.11 log difference, p = 0.077) samples. In the wet season, a 1 cm increase in weekly rainfall was associated with a 3% decrease (p = 0.006) in E. coli counts in source samples and a 6% decrease (p = 0.012) in household samples. Each additional person in the river when source samples were collected was associated with a 4% increase (p = 0.026) in E. coli counts in the wet season. Factors affecting household water quality included rainfall, water source, and covering the container. The variability can be understood as a combination of environmental (e.g., seasonal and soil processes) and other drivers (e.g., human river use, water practices, and sanitation), each working at different time scales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Following the Water: A Controlled Study of Drinking Water Storage in Northern Coastal Ecuador.
- Author
-
Levy, Karen, Nelson, Kara L., Hubbard, Alan, and Eisenberg, Joseph N. S.
- Subjects
- *
CONTAMINATION of drinking water , *WATER quality monitoring , *WATER quality biological assessment , *ESCHERICHIA coli , *ENTEROCOCCUS , *RESEARCH methodology , *WATER sampling , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *WATER supply , *SAFETY - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To design the most appropriate interventions to improve water quality and supply, information is needed to assess water contamination in a variety of community settings, including those that rely primarily on unimproved surface sources of drinking water. OBJECTIVES: We explored the role of initial source water conditions as well as household factors in determining household water quality, and how levels of contamination of drinking water change over time, in a rural setting in northern coastal Ecuador. METHODS: We sampled source waters concurrently with water collection by household members and followed this water over time, comparing Escherichia coli and enterococci concentrations in water stored in households with water stored under controlled conditions. RESULTS: We observed significant natural attenuation of indicator organisms in control containers and significant, although less pronounced, reductions of indicators between the source of drinking water and its point of use through the third day of sampling. These reductions were followed by recontamination in approximately half of the households. CONCLUSIONS: Water quality improved after water was transferred from the source to household storage containers, but then declined because of recontamination in the home. Our experimental design allowed us to observe these dynamics by controlling for initial source water quality and following changes in water quality over time. These data, because of our controlled experimental design, may explain why recontamination has been reported in the literature as less prominent in areas or households with highly contaminated source waters. Our results also suggest that efforts to improve source water quality and sanitation remain important. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. To Approach, to Welcome, to Contest.
- Author
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Levy, Karen D.
- Subjects
- *
SALUTATIONS , *TEACHING , *TRANSCENDENCE (Philosophy) , *WOMEN scholars - Abstract
As Jacques Derrida emphasizes in his eloquent funeral tribute to Emmanuel Levinas, “welcome” is one of the most frequently used words in Totalité et infini. In the early pages of this work Levinas insists on the broadly framed significance of welcoming and teaching as manifestations of the ethical encounter. In later sections, however, he carefully distinguishes between the discreet welcome of the feminine whose language is silent and without teaching, and the approach of an absolute Other, who teaches transcendence itself. Levinas privileges the masculine when referring to the Other who teaches and seems to relegate the feminine to a silent presence whose welcome sets the stage for the ethical experience but who lacks the capacity to accept this challenge. The role and status of sexual difference in relation to the ethical is perhaps the most highly contested aspect of Levinas's writings, and since the late 1980s women scholars have ever more boldly probed the tensions in Levinas's writings with respect to these issues. Their commentaries, written from a variety of perspectives, force us to acknowledge Levinas's shortcomings. At the same time they enable us to appreciate more specifically the significance of Le Clézio's own undertaking, which changed form dramatically following his years with the Indians in Panama to assume an openly acknowledged ethical dimension. The works from the last two decades that most daringly concretize the process of refusing or accepting the summons of an Other are the Mauritian sagas of Le chercheur d'or, La quarantaine, and Révolutions. These works both valorize the welcome of the Levinasian feminine and embody teaching in female characters, such as Ouma, Suryavati, Ananta, Anna Archambeau, and Catherine Marro. The male protagonists in these works, Alexis L'Étang, Léon Archambeau, and Jean Marro, either reject their teaching outright, preferring to remain enclosed in the solitude of the Same, or in different ways, accept the possibility of re-commencement as Other, which Le Clézio himself so eagerly embraced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Solitude and the Restlessness of the Immemorial: Levinasian Traces in the Discourse of Patrick Modiano.
- Author
-
Levy, Karen D.
