1,149 results
Search Results
2. Systematic Review of the Impacts of U.S. Social Safety Nets on Child Maltreatment.
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Palermo, Tia, Logan-Greene, Patricia, Lima, Sarah M., Grooms, Kaley, and Lillvis, Denise
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POOR children , *CHILD abuse , *BURDEN of care , *FOOD security , *BASIC needs - Abstract
Children living in poverty are at an increased risk for maltreatment. Social safety net (SSN) programs with antipoverty objectives may reduce child maltreatment through pathways such as reduced food insecurity, lessened caregiver stress, and improved caregiving behaviors and ability to meet children's basic needs. The objective of this study is to conduct a systematic review of evidence on the ability of SSN programs to reduce child maltreatment in the United States (U.S.). This systematic review was conducted using PRISMA protocol. Among studies published between 1996–2022, the initial search returned 1,873 articles, and 27 papers were included in the final analysis. Abstracts were identified primarily on June 24th, 2022, and extraction and synthesis of data was conducted in 2022–2023. Of the 27 papers assessed, 16 studies found that SSN programs were protective against child maltreatment. Three of the reviewed studies found no effect of safety net programs, 4 studies presented mixed findings, and 4 studies found adverse impacts in terms of child maltreatment outcomes. When restricting to high-quality studies only, 10 out of 12 found protective impacts and none found adverse impacts on child maltreatment. SSNs are associated with protective effects against child maltreatment. Expansion of SSN programs would likely have positive benefits beyond poverty-related objectives, including reducing incidence of child maltreatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Implementing preventive services. Based on papers prepared for the International Symposium on Preventive Services in Primary Care: Issues and Strategies. L'Esterel, Quebec, Canada, October 4-7, 1987.
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- Humans, Preventive Health Services organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration
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- 1988
4. Screening for tuberculosis among orphans in a developing country 2 <FN ID="FN1"><NO>2</NO><B>BEST PAPER IN PREVENTIVE MEDICINE BY A MEDICAL STUDENT Judith Francis, BS, Alison Reed, BA, Fitsum Yohannes, BS—Award Winners</B></FN> 3 <FN ID="FN2"><NO>3</NO>This paper is the award winner for this year’s annual competition for the “Best Paper in Preventive Medicine by a Medical Student.” Since its inception in 1992, this award has been co-sponsored by the American College of Preventive Medicine, the Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine, the Association of American Medical Colleges, and the Ulrich and Ruth Frank Foundation for International Health. The monetary prize for the best paper is $1000.Anyone interested in learning more about this award should contact: Erica Frank, MD, MPH, President and Founder of the Ulrich and Ruth Frank Foundation, c/o Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, 69 Butler Street, Atlanta GA 30303-3219; telephone: (404) 616-5603; fax: (404) 616-6847; E-mail: efrank@fpm.eusch.org.</FN>
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Francis, Judith, Reed, Alison, Yohannes, Fitsum, Dodard, Michel, and Fournier, Arthur M.
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TUBERCULOSIS prevention - Abstract
Background: There has been a recent resurgence of tuberculosis (TB) as a worldwide public health concern. It is a well-documented health problem in Haiti, where the reported prevalence is 123.9 per 100,000 population. While the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and World Health Organization (WHO) policy papers for the eradication of TB recommend screening in shelters, prisons, and other congregate-living facilities, screening in institutional orphanages is not specifically mentioned.Methods: A total of 445 orphans with no documentation of Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine at six orphanages representing urban, suburban, and rural Haiti were screened for TB using standardized purified protein derivative (PPD). An inoculum of 0.1 cc was introduced intradermally, with site checks for induration at 48-72 hours after inoculation. Induration >5 mm was recorded as positive. Active cases of TB were defined by symptoms such as fever, night sweats, cough greater than 1 month, or signs of extrapulmonary TB (like scrofula or Pott's disease).Results: The number of positive PPD tests was 170 of the 445 children tested, or 38,202 per 100,000; there were 10 active cases. The overall prevalence of tuberculin positivity in the three orphanages with one or more active cases was 44%, compared to 13% in the three with no identified active cases.Conclusions: The data indicate that TB prevalence among the orphans screened was 1123 per 100,000. This is substantially greater than that reported for the general Haitian population. These data thus suggest children living in orphanages as a previously unidentified high-risk group for TB infection. Further investigation of TB is recommended for orphans in developing countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2002
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5. Breast and Cervical Cancer Screenings: A Systematic Economic Review of Patient Navigation Services.
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Chattopadhyay, Sajal K., Pillai, Akash, Reynolds, Jeffrey, Jacob, Verughese, Ekwueme, Donatus, Peng, Yinan, and Cuellar, Alison E.
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QUALITY-adjusted life years , *EARLY detection of cancer , *BREAST cancer , *CERVICAL cancer , *HIGH-income countries - Abstract
This paper examined the economic evidence of patient navigation services to increase breast and cervical cancer screenings among historically disadvantaged racial and ethnic populations and people with lower incomes. The literature search strategy for this systematic review included English-language studies conducted in high-income countries that were published from database inception to December 2022. Studies on patients with existing cancer or without healthcare system involvement were excluded. Analysis was completed in January 2023. All monetary values reported are in 2022 U.S. dollars. The search yielded 3 breast cancer, 2 cervical cancer, and 2 multiple cancer studies that combined breast and cervical cancer with other cancer screenings. For breast cancer screening, the intervention cost per person ranged from $109 to $10,245. Two studies reported $154 and $740 as intervention cost per additional person screened. Changes in healthcare cost per person from 2 studies were $202 and $2,437. Two studies reported cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained of $3,852 and $39,159 while one study reported cost per life year (LY) gained of $22,889. For cervical cancer, 2 studies reported intervention cost per person ($103 and $794) and per additional person screened ($56 and $533) with one study reporting a cost per QALY gained ($924). All estimates of cost per QALY/LY saved for breast cancer screening were below a conservative threshold of $50,000 indicating that patient navigation services for breast cancer screening were cost-effective. There is limited evidence to determine cost-effectiveness of patient navigation services for cervical cancer screening. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Community Guide Methods for Systematic Reviews of Economic Evidence.
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Chattopadhyay, Sajal K., Jacob, Verughese, Hopkins, David P., Lansky, Amy, Elder, Randy, Cuellar, Alison E., Calonge, Ned, and Clymer, John M.
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COMMUNITIES , *EVIDENCE gaps , *TASK forces , *PATIENT compliance , *COMMUNITY services - Abstract
Community Guide systematic economic reviews provide information on the cost, economic benefit, cost-benefit, and cost-effectiveness of public health interventions recommended by the Community Preventive Services Task Force on the basis of evidence of effectiveness. The number and variety of economic evaluation studies in public health have grown substantially over time, contributing to methodologic challenges that required updates to the methods for Community Guide systematic economic reviews. This paper describes these updated methods. The 9-step Community Guide economic review process includes prioritization of topic, creation of a coordination team, conceptualization of review, literature search, screening studies for inclusion, abstraction of studies, analysis of results, translation of evidence to Community Preventive Services Task Force economic findings, and dissemination of findings and evidence gaps. The methods applied in each of these steps are reported in this paper. Two published Community Guide reviews, tailored pharmacy-based interventions to improve adherence to medications for cardiovascular disease and permanent supportive housing with housing first to prevent homelessness, are used to illustrate the application of the updated methods. The Community Preventive Services Task Force reached a finding of cost-effectiveness for the first intervention and a finding of favorable cost-benefit for the second on the basis of results from the economic reviews. The updated Community Guide economic systematic review methods provide transparency and improve the reliability of estimates that are used to derive a Community Preventive Services Task Force economic finding. This may in turn augment the utility of Community Guide economic reviews for communities making decisions about allocating limited resources to effective programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. Interventions for Preventing E-Cigarette Use Among Children and Youth: A Systematic Review.
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Mylocopos, Genevieve, Wennberg, Erica, Reiter, Anna, Hébert-Losier, Andréa, Filion, Kristian B., Windle, Sarah B., Gore, Genevieve, O'Loughlin, Jennifer L., Grad, Roland, and Eisenberg, Mark J.
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ELECTRONIC cigarettes , *TOBACCO products , *ANTI-smoking campaigns , *TEXT messages , *CINAHL database , *INTERACTIVE videos , *EXERCISE video games - Abstract
Many nonregulatory interventions targeting children and youth have been implemented at three levels: directed at the individual (e.g., interactive video games), delivered to students at school (e.g., campus bans), and launched in the community (e.g., mass media campaigns). This systematic review aims to synthesize the evidence on the effectiveness of interventions aimed at preventing e-cigarette initiation among children and youth. MEDLINE, CINAHL, Embase, APA PsycINFO, and Web of Science Core Collection were searched for papers published between January 1, 2004 and September 1, 2022 that reported more than one outcome on vaping prevention among individuals aged less than 21-years-old: vaping prevalence/incidence, initiation intentions, knowledge/attitudes, and other tobacco product use prevalence/initiation intentions. Interventions were at the individual, school, or community level. The risk of bias was assessed using ROBINS-I and RoB 1. Thirty-nine publications met the eligibility criteria. Fourteen individually-based (4 parental monitoring, 3 video games, 2 text messages, 3 graphic message themes, 2 healthcare), 19 school-based (14 educational and skill interventions, 5 vape-free policies/bans), and 6 community-based (3 social media, 3 mass media campaigns) interventions were reported. E-cigarette initiation prevention was observed with high perceived parental monitoring; however, the cross-sectional study designs precluded causal claims. There was promising but limited evidence that social-emotional skills curricula and peer leader programming prevented vaping initiation. Some individual- and school-based interventions showed promise for preventing e-cigarette initiation among children and youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Economics of Team-Based Care for Blood Pressure Control: Updated Community Guide Systematic Review.
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Jacob, Verughese, Reynolds, Jeffrey A., Chattopadhyay, Sajal K., Nowak, Keith, Hopkins, David P., Fulmer, Erika, Bhatt, Ami N., Therrien, Nicole L., Cuellar, Alison E., Kottke, Thomas E., Clymer, John M., and Rask, Kimberly J.
