34 results on '"Joshi, Neena"'
Search Results
2. Accounting for the interplay of interpersonal and structural trauma in the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain, opioid use disorder, and mental health in urban safety-net primary care clinics
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Castellanos, Stacy, Cooke, Alexis, Koenders, Sedona, Joshi, Neena, Miaskowski, Christine, Kushel, Margot, and Knight, Kelly Ray
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Mental Health ,Substance Misuse ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Pain Research ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Chronic Pain ,Health Services ,7.1 Individual care needs ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Health and social care services research ,Generic health relevance ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being - Abstract
While the epidemiological literature recognizes associations between chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP), opioid use disorder (OUD), and interpersonal trauma stemming from physical, emotional, sexual abuse or neglect, the complex etiologies and interplay between interpersonal and structural traumas in CNCP populations are under-examined. Research has documented the relationship between experiencing multiple adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and the likelihood of developing an OUD as an adult. However, the ACEs framework is criticized for failing to name the social and structural contexts that shape ACE vulnerabilities in families. Social scientific theory and ethnographic methods offer useful approaches to explore how interpersonally- and structurally-produced traumas inform the experiences of co-occurring CNCP, substance use, and mental health. We report findings from a qualitative and ethnographic longitudinal cohort study of patients with CNCP (n = 48) who received care in safety-net settings and their primary care providers (n = 23). We conducted semi-structured interviews and clinical and home-based participant observation from 2018 to 2020. Here we focus our analyses on how patients and providers explained and situated the role of patient trauma in the larger clinical context of reductions in opioid prescribing to highlight the political landscape of the United States opioid overdose crisis and its impact on clinical interactions. Findings reveal the disproportionate burden structurally-produced, racialized trauma places on CNCP, substance use and mental health symptoms that shapes patients’ embodied experiences of pain and substance use, as well as their emotional experiences with their providers. Experiences of trauma impacted clinical care trajectories, yet providers and patients expressed limited options for redress. We argue for an adaptation of trauma-informed care approaches that contextualize the structural determinants of trauma and their interplay with interpersonal experiences to improve clinical care outcomes.
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- 2023
3. The intersection of drug use discrimination and racial discrimination in the management of chronic non-cancer pain in United States primary care safety-net clinics: Implications for healthcare system and clinic-level changes
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Cooke, Alexis, Castellanos, Stacy, Koenders, Sedona, Joshi, Neena, Enriquez, Celeste, Olsen, Pamela, Miaskowski, Christine, Kushel, Margot, and Knight, Kelly R
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Chronic Pain ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Pain Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Chronic non-cancer pain ,Discrimination ,Opioids ,Primary care ,Race ,Safety-net ,Substance use ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
BackgroundClinicians' bias related to patients' race and substance use history play a role in pain management. However, patients' or clinicians' understandings about discriminatory practices and the structural factors that contribute to and exacerbate these practices are underexamined. We report on perceptions of discrimination from the perspectives of patients with chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) and a history of substance use and their clinicians within the structural landscape of reductions in opioid prescribing in the United States.MethodsWe interviewed 46 clinicians and 94 patients, using semi-structured interview guides, from eight safety-net primary care clinics across the San Francisco Bay Area from 2013 to 2020. We used a modified grounded theory approach to code and analyze transcripts.ResultsClinicians discussed using opioid prescribing guidelines with the goals of increased opioid safety and reduced bias in patient monitoring. While patients acknowledged the validity of clinicians' concerns about opioid safety, they indicated that clinicians made assumptions about opioid misuse towards Black patients and patients suspected of substance use. Clinicians discussed evidence of discrimination in opioid prescribing at the clinic-wide level; racialized stereotypes about patients likely to misuse opioids; and their own struggles to overcome discriminatory practices regarding CNCP management.ConclusionWhile clinicians and patients acknowledged opioid safety concerns, the practical application of opioid prescribing guidelines impacted how patients perceived and engaged with CNCP care particularly for patients who are Black and/or report a history of substance use. We recommend healthcare system and clinic-level interventions that may remediate discriminatory practices and associated disparities.
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- 2023
4. Structural Adaptations to Methadone Maintenance Treatment and Take-Home Dosing for Opioid Use Disorder in the Era of COVID-19
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Suen, Leslie W, Coe, William H, Wyatt, Janan P, Adams, Zoe M, Gandhi, Mona, Batchelor, Hannah M, Castellanos, Stacy, Joshi, Neena, Satterwhite, Shannon, Pérez-Rodríguez, Rafael, Rodríguez-Guerra, Esther, Albizu-Garcia, Carmen E, Knight, Kelly R, and Jordan, Ayana
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Methadone ,Opiate Substitution Treatment ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Public Health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Published
- 2022
5. Enhancing agency and empowerment in agricultural development projects: A synthesis of mixed methods impact evaluations from the Gender, Agriculture, and Assets Project, Phase 2 (GAAP2)
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Quisumbing, Agnes, Meinzen-Dick, Ruth, Malapit, Hazel, Dione, Malick, Heckert, Jessica, Martinez, Elena M., Pereira, Audrey, Seymour, Greg, van Biljon, Chloe, Vaz, Ana, Elias, Marlène, Mulema, Annet, Myers, Emily, Rubin, Deborah, Go, Ara, Argento, Federica, Ahmed, Akhter, Hannan, Anika, Roy, Shalini, Younus, Masuma, Brauw, Alan de, Dey, Amita, Kramer, Berber, Murphy, Mike, Crookston, Benjamin, Gash, Megan, Gray, Bobbi, Benali, Marwan, Schreinemachers, Pepijn, Sobgui, Caroline, Janzen, Sarah, Joshi, Neena, Magnan, Nicholas, Pradhan, Rajendra, Sharma, Sudhindra, Theis, Sophie, Bellemare, Marc, Casier, Bart, James, Susan, Krause, Brooke, Lardinois, Mathias, McCarthy, Aine, Gabrysch, Sabine, Sinharoy, Sheela, Waid, Jillian, Wendt, Amanda, Josué Awonon, Ganaba, Rasmane, Gelli, Aulo, Martinez, Elena, Pedehombga, Abdoulaye, Sanou, Armande, Zougouri, Sita, Alonso, Silvia, Galiè, Alessandra, Kakota, Tasokwa, Leroy, Jef, Palloni, Giordano, Bryan, Elizabeth, Mekonnen, Dawit, Miah, Mamun, Kumar, Neha, Siraj, Saiqa, Alemu, Mihret, Boonabaana, Brenda, Paula de la Ocampo, Ana, Kaaria, Susan, Hillesland, Marya, Mane, Erdgin, Slavchevska, Vanya, Choudhury, Avijit, Khetan, Madhu, Raghunathan, Kalyani, Thai, Giang, Quisumbing, Agnes R., Malapit, Hazel J., Doss, Cheryl, Johnson, Nancy, and Ramani, Gayathri
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- 2024
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6. "The idea is to help people achieve greater success and liberty": A qualitative study of expanded methadone take-home access in opioid use disorder treatment.