- Subjects
- *
INDIVIDUALITY , *IDENTITY (Philosophical concept) , *ONTOLOGY , *PHILOSOPHY - Abstract
Emmanuel Levinas contested Western ontology's insistence on the importance of individual autonomy and systematized knowledge, developing a new description of how identity and intersubjectivity are constructed. In the early De l'existence à l'existant and Le Temps et l'autre, he explains how the effort of existing is assumed, creating a sense of mastery but also of solitude, for the ego and the self are tied to one another, but it is not until Totalité et Infini that he elaborates on the ethical encounter with the face as discourse. In his last major work Autrement qu’être ou au-delà de l'essence, he focuses on the consequences of this epiphany for the subject, and relates this to the trace, a special kind of sign that focuses not so much on the relationship between sign and referent as on the irreversible passing of those who left them. The paired texts of Patrick Modiano's Voyage de noces and Dora Bruder most strikingly inscribe the simultaneous self-absorption and tedium of existing, but also depict how traces from the immemorial shatter the subject's autonomy. Modiano is haunted by the missing person ad's description of a runaway girl who disappeared in December 1941, was interned in Drancy the following summer and then deported to Auschwitz. He first wrote Voyage de noces to exorcise the spell the ad cast upon him, was eventually compelled to respond directly to the summons by composing Dora Bruder. Modiano tries to retrieve fragments of the adolescent Dora's past and rescue her from oblivion, but his efforts prove largely futile, for there is no memory to retrieve. His insistence on Dora's decision to remain in Drancy with her father makes it possible for him to forgive his own father's failings and acknowledge his admiration both for him and all those who defied Occupation hypocrisy. Lastly, Modiano's text calls upon us as readers to become the guardians of the pleas that French authorities ignored and thereby accept the summons of the immemorial ourselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Dosimetric calibration of anatomy‐specific ultra‐high dose rate electron irradiation platform for preclinical FLASH radiobiology experiments.
- Author
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Wang, Jinghui, Melemenidis, Stavros, Manjappa, Rakesh, Viswanathan, Vignesh, Ashraf, Ramish M., Levy, Karen, Skinner, Lawrie B., Soto, Luis A., Chow, Stephanie, Lau, Brianna, Ko, Ryan B., Graves, Edward E., Yu, Amy S., Bush, Karl K., Surucu, Murat, Rankin, Erinn B., Loo, Billy W. Jr., Schüler, Emil, and Maxim, Peter G.
- Subjects
- *
IONIZATION chambers , *MONTE Carlo method , *LINEAR accelerators , *CHARGE measurement , *MEDICAL dosimetry - Abstract
Background Purpose Methods Results Conclusion FLASH radiation therapy (RT) offers a promising avenue for the broadening of the therapeutic index. However, to leverage the full potential of FLASH in the clinical setting, an improved understanding of the biological principles involved is critical. This requires the availability of specialized equipment optimized for the delivery of conventional (CONV) and ultra‐high dose rate (UHDR) irradiation for preclinical studies. One method to conduct such preclinical radiobiological research involves adapting a clinical linear accelerator configured to deliver both CONV and UHDR irradiation.We characterized the dosimetric properties of a clinical linear accelerator configured to deliver ultra‐high dose rate irradiation to two anatomic sites in mice and for cell‐culture FLASH radiobiology experiments.Delivered doses of UHDR electron beams were controlled by a microcontroller and relay interfaced with the respiratory gating system. We also produced beam collimators with indexed stereotactic mouse positioning devices to provide anatomically specific preclinical treatments. Treatment delivery was monitored directly with an ionization chamber, and charge measurements were correlated with radiochromic film measurements at the entry surface of the mice. The setup for conventional dose rate irradiation utilized the same collimation system but at increased source‐to‐surface distance. Monte Carlo simulations and film dosimetry were used to characterize beam properties and dose distributions.The mean electron beam energies before the flattening filter were 18.8 MeV (UHDR) and 17.7 MeV (CONV), with corresponding values at the mouse surface of 17.2 and 16.2 MeV. The charges measured with an external ion chamber were linearly correlated with the mouse entrance dose. The use of relay gating for pulse control initially led to a delivery failure rate of 20% (± 1 pulse); adjustments to account for the linac latency improved this rate to < 1/20. Beam field sizes for two anatomically specific mouse collimators (4 × 4 cm2 for whole‐abdomen and 1.5 × 1.5 cm2 for unilateral lung irradiation) were accurate within < 5% and had low radiation leakage (< 4%). Normalizing the dose at the center of the mouse (∼0.75 cm depth) produced UHDR and CONV doses to the irradiated volumes with > 95% agreement.We successfully configured a clinical linear accelerator for increased output and developed a robust preclinical platform for anatomically specific irradiation, with highly accurate and precise temporal and spatial dose delivery, for both CONV and UHDR irradiation applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Author's responses to the comment by Daniele Lantagne on “Household effectiveness vs. laboratory efficacy of point-of-use chlorination”.