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BLOOD pressure , *HIGH-income countries , *QUALITY-adjusted life years , *HYPERTENSION , *U.S. dollar - Abstract
This paper examined the recent evidence from economic evaluations of team-based care for controlling high blood pressure. The search covered studies published from January 2011 through January 2021 and was limited to those based in the U.S. and other high-income countries. This yielded 35 studies: 23 based in the U.S. and 12 based in other high-income countries. Analyses were conducted from May 2021 through February 2023. All monetary values reported are in 2020 U.S. dollars. The median intervention cost per patient per year was $438 for U.S. studies and $299 for all studies. The median change in healthcare cost per patient per year after the intervention was −$140 for both U.S. studies and for all studies. The median net cost per patient per year was $439 for U.S. studies and $133 for all studies. The median cost per quality-adjusted life year gained was $12,897 for U.S. studies and $15,202 for all studies, which are below a conservative benchmark of $50,000 for cost-effectiveness. Intervention cost and net cost were higher in the U.S. than in other high-income countries. Healthcare cost averted did not exceed intervention cost in most studies. The evidence shows that team-based care for blood pressure control is cost-effective, reaffirming the favorable cost-effectiveness conclusion reached in the 2015 systematic review. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. The Leading Causes of Death in Children and Adolescents in Brazil, 2000–2020.
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Degli Esposti, Michelle, Coll, Carolina V.N., Murray, Joseph, Carter, Patrick M., and Goldstick, Jason E.
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CHILD mortality , *EARLY death , *CHILD death , *TEENAGERS , *CAUSES of death - Abstract
Despite promising reductions in mortality from infectious diseases, premature death is a still major public health problem in Brazil. However, little is known about which diseases and injury mechanisms are the main causes of premature death. This paper aimed to detail the trends in leading causes of death among children and adolescents in Brazil. Data were extracted from medical death certificates from the Brazilian Mortality Information System for children and adolescents aged 1–19 years for 2000–2020. The 10 leading causes of death for children and adolescents were defined using primary cause of death codes, grouped by death for diseases and mechanism for injury, according to the ICD-10. All analyses were completed in 2022. From 2000 through 2020, there was a total of 772,729 child and adolescent deaths in Brazil. Despite an overall 34% reduction in child and adolescent mortality from 2000 to 2020, improvements were less pronounced for injury-related deaths than for communicable diseases. Therefore, by 2020, over half of deaths were from injury-related causes. Firearm-related injury was by far the leading cause, accounting for 21% of all deaths. There was a 38% reduction in firearm deaths in the last 4 years against a previously increasing trend, and homicide accounted for over 90% of all firearm deaths because suicide by firearm was rare. Injury-related deaths among children and adolescents are a growing concern in Brazil, and firearms are the current leading cause of child and adolescent death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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10. Systematic Review of Self-Measured Blood Pressure Monitoring With Support: Intervention Effectiveness and Cost.
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Shantharam, Sharada S., Mahalingam, Mallika, Rasool, Aysha, Reynolds, Jeffrey A., Bhuiya, Aunima R., Satchell, Tyra D., Chapel, John M., Hawkins, Nikki A., Jones, Christopher D., Jacob, Verughese, and Hopkins, David P.
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BLOOD pressure , *COST effectiveness , *DRUG efficacy , *DATABASE searching , *KIDNEY diseases , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *COST benefit analysis , *RESEARCH funding , *BLOOD pressure measurement - Abstract
Introduction: Self-measured blood pressure monitoring with support is an evidence-based intervention that helps patients control their blood pressure. This systematic economic review describes how certain intervention aspects contribute to effectiveness, intervention cost, and intervention cost per unit of the effectiveness of self-measured blood pressure monitoring with support.Methods: Papers published between data inception and March 2021 were identified from a database search and manual searches. Papers were included if they focused on self-measured blood pressure monitoring with support and reported blood pressure change and intervention cost. Papers focused on preeclampsia, kidney disease, or drug efficacy were excluded. Quality of estimates was assessed for effectiveness, cost, and cost per unit of effectiveness. Patient characteristics and intervention features were analyzed in 2021 to determine how they impacted effectiveness, intervention cost, and intervention cost per unit of effectiveness.Results: A total of 22 studies were included in this review from papers identified in the search. Type of support was not associated with differences in cost and cost per unit of effectiveness. Lower cost and cost per unit of effectiveness were achieved with simple technologies such as interactive phone systems, smartphones, and websites and where providers interacted with patients only as needed.Discussion: Some of the included studies provided only limited information on key outcomes of interest to this review. However, the strength of this review is the systematic collection and synthesis of evidence that revealed the associations between the characteristics of implemented interventions and their patients and the interventions' effectiveness and cost, a useful contribution to the fields of both research and implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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11. Social Risk Screening and Response Equity: Assessment by Race, Ethnicity, and Language in Community Health Centers
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Torres, Cristina I. Huebner, Gold, Rachel, Kaufmann, Jorge, Marino, Miguel, Hoopes, Megan J., Totman, Molly S., Aceves, Benjamín, and Gottlieb, Laura M.
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- 2023
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12. The Influence of Social Determinants on Cancer Screening in a Medicaid Sample
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Markus, Anne R., Li, Yixuan, Wilder, Marceé E., Catalanotti, Jillian, and McCarthy, Melissa L.
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- 2023
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13. The HIV Treat Pillar: An Update and Summary of Promising Approaches.
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Benbow, Nanette D., Mokotoff, Eve D., Dombrowski, Julia C., Wohl, Amy R., and Scheer, Susan
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HIV , *HOMELESS persons , *VIRAL load , *NEEDLE exchange programs , *HOSPITALS , *CONTINUUM of care , *HIV infection epidemiology , *HIV infections , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *HUMAN sexuality , *IMPACT of Event Scale , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
The Treat pillar of the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. plan calls for comprehensive strategies to enhance linkage to, and engagement in, HIV medical care to improve viral suppression among people with HIV and achieve the goal of 95% viral suppression by 2025. The U.S. has seen large increases in the proportion of people with HIV who have a suppressed viral load. Viral suppression has increased 41%, from 46% in 2010 to 65% in 2018. An additional increase of 46% is needed to meet the Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. goal. The rate of viral suppression among those in care increased to 85% in 2018, highlighting the need to ensure sustained care for people with HIV. Greater increases in all steps along the HIV care continuum are needed for those disproportionately impacted by HIV, especially the young, sexual and racial/ethnic minorities, people experiencing homelessness, and people who inject drugs. Informed by systematic reviews and current research findings, this paper describes more recent promising practices that suggest an impact on HIV care outcomes. It highlights rapid linkage and treatment interventions; interventions that identify and re-engage people in HIV care through new collaborations among health departments, providers, and hospital systems; coordinated care and low-barrier clinic models; and telemedicine-delivered HIV care approaches. The interventions presented in this paper provide additional approaches that state and local jurisdictions can use to reach their local HIV elimination plans' goals and the ambitious Ending the HIV Epidemic in the U.S. Treat pillar targets by 2030. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Work Requirements and Emergency Food Assistance Usage.
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Cuffey, Joel M., Katare, Bhagyashree, and McMahon Fulford, Laura
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ASSISTANCE in emergencies , *NUTRITION services , *FOOD relief , *FOOD security - Abstract
Policymakers have suggested and implemented work requirements for safety-net programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). If these work requirements impact program participation, they may lead to greater food insecurity. This paper investigates the effects of implementing the work requirement for the SNAP on emergency food assistance usage. Data were used from a cohort of food pantries in Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi, which imposed the SNAP work requirement in 2016. Event study models were run in 2022, leveraging geographic variation in exposure to the work requirement to measure changes in the number of households served by the food pantries. The 2016 introduction of the SNAP work requirement increased the number of households served by food pantries. The impact is concentrated among urban food pantries. On average, an urban agency exposed to the work requirement served 34% more households in the 8 months after the work requirement than an agency with no exposure. Individuals who lose SNAP eligibility owing to the work requirement remain in need of assistance and seek other sources of food. SNAP work requirements thus increase the burden on emergency food assistance programs. Work requirements for other programs may also lead to increased emergency food assistance use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Meeting the Healthy People 2030 Added Sugars Target.
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Stowe, Ellen W., Moore, Latetia V., Hamner, Heather C., Park, Sohyun, Gunn, Janelle P., Juan, WenYen, Kantor, Mark A., and Galuska, Deborah A.
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HEALTH & Nutrition Examination Survey , *SUGARS - Abstract
Many Americans exceed the dietary recommendations for added sugars. Healthy People 2030 set a population target mean of 11.5% calories from added sugars for persons aged ≥2 years. This paper describes the reductions needed in population groups with varying added sugars intake to meet this target using four different public health approaches. Data from the 2015–2018 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (n =15,038) and the National Cancer Institute method were used to estimate the usual percentage calories from added sugars. Four approaches investigated lowering intake among (1) the general U.S. population, (2) people exceeding the 2020–2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommendation for added sugars (≥10% calories/day), (3) high consumers of added sugars (≥15% calories/day), or (4) people exceeding the Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommendation for added sugars with two different reductions on the basis of added sugars intake. Added sugars intake was examined before and after reduction by sociodemographic characteristics. To meet the Healthy People 2030 target using the 4 approaches, added sugars intake needs to decrease by an average of (1) 13.7 calories/day for the general population; (2) 22.0 calories/day for people exceeding the Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommendation; (3) 56.6 calories/day for high consumers; or (4) 13.9 and 32.3 calories/day for people consuming 10 to <15% and ≥15% calories from added sugars, respectively. Differences in added sugars intake were observed before and after reduction by race/ethnicity, age, and income. The Healthy People 2030 added sugars target is achievable with modest reductions in added sugars intake, ranging from 14 to 57 calories/day depending on the approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Summary and Concluding Remarks: Patterns of Birth Cohort‒Specific Smoking Histories.