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Suen, Leslie W, Castellanos, Stacy, Joshi, Neena, Satterwhite, Shannon, and Knight, Kelly R
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Humans ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Methadone ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Qualitative Research ,Freedom ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Pandemics ,Drug Overdose ,COVID-19 ,Opioid use disorder ,addiction ,clinical-decision making ,methadone ,policy ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prescription Drug Abuse ,Patient Safety ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Health and social care services research ,Generic health relevance ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
Background: Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States (US) was already facing an epidemic of opioid overdose deaths. Overdose deaths continued to surge during the pandemic. To limit COVID-19 spread and to avoid disruptions in access to medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD), including buprenorphine and methadone, US federal and state agencies granted unprecedented exemptions to existing MOUD guidelines for Opioid Treatment Programs (OTPs), including loosening criteria for unsupervised take-home doses. We conducted a qualitative study to evaluate the impact of these policy changes on MOUD treatment experiences for providers and patients at an OTP in California. Methods: We interviewed 10 providers (including two physicians, five social worker associates, and three nurse practitioners) and 20 patients receiving MOUD. We transcribed, coded, and analyzed all interviews to identify emergent themes. Results: Patient participants were middle-aged (median age 51 years) and were predominantly men (53%). Providers discussed clinical decision-making processes and experiences providing take-homes. Implementation of expanded take-home policies was cautious. Providers reported making individualized decisions, using patient factors to decide if benefits outweighed risks of overdose and misuse. Decision-making factors included patient drug use, overdose risk, housing status, and vulnerability to COVID-19. New patient groups started receiving take-homes and providers noted few adverse events. Patients who received take-homes reported increased autonomy and treatment flexibility, which in turn increased likelihood of treatment stabilization and engagement. Patients who remained ineligible for take-homes, usually due to ongoing non-prescribed opioid or benzodiazepine use, desired greater transparency and shared decision-making. Conclusion: Federal exemptions in response to COVID-19 led to the unprecedented expansion of access to MOUD take-homes within OTPs. Providers and patients perceived benefits to expanding access to take-homes and experienced few adverse outcomes, suggesting expanded take-home policies should remain post-COVID-19. Future studies should explore whether these findings are generalizable to other OTPs and assess larger samples to quantify patient-level outcomes resulting from expanded take-home policies.
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- 2022
7. “Get in and get out, get on with life”: Patient and provider perspectives on methadone van implementation for opioid use disorder treatment
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Suen, Leslie W., Steiger, Scott, Shapiro, Brad, Castellanos, Stacy, Joshi, Neena, Lambdin, Barrot H., and Knight, Kelly R.