- Author
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Levy, Karen, Anderson, Larissa, Robb, Katharine A., Cevallos, William, Trueba, Gabriel, and Eisenberg, Joseph N.S.
- Subjects
- *
CHLORINATION , *SEWAGE chlorination , *MICROBIAL contamination , *CONTAMINATION of drinking water - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. From duality to triplicity: The multidimensional undertaking of Jean Paulhan.
- Author
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Levy, Karen D.
- Subjects
- *
BOOKS , *CRITICISM - Abstract
Discusses the multidimensional undertaking of Nouvelle Revue Francaise's former director Jean Paulhan in his five-volume book `Oeuvres Completes.' Development manifested in Paulhan's theoretical texts; Relationship between Paulhan's theoretical writings and his creative works.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Tournier's Ultimate Perversion: The Historical Manipulation of Gilles et Jeanne.
- Author
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LEVY, KAREN D.
- Subjects
- *
CRITICISM - Abstract
Presents Tournier's ultimate perversion.
- Published
- 1992
33. Educating our youth to prevent central nervous system injuries.
- Author
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Levy, Michael L. and Levy, Karen M.
- Subjects
- *
CENTRAL nervous system injuries , *YOUTH health , *PREVENTION - Abstract
Discusses two preventive programs that specifically address central nervous system injuries. Traumatic injuries as the greatest health hazard in America; Number of hospitalizations annually as a result of trauma and deaths; Cost of treatment and rehabilitation for patients with severe head injuries; Percentage of funding for basic research used to study trauma.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A content analysis of copy and advertisement photographs in Sport Illustrated and Sport: A...
- Author
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Levy, Karen D. and Bryant, James E.
- Subjects
- *
DISCRIMINATION in sports , *AFRICAN American athletes - Abstract
Examines race discrimination in sport through a content analysis of copy and advertisement photographs in `Sports Illustrated' and `Sport' magazines. Amount of coverage and representation directed to African-American athletes; Comparison of high photograph and low advertisement representation to census figures for the African-American population.
- Published
- 1993
35. Combined Sewer Overflows and Gastrointestinal Illness in Atlanta, 2002-2013: Evaluating the Impact of Infrastructure Improvements.
- Author
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Miller, Alyssa G., Ebelt, Stefanie, and Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
STATISTICS , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *GASTROINTESTINAL diseases , *SANITATION , *REGRESSION analysis , *POPULATION geography , *RISK assessment , *MEDICAL care use , *PEARSON correlation (Statistics) , *WATER pollution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SEWAGE , *STATISTICAL models , *POVERTY , *DATA analysis software , *ODDS ratio , *POISSON distribution , *DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Combined sewer overflows (CSOs) discharge untreated sewage into surface and recreational water, often following heavy precipitation. Given projected increases in frequency and intensity of precipitation due to climate change, it is important to understand the health impacts of CSOs and mediating effects of sewerage systems. OBJECTIVES: In this study we estimate associations of CSO events and emergency department (ED) visits for gastrointestinal (GI) illness among City of Atlanta, Georgia, residents and explore how these associations vary with sewerage improvements. METHODS: We estimate associations using Poisson generalized linear models, controlling for time trends. We categorized CSOs by overflow volume and assessed effects of CSO events prior to ED visits with 1-, 2- and 3-wk lags. Similarly, we evaluated effects of weekly cumulative precipitation greater than the 90th percentile at the same lags. We also evaluated effect modification by ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA)-level poverty and infrastructure improvement period using interaction terms. RESULTS: Occurrence of a large volume CSO in the previous week was associated with a 9% increase in daily ED visits for GI illness. We identified significant interaction by ZCTA-level poverty, with stronger CSO–GI illness associations in low than high poverty areas. Among areas with low poverty, we observed associations at 1-wk and longer lags, following both large and lower volume CSO events. We did not observe significant interaction by infrastructure improvement period for CSO– nor precipitation–GI illness associations; however, the number of CSO events decreased from 2.31 per week before improvements to 0.49 after improvements. DISCUSSION: Our findings suggest that CSOs contribute to acute GI illness burden in Atlanta and that the magnitude of this risk may be higher among populations living in areas of low poverty. We did not find a protective effect of sewerage system improvements. Nonetheless, observed reductions in CSO frequency may lower the absolute burden of GI illness attributable to these events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Review of "Automation is a Myth".
- Author
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Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
AUTOMATION , *NONFICTION - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. You Had Me at 'Newly Single And No Felony Convictions'.
