60 results on '"Travers, MJ"'
Search Results
2. Increased connectivity and depth improve the effectiveness of marine reserves
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Goetze, JS, Wilson, S, Radford, B, Fisher, R, Langlois, TJ, Monk, Jacquomo, Knott, NA, Malcolm, H, Currey-Randall, LM, Ierodiaconou, Daniel, Harasti, D, Barrett, N, Babcock, RC, Bosch, NE, Brock, D, Claudet, J, Clough, J, Fairclough, DV, Heupel, MR, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Jordan, AR, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Miller, D, Newman, SJ, Rees, MJ, Roberts, KE, Saunders, BJ, Speed, CW, Travers, MJ, Treml, Eric, Whitmarsh, Sasha, Wakefield, CB, Harvey, ES, Goetze, JS, Wilson, S, Radford, B, Fisher, R, Langlois, TJ, Monk, Jacquomo, Knott, NA, Malcolm, H, Currey-Randall, LM, Ierodiaconou, Daniel, Harasti, D, Barrett, N, Babcock, RC, Bosch, NE, Brock, D, Claudet, J, Clough, J, Fairclough, DV, Heupel, MR, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Jordan, AR, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Miller, D, Newman, SJ, Rees, MJ, Roberts, KE, Saunders, BJ, Speed, CW, Travers, MJ, Treml, Eric, Whitmarsh, Sasha, Wakefield, CB, and Harvey, ES
- Published
- 2021
3. Effects of human footprint and biophysical factors on the body-size structure of fished marine species
- Author
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Bosch, NE, Monk, Jacquomo, Goetze, J, Wilson, S, Babcock, RC, Barrett, N, Clough, J, Currey-Randall, LM, Fairclough, DV, Fisher, R, Gibbons, BA, Harasti, D, Harvey, ES, Heupel, MR, Hicks, JL, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Ierodiaconou, Daniel, Jordan, A, Knott, NA, Malcolm, HA, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Newman, SJ, Radford, B, Rees, MJ, Saunders, BJ, Speed, CW, Travers, MJ, Wakefield, CB, Wernberg, T, Langlois, TJ, Bosch, NE, Monk, Jacquomo, Goetze, J, Wilson, S, Babcock, RC, Barrett, N, Clough, J, Currey-Randall, LM, Fairclough, DV, Fisher, R, Gibbons, BA, Harasti, D, Harvey, ES, Heupel, MR, Hicks, JL, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Ierodiaconou, Daniel, Jordan, A, Knott, NA, Malcolm, HA, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Newman, SJ, Radford, B, Rees, MJ, Saunders, BJ, Speed, CW, Travers, MJ, Wakefield, CB, Wernberg, T, and Langlois, TJ
- Published
- 2021
4. Thirty critical research needs for managing an ecologically and culturally unique remote marine environment: The Kimberley region of Western Australia
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Cvitanovic, C, Mackay, M, Kelly, R, Wilson, SK, Waples, K, Nash, KL, van Putten, EI, Field, S, Botterill-James, T, Austin, BJ, Beckley, LE, Boschetti, F, Depczynski, M, Dobbs, RJ, Evans, RD, Feng, M, Goater, RK, Halford, AR, Kendrick, A, Kendrick, G, Lincoln, GDB, Ludgerus, LJ, Lowe, RJ, McMahon, K, Munro, JK, Newman, SJ, Nutt, C, Pearson, L, O'Leary, MJ, Richards, ZT, Robbins, WD, Rogers, DI, Salgado Kent, CP, Schoepf, V, Travers, MJ, Thums, M, Tucker, AD, Underwood, JN, Whiting, S, Mathews, D, Cvitanovic, C, Mackay, M, Kelly, R, Wilson, SK, Waples, K, Nash, KL, van Putten, EI, Field, S, Botterill-James, T, Austin, BJ, Beckley, LE, Boschetti, F, Depczynski, M, Dobbs, RJ, Evans, RD, Feng, M, Goater, RK, Halford, AR, Kendrick, A, Kendrick, G, Lincoln, GDB, Ludgerus, LJ, Lowe, RJ, McMahon, K, Munro, JK, Newman, SJ, Nutt, C, Pearson, L, O'Leary, MJ, Richards, ZT, Robbins, WD, Rogers, DI, Salgado Kent, CP, Schoepf, V, Travers, MJ, Thums, M, Tucker, AD, Underwood, JN, Whiting, S, and Mathews, D
- Abstract
The Kimberley marine environment in Western Australia is widely recognised for its outstanding natural features, vast and remote sea and landscapes, and Indigenous cultural significance. To ensure that adequate baseline information is available to understand, monitor and manage this remote and relatively understudied region, scientific exploration was undertaken between 2012 and 2018 as part of the Kimberley Marine Research Program (KMRP). Whilst this program generated significant amounts of new knowledge about the region, important research gaps remain, that if answered, should improve the capacity of managers to conserve the region's values more effectively. Here, we apply established