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- 2023
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8. Saving lives in our homes: Qualitative evaluation of a tenant overdose response program in supportive, single-room occupancy (SRO) housing
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Olding, Michelle, Joshi, Neena, Castellanos, Stacy, Valadao, Emily, Hall, Lauren, Guzman, Laura, and Knight, Kelly
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- 2023
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9. The Lancet Commission on lessons for the future from the COVID-19 pandemic
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Sachs, Jeffrey D, Karim, Salim S Abdool, Aknin, Lara, Allen, Joseph, Brosbøl, Kirsten, Colombo, Francesca, Barron, Gabriela Cuevas, Espinosa, María Fernanda, Gaspar, Vitor, Gaviria, Alejandro, Haines, Andy, Hotez, Peter J, Koundouri, Phoebe, Bascuñán, Felipe Larraín, Lee, Jong-Koo, Pate, Muhammad Ali, Ramos, Gabriela, Reddy, K Srinath, Serageldin, Ismail, Thwaites, John, Vike-Freiberga, Vaira, Wang, Chen, Were, Miriam Khamadi, Xue, Lan, Bahadur, Chandrika, Bottazzi, Maria Elena, Bullen, Chris, Laryea-Adjei, George, Ben Amor, Yanis, Karadag, Ozge, Lafortune, Guillaume, Torres, Emma, Barredo, Lauren, Bartels, Juliana G E, Joshi, Neena, Hellard, Margaret, Huynh, Uyen Kim, Khandelwal, Shweta, Lazarus, Jeffrey V, and Michie, Susan
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- 2022
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10. A multi‐sectoral community development intervention has a positive impact on diet quality and growth in school‐age children in rural Nepal.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, and Lohani, Mahendra
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FOOD quality ,MIDDLE-income countries ,SELF-efficacy ,DATA analysis ,T-test (Statistics) ,RESEARCH funding ,HUMAN growth ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,CHILD nutrition ,AGE distribution ,LONGITUDINAL method ,CHILD development ,RURAL population ,STATISTICS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,RURAL conditions ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,DIET ,NUTRITION education ,COMMUNITY-based social services ,AGRICULTURE ,LOW-income countries ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Poor diet quality (diet diversity and animal‐source food [ASF] consumption) during childhood negatively affects growth, development, behaviour and physiologic function in later life. Relatively less is known about the impact of poor diet on the growth of school‐age children compared to children <5 years of age, especially in low/middle‐income countries. A better understanding of delivery strategies for effective interventions to improve diet and hence growth in school‐age children is needed. A 36‐month longitudinal controlled impact evaluation in rural Nepal assessed the nutrition and growth of children <5 years of age in families assigned via community clusters to full package intervention (community development, training in nutrition [during pregnancy and for children <5 years] and livestock husbandry), partial package (training only) or control (no inputs). Concurrent data were collected prospectively (baseline plus additional four rounds) on school‐age children (5–8 years at baseline) in these households; the present study analysed findings in the cohort of school‐age children seen at all five study visits (n = 341). Diet quality improved more in the full package school‐age children compared to those in partial package or control households. full package children consumed more ASF (β +0.40 [CI 0.07,0.73], p < 0.05), more diverse diets (β +0.93 [CI 0.55,1.31], p < 0.001) and had better head circumference z‐scores (β +0.21 [CI 0.07,0.35], p < 0.01) than control children. In conclusion, a multi‐sectoral community development intervention was associated with improvements in diet and growth of school‐age children in rural Nepal even though the intervention focused on the diet of children <5 years of age. The diet and growth of school‐age children can be favourably influenced by community‐level interventions, even indirectly. Key messages: Relatively less is known about the factors that influence diet quality and growth in school‐age children compared to younger children, especially in low‐ and middle‐income countries.Better diet quality and growth were found among school‐age children whose families participated in an impact study multi‐sectoral intervention compared to children in control families or those whose families only received nutrition training.Diet and growth of school‐age children can be favourably influenced by community‐level interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Hydrothermal effects on physicochemical, sensory attributes, vitamin C, and antioxidant activity of frozen immature Dolichos lablab
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Hassan, Md. Mahedi and Joshi, Neena
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- 2020
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12. Child dietary quality in rural Nepal: Effectiveness of a community-level development intervention
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Darrouzet-Nardi, Amelia F., Miller, Laurie C., Joshi, Neena, Mahato, Shubh, Lohani, Mahendra, and Rogers, Beatrice L.
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- 2016
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13. Trajectories of child growth, child development, and home child‐rearing quality during the Covid pandemic in rural Nepal.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, and Shrestha, Bhola
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CHILD rearing ,CHILD nutrition ,NUTRITIONAL assessment ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,CHILD development ,RURAL conditions ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,REGRESSION analysis ,SURVEYS ,MALNUTRITION ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,COVID-19 pandemic ,NUTRITION disorders in children - Abstract
Background: Children, especially disadvantaged children in poor countries, were expected to be among the "biggest victims" of the Covid pandemic. Economic burdens, decreased nutritious foods, reduced medical care, school closures, and ill‐health or death of family members were predicted to increase child undernutrition and developmental delays, and diminish home child‐rearing quality. Methods: A planned nutrition intervention could not be implemented due to Covid restrictions. However, three surveys (pre‐Covid [December 2019], July 2021, and September 2021) in 280 Nepali households (309 parent‐dyads, 368 children, 6–66 months old) collected demographics, child anthropometry and development (Ages and Stages Questionnaire‐3 [ASQ‐3]), and home child‐rearing quality (caregiver engagement, learning resources, adult supervision [UNICEF's Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey]). Mixed‐effect regression models adjusted for household (wealth, maternal education) and child factors (age, gender) and survey round. Results: Height, mid‐upper‐arm circumference, and head circumference measurements improved over time. The total ASQ‐3 score did not change: Communication scores increased while fine motor and personal‐social scores declined. Girls' growth and development worsened more than boys. Caregiver engagement (especially mothers') generally declined, but learning resource availability increased. More children were left unsupervised at Round 2 than Round 1 or 3. Conclusions: In this sample, some aspects of child growth, development, and home child‐rearing quality improved while others declined. Better understanding of these changes in child well‐being and the family environment during the pandemic could provide insight on how to protect children during future crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Therapeutic evaluation of grain based functional food formulation in a geriatric animal model
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Teradal, Deepa, Joshi, Neena, and Aladakatti, Ravindranath H.
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- 2017
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15. Storage stability of value added products from sunflower kernels
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Muttagi, Gopika C., Joshi, Neena, Shadakshari, Y. G., and Chandru, R.