- Author
-
Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
FELONIES - Abstract
The article discusses that the Match Group, which owns dating and hookup platforms including Tinder, OK Cupid and Match.com, is trying to make it easier to obtain data on potential partners as the company announced in March that it would help users run background checks on potential dates.
- Published
- 2021
38. Afrodescendientes e indígenas vulnerables al cambio climático: desacuerdos frente a medidas preventivas estatales ecuatorianas.
- Author
-
Salinas, Victoria, Cevallos, William, and Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
POPULATION transfers , *ECONOMIC man , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *FLOOD risk , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
The following article analyzes the situation of the province of Esmeraldas, located in the northeast of Ecuador and populated by afro-descendants and indigenous Chachi people. This province is one of the most affected by the high frequency and intensity of floods that cause innumerable material, economic and human loses. The objective of this research is to acknowledge the situation of the mentioned populations, identify their practices and representations, analyze how conditions of vulnerability related to the risks caused by floods are generated, and pinpoint the guides governmental institutions have used to develop their prevention and adaptation policies about this type of disasters. This study uses a qualitative methodology that is exploratory and descriptive in order to provide an account of the issue, showing that these populations recognize the level of vulnerability and risk in the area, but maintain their way of life because their actions respond to their own socio-cultural and economic constructions. In this sense, the conclusion of this study indicates that the preventative state measures, with relocation projects of the populations, are skewed, segmented, and authoritarian. The lack of communication, respect, and understanding for the forms of interaction of the community can be pinpointed as the reason for the failure of these initiatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Correlates of maternal depression, anxiety and functioning across an urban-rural gradient in northern Ecuador.
- Author
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Ghahyazi, Kiana, Familiar-Lopez, Itziar, Culbert, Oriana, Uruchima, Jessica, Van Engen, Amanda, Cevallos, William, Eisenberg, Joseph N. S., Levy, Karen, and Lee, Gwenyth O.
- Subjects
- *
SCALE analysis (Psychology) , *MIDDLE-income countries , *DATA analysis , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *STATISTICAL sampling , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ANXIETY , *FUNCTIONAL status , *COMMUNITIES , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *METROPOLITAN areas , *RURAL conditions , *CONTENT mining , *STATISTICS , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MENTAL depression , *SOCIAL classes , *LOW-income countries , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Maternal depression remains under characterised in many low- and middle-income countries, especially in rural settings. We aimed to describe maternal depression and anxiety symptoms in rural and urban communities in northern Ecuador and to identify socioeconomic and demographic factors associated with these symptoms. Data from 508 mothers participating in a longitudinal cohort study were included. Depression and anxiety symptoms were assessed using the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-25), and maternal psychological functioning was assessed using a checklist of daily activities. Tobit regression models were used to examine associations with sociodemographic variables and urbanicity. The median HSCL-25 score was 1.2 (IQR: 0.4) and 14% of women scored above the threshold for clinically relevant symptoms. Rural women reported similar food insecurity, less education, younger age of first pregnancy, and lower socio-economic status compared to their urban counterparts. After adjusting for these factors, rural women reported lower HSCL-25 scores compared to women lin urban areas (β = −0.48, 95%CI:0.65, −0.31). Rural residence was also associated with lower depression and anxiety HSCL-25 sub-scale scores, and similar levels of maternal functioning, compared to urban residence. Our results suggest that both household and community-level factors are risk factors for maternal depression and anxiety in this context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Artificial intelligence in communication impacts language and social relationships.
- Author
-
Hohenstein, Jess, Kizilcec, Rene F., DiFranzo, Dominic, Aghajari, Zhila, Mieczkowski, Hannah, Levy, Karen, Naaman, Mor, Hancock, Jeffrey, and Jung, Malte F.
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SOCIAL impact , *INTERPERSONAL communication , *SOCIAL perception , *RECOMMENDER systems - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is already widely used in daily communication, but despite concerns about AI's negative effects on society the social consequences of using it to communicate remain largely unexplored. We investigate the social consequences of one of the most pervasive AI applications, algorithmic response suggestions ("smart replies"), which are used to send billions of messages each day. Two randomized experiments provide evidence that these types of algorithmic recommender systems change how people interact with and perceive one another in both pro-social and anti-social ways. We find that using algorithmic responses changes language and social relationships. More specifically, it increases communication speed, use of positive emotional language, and conversation partners evaluate each other as closer and more cooperative. However, consistent with common assumptions about the adverse effects of AI, people are evaluated more negatively if they are suspected to be using algorithmic responses. Thus, even though AI can increase the speed of communication and improve interpersonal perceptions, the prevailing anti-social connotations of AI undermine these potential benefits if used overtly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Opportunities to Interrupt Transmission of Enteropathogens of Poultry Origin in Maputo, Mozambique: A Transmission Model Analysis.