participatory horizon scanning methods to draw on the expertise and understanding of 24 scientists and 18 managers (12 natural resource managers and 6 healthy country managers) involved in the KMRP, and assess their most essential remaining research needs for informing management of the region. Through this process, we identify a total of 184 research questions spanning seven themes: (i) habitats, (ii) fauna, (iii) ecological processes, (iv) pressures, (v) management, (vi) oceanography, and (vii) geomorphology. Of the 184 questions that formed the basis of this study, 29% related to the theme of ‘management’, followed by questions relating to ‘fauna’ (21%) and ‘pressures’ (20%). Questions assigned to the theme of ‘habitats’ (13%), ‘ecological processes’ (10%), and ‘oceanography’ (6%) were less common, whilst questions that related to ‘geomorphology’ only constituted 1% of all questions provided by study participants. Subtle differences in the types of questions posed by the scientist and manager groups were also evident, with questions relating to ‘ecological process’ and ‘oceanography’ overwhelmingly provided by scientists; questions in the themes ‘fauna’ and ‘management’ were mainly provided by Healthy Country Managers; and questions posed by natural resource managers were distribu
- Published
- 2021
5. A field and video annotation guide for baited remote underwater stereo-video surveys of demersal fish assemblages
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Langlois, T, Goetze, J, Bond, T, Monk, J, Abesamis, RA, Asher, J, Barrett, N, Bernard, ATF, Bouchet, PJ, Birt, MJ, Cappo, M, Currey-Randall, LM, Driessen, D, Fairclough, DV, Fullwood, LAF, Gibbons, BA, Harasti, D, Heupel, MR, Hicks, J, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Ierodiaconou, D, Jordan, A, Knott, NA, Lindfield, S, Malcolm, HA, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Miller, D, Mitchell, PJ, Newman, SJ, Radford, B, Rolim, FA, Saunders, BJ, Stowar, M, Smith, ANH, Travers, MJ, Wakefield, CB, Whitmarsh, SK, Williams, J, Harvey, ES, Langlois, T, Goetze, J, Bond, T, Monk, J, Abesamis, RA, Asher, J, Barrett, N, Bernard, ATF, Bouchet, PJ, Birt, MJ, Cappo, M, Currey-Randall, LM, Driessen, D, Fairclough, DV, Fullwood, LAF, Gibbons, BA, Harasti, D, Heupel, MR, Hicks, J, Holmes, TH, Huveneers, C, Ierodiaconou, D, Jordan, A, Knott, NA, Lindfield, S, Malcolm, HA, McLean, D, Meekan, M, Miller, D, Mitchell, PJ, Newman, SJ, Radford, B, Rolim, FA, Saunders, BJ, Stowar, M, Smith, ANH, Travers, MJ, Wakefield, CB, Whitmarsh, SK, Williams, J, and Harvey, ES
- Published
- 2020
6. Strong population structure deduced from genetics, otolith chemistry and parasite abundances explains vulnerability to localized fishery collapse in a large Sciaenid fish, Protonibea diacanthus
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Taillebois, L, Barton, DP, Crook, DA, Saunders, T, Taylor, J, Hearnden, M, Saunders, RJ, Newman, SJ, Travers, MJ, Welch, DJ, Greig, A, Dudgeon, C, Maher, S, Ovenden, JR, Taillebois, L, Barton, DP, Crook, DA, Saunders, T, Taylor, J, Hearnden, M, Saunders, RJ, Newman, SJ, Travers, MJ, Welch, DJ, Greig, A, Dudgeon, C, Maher, S, and Ovenden, JR
- Abstract
As pressure on coastal marine resources is increasing globally, the need to quantitatively assess vulnerable fish stocks is crucial in order to avoid the ecological consequences of stock depletions. Species of Sciaenidae (croakers, drums) are important components of tropical and temperate fisheries and are especially vulnerable to exploitation. The black-spotted croaker, Protonibea diacanthus, is the only large sciaenid in coastal waters of northern Australia where it is targeted by commercial, recreational and indigenous fishers due to its food value and predictable aggregating behaviour. Localized declines in the abundance of this species have been observed, highlighting the urgent requirement by managers for information on fine- and broad-scale population connectivity. This study examined the population structure of P. diacanthus across north-western Australia using three complementary methods: genetic variation in microsatellite markers, otolith elemental composition and parasite assemblage composition. The genetic analyses