8 results on '"Tabatabai, Mohammad"'
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2. Conditional survival analysis for concrete bridge decks
- Author
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Nabizadeh, Azam, Tabatabai, Habib, and Tabatabai, Mohammad A.
- Abstract
Bridge decks are a significant factor in the deterioration of bridges, and substantially affect long-term bridge maintenance decisions. In this study, conditional survival (reliability) analysis techniques are applied to bridge decks to evaluate the age at the end of service life using the National Bridge Inventory records. As bridge decks age, the probability of survival and the expected service life would change. The additional knowledge gained from the fact that a bridge deck has already survived a specific number of years alters (increases) the original probability of survival at subsequent years based on the conditional probability theory. The conditional expected service life of a bridge deck can be estimated using the original and conditional survival functions. The effects of average daily traffic and deck surface area are considered in the survival calculations. Using Wisconsin data, relationships are provided to calculate the probability of survival of bridge decks as well as expected service life at various ages. The concept of survival dividend is presented and the age when rapid deterioration begins is defined.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Effect of Secondary Flow on Hydraulic Geometry in Meandering Rivers
- Author
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Shahosainy, Mojgan, Tabatabai, Mohammad, and Nadoushani, Saied
- Abstract
Hydraulic geometry is a term to state that a relationship between channel shape and discharge at-a-station or downstream of a reach. Channel shape means cross-sectional geometry (i.e., width, depth), together with hydraulic parameters (i.e., bed slope, mean velocity) for a given water and sediment discharge. In this study, a general concept of hydraulic geometry is initially dealt with; thereafter, continuity, flow resistance, sediment load and secondary flow equations are applied to develop a semi-analytical model for downstream hydraulic relation. The secondary flow appears in the relations by the ratio of radial to longitudinal shear stresses. Further on, Hey and Thorne (J Hydraul Eng ASCE 112(8):671–686, 1986) field data in Britain are used to calibrate the model, and this indicates a reasonable agreement between observed and calculated values with average error between 17.101 and 30.204% which may partially be owing to the assumptions made in the model. In the end, sensitivity analysis is accomplished to identify the parameters to which the model is most sensitive.
- Published
- 2019
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4. Influence of Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) Exposure on Cardiovascular and Salivary Biosensors: Is There a Relationship?
- Author
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Halpern, Leslie R., Shealer, Malcolm L., Cho, Rian, McMichael, Elizabeth B., Rogers, Joseph, Ferguson-Young, Daphne, Mouton, Charles P., Tabatabai, Mohammad, Southerland, Janet, and Gangula, Pandu
- Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a global public health epidemic that initiates/exacerbates health consequences affecting a victim's lifespan. IPV can significantly predispose women to a lifetime risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD) due to the effects of stress and inflammation. This study investigates the correlation among IPV exposure, in-vivo CVD events, and inflammatory biomarkers as predictor indices(s) for CVD in female dental patients.
- Published
- 2017
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5. An Analysis of COVID-19 Mortality During the Dominancy of Alpha, Delta, and Omicron in the USA
- Author
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Tabatabai, Mohammad, Juarez, Paul D., Matthews-Juarez, Patricia, Wilus, Derek M., Ramesh, Aramandla, Alcendor, Donald J., Tabatabai, Niki, and Singh, Karan P.
- Abstract
Background: The objective of the study was to measure the risk of death due to COVID-19 in relation to individuals’ characteristics, and severity of their disease during the dominant periods of Alpha, Delta, and Omicron variants have influenced mortality rates.Methods: This study was conducted using COVID-19 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Case Surveillance Public Data Taskforce for 57 states, and United States territories between January 1, 2020 and March 20, 2022. Multivariable binary Hyperbolastic regression of type I was used to analyzes the data.Results: Seniors and ICU-admitted patients had the highest risk of death. For each additional percent increase in fully vaccinated individuals, the odds of death deceased by 1%. The odds of death prior to vaccine availability, compared to post vaccine availability, was 1.27. When comparing the time periods each variant was dominant, the odds of death was 3.45-fold higher during Delta compared to Alpha. All predictor variables had P-values ≤.001.Conclusion: There was a noticeable difference in the odds of death among subcategories of age, race/ethnicity, sex, PMCs, hospitalization, ICU, vaccine availability, variant, and percent of fully vaccinated individuals.