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Levy, David T., Tam, Jamie, Jeon, Jihyoun, Holford, Theodore R., Fleischer, Nancy L., and Meza, Rafael
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INCOME , *SMOKING , *RACE , *MIDDLE-income countries , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
The Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET) Lung Working Group age-period-cohort methodology to study smoking patterns can be applied to tackle important issues in tobacco control and public health. This paper summarizes the analyses of smoking patterns in the U.S. by race/ethnicity, educational attainment, and family income and for each of the 50 U.S. states using the CISNET Lung Working Group age-period-cohort approach. We describe how decision makers, policy advocates, and researchers can use the sociodemographic analyses in this supplement to project state smoking trends and develop effective state-level tobacco control strategies. The all-cause mortality RR estimates associated with smoking for U.S. race/ethnicity and education groups are also discussed in the context of research that measures and evaluates health disparities. Finally, the application of the CISNET Lung Working Group age-period-cohort methodology to Brazil is reviewed with a view to how the same types of analyses can be applied to other low- and middle-income countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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17. Impact of an Urban Project ECHO: Safety-Net Clinician Self-Efficacy Across Conditions.
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Tilmon, Sandra J., Lee, Karen K., Gower, Patrick A., West, Kathryn S.H., Mittal, Kanika, Ogle, Marielle B., Rodriguez, Isa M., and Johnson, Daniel
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SAFETY-net health care providers , *MEDICAL personnel , *COMMUNITIES , *STATISTICAL significance , *PRIMARY care - Abstract
To mitigate the lack of specialty healthcare, Project ECHO (Extension for Community Health Outcomes) trains community-based primary care clinicians to better prevent the progression of, manage, and treat common health conditions. ECHO-Chicago launched in 2010 as the first urban-centered ECHO program, focusing on safety-net clinicians, and has trained over 5,175 community clinicians across 34 topic areas. This paper examines self-efficacy among ECHO-Chicago participants across 11 clinical series, including a novel use of qualitative themes from self-efficacy questions. Five years of baseline and postseries survey data were collected from 2014 to 2019, resulting in 951 participants. Paired t -tests assessed change from baseline survey to postsurvey, and Cohen's d determined effect size. Change was assessed by individual series, adult or pediatric focus, participants' prescription privilege status, and across series by qualitative question theme. Metrics included total change, any improvement, a 10% target, and a clinical competency threshold. Analysis occurred from July 2020 to January 2022. All clinical series achieved statistically significant improvement in self-efficacy, and most had a large effect size. A total of 88% had any improvement, 65% met the 10% target of 0.7 points, and 52% met the competency threshold of 5.0 in the postsurvey. Prescribers had a significantly greater increase in their self-efficacy scores than nonprescribers. With a comparison across series, each theme achieved statistical significance, with most reaching large effect sizes. ECHO-Chicago successfully increased participants' self-efficacy. This inquiry adds an urban focus, years of data, multiple series, and a novel qualitative theme component to enable comparisons across rather than solely within the ECHO series. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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18. Effectiveness of Minimal Contact Interventions: An RCT.
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Hajna, Samantha, Sharp, Stephen J, Cooper, Andrew J M, Williams, Kate M, van Sluijs, Esther M F, Brage, Soren, Griffin, Simon J, and Sutton, Stephen
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ENERGY metabolism , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *EXERCISE - Abstract
Introduction: Around 23% of adults worldwide are insufficiently active. Wearable devices paired with virtual coaching software could increase physical activity. The effectiveness of 3 minimal contact interventions (paper-based physical activity diaries, activity trackers, and activity trackers coupled with virtual coaching) in increasing physical activity energy expenditure and cardiorespiratory fitness were compared over 12 weeks among inactive adults.Methods: This was an open label, parallel-group RCT. Inactive adults (aged ≥18 years, N=488) were randomized to no intervention (Control; n=121), paper-based diary (Diary; n=124), activity tracker (Activity Band; n=122), or activity tracker plus virtual coaching (Activity Band PLUS; n=121) groups. Coprimary outcomes included 12-week changes in physical activity energy expenditure and fitness (May 2012-January 2014). Analyses were conducted in 2019-2020.Results: There were no differences between groups overall (physical activity energy expenditure: p=0.114, fitness: p=0.417). However, there was a greater increase in physical activity energy expenditure (4.21 kJ/kg/day, 95% CI=0.42, 8.00) in the Activity Band PLUS group than in the Diary group. There were also greater decreases in BMI and body fat percentage in the Activity Band PLUS group than in the Control group (BMI= -0.24 kg/m2, 95% CI= -0.45, -0.03; body fat= -0.48%, 95% CI= -0.88, -0.08) and in theActivity Band PLUS group than in the Diary group (BMI= -0.30 kg/m2, 95% CI= -0.50, -0.09; body fat= -0.57%, 95% CI= -0.97, -0.17).Conclusions: Coupling activity trackers with virtual coaching may facilitate increases in physical activity energy expenditure compared with a traditional paper‒based physical activity diary intervention and improve some secondary outcomes compared with a traditional paper‒based physical activity diary intervention or no intervention.Trial Registration: This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov ISRCTN31844443. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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19. Food Insecurity Transitions and Changes in Employment and Earnings.
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Mabli, James, Monzella, Kelley, Franckle, Rebecca L., and Delgado, Patrick Lavallee
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EMPLOYMENT changes , *EMPLOYEE training , *FOOD security , *CORPORATE profits , *LAYOFFS - Abstract
Introduction: Many low-income U.S. households experience food security changes over time, but little is known about how labor market transitions contribute to these changes. This paper uses longitudinal survey data collected from 2017 to 2020 to explore how changes in employment and earnings are associated with changes in food security status.Methods: Analyses were conducted in the spring of 2022 and include nearly 3,500 individuals who participated in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Employment and Training program. Individuals responded to surveys at 2 points in time-12 months and 36 months after study enrollment-which asked for employment, earnings, and food security information. Logistic regression models were used to estimate the associations between food security transitions and employment and earnings changes. Analyses also were conducted to assess whether these associations differed on the basis of individuals' previous employment and earnings volatility.Results: Individuals who experienced a job loss 2 months before the second survey interview had higher odds of becoming food insecure (OR=2.67; 95% CI=1.24, 5.75); those who experienced an earnings reduction in the month before the interview also had higher odds of becoming food insecure (OR=1.89; 95% CI=1.03, 3.47). The association between experiencing a job loss and becoming food insecure was greater among those who had experienced past earnings changes. There were no statistically significant associations between changes in earnings and employment and the likelihood of becoming food secure.Conclusions: Employment losses and earnings reductions are associated with becoming food insecure among Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Employment and Training participants. Providing additional support to individuals who experience these losses and reductions may reduce their risk of becoming food insecure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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20. Oral Nicotine Product Awareness and Use Among People Who Smoke and Vape in the U.S.
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Felicione, Nicholas J., Schneller, Liane M., Goniewicz, Maciej L., Hyland, Andrew J., Cummings, K. Michael, Bansal-Travers, Maansi, Fong, Geoffrey T., and O'Connor, Richard J.
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NICOTINE , *SMOKELESS tobacco , *SMOKING cessation , *TOBACCO products , *TOBACCO use , *CROSS-sectional method , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco-free oral nicotine products are an emerging class of noncombustible nicotine products. Oral nicotine product sales have increased since 2016, although little research has investigated consumer awareness, use, or correlates of oral nicotine product use. The purpose of this analysis was to assess the prevalence and correlates of oral nicotine product awareness and use.Methods: This paper is a cross-sectional analysis of 2,507 U.S. participants from Wave 3 (February-June 2020) of the International Tobacco Control Four Country Smoking and Vaping Survey, a population-based survey of current and former cigarette smokers and nicotine vaping product users in the U.S. Oral nicotine product awareness and use prevalence were compared with those of heated tobacco products. Analyses conducted in late 2021 assessed the correlates of oral nicotine product awareness and use such as demographic characteristics, tobacco use (cigarettes, nicotine vaping products, smokeless tobacco), and tobacco quit attempts.Results: Almost 1 in 5 respondents claimed to have heard of oral nicotine products, 3.0% reported ever use, and 0.9% were current users, all of which were lower than for heated tobacco products. Ever use of oral nicotine products was more common among younger adults (e.g., aged 18-24 years), males, and current users of smokeless tobacco. Oral nicotine product prevalence was higher among those who reported having made attempts to stop smoking or vaping.Conclusions: Oral nicotine product use was low among current and former smokers and nicotine vaping product users. Oral nicotine product users were demographically similar to use among individuals who smoke/vape and also use smokeless tobacco. Future studies are needed to understand emerging oral nicotine products, particularly whether they are being used as product supplements (dual use), replacements (switching), or cessation aids (quitting). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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21. Z-Score Burden Metric: A Method for Assessing Burden of Injury and Disease.
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Wolff, Catherine S., Naumann, Rebecca B., Golightly, Yvonne M., Wiebe, Douglas J., Ranapurwala, Shabbar I., and Marshall, Stephen W.
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AGE distribution , *VIOLENT deaths , *RESOURCE allocation , *DEATH rate , *WOUNDS & injuries , *HOMICIDE , *SUICIDE , *PUBLIC health surveillance , *CAUSES of death , *VIOLENCE , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Introduction: Traditional methods of summarizing burden of disease have limitations in terms of identifying communities within a population that are in need of prevention and intervention resources. This paper proposes a new method of burden assessment for use in guiding these decisions.Methods: This new method for assessing burden utilizes the sum of population-weighted age-specific z-scores. This new Z-Score Burden Metric was applied to firearm-related deaths in North Carolina counties using 2010‒2017 North Carolina Violent Death Reporting System data. The Z-Score Burden Metric consists of 4 measures describing various aspects of burden. The Z-Score Burden Metric Overall Burden Measure was compared with 2 traditional measures (unadjusted and age-adjusted death rates) for each county to assess similarities and differences in the relative burden of firearm-related death.Results: Of all 100 North Carolina counties, 73 met inclusion criteria (≥5 actual and expected deaths during the study period in each age strata). Ranking by the Overall Burden Measure produced an ordering of counties different from that of ranking by traditional measures. A total of 8 counties (11.0%) differed in burden rank by at least 10% when comparing the Overall Burden Measure with age-adjusted and unadjusted rates. All the counties with large differences between the measures were substantially burdened by firearm-related death.Conclusions: The use of the Z-Score Burden Metric provides an alternative way of measuring realized community burden of injury while still facilitating comparisons between communities with different age distributions. This method can be used for any injury or disease outcome and may help to prioritize the allocation of resources to communities suffering high burdens of injury and disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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22. Improving Diet Quality in U.S. Adults: A 30-Year Health and Economic Impact Microsimulation.