demonstrated that there were at least five genetically distinct populations across the study region, with gene flow most likely restricted by inshore biogeographic barriers such as the Dampier Peninsula. The otolith chemistry and parasite analyses also revealed strong spatial variation among locations within broad-scale regions, suggesting fine-scale location fidelity within the lifetimes of individual fish. The complementarity of the three techniques elucidated patterns of connectivity over a range of spatial and temporal scales. We conclude that fisheries stock assessments and management are required at fine scales (100 s of km) to account for the restricted exchange among populations (stocks) and to prevent localized extirpations of this species. Realistic management arrangements may involve the successive closure and opening of fishing areas to reduce fishing pressure.
- Published
- 2017
7. Relationships between latitude and environmental conditions and the species richness, abundance and composition of tropical fish assemblages over soft substrata
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Travers, MJ, primary, Potter, IC, additional, Clarke, KR, additional, and Newman, SJ, additional
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- 2012
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8. Visually induced analgesia in a deep tissue experimental pain model: A randomised crossover experiment
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Benedict M Wand, William Gibson, Mervyn J Travers, G.L. Moseley, Dana A Hince, M.J. van Selm, van Selm, MJ, Gibson, WI, Travers, MJ, Moseley, GL, Hince, D, and Wand, BM
- Subjects
integration of visual feedback into clinical practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Visual distortion ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Analgesic ,Magnification ,Thigh ,050105 experimental psychology ,Clinical Practice ,visualisation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Deep tissue ,Delayed onset muscle soreness ,Healthy volunteers ,Medicine ,visual distortion ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,medicine.symptom ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Visualizing one's own painful body part appears to have an effect on reported pain intensity. Furthermore, it seems that manipulating the size of the viewed image can determine the direction and extent of this phenomenon. When visual distortion has been applied to clinical populations, the analgesic effects have been in opposition to those observed in some experimental pain models. To help resolve this problem, we explored the effect of visualisation and magnification of the visual image on reported pain using a delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) pain model. Methods: We induced DOMS in the quadriceps of 20 healthy volunteers. Forty‐eight hours later, participants performed a series of painful contractions of the DOMS‐affected muscle under four randomised conditions: (1) Viewing the injured thigh; (2) Viewing the contralateral thigh; (3) Viewing a neutral object; and (4) Viewing the injured thigh through magnifying glasses. For each condition, participants rated their pain intensity during a series of painful contractions. Results: We observed that direct visualisation of the injured thigh had no effect on pain intensity when compared to viewing the contralateral thigh or neutral object. However, magnification of the DOMS‐affected leg during the performance of painful contractions caused participants to report more pain than when viewing the injured thigh normally. Conclusions: These results further demonstrate that the effect of visualisation varies between different pain conditions. These results may have implications for the integration of visual feedback into clinical practice. Significance: We present delayed onset muscle soreness as a model for exploring visually induced analgesia. Our findings suggest that this phenomenon is expressed differently in exogenous and endogenous experimental pain models. Further exploration may offer a potential pathway for the integration of visual analgesia into the management of clinical pain. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2018