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- 2014
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16. Universal health coverage is a matter of equity, rights, and justice
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Cuevas Barron, Gabriela, Koonin, Justin, Akselrod, Svetlana, Fogstad, Helga, Karema, Corine, Ditiu, Lucica, Dain, Katie, and Joshi, Neena
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- 2023
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17. Dairy Animal Ownership and Household Milk Production Associated with Better Child and Family Diet in Rural Nepal during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Sah, Keshav, and Shrestha, Bhola
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The economic and health crises related to the COVID-19 pandemic raised considerable concern about child and family diet, especially among small-holder farming households in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). In rural Nepal, 309 families (including 368 children aged 6–66 months) were enrolled pre-COVID-19 in a prospective study of a nutrition education intervention and family milk consumption. The intervention could not be implemented due to COVID-19; however, child and family diet was assessed in three household surveys (one before and two during the pandemic). Over time, after adjusting for child and household factors, child and family diet quality declined (reduced diet diversity, consumption of milk and animal-source-foods (ASF)). However, in dairy-animal-owning (vs. non-dairy-animal-owning) households, both children and family were more likely to consume milk (aOR respectively 2.88× (p < 0.05), 5.81× (p < 0.001)). Similarly, in households producing >3.5 L/d milk (vs. ≤3.5 L/d), children and family members were more likely to consume milk (respectively 7.45× and 11.88× (both p < 0.001)). Thus, the overall decline in child and family diet quality, especially related to milk consumption, was buffered independently by household ownership of ≥1 dairy animals (cow or buffalo) and by milk production >3.5 L/day. A better understanding of these protective factors might facilitate the development of interventions to promote resilience in future crises. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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18. Federal and State Regulatory Changes to Methadone Take-Home Doses: Impact of Sociostructural Factors.
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Wyatt, Janan P., Suen, Leslie W., Coe, William H., Adams, Zoe M., Gandhi, Mona, Batchelor, Hannah M., Castellanos, Stacy, Joshi, Neena, Satterwhite, Shannon, Pérez-Rodríguez, Rafael, Rodríguez-Guerra, Esther, Albizu-Garcia, Carmen E., Knight, Kelly R., and Jordan, Ayana
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METHADONE treatment programs ,COVID-19 pandemic ,HEALTH policy ,INTERVENTION (Social services) ,PUBLIC health ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors - Abstract
An editorial is presented in which the authors discuss changes made during the COVID-19 pandemic to federal and U.S. state regulations governing methadone take-home doses (THDs) for patients who had been attending daily opioid treatment programs (OTPs). The article examines how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted housing interventions on THD expansion, incarceration, and the significance to public health.
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- 2022
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19. Spirulina enriched gluten free quality protein maize (QPM) pasta as functional food.
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U. K., Veena, D., Shobha, Joshi, Neena, M. B., Darshan, and P. S., Benherlal
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FUNCTIONAL foods ,SPIRULINA ,PASTA ,SOY flour ,GUAR gum ,GLUTEN-free foods ,FLOUR - Abstract
The gluten-free Quality Protein Maize (QPM) and pasta made from such grains would have far-reaching implications for achieving nutritional stability. As a result, the aim of this study was to see whether QPM combined with legume flours could be used to make gluten-free pasta (pasta without gluten protein). Furthermore, the effect of adding legume flours and spirulina to QPM pasta (2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 %) on color, appearance, cooking, physical, nutritional and sensory quality was examined. The best-accepted combination of QPM (QPM flour 60 %, black gram flour 30 %, defatted soy flour 8 %, and guar gum 2 %-Q) and QPM pasta enriched with spirulina (QPM flour 60 %, black gram flour 30 %, Spirulina 6 %, defatted soy flour 2 % and guar gum 2 % -S) were compared to the control (100 % whole wheat flour-C). The functional and cooking parameters such as bulk density (0.54 kg/m3), swelling index (1.3 g/g), and cooked weight (11.0 g) of the spirulina pasta were slightly higher with a reasonable cooking loss of 7.6 %. The nutrients such as protein (21.6 %), calcium (44 mg %), iron (8.6 mg %), lysine (3.1 g/100g protein), and tryptophan (0.81 g/100g protein) were reported in the dietary composition of QPM pasta enriched with 6 % spirulina (S). Further addition of spirulina resulted in 16-fold increase in the carotenoid content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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20. Maternal depression is associated with less dietary diversity among rural Nepali children.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Sparling, Thalia M., Shrestha, Merina, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, and Thorne‐Lyman, Andrew
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FOOD habits ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,ANALYSIS of variance ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,CHILD development ,RURAL conditions ,CROSS-sectional method ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,DIET ,MENTAL health ,REGRESSION analysis ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,T-test (Statistics) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,MENTAL depression ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis software ,LONGITUDINAL method ,POISSON distribution ,EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale - Abstract