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Herman, Patricia M., Chen, Annie Yu-An, and Sturm, Roland
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VEGETARIANS , *HEALTH & Nutrition Examination Survey , *ECONOMIC impact , *DISEASE risk factors , *QUALITY-adjusted life years , *DIET , *CHRONIC diseases , *SURVEYS , *RESEARCH funding , *HEART diseases , *NUTRITION policy - Abstract
Introduction: Epidemiologic studies relating health outcomes to dietary patterns captured by diet quality indices have shown better quality scores associated with lower mortality and chronic disease incidence. However, changing chronic disease risk factors only alters population health over time, and initial diet quality systematically varies across the population by sociodemographic status. This study uses microsimulation to examine 30-year impacts of improved diet quality by sociodemographic group.Methods: Diet quality across 12 sex-, race/ethnicity-, and education-defined subgroups was estimated from the 2011-2012 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. In 2021, the Future Adults (dynamic microsimulation) Model was used to simulate population health and economic outcomes over 30 years for these subgroups and all adults. The modeled pathway was through lowering risk for heart disease by following U.S. Dietary Guidelines.Results: Diet quality varied across the sociodemographic subgroups, and half of U.S. adults had diet quality that would be classified as poor. Improving U.S. diet quality to that reported for the top 20% in 2 large health professionals' samples could reduce incidence of heart disease by 9.9% (7.6%-13.8% across the 12 sociodemographic groups) after 30 years. Year 30 would also have 37,000 fewer deaths, 694,000 more quality-adjusted life years, and healthcare cost savings of $59.6 billion (2019 U.S. dollars).Conclusions: Dynamic microsimulation enables predictions of socially important outcomes of prevention efforts, most of which are many years in the future and beyond the scope of trials. This paper estimates the 30-year population health and economic impact of poor diet quality by sociodemographic group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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23. Fall Prevention Self-Management Among Older Adults: A Systematic Review.
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Schnock, Kumiko O., P. Howard, Elizabeth, and Dykes, Patricia C.
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ACCIDENTAL fall prevention , *OLDER people , *META-analysis , *WORKS councils , *LITERATURE reviews - Abstract
Context: Adequate self-management could minimize the impact of falls in older adults. The efficacy of fall prevention self-management interventions has been widely studied, yet little is known about why some older adults engage in fall prevention self-management actions and behaviors, whereas others do not. Through a systematic review of fall prevention self-management studies, this study identified characteristics and the personal, social, and environmental factors of older adults who engage in self-management actions and behaviors.Evidence Acquisition: Medical and nursing literature related to fall prevention self-management was searched in PubMed, Embase, and CINAHL (1997-2017), and relevant publications were selected by three researchers to assess whether the papers included subject characteristics and their fall prevention self-management actions and behaviors. GRADE (Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations) was used by the researchers to assess the quality of the included studies and to determine the significance of the extracted characteristics.Evidence Synthesis: Searching literature through 2017, a total of 972 papers were identified, and 28 papers remained after removing those that did not meet inclusion criteria. Nine papers that addressed subject characteristics in relation to the study outcomes were included in a sub-analysis. The authors identified the following characteristics of older adults who participated in fall prevention self-management actions and behaviors: younger males, not living alone and with self-reported good health, having greater fear of falling and high fall prevention self-efficacy, and possessing high motivation for engagement with self-management activities.Conclusions: The systematic literature review revealed the personal characteristics of older adults who engage in fall prevention self-management actions and behaviors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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24. "The Real Cost": Reaching At-Risk Youth in a Fragmented Media Environment.
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Santiago, Suzanne, Mahoney, Caitlin, Murray, Michael P., and Benoza, Gem
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AT-risk youth , *SMOKING prevention , *ADOLESCENT smoking , *SMOKING , *DRUG administration , *PRESS - Abstract
In 2014, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration launched its first youth smoking prevention media campaign, "The Real Cost," with the goal of preventing cigarette smoking among at-risk youth aged 12–17 years in the U.S. This paper examines how the paid media strategy was developed, implemented, and refined between 2013 and 2016. Specifically, this paper discusses how research and best practices informed the media targeting strategy used to implement a multifaceted national campaign that successfully reached and influenced thousands of teens at risk for cigarette smoking. Supplement information This article is part of a supplement entitled Fifth Anniversary Retrospective of "The Real Cost," the Food and Drug Administration's Historic Youth Smoking Prevention Media Campaign, which is sponsored by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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25. Clinic-Based Programs to Prevent Repeat Teen Pregnancy: A Systematic Review.
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Frederiksen, Brittni N, Rivera, Maria I, Ahrens, Katherine A, Malcolm, Nikita M, Brittain, Anna W, Rollison, Julia M, and Moskosky, Susan B
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PREVENTION of teenage pregnancy , *CONTRACEPTION , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *FAMILY planning ,MEDICAL care for teenagers - Abstract
Context: The purpose of this paper is to synthesize and evaluate the evidence on the effectiveness of repeat teen pregnancy prevention programs offered in clinical settings.Evidence Acquisition: Multiple databases were searched for peer-reviewed articles published from January 1985 to April 2016 that included key terms related to adolescent reproductive health services. Analysis of these studies occurred in 2017. Studies were excluded if they focused solely on sexually transmitted disease/HIV prevention services, or occurred outside of a clinic setting or the U.S., Canada, Europe, Australia, or New Zealand. Inclusion and exclusion criteria further narrowed the studies to those that included information on at least one short-term (e.g., increased knowledge); medium-term (e.g., increased contraceptive use); or long-term (e.g., decreased repeat teen pregnancy) outcome, or identified contextual barriers or facilitators for providing adolescent-focused family planning services. Standardized abstraction methods and tools were used to synthesize the evidence and assess its quality. Only studies of clinic-based programs focused on repeat teen pregnancy prevention were included in this review.Evidence Synthesis: The search strategy identified 27,104 citations, 940 underwent full-text review, and 120 met the adolescent-focused family planning services inclusion criteria. Only five papers described clinic-based programs focused on repeat teen pregnancy prevention. Four studies found positive (n=2) or null (n=2) effects on repeat teen pregnancy prevention; an additional study described facilitators for helping teen mothers remain linked to services.Conclusions: This review identified clinic-based repeat teen pregnancy prevention programs and few positively affect factors that may reduce repeat teen pregnancy. Access to immediate postpartum contraception or home visiting programs may be opportunities to meet adolescents where they are and reduce repeat teen pregnancy.Theme Information: This article is part of a theme issue entitled Updating the Systematic Reviews Used to Develop the U.S. Recommendations for Providing Quality Family Planning Services, which is sponsored by the Office of Population Affairs, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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26. Building Infrastructure for Surveillance of Adverse and Positive Childhood Experiences: Integrated, Multimethod Approaches to Generate Data for Prevention Action.
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Anderson, Kayla N., Swedo, Elizabeth A., Clayton, Heather B., Niolon, Phyllis Holditch, Shelby, Daniel, and McDavid Harrison, Kathleen
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ADVERSE childhood experiences , *HEALTH equity - Abstract
Adverse and positive childhood experiences have a profound impact on lifespan health and well-being. However, their incorporation into ongoing population-based surveillance systems has been limited. This paper outlines critical steps in building a comprehensive approach to adverse and positive childhood experiences surveillance, provides examples from the Preventing Adverse Childhood Experiences: Data to Action cooperative agreement, and describes improvements needed to optimize surveillance data for action. Components of a comprehensive approach to adverse and positive childhood experiences surveillance include revisiting definitions and measurement, including generating and using uniform definitions for adverse and positive childhood experiences across data collection efforts; conducting youth-based surveillance of adverse and positive childhood experiences; using innovative methods to gather and analyze near real-time data; leveraging available data, including from administrative sources; and integrating data on community- and societal-level risk and protective factors for adverse childhood experiences, including social and health inequities such as racism and poverty, as well as policies and conditions that create healthy environments for children and families. Comprehensive surveillance data on adverse and positive childhood experiences can inform data-driven prevention and intervention efforts, including focusing prevention programming and services to populations in greatest need. Data can be used to evaluate progress in reducing the occurrence of adverse childhood experiences and bolstering the occurrence of positive childhood experiences. Through expansion and improvement in adverse and positive childhood experiences surveillance-including at federal, state, territorial, tribal, and local levels-data-driven action can reduce children's exposure to violence and other adversities and improve lifelong health and well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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27. Preventing Childhood Adversity Through Economic Support and Social Norm Strategies.
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Ottley, Phyllis G., Barranco, Lindsey S., Freire, Kimberley E., Meehan, Ashley A., Shiver, Arielle J., Lumpkin, Corey D., Gervin, Derrick W., and Holmes, Gayle M.