9. Population genomics informs the management of harvested snappers across north-western Australia.
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Payet SD, Underwood J, Berry O, Saunders T, Travers MJ, Wakefield CB, Miller K, and Newman SJ
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- Animals, Western Australia, Fisheries, Fishes genetics, Genetic Variation, Metagenomics methods, Perciformes genetics, Australia, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
Failure to consider population structure when managing harvested fishes increases the risk of stock depletion, yet empirical estimates of population structure are often lacking for important fishery species. In this study, we characterise genetic variation in single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to assess population structure for three harvested species of tropical snappers across the broad (up to 300 km wide) and extensive (~ 4000 km) continental shelf of north-western Australia. Comparisons across ~ 300 individuals per species, showed remarkably similar patterns of genetic structure among Lutjanus sebae (red emperor), L. malabaricus (saddletail snapper) and Pristipomoides multidens (goldband snapper) despite subtle differences in biological and ecological traits. Low levels of genetic subdivision were reflected in an isolation by distance relationship where genetic connectivity increased with geographic proximity. This indicates extensive but not unlimited dispersal across the north-western Australian shelf. Our findings provide evidence of connectivity between current management areas, violating the assumption of multiple independent stocks. Spatial stock assessment models may be more suitable for the management of these species however demographic connectivity rates cannot be accurately estimated from the conventional population genetic approaches applied in this study. We recommend that managers aim to maintain adequate spawning biomass across current management areas, and assess stocks at finer scales, where practical., (© 2024. Crown.)
- Published
- 2024
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10. The clinical course of acute, subacute and persistent low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Wallwork SB, Braithwaite FA, O'Keeffe M, Travers MJ, Summers SJ, Lange B, Hince DA, Costa LOP, Menezes Costa LDC, Chiera B, and Moseley GL
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- Humans, Prospective Studies, Databases, Factual, Disease Progression, Low Back Pain diagnosis, Low Back Pain therapy, Acute Pain therapy
- Abstract
Background: Understanding the clinical course of low back pain is essential to informing treatment recommendations and patient stratification. Our aim was to update our previous systematic review and meta-analysis to gain a better understanding of the clinical course of acute, subacute and persistent low back pain., Methods: To update our 2012 systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched the Embase, MEDLINE and CINAHL databases from 2011 until January 2023, using our previous search strategy. We included prospective inception cohort studies if they reported on participants with acute (< 6 wk), subacute (6 to less than 12 wk) or persistent (12 to less than 52 wk) nonspecific low back pain at study entry. Primary outcome measures included pain and disability (0-100 scale). We assessed risk of bias of included studies using a modified tool and assessed the level of confidence in pooled estimates using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) tool. We used a mixed model design to calculate pooled estimates (mean, 95% confidence interval [CI]) of pain and disability at 0, 6, 12, 26 and 52 weeks. We treated time in 2 ways: time since study entry (inception time uncorrected) and time since pain onset (inception time corrected). We transformed the latter by adding the mean inception time to the time of study entry., Results: We included 95 studies, with 60 separate cohorts in the systematic review ( n = 17 974) and 47 cohorts ( n = 9224) in the meta-analysis. Risk of bias of included studies was variable, with poor study attrition and follow-up, and most studies did not select participants as consecutive cases. For the acute pain cohort, the estimated mean pain score with inception time uncorrected was 56 (95% CI 49-62) at baseline, 26 (95% CI 21-31) at 6 weeks, 22 (95% CI 18-26) at 26 weeks and 21 (95% CI 17-25) at 52 weeks (moderate-certainty evidence). For the subacute pain cohort, the mean pain score was 63 (95% CI 55-71) at baseline, 29 (95% CI 22-37) at 6 weeks, 29 (95% CI 22-36) at 26 weeks and 31 (95% 23-39) at 52 weeks (moderate-certainty evidence). For the persistent pain cohort, the mean