Maternal depression has been associated with adverse child growth and development; less is known about its relation to children's diet. In a cross‐sectional study embedded at endline of a longitudinal community development intervention, mothers of 629 children (age 23–66 months) in rural Nepal responded to household and children's diet questionnaires and were screened for depression. Child anthropometry and development (Ages and Stages Questionnaire) were assessed. Regression models examined children's diet, growth and development, adjusting for household, child and maternal characteristics. The prevalence of maternal depression was 21%. Maternal depression was associated with 11% lower likelihood that the child consumed one additional food group [Poisson regression, adjusted relative risk (aRR) 0.89, 95% confidence intervals (95% CI 0.81, 0.99), p = 0.024] and 13% lower likelihood that the child consumed one additional animal source food (ASF) [aRR 0.87, (95% CI 0.76, 1.01), p = 0.061] compared with children of nondepressed mothers. However, maternal depression was not associated with either child anthropometry or development: these outcomes were strongly associated with better home child‐rearing quality. Stunting also related to child age and intervention group; child development related to mother's education and household wealth. This study suggests a correlation between maternal depression and child dietary diversity. This association could be due to unmeasured confounders, and therefore, further research is warranted. Understanding the relationship of depression to child outcomes—and the role of other potentially compensatory household factors—could help address some of the earliest, modifiable influences in a child's life and contribute to innovative approaches to improve child well‐being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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21. Child Diet and Household Characteristics Relate Differently to Child Development at the Beginning and the End of the Second "1000 Days" in Rural Nepal.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, and Thorne-Lyman, Andrew
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The "second 1000 days" is a period of rapid brain growth which consolidates developmental foundations and establishes school readiness. Understanding the relation between household characteristics, child diet, and child development remains incomplete, especially in resource-poor settings where >250 million children risk not achieving their full developmental potential. Child developmental performance was assessed (Ages & Stages Questionnaire [ASQ]) at ages 2 and 5 years in a cohort of Nepali children (n = 207) whose families participated in a nutrition/livestock management+community development intervention trial. Relationships between child developmental performance and mother's education, family wealth, child diet (animal source food [ASF] consumption, dietary diversity score [DDS]), school attendance, and intervention group were examined by adjusted linear regressions. These relationships varied at the 2 ages. At age 2 years, ASQ scores related positively to "Full Package Intervention" and negatively to "Partial Package Intervention" membership. At age 5 years, intervention group did not relate to ASQ scores. Mother's education did not relate to developmental findings for 2-year-olds. Mother's education, wealth, and school attendance positively predicted ASQ scores for these same children as 5-year-olds. Animal source food consumption was related to child development more strongly at age 5 than at 2 years. DDS had a less pronounced relationship to development than ASF consumption at both ages. Over this time span bracketing the second 1000 days, household characteristics and child diet related differentially to developmental performance depending on child age. Better understanding of the timing and mechanisms of these relationships is needed to effectively design interventions targeting improved child development in resource-poor settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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22. Diet quality over time is associated with better development in rural Nepali children.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, Shrestha, Merina, Neupane, Shailes, Lohani, Mahendra, and Thorne‐Lyman, Andrew L.
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CHILD development ,DIET ,LONGITUDINAL method ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL conditions ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,HOME environment ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DATA analysis software ,NUTRITIONAL status ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Developmental delays affect between 150 and 200 million children <5 years of age worldwide. Outside of diet supplement studies, relatively little is known about the relationships between diet quality and developmental status in resource‐poor settings. We examined associations between different aspects of dietary quality (dietary diversity score [DDS] and animal‐source food [ASF] consumption) and child development (assessed using the Ages and Stages Questionnaire‐3 [ASQ‐3]) among children whose families were enrolled in a community development intervention trial (implemented by Heifer Nepal) in western Nepal. Two sets of analyses were performed: (a) cross‐sectional Sample (N = 629) seen at the endline survey and (b) longitudinal sample (N = 269) with complete dietary records (six surveys over 48 months). In both samples, child development was significantly related to household wealth, maternal education, and especially home environmental quality. In the cross‐sectional sample, greater consumption of eggs (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 0.80, p =.04) or dairy products (aOR 0.95, p =.05) over the previous 7 days significantly reduced odds of low total ASQ score, by logistic regression analysis. In the longitudinal sample, only egg consumption and cumulative DDS and ASF scores were associated with significantly reduced odds of low total ASQ score (aORs 0.59–0.89). In adjusted linear regression analysis, both cumulative DDS (β [CI]: 1.92 [0.4, 3.5]) and ASF scores (2.46 [0.3, 4.7]) were significantly associated with greater continuous total child development. Programmes targeting child development must address home environmental quality as well as long‐term diet quality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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23. Multisectoral community development in Nepal has greater effects on child growth and diet than nutrition education alone - CORRIGENDUM.
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Miller, Laurie C, Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Rogers, Beatrice L, Neupane, Shailes, Ghosh, Shibani, and Webb, Patrick
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NUTRITION education ,COMMUNITY development ,GROWTH of children ,PLANT nutrition ,ANIMAL nutrition ,DIET ,ARM circumference ,NUTRITIONAL genomics - Published
- 2020
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24. Development of Ready to Cook (RTC) Edible Coated Foxtail Millet Pulao Mix.
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Wahlang, Baphiralang, Joshi, Neena, and Vijayalaxmi, K. G.
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FOXTAIL millet ,KIWIFRUIT ,SWEET cherry ,FOOD additives ,EDIBLE coatings ,RAGI ,COATED vesicles ,HIGH density polyethylene - Published
- 2019
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25. Women's education level amplifies the effects of a livelihoods-based intervention on household wealth, child diet, and child growth in rural Nepal.