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ADULT child abuse victims , *EARNED income tax credit , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *SOCIAL norms , *SOCIAL support , *CHILD abuse - Abstract
Through the Essentials for Childhood program, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention funds 7 state health departments (states) to address the urgent public health problem of adverse childhood experiences and child abuse and neglect, in particular. Through interviews and document reviews, the paper highlights the early implementation of 2 primary prevention strategies from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's child abuse and neglect technical package with the greatest potential for broad public health impact to prevent adverse childhood experiences-strengthening economic supports and changing social norms. States are focused on advancing family-friendly work policies such as paid family and medical leave, livable wage policies, flexible and consistent work schedules, as well as programs and policies that strengthen household financial security such as increasing access to Earned Income Tax Credit. In addition, states are launching campaigns that focus on reframing the way people think about child abuse and neglect and who is responsible for preventing it. State-level activities such as establishing a diverse coalition of partners, program champions, and state action planning have helped to leverage and align resources needed to implement, evaluate, and sustain programs. States are working to increase awareness and commitment to multisector efforts that reduce adverse childhood experiences and promote safe, stable, nurturing relationships and environments for children. Early learning from this funding opportunity indicates that using a public health approach, states are well positioned to implement comprehensive, primary prevention strategies and approaches to ensure population-level impact for preventing child abuse and neglect and other adverse childhood experience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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28. A Theory of Change for Community-Based Systems Interventions to Prevent Obesity.
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Brown, Andrew D., Whelan, Jillian, Bolton, Kristy A., Nagorcka-Smith, Phoebe, Hayward, Joshua, Fraser, Penny, Strugnell, Claudia, Felmingham, Tiana, Nichols, Melanie, Bell, Colin, Le, Ha N.D., and Allender, Steven
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CHANGE theory , *CHILDHOOD obesity , *SYSTEMS theory , *OBESITY , *FLOW charts , *PUBLIC health , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Introduction: Applying systems science in public health trials is a recent innovation in childhood obesity prevention. This paper aims to use systems science conventions to propose a theory of change for community-based interventions aiming to build capacity and use exemplars from systems science for obesity prevention to describe how this approach works.Methods: Participants were community-based researchers. A dynamic hypothesis was created in workshops conducted in 2020 and 2021 by identifying variables critical to building community capacity for systems thinking. These were used to develop stock and flow diagrams representing individual causal relationships, feedback loops, and the overall theory of change.Results: The resultant model identified 9 stocks and 4 pairs of central balancing and reinforcing feedback loops. These represented building commitment through relationships, mutual learning, strengthening collaboration, and embedding capacity. The model is described using examples from 3 trials involving 25 communities across Victoria, Australia.Conclusions: This nonlinear and practice-based model illustrates the process of community-based obesity prevention. The model integrates >20 years of community-based intervention implementation experience, providing an overarching theory of how such interventions work to create change and prevent obesity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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29. Racial and Ethnic Disparities in COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage: The Contribution of Socioeconomic and Demographic Factors.
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Williams, Austin M., Clayton, Heather B., and Singleton, James A.
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VACCINATION coverage , *COVID-19 vaccines , *RACIAL inequality , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
Introduction: Health disparities among racial and ethnic and socioeconomic groups are pervasive, and the COVID-19 pandemic has not been an exception. This study explores the key demographic and socioeconomic factors related to racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19 vaccination coverage.Methods: Using recent (January 2021-March 2021) data on adults from the U.S. Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey, a regression-based decomposition method was used to estimate how much of the observed racial and ethnic disparities in vaccination coverage could be explained by particular socioeconomic and demographic factors (i.e., age, number of children and adults in household).Results: Demographics, socioeconomic factors, and experiencing economic hardship during the pandemic each explained a statistically significant portion of vaccination coverage disparities between non-Hispanic White and racial/ethnic minority individuals. The largest disparity was observed among people who identified as Hispanic or Latino, whose vaccination coverage was 8.0 (95% CI=7.1, 8.9) percentage points lower than that of their non-Hispanic White counterparts. Socioeconomic factors explained 4.8 (95% CI=4.3, 5.2) percentage points of this disparity, and economic hardship explained an additional 1.4 (95% CI=1.2, 1.6) percentage points.Conclusions: This paper identified the key factors related to racial and ethnic disparities in adult vaccination coverage. The variables that explained the largest portions of the disparities were age, education, employment, and income. The study findings can help to inform efforts to increase equitable vaccine access and engage various segments of the population to prevent the further exacerbation of COVID-19 health disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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30. Collaborative Modeling: Experience of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force.
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Petitti, Diana B, Lin, Jennifer S, Owens, Douglas K, Croswell, Jennifer M, and Feuer, Eric J
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Models can be valuable tools to address uncertainty, trade-offs, and preferences when trying to understand the effects of interventions. Availability of results from two or more independently developed models that examine the same question (comparative modeling) allows systematic exploration of differences between models and the effect of these differences on model findings. Guideline groups sometimes commission comparative modeling to support their recommendation process. In this commissioned collaborative modeling, modelers work with the people who are developing a recommendation or policy not only to define the questions to be addressed but ideally, work side-by-side with each other and with systematic reviewers to standardize selected inputs and incorporate selected common assumptions. This paper describes the use of commissioned collaborative modeling by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), highlighting the general challenges and opportunities encountered and specific challenges for some topics. It delineates other approaches to use modeling to support evidence-based recommendations and the many strengths of collaborative modeling compared with other approaches. Unlike systematic reviews prepared for the USPSTF, the commissioned collaborative modeling reports used by the USPSTF in making recommendations about screening have not been required to follow a common format, sometimes making it challenging to understand key model features. This paper presents a checklist developed to critically appraise commissioned collaborative modeling reports about cancer screening topics prepared for the USPSTF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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31. Pharmacist Interventions for Medication Adherence: Community Guide Economic Reviews for Cardiovascular Disease.
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Jacob, Verughese, Reynolds, Jeffrey A., Chattopadhyay, Sajal K., Hopkins, David P., Therrien, Nicole L., Jones, Christopher D., Durthaler, Jeffrey M., Rask, Kimberly J., Cuellar, Alison E., Clymer, John M., Kottke, Thomas E., and Community Preventive Services Task Force (CPSTF)
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PATIENT compliance , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors , *QUALITY-adjusted life years , *DISEASE management , *CARDIOVASCULAR disease prevention , *COST benefit analysis , *DRUGS , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Introduction: Adherence to medications for cardiovascular disease and its risk factors is less than optimal, although greater adherence to medication has been shown to reduce the risk factors for cardiovascular disease. This paper examines the economics of tailored pharmacy interventions to improve medication adherence for cardiovascular disease prevention and management.Methods: Literature from inception of databases to May 2019 was searched, yielding 29 studies for cardiovascular disease prevention and 9 studies for cardiovascular disease management. Analyses were done from June 2019 through May 2020. All monetary values are in 2019 U.S. dollars.Results: The median intervention cost per patient per year was $246 for cardiovascular disease prevention and $292 for cardiovascular disease management. The median change in healthcare cost per person per year due to the intervention was -$355 for cardiovascular disease prevention and -$2,430 for cardiovascular disease management. The median total cost per person per year was -$89 for cardiovascular disease prevention, with a median return on investment of 0.01. The median total cost per person per year for cardiovascular disease management was -$1,080, with a median return on investment of 7.52, and 6 of 7 estimates indicating reduced healthcare cost averted exceeded intervention cost. For cardiovascular disease prevention, the median cost per quality-adjusted life year gained was $11,298. There were no cost effectiveness studies for cardiovascular disease management.Discussion: The evidence shows that tailored pharmacy-based interventions to improve medication adherence are cost effective for cardiovascular disease prevention. For cardiovascular disease management, healthcare cost averted exceeds the cost of implementation for a favorable return on investment from a healthcare systems perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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32. Permanent Supportive Housing With Housing First: Findings From a Community Guide Systematic Economic Review.
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Jacob, Verughese, Chattopadhyay, Sajal K., Attipoe-Dorcoo, Sharon, Peng, Yinan, Hahn, Robert A., Finnie, Ramona, Cobb, Jamaicia, Cuellar, Alison E., Emmons, Karen M., and Remington, Patrick L.
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HOUSING , *GREY literature , *U.S. dollar , *COST effectiveness , *HOMELESSNESS , *COST benefit analysis - Abstract
Introduction: The annual economic burden of chronic homelessness in the U.S. is estimated to be as high as $3.4 billion. The Permanent Supportive Housing with Housing First (Housing First) program, implemented to address the problem, has been shown to be effective. This paper examines the economic cost and benefit of Housing First Programs.Methods: The search of peer-reviewed and gray literature from inception of databases through November 2019 yielded 20 evaluation studies of Housing First Programs, 17 from the U.S. and 3 from Canada. All analyses were conducted from March 2019 through July 2020. Monetary values are reported in 2019 U.S. dollars.Results: Evidence from studies conducted in the U.S. was separated from those conducted in Canada. The median intervention cost per person per year for U.S. studies was $16,479, and for all studies, including those from Canada, it was $16,336. The median total benefit for the U.S. studies was $18,247 per person per year, and it was $17,751 for all studies, including those from Canada. The benefit-to-cost ratio for U.S. studies was 1.80:1, and for all studies, including those from Canada, it was 1.06:1.Discussion: The evidence from this review shows that economic benefits exceed the cost of Housing First Programs in the U.S. There were too few studies to determine cost-benefit in the Canadian context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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33. Understanding and Promoting Effective Engagement With Digital Behavior Change Interventions.
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Yardley, Lucy, Spring, Bonnie J., Riper, Heleen, Morrison, Leanne G., Crane, David H., Curtis, Kristina, Merchant, Gina C., Naughton, Felix, and Blandford, Ann
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DIGITAL technology , *BEHAVIOR modification , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *MEDICAL care , *PUBLIC health , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH promotion , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *PATIENT participation - Abstract
This paper is one in a series developed through a process of expert consensus to provide an overview of questions of current importance in research into engagement with digital behavior change interventions, identifying guidance based on research to date and priority topics for future research. The first part of this paper critically reflects on current approaches to conceptualizing and measuring engagement. Next, issues relevant to promoting effective engagement are discussed, including how best to tailor to individual needs and combine digital and human support. A key conclusion with regard to conceptualizing engagement is that it is important to understand the relationship between engagement with the digital intervention and the desired behavior change. This paper argues that it may be more valuable to establish and promote "effective engagement," rather than simply more engagement, with "effective engagement" defined empirically as sufficient engagement with the intervention to achieve intended outcomes. Appraisal of the value and limitations of methods of assessing different aspects of engagement highlights the need to identify valid and efficient combinations of measures to develop and test multidimensional models of engagement. The final section of the paper reflects on how interventions can be designed to fit the user and their specific needs and context. Despite many unresolved questions posed by novel and rapidly changing technologies, there is widespread consensus that successful intervention design demands a user-centered and iterative approach to development, using mixed methods and in-depth qualitative research to progressively refine the intervention to meet user requirements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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34. Designing and Undertaking a Health Economics Study of Digital Health Interventions.