- Published
- 2023
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6. The Effect of Naloxone Access Laws on Fatal Synthetic Opioid Overdose Fatality Rates
- Author
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Tabatabai, Mohammad, Cooper, Robert L., Wilus, Derek M., Edgerton, Ryan D., Ramesh, Aramandla, MacMaster, Samuel A., Patel, Parul N., and Singh, Karan P.
- Abstract
Background: Increases in fatal synthetic opioid overdoses over the past 8 years have left states scrambling for effective means to curtail these deaths. Many states have implemented policies and increased service capacity to address this rise. To better understand the effectiveness of policy level interventions we estimated the impact of the presence of naloxone access laws (NALs) on synthetic opioid fatalities at the state level.Methods: A multivariable longitudinal linear mixed model with a random intercept was used to determine the relationship between the presence of NALs and synthetic opioid overdose death rates, while controlling for, Good Samaritan laws, opioid prescription rate, and capacity for medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD), utilizing a quadratic time trajectory. Data for the study was collected from the National Vital Statistics System using multiple cause-of-death mortality files linked to drug overdose deaths.Results: The presence of an NAL had a significant (univariate P-value = .013; multivariable p-value = .010) negative relationship to fentanyl overdose death rates. Other significant controlling variables were quadratic time (univariate and multivariable P-value < .001), MOUD (univariate P-value < .001; multivariable P-value = .009), and Good Samaritan Law (univariate P-value = .033; multivariable P-value = .018).Conclusion: Naloxone standing orders are strongly related to fatal synthetic opioid overdose reduction. The effect of NALs, MOUD treatment capacity, and Good Samaritan laws all significantly influenced the synthetic opioid overdose death rate. The use of naloxone should be a central part of any state strategy to reduce overdose death rate.
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- 2023
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7. Recommendations for Increasing Physician Provision of Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis: Implications for Medical Student Training
- Author
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Cooper, Robert L., Juarez, Paul D., Morris, Matthew C., Ramesh, Aramandla, Edgerton, Ryan, Brown, Lauren L., Mena, Leandro, MacMaster, Samuel A., Collins, Shavonne, Juarez, Patricia Matthews-, Tabatabai, Mohammad, Brown, Katherine Y., Paul, Michael J., Im, Wansoo, Arcury, Thomas A., and Shinn, Marybeth
- Abstract
There is growing evidence that pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) prevents HIV acquisition. However, in the United States, approximately only 4% of people who could benefit from PrEP are currently receiving it, and it is estimated only 1 in 5 physicians has ever prescribed PrEP. We conducted a scoping review to gain an understanding of physician-identified barriers to PrEP provision. Four overarching barriers presented in the literature: Purview Paradox, Patient Financial Constraints, Risk Compensation, and Concern for ART Resistance. Considering the physician-identified barriers, we make recommendations for how physicians and students may work to increase PrEP knowledge and competence along each stage of the PrEP cascade. We recommend adopting HIV risk assessment as a standard of care, improving physician ability to identify PrEP candidates, improving physician interest and ability in encouraging PrEP uptake, and increasing utilization of continuous care management to ensure retention and adherence to PrEP.
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- 2021
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8. Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Training among Medical Schools in the United States
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Cooper, Robert L., Tabatabai, Mohammad, Juarez, Paul D., Ramesh, Aramandla, Morris, Matthew C., Brown, Katherine Y., Arcury, Thomas A., Shinn, Marybeth, Mena, Leandro A., and Juarez, Patricia-Matthews
- Abstract
Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) has been shown to be an effective method of HIV prevention for men who have sex with-men (MSM) and -transgender women (MSTGWs), serodiscordant couples, and injection drug users; however fewer than 50 000 individuals currently take this regimen. Knowledge of PrEP is low among healthcare providers and much of this lack of knowledge stems from the lack or exposure to PrEP in medical school. We conducted a cross sectional survey of medical schools in the United States to assess the degree to which PrEP for HIV prevention is taught. The survey consisted Likert scale questions assessing how well the students were prepared to perform each skill associated with PrEP delivery, as well as how PrEP education was delivered to students. We contacted 141 medical schools and 71 responded to the survey (50.4%). PrEP education was only reported to be offered at 38% of schools, and only 15.4% reported specific training for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) patients. The most common delivery methods of PrEP content were didactic sessions with 11 schools reporting this method followed by problem-based learning, direct patient contact, workshops, and small group discussions. Students were more prepared to provide PrEP to MSM compared to other high-risk patients. Few medical schools are preparing their students to prescribe PrEP upon graduation. Further, there is a need to increase the number of direct patient contacts or simulations for students to be better prepared.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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