pain score was 56 (95% CI 37-74) at baseline, 48 (95% CI 32-64) at 6 weeks, 43 (95% CI 29-57) at 26 weeks and 40 (95% CI 27-54) at 52 weeks (very low-certainty evidence). The clinical course of disability was slightly more favourable than the clinical course of pain., Interpretation: Participants with acute and subacute low back pain had substantial improvements in levels of pain and disability within the first 6 weeks ( moderate-certainty evidence); however, participants with persistent low back pain had high levels of pain and disability with minimal improvements over time (very low-certainty evidence). Identifying and escalating care in individuals with subacute low back pain who are recovering slowly could be a focus of intervention to reduce the likelihood of transition into persistent low back pain., Protocol Registration: PROSPERO - CRD42020207442., Competing Interests: Competing interests: Sarah Wallwork has received speaker fees from the Neuro Orthopaedic Institute and Exercise and Sport Science Australia. Felicity Braithwaite has received speaker fees from the Neuro Orthopaedic Institute, San Diego Pain Summit, Medicine Education Science and Health (MESH) . Mary O’Keeffe reports consulting fees from the European Pain Federation EFIC, honoraria from the Physio Network and travel support from INTERACT-EUROPE, PANACEA and Happy. Mervyn Travers has received speaker fees from Aalborg University, Australian Physiotherapy Association, Australian Podiatry Association, Life Ready Physiotherapy, Physio-Formation, Smart Education, O2 Academy, Healthia, Queensland Health, The University of Western Australia, Hemophilia Association Australia, Icelandic Physiotherapy Association and Rural Health West. Belinda Lange is a nonexecutive director of the Australian Physiotherapy Council and the Australasian Institute of Digital Health. G. Lorimer Moseley has received support from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Medical Research Future Fund, Reality Health, Connect Health UK, Institutes of Health California, American International Assurance Australia, Workers’ Compensation Boards and professional sporting organisations (International Olympic Committee, English Premier League, La Liga, Australian Football League Clubs, National Basketball League, Athletics Australia, Cricket Australia). Professional and scientific bodies have reimbursed him for travel costs related to presentations of research on pain. He has received speaker fees for lectures on pain and rehabilitation from the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, Noigroup Australia and MasterSessions. He receives royalties from Noigroup Publications, Orthopedic Physical Therapy Products and Dancing Giraffe Press. He sits on boards with Painaustralia and National Pain Solutions Research Alliance, and is chief executive officer with Pain Revolution. No other competing interests were declared., (© 2024 CMA Impact Inc. or its licensors.)
- Published
- 2024
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11. SMART Drumlines Ineffective in Catching White Sharks in the High Energy Capes Region of Western Australia: Acoustic Detections Confirm That Sharks Are Not Always Amenable to Capture.
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Taylor SM, How J, Travers MJ, Newman SJ, Mountford S, Waltrick D, Dowling CE, Denham A, and Gaughan DJ
- Abstract
The management of human-shark interactions can benefit from the implementation of effective shark hazard mitigation measures. A Shark-Management-Alert-in-Real-Time (SMART) drumline trial in the Capes region of Western Australia was instigated after several serious incidents involving surfers and white sharks ( Carcharodon carcharias ). The project aimed to determine whether white sharks (target species), which were relocated after capture, remained offshore using satellite and acoustic tagging. Over a 27-month period, 352 fish were caught, 55% of which comprised tiger sharks ( Galeocerdo cuvier ). Ninety-one percent of animals were released alive in good condition. Only two white sharks were caught; both were relocated ≥ 1 km offshore before release and moved immediately further offshore after capture, remaining predominately in offshore waters for the duration of their 54-day and 186-day tag deployments. Our results confirm that desirable animal welfare outcomes can be achieved using SMART drumlines when response times are minimised. The low target catches and the detection of 24 other tagged white sharks within the study area supported the decision to cease the trial. Our results reiterate there is no simple remedy for dealing with the complexities of shark hazards and reinforce the importance of trialing mitigation measures under local conditions.