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McNamee, Paul, Murray, Elizabeth, Kelly, Michael P., Bojke, Laura, Chilcott, Jim, Fischer, Alastair, West, Robert, and Yardley, Lucy
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MEDICAL economics , *DIGITAL technology , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *MEDICAL care , *PUBLIC health , *COST effectiveness , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *HEALTH behavior , *HEALTH promotion , *RESEARCH funding , *TELECOMMUNICATION , *EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
This paper introduces and discusses key issues in the economic evaluation of digital health interventions. The purpose is to stimulate debate so that existing economic techniques may be refined or new methods developed. The paper does not seek to provide definitive guidance on appropriate methods of economic analysis for digital health interventions. This paper describes existing guides and analytic frameworks that have been suggested for the economic evaluation of healthcare interventions. Using selected examples of digital health interventions, it assesses how well existing guides and frameworks align to digital health interventions. It shows that digital health interventions may be best characterized as complex interventions in complex systems. Key features of complexity relate to intervention complexity, outcome complexity, and causal pathway complexity, with much of this driven by iterative intervention development over time and uncertainty regarding likely reach of the interventions among the relevant population. These characteristics imply that more-complex methods of economic evaluation are likely to be better able to capture fully the impact of the intervention on costs and benefits over the appropriate time horizon. This complexity includes wider measurement of costs and benefits, and a modeling framework that is able to capture dynamic interactions among the intervention, the population of interest, and the environment. The authors recommend that future research should develop and apply more-flexible modeling techniques to allow better prediction of the interdependency between interventions and important environmental influences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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35. The Pace of Technologic Change: Implications for Digital Health Behavior Intervention Research.
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Patrick, Kevin, Hekler, Eric B., Estrin, Deborah, Mohr, David C., Riper, Heleen, Crane, David, Godino, Job, and Riley, William T.
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HEALTH behavior , *MEDICAL informatics , *DIGITAL technology , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *CHRONIC diseases , *INFORMATION & communication technologies , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *HEALTH promotion , *TELECOMMUNICATION - Abstract
This paper addresses the rapid pace of change in the technologies that support digital interventions; the complexity of the health problems they aim to address; and the adaptation of scientific methods to accommodate the volume, velocity, and variety of data and interventions possible from these technologies. Information, communication, and computing technologies are now part of every societal domain and support essentially every facet of human activity. Ubiquitous computing, a vision articulated fewer than 30 years ago, has now arrived. Simultaneously, there is a global crisis in health through the combination of lifestyle and age-related chronic disease and multiple comorbidities. Computationally intensive health behavior interventions may be one of the most powerful methods to reduce the consequences of this crisis, but new methods are needed for health research and practice, and evidence is needed to support their widespread use. The challenges are many, including a reluctance to abandon timeworn theories and models of health behavior-and health interventions more broadly-that emerged in an era of self-reported data; medical models of prevention, diagnosis, and treatment; and scientific methods grounded in sparse and expensive data. There are also many challenges inherent in demonstrating that newer approaches are, indeed, effective. Potential solutions may be found in leveraging methods of research that have been shown to be successful in other domains, particularly engineering. A more "agile science" may be needed that streamlines the methods through which elements of health interventions are shown to work or not, and to more rapidly deploy and iteratively improve those that do. There is much to do to advance the issues discussed in this paper, and the papers in this theme issue. It remains an open question whether interventions based in these new models and methods are, in fact, equally if not more efficacious as what is available currently. Economic analyses of these new approaches are needed because assumptions of net worth compared to other approaches are just that, assumptions. Human-centered design research is needed to ensure that users ultimately benefit. Finally, a translational research agenda will be needed, as the status quo will likely be resistant to change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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36. Sources of Missing Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Data in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
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Jesdale, Bill M.
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GENDER identity , *SEXUAL orientation , *EXIT interviewing - Abstract
Introduction: This paper describes the sources, magnitude, and correlates of missing data in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module.Methods: Missing data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module fielded from 2014 to 2019 were ascribed to 4 sources: the optional nature of the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module, out-of-state cell phone respondents, interview termination, and item nonresponse. The prevalence of missingness from these 4 sources was examined in relation to sociodemographic factors and survey process factors. Data were analyzed in 2018-2020.Results: From 2014 to 2019, of 2,698,738 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System respondents, 1,330,025 (44.8%, weighted) were in states that did not administer the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module. Among 723,301 cell phone interviews in states administering the module, 12.5% (weighted) were out of state. Among 1,316,174 otherwise potential respondents, 9.4% (weighted) terminated the interview before Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module administration. Among 1,205,177 administered the module, item-level missingness was 3.4% for sexual orientation and 1.3% for gender identity. Correlates of missingness varied considerably at each stage.Conclusions: Missing the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity data is much more prevalent than item nonresponse alone would suggest. Analytic techniques that consider only item nonresponse, such as complete case analysis, risk producing biased findings. Including the Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity module in the required core demographics section is the only feasible method to reduce the amount and complexity of missing data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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37. Embracing Uncertainty: The Value of Partial Identification in Public Health and Clinical Research.
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Mullahy, John, Venkataramani, Atheendar, Millimet, Daniel L., and Manski, Charles F.
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PUBLIC health research , *UNCERTAINTY , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL research , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Introduction: This paper describes the methodology of partial identification and its applicability to empirical research in preventive medicine and public health.Methods: The authors summarize findings from the methodologic literature on partial identification. The analysis was conducted in 2020-2021.Results: The applicability of partial identification methods is demonstrated using 3 empirical examples drawn from published literature.Conclusions: Partial identification methods are likely to be of considerable interest to clinicians and others engaged in preventive medicine and public health research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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38. Occupations by Proximity and Indoor/Outdoor Work: Relevance to COVID-19 in All Workers and Black/Hispanic Workers.
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Cox-Ganser, Jean M. and Henneberger, Paul K.
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COVID-19 , *SARS-CoV-2 , *OCCUPATIONS , *RISK exposure - Abstract
Introduction: This paper describes the occupations in the U.S. that involve close contact with others and whether the work is outdoors or indoors (risk factors for COVID-19), including the distribution of Black and Hispanic workers over these occupations.Methods: U.S. data released from 2014 to 2019 on employment, proximity to others at work, outdoor or indoor work, and Black and Hispanic worker percentages for occupations were used. Occupations were assigned to 6 categories defined as a low, medium, or high physical closeness (proximity) at work and outdoor or indoor work. A total of 3 of the 6 categories represent a higher risk for exposure to SARS-CoV-2: medium-proximity indoor, high-proximity outdoor, and high-proximity indoor exposure.Results: A high proportion of U.S. workers may be at higher risk for exposure to SARS-CoV-2 because their occupations involve either high proximity to others indoors and outdoors (25.2%, 36.5 million workers) or medium-proximity indoors (48%, 69.6 million workers). There is a differential distribution of proximity and outdoor/indoor work by occupation, which disproportionately affects Black and Hispanic workers in some occupations.Conclusions: Implementation of COVID-19 preventive measures in work settings should be based on occupation-specific risk factors, including the extent of proximity to others and whether the work is conducted outdoors or indoors. It is important that communication messages are tailored to the languages and preferred media of the workforce. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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39. Aspirin Use and Misuse for the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases.
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Luepker, Russell V., Oldenburg, Niki C., Misialek, Jeffrey R., Van't Hof, Jeremy R., Finnegan, John R., Eder, Milton, and Duval, Sue
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ASPIRIN , *CARDIOVASCULAR diseases , *PREVENTIVE medicine , *TASK forces , *PHYSICIAN services utilization - Abstract
Introduction: Daily aspirin use for primary cardiovascular disease prevention is common among adults. Numerous clinical trials observe reduced cardiovascular disease with regular low-dose aspirin. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force in 2016 published guidelines for aspirin use, but controversy exists about the side effects, and overuse or underuse may be common despite the guidelines. Using the Task Force recommendations, this paper describes the prevalence of appropriate aspirin use and physician advice in a population sample.Methods: A random sample of men and women (aged 50-69 years) living in the Upper Midwest in 2017-2018 were surveyed, collecting demographic data, health history, and aspirin use. Appropriate primary prevention with aspirin was defined as having ≥10% cardiovascular disease risk (hypertension, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, smoking) with daily or every other day aspirin use. Those with prevalent cardiovascular disease were labeled as secondary prevention.Results: A total of 1,352 adults were surveyed (697 women, 655 men). The criteria for secondary prevention were fulfilled in 188 participants, and these were eliminated from the analysis. In the remaining group, aspirin was indicated in 32.9% (383 of 1,164). Among those, 46.0% (176 of 383) were appropriate users, and 54.0% (207 of 383) were nonusers despite indications. Overuse, where aspirin is not indicated, was common at 26.9% (210 of 781). Discussion with a physician, although reported in 29% of subjects, was associated with some improvement in the appropriate use but also with overuse and underuse.Conclusions: Aspirin use for primary cardiovascular disease prevention is common. However, many adults are medicating without indication (overuse) or are not using aspirin despite guidelines (underuse). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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40. Using Digital Technologies to Reach Tobacco Users Who Want to Quit: Evidence From the National Cancer Institute's Smokefree.gov Initiative.