- Author
-
Kayoko Shioda, Brouwer, Andrew F., Lamar, Frederica, Mucache, Hermógenes N., Levy, Karen, and Freeman, Matthew C.
- Subjects
- *
FOOD poisoning prevention , *MEAT microbiology , *DIARRHEA prevention , *FOOD contamination prevention , *BIOLOGICAL models , *POULTRY , *SALMONELLA diseases , *DISEASE vectors , *ZOONOSES , *CAMPYLOBACTER infections , *SIMULATION methods in education , *SOCIOECONOMIC status , *SALMONELLA , *CAMPYLOBACTER , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL classes , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *METROPOLITAN areas , *SHIGELLOSIS , *DATA analysis software , *SHIGELLA - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The burden of diarrheal diseases remains high among children in low-income countries. Enteropathogens are challenging to control because they are transmitted via multiple pathways. Chickens are an important animal protein source, but live chickens and their products are often highly contaminated with enteropathogens. OBJECTIVES: We conducted this study to a) understand the contribution of multiple transmission pathways to the force of infection of Campylobacter spp. and nontyphoidal Salmonella spp., b) quantify the potential impact of reducing each pathway on human infection, and c) quantify hypothesized pathway reduction from the context of Maputo, Mozambique. METHODS: We developed transmission models for Campylobacter and Salmonella that captured person-to-person, water-to-person, food-to-person, soil-to-person, animal-to-person, and all-other-sources-to-person in an urban, low-income setting in Mozambique. We calibrated these models using prevalence data from Maputo, Mozambique and estimates of attributable fraction of transmission pathways for the region. We simulated the prevalence of human infection after reducing transmission through each pathway. RESULTS: Simulation results indicated that if foodborne transmission were reduced by 90%, the prevalence of Campylobacter and Salmonella infection would decline by [52.2%; 95% credible interval (CrI): 39.7, 63.8] and (46.9%; 95% CrI: 39, 55.4), respectively. Interruption of any other pathway did not have a substantial impact. Combined with survey and microbiology data, if contamination of broiler chicken meat at informal markets in Maputo could be reduced by 90%, the total infection of Campylobacter and Salmonella could be reduced by 21% (16–26%) and 12% (10–13%), respectively. DISCUSSION: Our transmission models showed that the foodborne transmission has to be reduced to control enteropathogen infections in our study site, and likely in other similar contexts, but mitigation of this transmission pathway has not received sufficient attention. Our model can serve as a tool to identify effective mitigation opportunities to control zoonotic enteropathogens. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP12314 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Quantifying Enteropathogen Contamination along Chicken Value Chains in Maputo, Mozambique: A Multidisciplinary and Mixed-Methods Approach to Identifying High Exposure Settings.
- Author
-
Lamar, Frederica, Mucache, Hermógenes N., Mondlane-Milisse, Amelia, Jesser, Kelsey J., Victor, Courtney, Fafetine, José M., Osvaldo Saíde, Joaquim Ângelo, Fèvre, Eric M., Caruso, Bethany A., Freeman, Matthew C., and Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
FOOD contamination , *KRUSKAL-Wallis Test , *POULTRY , *SALMONELLA diseases , *DNA , *HAZARDOUS substances , *RESEARCH methodology , *FOOD security , *INTERVIEWING , *CAMPYLOBACTER infections , *HYGIENE , *FECES , *QUALITATIVE research , *SURVEYS , *INTESTINAL diseases , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASE prevalence , *POLYMERASE chain reaction , *FOOD quality , *DATA analysis software , *GROCERY industry , *MICROBIAL contamination - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Small-scale poultry production is widespread and increasing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Exposure to enteropathogens in poultry feces increases the hazard of human infection and related sequela, and the burden of disease due to enteric infection in children <5 y in particular is substantial. Yet, the containment and management of poultry-associated fecal waste in informal settings in LMICs is largely unregulated. OBJECTIVES: To improve the understanding of potential exposures to enteropathogens carried by chickens, we used mixed methods to map and quantify microbial hazards along production value chains among broiler, layer, and indigenous chickens in Maputo, Mozambique. METHODS: To map and describe the value chains, we conducted 77 interviews with key informants working in locations where chickens and related products are sold, raised, and butchered. To quantify microbial hazards, we collected chicken carcasses (푛=75) and fecal samples (푛=136) from chickens along the value chain and assayed them by qPCR for the chicken-associated bacterial enteropathogens C. jejuni/coli and Salmonella spp. RESULTS: We identified critical hazard points along the chicken value chains and identified management and food hygiene practices that contribute to potential exposures to chicken-sourced enteropathogens. We detected C. jejuni/coli in 84 (76%) of fecal samples and 52 (84%) of carcass rinses and Salmonella spp. in 13 (11%) of fecal samples and 16 (21%) of carcass rinses. Prevalence and level of contamination increased as chickens progressed along the value chain, from no contamination of broiler chicken feces at the start of the value chain to 100% contamination of carcasses with C. jejuni/coli at informal markets. Few hazard mitigation strategies were found in the informal sector. DISCUSSION: High prevalence and concentration of C. jejuni/coli and Salmonella spp. contamination along chicken value chains suggests a high potential for exposure to these enteropathogens associated with chicken production and marketing processes in the informal sector in our study setting. We identified critical control points, such as the carcass rinse step and storage of raw chicken meat, that could be intervened in to mitigate risk, but regulation and enforcement pose challenges. This mixed-methods approach can also provide a model to understand animal value chains, sanitary risks, and associated exposures in other settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Cameras on beds: The ethics of surveillance in nursing home rooms.