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- 2022
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12. Effects of human footprint and biophysical factors on the body-size structure of fished marine species.
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Bosch NE, Monk J, Goetze J, Wilson S, Babcock RC, Barrett N, Clough J, Currey-Randall LM, Fairclough DV, Fisher R, Gibbons BA, Harasti D, Harvey ES, Heupel MR, Hicks JL, Holmes TH, Huveneers C, Ierodiaconou D, Jordan A, Knott NA, Malcolm HA, McLean D, Meekan M, Newman SJ, Radford B, Rees MJ, Saunders BJ, Speed CW, Travers MJ, Wakefield CB, Wernberg T, and Langlois TJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Body Size, Fisheries, Fishes, Humans, Conservation of Natural Resources, Ecosystem
- Abstract
Marine fisheries in coastal ecosystems in many areas of the world have historically removed large-bodied individuals, potentially impairing ecosystem functioning and the long-term sustainability of fish populations. Reporting on size-based indicators that link to food-web structure can contribute to ecosystem-based management, but the application of these indicators over large (cross-ecosystem) geographical scales has been limited to either fisheries-dependent catch data or diver-based methods restricted to shallow waters (<20 m) that can misrepresent the abundance of large-bodied fished species. We obtained data on the body-size structure of 82 recreationally or commercially targeted marine demersal teleosts from 2904 deployments of baited remote underwater stereo-video (stereo-BRUV). Sampling was at up to 50 m depth and covered approximately 10,000 km of the continental shelf of Australia. Seascape relief, water depth, and human gravity (i.e., a proxy of human impacts) were the strongest predictors of the probability of occurrence of large fishes and the abundance of fishes above the minimum legal size of capture. No-take marine reserves had a positive effect on the abundance of fishes above legal size, although the effect varied across species groups. In contrast, sublegal fishes were best predicted by gradients in sea surface temperature (mean and variance). In areas of low human impact, large fishes were about three times more likely to be encountered and fishes of legal size were approximately five times more abundant. For conspicuous species groups with contrasting habitat, environmental, and biogeographic affinities, abundance of legal-size fishes typically declined as human impact increased. Our large-scale quantitative analyses highlight the combined importance of seascape complexity, regions with low human footprint, and no-take marine reserves in protecting large-bodied fishes across a broad range of species and ecosystem configurations., (© 2021 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.)
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- 2022
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13. Climate-assisted persistence of tropical fish vagrants in temperate marine ecosystems.
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Gajdzik L, DeCarlo TM, Koziol A, Mousavi-Derazmahalleh M, Coghlan M, Power MW, Bunce M, Fairclough DV, Travers MJ, Moore GI, and DiBattista JD
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- Animals, Kelp, Oceans and Seas, Tropical Climate, Western Australia, Animal Distribution, Climate Change, Herbivory, Perciformes physiology
- Abstract
Rising temperatures and extreme climate events are propelling tropical species into temperate marine ecosystems, but not all species can persist. Here, we used the heatwave-driven expatriation of tropical Black Rabbitfish (Siganus fuscescens) to the temperate environments of Western Australia to assess the ecological and evolutionary mechanisms that may entail their persistence. Population genomic assays for this rabbitfish indicated little genetic differentiation between tropical residents and vagrants to temperate environments due to high migration rates, which were likely enhanced by the marine heatwave. DNA metabarcoding revealed a diverse diet for this species based on phytoplankton and algae, as well as an ability to feed on regional resources, including kelp. Irrespective of future climate scenarios, these macroalgae-consuming vagrants may self-recruit in temperate environments and further expand their geographic range by the year 2100. This expansion may compromise the health of the kelp forests that form Australia's Great Southern Reef. Overall, our study demonstrates that projected favourable climate conditions, continued large-scale genetic connectivity between populations, and diet versatility are key for tropical range-shifting fish to establish in temperate ecosystems., (© 2021. The Author(s).)
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- 2021
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14. Biomarkers of Inflammation and Oxidative Stress among Adult Former Smoker, Current E-Cigarette Users-Results from Wave 1 PATH Study.