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Prutzman, Yvonne M, Wiseman, Kara P, Grady, Meredith A, Budenz, Alexandra, Grenen, Emily G, Vercammen, Laura K, Keefe, Brian P, and Bloch, Michele H
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The rapid growth of smartphone ownership and broadband access has created new opportunities to reach smokers with cessation information and support using digital technologies. These technologies can both complement and be integrated with traditional support modalities such as telephone quitlines and 1-on-1 clinical cessation counseling. The National Cancer Institute's Smokefree.gov Initiative provides free, evidence-based cessation support to the public through a multimodal suite of digital interventions, including several mobile-optimized websites, text messaging programs, and 2 mobile applications. In addition to digital resources directed at the general population, the Smokefree.gov Initiative includes population-specific resources targeted to adolescents, women, military veterans, Spanish speakers, older adults, and other populations. This paper describes the reach and use of the Smokefree.gov Initiative's resources over a 5-year period between 2014 and 2018, including how users interact with the program's digital content in ways that facilitate engagement with live counseling support. Use of Smokefree.gov Initiative resources has grown steadily over time; in 2018 alone, approximately 7-8 million people accessed Smokefree.gov Initiative web- and mobile-based resources. Smokefree.gov Initiative utilization data show that people take advantage of the full range of technology tools and options offered as part of the Smokefree.gov Initiative's multiplatform intervention. The Smokefree.gov Initiative experience suggests that offering different, complementary technology options to meet the needs and preferences of smokers has the potential to meaningfully expand the reach of cessation treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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41. Vaping and E-Cigarettes Within the Evolving Tobacco Quitline Landscape.
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Vickerman, Katrina A, Carpenter, Kelly M, Raskob, Margaret K, Nash, Chelsea M, Vargas-Belcher, Robert A, and Beebe, Laura A
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TOBACCO products , *TOBACCO - Abstract
This article summarizes the vaping research literature as it pertains to tobacco quitlines and describes vaping assessment, treatment, and evaluation quitline practices. It also presents 2014-2018 registration data (vaping in the past 30 days, number of use days, use for quitting smoking, and intentions to quit vaping) from 24 public quitlines (23 states and District of Columbia) and 110,295 enrollees to employer-sponsored quitlines. Trends in vaping rates over time, by state, and by age group are described. Approximately 57,000 adult public quitline enrollees in the U.S. reported vaping at registration in 2018 (14.7% of enrollees). Most quitline participants who vape also smoke cigarettes and contact the quitline for smoking cessation support. Rates of reporting vaping and no combustible or smokeless tobacco use in the past 30 days are 0.5% of all public quitline participants (<3% of public quitline vaping product users). Data are not systematically available regarding the number of quitline participants who are seeking help quitting vaping and only vape (do not use combustible or smokeless tobacco). Few quitline participants (<1%) are youth aged <18 years, but more than a third (35%) report vaping. This paper outlines research and evaluation priorities to inform the future quitline treatment landscape with respect to vaping. The quitline community is positioned to increase the likelihood that vaping has a positive impact for adults who smoke through harm reduction or supporting cessation and has opportunities to expand impacts on youth and young adult vaping prevention and cessation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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42. Quitline Programs Tailored for Mental Health: Initial Outcomes and Feasibility.
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Morris, Chad D, Lukowski, Amy V, Vargas-Belcher, Robert A, Ylioja, Thomas E, Nash, Chelsea M, and Bailey, Linda A
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Introduction: The general efficacy of quitlines has been widely demonstrated, but uncertainty exists regarding how quitlines might best intervene for persons with mental health conditions. A total of 1 in 5 people in the U.S. has a diagnosable psychiatric disorder. These individuals smoke at 2‒4 times the rate of smoking among those without a mental health condition and face high rates of related death and disability. About half of quitline callers self-report a mental health condition, but until recently, quitline protocols tailored to these smokers did not exist.Methods: This paper provides initial results for tailored mental health programs from the largest quitline providers in the U.S., Optum and National Jewish Health. From 2017 to 2018, cohorts of callers with a mental health condition who enrolled in tailored programs were compared with cohorts with a mental health condition who received standard care. Both mental health programs offered participants additional calls, longer duration of combination nicotine-replacement therapy, and attention to mental health issues. Analyses were conducted in 2018-2019.Results: Findings suggest that callers with a mental health condition benefit from both standard care and tailored mental health services. Tailored programming did well in engaging people with mental health conditions. At the same time, there were no significant differences in abstinence rates when comparing mental health programs with standard care. Mental health cohorts did receive significantly greater service durations, more counseling calls, and longer nicotine-replacement therapy duration.Conclusions: Tailored mental health quitline programs present a promising framework for testing the services that address psychiatric symptoms as well as other frequent population characteristics such as chronic illness. Implications for increasing reach to the often underserved population with a mental health condition are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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43. Family Health History-Based Cancer Prevention Training for Community Health Workers.
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Chen, Wei-Ju, Zhao, Shixi, Stelzig, Donaji, Nimmons, Katharine M., Dhar, Shweta U., Eble, Tanya N., Martinez, Denise, Yeh, Yu-Lyu, and Chen, Lei-Shih
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COMMUNITY health workers , *CANCER prevention , *SPANISH language , *FAMILY health , *BILINGUAL education , *FAMILY history (Medicine) , *HEALTH education teachers , *PILOT projects , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GENOMICS , *MEDICAL history taking , *TUMORS ,TUMOR prevention - Abstract
Cancer is the second leading cause of death in the U.S. Utilizing family health history in cancer prevention holds promise in lessening the burden of cancer. Nevertheless, family health history is underutilized in public health and preventive medicine. Community health workers, also known as lay health educators, are ideal candidates to offer basic cancer family history-based education and services to the general public. The authors developed the first cancer family history-based genomics training program in cancer prevention tailored for community health workers. This paper details the development and pilot testing findings of the training. Specifically, a multidisciplinary research team of geneticists, genetic counselors, health educators, community health workers, and community health worker instructors developed a 7-module, 6-hour, bilingual (English and Spanish) cancer family history-based training focusing on cancer family history-based risk assessment, lifestyle recommendations, and genetic evaluation and testing. The curriculum was based on an integrated theoretical framework, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines, the community health worker core competencies, and the 4MAT instructional model. The Texas Department of State Health Services approved and certified the curriculum with 2 delivery formats: in-person/face-to-face workshops and online training. A total of 34 community health workers completed the pilot training in person (n=17) and online (n=17) in 2018 and 2019. Participating community health workers' knowledge, attitudes, self-efficacy, and intention in delivering basic cancer family history-based genomics education and services significantly increased on the immediate post-test measures compared with their pretest data. Positive ratings and feedback were also reported by the community health workers. Findings from this pilot study suggest that wider training is warranted for educating more community health workers in the U.S. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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44. Pediatric Resident Training in Tobacco Control and the Electronic Health Record.
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Boykan, Rachel, Gorzkowski, Julie, Wellman, Robert J., Jenssen, Brian P., Klein, Jonathan D., Krugman, Jessica, Pbert, Lori, and Salloum, Ramzi G.
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ELECTRONIC health records , *ELECTRONIC control , *TOBACCO use , *TOBACCO smoke , *TOBACCO , *TRAINING of medical residents , *RESEARCH , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *INTERNSHIP programs , *COMPARATIVE studies , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation - Abstract
Given the dangers posed by tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, pediatricians should address tobacco use and exposure with patients and parents at every opportunity, but this is not consistently done in practice. One reason may be that many medical residents do not receive education on how to address tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure with patients and their parents. In a 2012 survey of U.S. pediatric program directors, 65% of programs reported covering tobacco control in their curricula, but most training programs focused on tobacco's health effects and not intervention strategies for clinical practice. Since that survey, electronic health records have been implemented broadly nationwide and utilized to address tobacco smoke exposure. Investigators surveyed U.S. program directors in 2018 and residents in 2019 to explore the ways in which the residents learn about tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, components and use of the electronic record specific to tobacco use and tobacco smoke exposure, and perceived resident effectiveness in this area. All the program directors and 85% of the residents valued training, but 21% of the residents reported receiving none. Moreover, a minority of the residents assessed themselves as effective at counseling parents (19%) or adolescents (23%), and their perceived effectiveness was related to small group learning and active learning workshops, modalities that were infrequently implemented in training. Respondents also reported infrequent use of electronic health record prompts regarding tobacco and the absence of prompts about critical issues (e.g., addressing tobacco smoke exposure in vehicles or other settings or offering treatment or referrals to parents who smoke). This paper provides recommendations about augmenting pediatric resident training in simple ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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45. Data Needs in Opioid Systems Modeling: Challenges and Future Directions.
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Jalali, Mohammad S., Ewing, Emily, Bannister, Calvin B., Glos, Lukas, Eggers, Sara, Lim, Tse Yang, Stringfellow, Erin, Stafford, Celia A., Pacula, Rosalie Liccardo, Jalal, Hawre, and Kazemi-Tabriz, Reza
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OPIOIDS , *GOVERNMENT agencies , *ACQUISITION of data , *NARCOTICS , *RESEARCH , *ANALGESICS , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *FORECASTING , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Introduction: The opioid crisis is a pervasive public health threat in the U.S. Simulation modeling approaches that integrate a systems perspective are used to understand the complexity of this crisis and analyze what policy interventions can best address it. However, limitations in currently available data sources can hamper the quantification of these models.Methods: To understand and discuss data needs and challenges for opioid systems modeling, a meeting of federal partners, modeling teams, and data experts was held at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2019. This paper synthesizes the meeting discussions and interprets them in the context of ongoing simulation modeling work.Results: The current landscape of national-level quantitative data sources of potential use in opioid systems modeling is identified, and significant issues within data sources are discussed. Major recommendations on how to improve data sources are to: maintain close collaboration among modeling teams, enhance data collection to better fit modeling needs, focus on bridging the most crucial information gaps, engage in direct and regular interaction between modelers and data experts, and gain a clearer definition of policymakers' research questions and policy goals.Conclusions: This article provides an important step in identifying and discussing data challenges in opioid research generally and opioid systems modeling specifically. It also identifies opportunities for systems modelers and government agencies to improve opioid systems models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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46. Lung Cancer Screening Knowledge, Perceptions, and Decision Making Among African Americans in Detroit, Michigan.