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Miller, Laurie C., Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Rogers, Beatrice, Mahato, Shubh, Ghosh, Shibani, and Webb, Patrick
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CHILD development , *CHILD rearing , *CHILDREN'S health , *CHILD nutrition , *INCOME , *MOTHERS , *QUALITY of life , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RURAL conditions , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SUPPORT groups , *STATURE , *WOMEN , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *COMMUNITY-based social services , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
Background: Many organizations seek to alleviate poverty in the developing world, often focusing their interventions on women. The role, status, and education of women are fundamentally important facets of development. Thus, understanding the interaction of women's educational level and the response to interventions is important. Therefore, we examined the impact of educational level of household adults on responses to a livestock-based community intervention. Methods: Six pair-matched communities in 3 districts of Nepal (Chitwan/Nawalparasi/Nuwakot), were randomly assigned to receive community development activities via women's self-help groups at baseline or 1 year later. At 6 intervals over 48 months, a 125- item questionnaire addressing family demographics and child health/nutrition was completed in each household, plus child growth monitoring. Results were analyzed in relation to the highest education attained by any woman in the household, the child's mother, men, or any other adult in the household. Results: Outcomes (wealth, water/toilet availability, child diet diversity and growth) all significantly related to adult education. However, notable differences were found comparing the impact of men's and women's education. Percent change in wealth score was significant only in households where women had primary or secondary education (respectively, p = .0009 and p < .0001). Increased soap use related only to women's education (p < .0001). When adjusted for group assignment, baseline income, wealth, and animal scores, higher women's education was significantly associated with increased household wealth (p < .0001), better child height-for-age z scores (HAZ, p = .005), and improved child diet diversity (p = .01). Higher mother's education predicted better child HAZ (primary, p = .01, secondary, p = .03) and diet diversity (primary, p = .05, secondary, p < .0001). Higher men's education was significantly associated with household wealth (p = .02) and child diet diversity (p = .04), but not HAZ; higher education of any household member was associated only with household wealth (p < .0001). Moreover, households where the mother's education was better than the best-educated man also were significantly more likely to have children with better HAZ and dietary diversity (p = .03, p < .0001). Thus, the educational level of women and mothers had the broadest impact on child outcome variables. Conclusions: Household characteristics vary among participants in most community development projects. Of these, adult education likely mediates response to the inputs provided by the intervention. Particularly in interventions directed towards women, better education may enhance the ability of households to put interventions into practice, thus improving wealth, hygiene, and child diet and growth indices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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26. Duration of programme exposure is associated with improved outcomes in nutrition and health: the case for longer project cycles from intervention experience in rural Nepal.
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Miller, Laurie C., Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Rogers, Beatrice, Kershaw, Meghan, Houser, Robert, Ghosh, Shibani, Griffiths, Jeffrey K., Mahato, Shubh, and Webb, Patrick
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CHILD nutrition ,CHILDREN'S health ,RURAL geography ,ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY reduction - Abstract
Economic growth and poverty reduction are not always sufficient to improve child health and nutritional status.Heifer Internationalpromotes livestock introduction and related training for community development and poverty alleviation. These programmes do not directly address child health or nutrition. To determine effects of its activities on these important outcomes,Heiferconducted a 4-year longitudinal investigation in rural Nepal. The intervention was associated with significantly improved child anthropometry (related to the duration of intervention exposure) and child health.Heiferactivities represent a viable ‘nutrition sensitive’ intervention, but these impacts take time to manifest and be sustained. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2017
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27. Head growth of undernourished children in rural Nepal: association with demographics, health and diet.
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Miller, Laurie C., Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Singh, Rupa, Bhatta, Nisha, Rogers, Beatrice, Griffiths, Jeffrey K., Ghosh, Shibani, Mahato, Shubh, Singh, Padma, and Webb, Patrick
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NEURAL development , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *CHILDREN'S health , *RESPONSIBILITY in children , *ECONOMIC history - Abstract
Background: Brain development in early childhood is a key determinant of later cognition, social achievement and educational success. Head circumference (HC) measurements are a simple method to assess brain growth, yet reports of these measurements are uncommon in nutritional surveys of undernourished children. Objective: To evaluate HC measurements in a population of rural Nepali children and relate these measurements to demographics, health and diet. Methods: An observational study of head growth was nested within a longitudinal evaluation of a livestock-based agricultural intervention in rural Nepal. Between 538 and 689 children (aged 6 months to 8 years) were measured (height, weight, HC) at each of six survey visits. A total of 3652 HC measurements were obtained. Results were converted toZ-scores (WHO Anthro). Results: Mean head circumferenceZ-scores (HCZ) diminished progressively over the first 4 years of life; a decline of 30% occurred between 3 and 4 years of age (−1.73 to −2.45,P < 0.0001). Overall, 56% of HCZ were <−2. Gender-adjusted HCZ (but not other measurements) were significantly lower for girls than boys [mean (SD) −2.31 (1.0)vs−1.99 (0.094),P < 0.0001]; girls more often had microcephaly (61%vs50%,P < 0.0001). For children <3 years of age, HCZ were better in those who had eaten two or more animal-source foods (ASFs) within the previous 24 h [−1.69 (.05)vs−2.08 (0.10),P = 0.001] than in those who had eaten none or only one; HCZ correlated with the number of ASFs consumed (P < 0.001). Regression analyses demonstrated that the main determinants of HCZ were age, weight-for-ageZ-scores (WAZ) and gender; 43% of the variance in HCZ in younger children was explained by WAZ and ASF consumption. Conclusion: HCs reflect brain size in young children; brain size is linked to cognitive function. Poor head growth represents another facet of the ‘silent emergency’ of child undernutrition. Routine HCZ assessments may contribute to better understanding of the links between poverty and cognitive development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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28. Community development and livestock promotion in rural Nepal: Effects on child growth and health.
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Miller, Laurie C., Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, Rogers, Beatrice, Loraditch, Meghan, Houser, Robert, Singh, Padma, and Mahato, Shubh
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Background. More than 50% of children in Nepal are malnourished. Economic growth and poverty reduction are not always sufficient to improve the health and nutritional status of children. Heifer Nepal uses livestock training as a tool for community development and poverty alleviation but does not directly address child health and nutrition. Objective. To systematically assess the effects of Heifer activities on child health and nutrition. Methods. The study was a 2-year, longitudinal, randomized, controlled trial in six communities in Nepal (both Terai and hills), pair-matched for specific characteristics, randomly assigned to receive Heifer community development activities at baseline (intervention) or 1 year (control). At 6-month intervals over a period of 2 years, child anthropometric and comprehensive household surveys were performed. Results. Four hundred fifteen households were enrolled containing 607 children 6 months to 5 years of age. The intervention and control communities were equivalent for baseline socioeconomic status, household size, ownership of land and animals, and child nutrition and health. At 12 months (prior to animal donations), the Terai intervention group had improved child weight (p = .04), improved child height (p = .05), and reduced sick days (p = .03), as well as increased household income (p = .004), increased ownership of animals (p = .04) and land (p = .04), and improved sanitation practices (p < .01). In all districts, longer participation in Heifer activities corresponded to more improvement in child height-for-age z-scores. Conclusions. Heifer interventions resulted in improved socioeconomic status and household income per family member. Children under 60 months of age in the intervention group had greater incremental improvement in height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores than children in the control group, and longer participation in Heifer activities was associated with better growth. Poverty alleviation programs, such as Heifer, may indirectly benefit child growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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29. Comparative Evaluation of Different Pretreatments on Tomato Slices Dried in a Cabinet Air Drier.