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Christensen CH, Chang JT, Rostron BL, Hammad HT, van Bemmel DM, Del Valle-Pinero AY, Wang B, Mishina EV, Faulcon LM, DePina A, Brown-Baker L, Kimmel HL, Lambert E, Blount BC, Vesper HW, Wang L, Goniewicz ML, Hyland A, Travers MJ, Hatsukami DK, Niaura R, Cummings KM, Taylor KA, Edwards KC, Borek N, Ambrose BK, and Chang CM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Biomarkers urine, Cigarette Smoking adverse effects, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Vaping adverse effects, Young Adult, Cigarette Smoking epidemiology, F2-Isoprostanes urine, Oxidative Stress, Vaping epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Former smokers who currently use e-cigarettes have lower concentrations of biomarkers of tobacco toxicant exposure than current smokers. It is unclear whether tobacco toxicant exposure reductions may lead to health risk reductions., Methods: We compared inflammatory biomarkers (high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, IL6, fibrinogen, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule-1) and an oxidative stress marker (F2-isoprostane) among 3,712 adult participants in Wave 1 (2013-2014) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study by tobacco user groups: dual users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes; former smokers who currently use e-cigarettes-only; current cigarette-only smokers; former smokers who do not currently use any tobacco; and never tobacco users. We calculated geometric means (GM) and estimated adjusted GM ratios (GMR)., Results: Dual users experienced greater concentration of F2-isoprostane than current cigarette-only smokers [GMR 1.09 (95% confidence interval, CI, 1.03-1.15)]. Biomarkers were similar between former smokers who currently use e-cigarettes and both former smokers who do not use any tobacco and never tobacco users, but among these groups most biomarkers were lower than those of current cigarette-only smokers. The concentration of F2-isoprostane decreased by time since smoking cessation among both exclusive e-cigarette users ( P
trend = 0.03) and former smokers who do not currently use any tobacco ( Ptrend = 0.0001)., Conclusions: Dual users have greater concentration of F2-isoprostane than smokers. Exclusive e-cigarette users have biomarker concentrations that are similar to those of former smokers who do not currently use tobacco, and lower than those of exclusive cigarette smokers., Impact: This study contributes to an understanding of the health effects of e-cigarettes., (©2021 American Association for Cancer Research.)- Published
- 2021
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15. Association of Electronic Nicotine Delivery System Use With Cigarette Smoking Progression or Reduction Among Young Adults.
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Pearson JL, Sharma E, Rui N, Halenar MJ, Johnson AL, Cummings KM, Hammad HT, Kaufman AR, Tworek C, Goniewicz ML, Kimmel HL, Tanski S, Compton WM, Day H, Ambrose BK, Bansal-Travers M, Silveira ML, Abrams D, Limpert J, Travers MJ, Borek N, Hyland AJ, and Stanton CA
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- Adult, Cohort Studies, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prevalence, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Cigarette Smoking epidemiology, Cigarette Smoking psychology, Smoking Cessation psychology, Smoking Cessation statistics & numerical data, Vaping epidemiology, Vaping psychology
- Abstract
Importance: The prevalence of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) use, including e-cigarettes, among US young adults (YAs) has raised questions about how these products may affect future tobacco and nicotine use among YAs. Given this prevalence and that young adulthood is a critical period for the establishment of tobacco and nicotine use, it is important to consider the association between ENDS use and cigarette smoking specifically in this age group., Objective: To examine whether ENDS use frequency or intensity is associated with changes in cigarette smoking among US YA ever smokers during 1 year., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study used 3 waves of data (2013-2014, 2014-2015, and 2015-2016) from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, an ongoing longitudinal cohort study of adults and youth. Unweighted 1:6 propensity score matching was used to match participants on wave 1 risk factors for ENDS use at wave 2. The changes in smoking between wave 2 and wave 3 were assessed using the matched sample. In total, 1096 ENDS-naive, ever cigarette-smoking