- Author
-
Berridge, Clara, Halpern, Jodi, and Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
NURSING care facilities , *NURSING ethics , *CONGREGATE housing , *CAMERAS , *OLDER people , *TELEVISION in security systems - Abstract
Surveillance cameras are increasingly being deployed in nursing homes and assisted living facilities, with insufficient attention to what is ethically fraught about this way of assuaging concerns about abuse and other personnel challenges. With seven state laws now regulating camera monitoring and more on the way, it is urgent for us to consider the ethical implications of how we use technology to keep older adults safe. Drawing on findings from the first facility survey on this topic, we address three ethical issues: the risk that in-room cameras pose to residents' privacy and dignity, the risk of undermining care workers' sense of being fiduciaries for residents, and the probable extension of camera use by facilities to monitor staff and residents. We argue that with an aging population, intensifying strain on the care workforce, and ease of access to Web-connected cameras, this is a critical moment to address these ethical challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Artificial intelligence in communication impacts language and social relationships.
- Author
-
Hohenstein, Jess, Kizilcec, Rene F., DiFranzo, Dominic, Aghajari, Zhila, Mieczkowski, Hannah, Levy, Karen, Naaman, Mor, Hancock, Jeffrey, and Jung, Malte F.
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SOCIAL impact , *INTERPERSONAL communication , *SOCIAL perception , *RECOMMENDER systems - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is already widely used in daily communication, but despite concerns about AI's negative effects on society the social consequences of using it to communicate remain largely unexplored. We investigate the social consequences of one of the most pervasive AI applications, algorithmic response suggestions ("smart replies"), which are used to send billions of messages each day. Two randomized experiments provide evidence that these types of algorithmic recommender systems change how people interact with and perceive one another in both pro-social and anti-social ways. We find that using algorithmic responses changes language and social relationships. More specifically, it increases communication speed, use of positive emotional language, and conversation partners evaluate each other as closer and more cooperative. However, consistent with common assumptions about the adverse effects of AI, people are evaluated more negatively if they are suspected to be using algorithmic responses. Thus, even though AI can increase the speed of communication and improve interpersonal perceptions, the prevailing anti-social connotations of AI undermine these potential benefits if used overtly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Elsewhere and Otherwise: Lévinasian Eros and Ethics in Le Clézio's La quarantaine.
- Author
-
Levy, Karen D.
- Subjects
- *
EROTICA , *METAPHYSICS , *LITERATURE , *ETHICS - Abstract
Beginning in the 1930s, Emmanuel Leávinas called into question the totalizing priorities of the Western metaphysical tradition and developed a dramatically original description of how subjectivity is constructed in the context of what he terms a face to face encounter with an absolute Other. This destabilizing experience is presented in terms of a summons that demands an ethical response in the form of unqualified moral responsibility for the well being of the Other, without any expectation of reciprocity. In a series of profoundly challenging works, Leávinas analyzes the different stages in the development of this relationship, expressed in masculine oriented terms, and he contrasts the nobility and generosity of ethics with the intimacy of eros and the welcome of the feminine in a protected domestic site. The fact that eros is based on an equivocation between need and the desire for something absolutely Other, which does not depend on any lack, prevents it from attaining the same stature as ethics. And by leaving the feminine out of his discussion of ethics, Leávinas at least downplays the possibility for feminine subjects to respond to the summons of the face to face encounter and accept the risk of living other than in the metaphysical dwelling of Being. The questions raised in Leávinas' works concerning eros, ethics, and the feminine assume different configurations and lead else- where when explored in proximity to J.M.G. Le Cleázio's emblematic saga La quarantaine. The multi-layered text of La quarantaine fictionalizes the crisis that caused Le Cleázio's great-uncle to be erased from family history and depicts the transgenerational effects of that disappearance. Le Cleázio's arrestingly beautiful prose serves as a kind of textual face that expresses concretely the complexity of Leávinas' preoccupations and summons us as readers to exceed our capacities and live otherwise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. A Qualitative Study of Food Choice in Urban Coastal Esmeraldas, Ecuador.