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Joshi, Neena, Raghavan, G. S. Vijaya, and Gariepy, Yvan
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DRYING , *FRUIT drying , *TOMATOES , *WATER activity of food , *CALCIUM chloride , *SALT - Abstract
Effects on drying and other acceptability parameters when slices of tomatoes were subjected to different pretreatments before initiating the process of drying were studied. The study also included observation of effects of inherent moisture levels in the drying tomato on the attributes such as color, texture, shrinkage and appearance. The pretreatments consisted of solutions in water, of sugar (1%), calcium chloride (1,2 % ), common salt (2%), ascorbic acid (0.75%) and sodium benzoate (0.1%). The slices of tomato, 1 cm thick, were soaked in the specific solutions separately for 3, 6 and 12 hours. Untreated tomato slices served as control. Drying was stopped when tomato slices attained moisture levels of 30% and 10%. Drying rate (mr = m ebx where: mr - moisture ratio; m - model constant; b - drying rate; x time, minute) ranged between -0.007 (sugar solution 1%) and -0.029 (control). Pretreatments did in fact influence the shrinkage both at 10 and 30 % moisture levels. Effect on shrinkage was more pronounced at 30 % than 10 % moisture level. Visual assessment and photographs suggest that pretreatments with calcium chloride and sodium chloride had better texture and visual appeal than other pre-drying treatments. Duration of drying to reach 10% moisture level ranged between 180.0 and 241.67 minutes. Variations were observed between samples for parameters re-hydration ratio and water activity (0.462 0.550). It is suggested that pre-drying treatments do affect the different parameters that were studied and can help in improving the visual appeal and acceptability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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30. Dietary Diversity and Child Development in the Far West of Nepal: A Cohort Study.
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Thorne-Lyman, Andrew L., Shrestha, Merina, Fawzi, Wafaie W., Pasqualino, Monica, Strand, Tor A., Kvestad, Ingrid, Hysing, Mari, Joshi, Neena, Lohani, Mahendra, and Miller, Laurie C.
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Poverty adversely affects child development through multiple pathways in low- and middle-income countries. Relationships between diet and child development are poorly understood. In this study, we aimed to explore these associations in a longitudinal cohort of 305 children in rural Nepal (baseline mean age 14 months), evaluating dietary diversity and the consumption of specific food groups at three timepoints over 1.5 years. Child development was assessed using the Ages and Stages questionnaire-version 3 (ASQ-3). Associations between the number of days that children consumed minimum dietary diversity (MDD) (≥4/8 items) and specific food groups over time (range 0–3) and total and subscale ASQ scores at age 23–38 months were estimated using multiple linear and logistic regression, dichotomizing scores at the lowest quartile. After adjusting for confounders, each additional day of consuming MDD was associated with a 35% reduction in the odds of low total ASQ score [OR 0.65, 95% CI (0.46, 0.92)]. The consumption of animal source foods [OR 0.64, (0.46, 0.89)], and vegetables/fruits [OR 0.60, (0.41, 0.90), but not processed foods [OR 0.99, (0.62, 1.59)] was associated with lower odds of low total development. Vegetables, fruits and animal source foods may be important for child development in this setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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31. MILK Symposium review: Milk consumption is associated with better height and weight in rural Nepali children over 60 months of age and better head circumference in children 24 to 60 months of age.
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Miller, Laurie C., Neupane, Sumanta, Joshi, Neena, and Lohani, Mahendra
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Child undernutrition afflicts >150 million children worldwide, contributing to poor child growth, increased risk of infections, and loss of developmental potential. Animal-source foods (ASF) can ameliorate these problems by providing high-quality, high-density, and bioavailable protein and micronutrients. However, many children in developing countries lack ASF in their diet, although generally milk is the ASF most often consumed. Nevertheless, the relation of ASF—and that of specific ASF—to child growth in these contexts has been difficult to define, as has the association between diet and child and household factors in influencing growth outcomes. To better understand these relationships, we evaluated child growth by age groups (6–23 mo, 24–60 mo, and >60 mo) in relation to ASF consumption in rural Nepal. We used an observational study design that leveraged a data set generated through a 3-yr longitudinal controlled impact evaluation of a communitydevelopment intervention. Child anthropometry and 24-h diet recall were obtained at 5 household visits. At baseline, children were generally undernourished: 47% were stunted, 46% underweight, 17% wasted, and 24% microcephalic. Patterns of undernutrition varied with age but improved somewhat over time. Over the 3-yr period of study (9,283 observations), ASF were consumed infrequently: milk in 28% of assessments, meat in 27%, and eggs in 15%. Consumption patterns differed by age group, with younger children (6–23 mo) consuming more milk and less meat than children 24 to 60 or >60 mo. Consumption of even a single ASF at any of the 5 surveys was associated with greater growth in bivariate analysis. After adjustment for household (group assignment, survey round and its interaction, wealth, income, livestock and land ownership, maternal education) and child factors (age, sex, baseline anthropometry), mixed-effect linear regression analysis showed that milk consumption related to higher height for age and weight for age z-scores for children >60 mo of age and to higher head circumference z-score for children age 24 to 60 mo. For children >60 mo, egg consumption also related to higher weight z-scores. Household and child factors also influenced these outcomes. Of the ASF, milk had the strongest and most consistent relationship to child growth. Better measures of diet intake could reveal stronger associations between diet consumption patterns and child growth. Regardless, milk may be a key ASF to target for growth promotion among undernourished rural Nepali children. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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32. Accounting for the interplay of interpersonal and structural trauma in the treatment of chronic non-cancer pain, opioid use disorder, and mental health in urban safety-net primary care clinics.