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Lau, Yan Kwan, Bhattarai, Harihar, Caverly, Tanner J, Hung, Pei-Yao, Jimenez-Mendoza, Evelyn, Patel, Minal R, Coté, Michele L, Arenberg, Douglas A, and Meza, Rafael
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RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *LUNG tumors , *EARLY detection of cancer , *SENSORY perception , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *DECISION making , *HEALTH attitudes , *RESEARCH funding , *AFRICAN Americans , *MEDICARE - Abstract
Introduction: Previously, a web-based, patient-facing decision aid for lung cancer screening, shouldiscreen.com, was developed and evaluated. An initial evaluation was completed before the Medicare coverage decision and recruited a nondiverse sample of mostly former smokers, limiting the understanding of the potential effectiveness of the tool among diverse populations. This study evaluates shouldiscreen.com among African Americans in Metro Detroit.Methods: Using insights obtained from participatory workshops in this population, content changes to shouldiscreen.com were implemented, and this modified version was evaluated with a before-after study. Measures included knowledge of lung cancer screening, decisional conflict, and concordance between individual preference and screening eligibility. Surveys occurred between April and July 2018. Participants were contacted 6 months after the survey to assess subsequent screening behaviors. Analysis took place in 2019.Results: Data were collected from 74 participants aged 45-77 years, who were current/former smokers with no history of lung cancer. The average knowledge score increased by 25% from 5.7 (SD=1.94) before to 7.1 (SD=2.30) after (out of 13 points). Decisional conflict was halved between before and after. Concordance between individual preference and eligibility for screening increased from 22% (SD=41) to 35% (SD=47). Half of the participants felt uncomfortable answering surveys electronically and requested paper versions.Conclusions: The use of the tool led to small improvements in lung cancer screening knowledge and increased concordance with current recommendations. Additional design modifications and modes of information delivery of these decision aids should be considered to increase their efficacy in helping populations with lower educational attainment and computer literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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47. Area-Level Predictors of Tobacco 21 Coverage in the U.S. Before the National Law: Exploring Potential Disparities.
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Colston, David C., Titus, Andrea R., Thrasher, James F., Elliott, Michael R., and Fleischer, Nancy L.
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GOVERNMENT policy , *TOBACCO , *SMOKING laws , *ACADEMIC degrees , *RESEARCH funding , *TOBACCO products , *ETHNIC groups , *POVERTY - Abstract
Introduction: The goal of the paper is to characterize the geographic and sociodemographic patterns of policies prohibiting tobacco sales to people aged <21 years (i.e., Tobacco 21) at the local, county, and state levels in the U.S. before the national law.Methods: This study assessed area-level markers for region, race/ethnicity, education, poverty status, and smoke-free law coverage as predictors of Tobacco 21 passage as of December 20, 2019, using modified Poisson and negative binomial regression models with robust SEs. Data were analyzed in 2020.Results: Before the passage of the national policy, 191 million people were covered by Tobacco 21 laws. Counties with higher percentages of non-Hispanic Blacks and individuals living below the poverty line had a lower probability of coverage, whereas counties with higher percentages of Hispanics/Latinxs and individuals with a college degree had a higher probability of coverage. Tobacco 21 coverage also varied by region, with far greater coverage in the Northeast than in the Midwest and South.Conclusions: The national Tobacco 21 law may address disparities in coverage by SES, race/ethnicity, and region that could have lasting implications with regard to health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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48. Vaccine Hesitancy and Concerns About Vaccine Safety and Effectiveness in Shanghai, China.
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Wagner, Abram L., Huang, Zhuoying, Ren, Jia, Laffoon, Megan, Ji, Mengdi, Pinckney, Leah C., Sun, Xiaodong, Prosser, Lisa A., Boulton, Matthew L., and Zikmund-Fisher, Brian J.
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VACCINE safety , *VACCINE effectiveness , *VACCINATION complications , *HESITATION , *PARENT attitudes , *RESEARCH , *VACCINES , *IMMUNIZATION , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *COMPARATIVE studies , *HEALTH attitudes , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PARENTS - Abstract
Introduction: Rapidly urbanizing communities in middle-income countries could be sources of vaccine hesitancy, and may create hot spots of low vaccination coverage. This study characterizes vaccine hesitancy in Shanghai and identifies disparities in vaccine safety and efficacy concerns by residency status-a marker for recent migration into the city.Methods: Parents of children aged ≤18 years from immunization clinics in Shanghai were enrolled in summer 2019, with the data analyzed during winter 2019-2020. The paper questionnaire used the Parental Attitudes towards Childhood Vaccines scale, which included questions about vaccine safety and efficacy concerns. The primary independent variable was residency-whether an individual was a Shanghai local or a recent migrant (i.e., non-local). Linear regression models assessed the relationship between residency and vaccine safety and efficacy concerns.Results: Among 1,021 participants, 65.4% had local residency, and the remainder were urban non-locals (13.1%) or rural non-locals (21.5%). A majority of parents expressed concerns about vaccine side effects (73.8%), vaccine safety (63.9%), and vaccine effectiveness (52.4%). Compared with locals, rural non-locals were more concerned about vaccine side effects (β=0.26, 95% CI=0.07, 0.46), vaccine safety (β=0.42, 95% CI=0.19, 0.65), and vaccine effectiveness (β=0.37, 95% CI=0.16, 0.58).Conclusions: Differences in vaccine hesitancy by residency could lead to geographical and sociodemographic disparities in vaccination coverage and outbreaks of vaccine-preventable disease.Supplement Information: This article is part of a supplement entitled Global Vaccination Equity, which is sponsored by the Global Institute for Vaccine Equity at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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49. Group Lifestyle Balance Adapted for Individuals With Impaired Mobility: Outcomes for 6-Month RCT and Combined Groups at 12 Months.
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Froehlich-Grobe, Katherine, Betts, Andrea C., Driver, Simon J., Carlton, Danielle N., Lopez, Amber Merfeld, Lee, Jaehoon, and Kramer, M. Kaye
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WEIGHT loss , *SPINAL cord injuries , *PHYSICAL activity , *AGE of onset , *LIFESTYLES , *RESEARCH , *BODY weight , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *EVALUATION research , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *STATISTICAL sampling , *HEALTH promotion - Abstract
Introduction: This study examines the feasibility and effectiveness of an intensive lifestyle intervention adapted for people with impaired mobility.Study Design: This was a randomized, wait-list controlled trial. The experimental group immediately received the 12-month weight loss program; the wait-list control group received it after a 6-month delay. Between-group comparisons were conducted for the 6-month RCT study design. Repeated measures were conducted for both groups combined after receiving the 12-month intervention. Data were collected August 2015-February 2017 and analyzed in 2017.Setting/participants: A community-based sample received 23, group-based sessions via a mix of telephone and in-person sessions in a hospital-based setting. Participants with impaired mobility (n=66) were middle-aged (49.80 [SD=11.37] years), mostly White (66.7%), female (66.7%), and most commonly had spinal cord injury (47.0%).Intervention: The 12-month intervention delivered 23 group-based sessions that promoted weight loss through reducing caloric intake and increasing physical activity.Main Outcome Measures: Primary outcomes were effectiveness measured as change in weight and time spent in moderate physical activity. Feasibility was assessed in 12-month combined group analyses, measured as retention, attendance, and dietary self-monitoring.Results: The 6-month RCT results showed that the immediate and delayed groups differed significantly (p<0.05) in weight (-1.66 [SD=4.42] kg loss vs 0.05 [SD=4.15] kg gain) and moderate physical activity (52.93 [SD=90.74] minutes/week increase vs -14.22 [SD=96.02] minutes/week decrease), accounting for baseline weight, time with disability, and age of onset. The 12-month results with groups combined demonstrated 74.2% retention and 77.7% core session attendance. Self-monitoring was higher in the delayed group (77.3%), who used a smartphone app, than the immediate group (47.3%), who mostly used paper trackers. Participants achieved significant 12-month weight loss of 3.31 (SD=10.13) kg (d=0.33) in mixed modeling analyses with groups combined yet did not significantly increase moderate physical activity.Conclusions: Group Lifestyle Balance Adapted for Individuals with Impaired Mobility is a feasible, effective approach to teach healthy lifestyle skills to individuals with mobility impairment, yielding modest weight loss and enhanced self-efficacy.Trial Registration: This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT03307187. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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50. National Estimates of ENDS Liquid Nicotine Exposures, U.S., 2013-2017.
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Chang, Joanne T., Wang, Baoguang, Rostron, Brian L., Chen, Li Hui, Schroeder, Thomas J., Mah, Jean C., Chang, Cindy M., and Ambrose, Bridget K.
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NICOTINE , *ELECTRONIC surveillance , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *ESTIMATES - Abstract
Introduction: Increased use of ENDS in the U.S. is related to acute adverse events from liquid nicotine exposure. This paper provides national estimates of U.S. hospital emergency department visits for exposures from liquid nicotine exposure in individuals aged ≥5 years.Methods: In 2018-2019, data from the 2013-2017 National Electronic Injury Surveillance System All Injury Program were used to identify cases of liquid nicotine-related exposures in individuals aged ≥5 years. National estimates of exposures related to liquid nicotine exposure in ENDS for those aged ≥5 years by demographic characteristics, symptoms, diagnoses, and treatment dispositions were calculated.Results: From 2013 to 2017, an estimated 2,718 cases related to liquid nicotine among those aged ≥5 years were treated in U.S. hospital emergency departments. Most exposures occurred among those who were aged ≥25 years (51.7%), white (74.1%), and male (51.9%). Most case patients were treated and released from the hospitals, and 7.5% were admitted. Poisoning was the most common diagnosis of these exposures (82.7%). The most common symptoms were cardiovascular (29.7%).Conclusions: This study provides national estimates of emergency department visits for injury and poisoning cases related to nicotine exposure from ENDS among individuals aged ≥5 years. Although long-term health outcome studies of liquid nicotine exposure are not available, these estimates provide some insight into the acute health effects. Findings from this study may inform education programs aimed at preventing exposures related to ENDS products. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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