- Author
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Uruchima, Jessica, Renehan, Cala, Castro, Nancy, Cevallos, William, Levy, Karen, Eisenberg, Joseph NS., and Lee, Gwenyth O.
- Subjects
- *
CITY dwellers , *MOTHER-child relationship , *FOOD habits , *FOOD safety , *FOOD security , *SEMI-structured interviews , *FOOD deserts - Abstract
Background: Constraints on food choice increase risk of malnutrition worldwide. Residents of secondary cities within low- and middleincome countries are a population of particular concern because they often face high rates of food insecurity and multiple nutritional burdens. Within this context, effective and equitable interventions to support healthy diets must be based on an understanding of the lived experience of individuals and their interactions with the food environment. Objectives: The primary objectives of this study were to describe considerations that drive household decision making around food choice in the city of Esmeraldas, Ecuador; to identify trade-offs between these considerations; and to understand how an evolving urban environment influences these trade-offs. Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted with 20 mothers of young children to explore drivers in food choice throughout the purchase, preparation, and consumption chain. Interviews were transcribed and coded to identify key themes. Results: Personal preference, economic access (costs), convenience, and perceptions of food safety were key influencers of decision making related to food. In addition, concerns about personal safety in the urban environment limited physical access to food. This, combined with the need to travel long distances to obtain desirable foods, increased men's participation in food purchasing. Women's increasing engagement in the workforce also increased men's participation in food preparation. Conclusions: Policies to promote healthy food behavior in this context should focus on increasing access to health foods, such as affordable fresh produce, in convenient and physically safe locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Artificial intelligence in communication impacts language and social relationships.
- Author
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Hohenstein, Jess, Kizilcec, Rene F., DiFranzo, Dominic, Aghajari, Zhila, Mieczkowski, Hannah, Levy, Karen, Naaman, Mor, Hancock, Jeffrey, and Jung, Malte F.
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SOCIAL impact , *INTERPERSONAL communication , *SOCIAL perception , *RECOMMENDER systems - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is already widely used in daily communication, but despite concerns about AI's negative effects on society the social consequences of using it to communicate remain largely unexplored. We investigate the social consequences of one of the most pervasive AI applications, algorithmic response suggestions ("smart replies"), which are used to send billions of messages each day. Two randomized experiments provide evidence that these types of algorithmic recommender systems change how people interact with and perceive one another in both pro-social and anti-social ways. We find that using algorithmic responses changes language and social relationships. More specifically, it increases communication speed, use of positive emotional language, and conversation partners evaluate each other as closer and more cooperative. However, consistent with common assumptions about the adverse effects of AI, people are evaluated more negatively if they are suspected to be using algorithmic responses. Thus, even though AI can increase the speed of communication and improve interpersonal perceptions, the prevailing anti-social connotations of AI undermine these potential benefits if used overtly. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Effects of chronic exposure to arsenic on the fecal carriage of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli among people in rural Bangladesh.