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Castellanos S, Cooke A, Koenders S, Joshi N, Miaskowski C, Kushel M, and Knight KR
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While the epidemiological literature recognizes associations between chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP), opioid use disorder (OUD), and interpersonal trauma stemming from physical, emotional, sexual abuse or neglect, the complex etiologies and interplay between interpersonal and structural traumas in CNCP populations are underexamined. Research has documented the relationship between experiencing multiple adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and the likelihood of developing an OUD as an adult. However, the ACEs framework is criticized for failing to name the social and structural contexts that shape ACE vulnerabilities in families. Social scientific theory and ethnographic methods offer useful approaches to explore how interpersonally- and structurally-produced traumas inform the experiences of co-occurring CNCP, substance use, and mental health. We report findings from a qualitative and ethnographic longitudinal cohort study of patients with CNCP (n = 48) who received care in safety-net settings and their primary care providers (n = 23). We conducted semi-structured interviews and clinical and home-based participant observation from 2018 to 2020. Here we focus our analyses on how patients and providers explained and situated the role of patient trauma in the larger clinical context of reductions in opioid prescribing to highlight the political landscape of the United States opioid overdose crisis and its impact on clinical interactions. Findings reveal the disproportionate burden structurally-produced, racialized trauma places on CNCP, substance use and mental health symptoms that shapes patients' embodied experiences of pain and substance use, as well as their emotional experiences with their providers. Experiences of trauma impacted clinical care trajectories, yet providers and patients expressed limited options for redress. We argue for an adaptation of trauma-informed care approaches that contextualize the structural determinants of trauma and their interplay with interpersonal experiences to improve clinical care outcomes., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.
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- 2023
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33. The intersection of drug use discrimination and racial discrimination in the management of chronic non-cancer pain in United States primary care safety-net clinics: Implications for healthcare system and clinic-level changes.
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Cooke A, Castellanos S, Koenders S, Joshi N, Enriquez C, Olsen P, Miaskowski C, Kushel M, and Knight KR
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- Humans, United States, Analgesics, Opioid adverse effects, Safety-net Providers, Practice Patterns, Physicians', San Francisco, Primary Health Care, Racism, Chronic Pain drug therapy, Opioid-Related Disorders drug therapy
- Abstract
Background: Clinicians' bias related to patients' race and substance use history play a role in pain management. However, patients' or clinicians' understandings about discriminatory practices and the structural factors that contribute to and exacerbate these practices are underexamined. We report on perceptions of discrimination from the perspectives of patients with chronic non-cancer pain (CNCP) and a history of substance use and their clinicians within the structural landscape of reductions in opioid prescribing in the United States., Methods: We interviewed 46 clinicians and 94 patients, using semi-structured interview guides, from eight safety-net primary care clinics across the San Francisco Bay Area from 2013 to 2020. We used a modified grounded theory approach to code and analyze transcripts., Results: Clinicians discussed using opioid prescribing guidelines with the goals of increased opioid safety and reduced bias in patient monitoring. While patients acknowledged the validity of clinicians' concerns about opioid safety, they indicated that clinicians made assumptions about opioid misuse towards Black patients and patients suspected of substance use. Clinicians discussed evidence of discrimination in opioid prescribing at the clinic-wide level; racialized stereotypes about patients likely to misuse opioids; and their own struggles to overcome discriminatory practices regarding CNCP management., Conclusion: While clinicians and patients acknowledged opioid safety concerns, the practical application of opioid prescribing guidelines impacted how patients perceived and engaged with CNCP care particularly for patients who are Black and/or report a history of substance use. We recommend healthcare system and clinic-level interventions that may remediate discriminatory practices and associated disparities., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest No conflicts declared., (Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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34. Hydrothermal effects on physicochemical, sensory attributes, vitamin C, and antioxidant activity of frozen immature Dolichos lablab .
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Hassan MM and Joshi N
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Immature Dolichos bean is popular in the Asian region, which is a potent source of vitamin C, antioxidants as well as other macro and micronutrients. Extending shelf life with retaining maximum quality parameters through hydrothermal treatments (HTT) followed by freezing of immature Dolichos bean were carried out. In particular, samples were undergone HTT (n = 9), cooled at room temperature, packed in HDPE packs and stored in a freezer (-18 °C±2), whereas samples without HTT considered as control. The samples were analyzed for physicochemical, sensory attributes, vitamin C and antioxidant activity after three months of freeze storage. In the case of vitamin C, antioxidant activity and color retention, significant differences ( p < 0.05 ) were observed among HTT samples. HTT resulted in improving the cooking quality, sensory characteristics and retaining fresh like traits especially antioxidant activity and vitamin C in Dolichos bean. The study revealed that higher temperature (85 °C-98 °C) HTT for a shorter period of time (3 min) could be suitable for immature Dolichos bean to retain quality parameters without great loss during storage., (© 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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