- Author
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Amin, Mohammed Badrul, Talukdar, Prabhat Kumar, Asaduzzaman, Muhammad, Roy, Subarna, Flatgard, Brandon M., Islam, Md. Rayhanul, Saha, Sumita Rani, Mahmud, Zahid Hayat, Navab-Daneshmand, Tala, Kile, Molly L., Levy, Karen, Julian, Timothy R., and Islam, Mohammad Aminul
- Subjects
- *
ARSENIC , *CONTAMINATION of drinking water , *HEAVY elements , *ANTIBIOTIC overuse , *DRUG resistance in bacteria , *ESCHERICHIA coli - Abstract
Antibiotic resistance is a leading cause of hospitalization and death worldwide. Heavy metals such as arsenic have been shown to drive co-selection of antibiotic resistance, suggesting arsenic-contaminated drinking water is a risk factor for antibiotic resistance carriage. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and abundance of antibiotic-resistant Escherichia coli (AR-Ec) among people and drinking water in high (Hajiganj, >100 μg/L) and low arsenic-contaminated (Matlab, <20 μg/L) areas in Bangladesh. Drinking water and stool from mothers and their children (<1 year) were collected from 50 households per area. AR-Ec was detected via selective culture plating and isolates were tested for antibiotic resistance, arsenic resistance, and diarrheagenic genes by PCR. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) analysis was done for 30 E. coli isolates from 10 households. Prevalence of AR-Ec was significantly higher in water in Hajiganj (48%) compared to water in Matlab (22%, p <0.05) and among children in Hajiganj (94%) compared to children in Matlab (76%, p <0.05), but not among mothers. A significantly higher proportion of E. coli isolates from Hajiganj were multidrug-resistant (83%) compared to isolates from Matlab (71%, p <0.05). Co-resistance to arsenic and multiple antibiotics (MAR index >0.2) was observed in a higher proportion of water (78%) and child stool (100%) isolates in Hajiganj than in water (57%) and children (89%) in Matlab (p <0.05). The odds of arsenic-resistant bacteria being resistant to third-generation cephalosporin antibiotics were higher compared to arsenic-sensitive bacteria (odds ratios, OR 1.2–7.0, p <0.01). WGS-based phylogenetic analysis of E. coli isolates did not reveal any clustering based on arsenic exposure and no significant difference in resistome was found among the isolates between the two areas. The positive association detected between arsenic exposure and antibiotic resistance carriage among children in arsenic-affected areas in Bangladesh is an important public health concern that warrants redoubling efforts to reduce arsenic exposure. Author summary: Antibiotic resistance is one of the leading causes of death and hospitalization worldwide. While the major drivers of antibiotic resistance are the overuse and misuse of antibiotics, natural elements such as heavy metals can also promote antibiotic resistance. In this observational study, we investigated the prevalence and abundance of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in drinking water samples and among mothers and children from the same households in two rural areas of Bangladesh with high and low levels of arsenic contamination in drinking water. We found that the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant E. coli was significantly higher in water and among children in high arsenic-contaminated areas compared to the low arsenic-contaminated areas. We also found that a higher proportion of E. coli isolates from the high arsenic area were resistant to multiple antibiotics including penicillin, cephalosporin, and chloramphenicol. Arsenic-resistant bacteria are more likely to be resistant to certain groups of antibiotics, including third-generation cephalosporins. Overall, this study suggests that arsenic exposure could be an important risk factor for the carriage of antibiotic-resistant organisms which needs to be taken into consideration when designing community-based interventions to combat antimicrobial resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. CLEAN WATER WATCHERS.
- Author
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Levy, Karen
- Subjects
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WATER conservation , *WATER quality management , *WATERWAYS - Abstract
Reports on the organizations that launched a campaign to protect United States' waterways. When the movement of dedicated water activists began; Principle of water monitor operation; Contact information of the groups.
- Published
- 2001
50. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Global Seasonality of Norovirus.
- Author
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Ahmed, Sharia M., Lopman, Benjamin A., and Levy, Karen
- Subjects
- *
GASTROENTERITIS , *NOROVIRUS diseases , *SEASONAL physiological variations , *ETIOLOGY of diseases , *GENETIC polymorphisms , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *META-analysis , *MICROORGANISMS - Abstract
Background: Noroviruses are the most common cause of acute gastroenteritis across all ages worldwide. These pathogens are generally understood to exhibit a wintertime seasonality, though a systematic assessment of seasonal patterns has not been conducted in the era of modern diagnostics. Methods: We conducted a systematic review of the Pubmed Medline database for articles published between 1997 and 2011 to identify and extract data from articles reporting on monthly counts of norovirus. We conducted a descriptive analysis to document seasonal patterns of norovirus disease, and we also constructed multivariate linear models to identify factors associated with the strength of norovirus seasonality. Results: The searched identified 293 unique articles, yielding 38 case and 29 outbreak data series. Within these data series, 52.7% of cases and 41.2% of outbreaks occurred in winter months, and 78.9% of cases and 71.0% of outbreaks occurred in cool months. Both case and outbreak studies showed an earlier peak in season-year 2002-03, but not in season-year 2006-07, years when new genogroup II type 4 variants emerged. For outbreaks, norovirus season strength was positively associated with average rainfall in the wettest month, and inversely associated with crude birth rate in both bivariate and multivariate analyses. For cases, none of the covariates examined was associated with season strength. When case and outbreaks were combined, average rainfall in the wettest month was positively associated with season strength. Conclusions: Norovirus is a wintertime phenomenon, at least in the temperate northern hemisphere where most data are available. Our results point to possible associations of season strength with rain in the wettest month and crude birth rate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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