YAs (18-24 years of age) at wave 1 who participated in wave 2 and wave 3 and who had complete data in the PATH Study were included in the analyses, which were conducted from August 2018 to October 2019., Exposures: Never ENDS use (n = 987), any previous 30-day ENDS use (n = 109), 1 to 5 days of ENDS use in the previous 30 days (n = 75), and 6 or more days ENDS use in the previous 30 days at wave 2 (n = 34)., Main Outcomes and Measures: The analytic sample was selected using multiple variables based on peer-reviewed literature supporting associations with ENDS use. The main outcomes-changes in cigarette smoking behavior between wave 2 and wave 3-were defined using 2 measures: (1) change in smoking frequency, defined as the number of smoking days in the previous 30 days at wave 3 vs wave 2, and (2) change in smoking intensity, defined as the number smoking days in the previous 30 days multiplied by the mean number of cigarettes consumed on smoking days at wave 3 vs wave 2., Results: The present cohort analyses included 1096 YA ever smokers who were ENDS naive at wave 1. The majority of the sample were women (609 [55.6%]) and White individuals (698 [63.7%]), and the mean (SD) age was 21.4 (1.9) years. In wave 1, 161 YAs (14.7%) were daily smokers in the previous 30 days. After propensity score matching, no statistically significant associations were observed between any definition of wave 2 ENDS use and changes in either the frequency or intensity of smoking at wave 3., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study of US YA ever smokers, ENDS use was not associated with either decreased or increased cigarette smoking during a 1-year period. However, it is possible that the rapidly evolving marketplace of vaping products may lead to different trajectories of YA cigarette and ENDS use in the future.
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- 2020
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16. Biomarkers of Exposure among USA Adult Hookah Users: Results from Wave 1 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study (2013-2014).
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Travers MJ, Rivard C, Sharma E, Retzky S, Yucesoy B, Goniewicz ML, Stanton CA, Chen J, Callahan-Lyon P, Kimmel HL, Xia B, Wang Y, Sosnoff CS, De Jesús VR, Blount BC, Hecht SS, and Hyland A
- Subjects
- Adult, Carcinogens analysis, Cotinine, Female, Health, Humans, Male, Population, Smoking, Nicotiana, Young Adult, Biomarkers, Nicotine analysis, Nitrosamines, Smoking Water Pipes
- Abstract
Hookah smoking has become common in the USA, especially among young adults. This study measured biomarkers of exposure to known tobacco product toxicants in a population-based sample of exclusive, established hookah users. Urinary biomarker data from 1753 adults in Wave 1 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study were used to compare geometric mean concentrations of biomarkers of exposure in exclusive, established past 30-day hookah users to never users of tobacco. Geometric mean ratios were calculated comparing hookah user groups with never users adjusting for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, past 30-day marijuana use, secondhand smoke exposure and creatinine. Past 30-day hookah users ( n = 98) had 10.6 times the urinary cotinine level of never tobacco users. Compared to never tobacco users, past 30-day hookah users had 2.3 times the level of the carcinogen 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanol (NNAL), a metabolite of the tobacco-specific nitrosamine (TSNA) 4-(methylnitrosamino)-1-(3-pyridyl)-1-butanone (NNK), 1.3 times higher polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) 3-hydroxyfluorene and 1-hydroxypyrene, 1.8 times higher levels of acrylonitrile, 1.3 times higher levels of acrylamide, and 1.2 times higher levels of acrolein exposure. These data indicate that hookah use is a significant source of exposure to nicotine, carcinogens, and respiratory toxicants.
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- 2020
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17. Author Correction: Global status and conservation potential of reef sharks.
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MacNeil MA, Chapman DD, Heupel M, Simpfendorfer CA, Heithaus M, Meekan M, Harvey E, Goetze J, Kiszka J, Bond ME, Currey-Randall LM, Speed CW, Sherman CS, Rees MJ, Udyawer V, Flowers KI, Clementi G, Valentin-Albanese J, Gorham T, Adam MS, Ali K, Pina-Amargós F, Angulo-Valdés JA, Asher J, Barcia LG, Beaufort O, Benjamin C, Bernard ATF, Berumen ML, Bierwagen S, Bonnema E, Bown RMK, Bradley D, Brooks E, Brown JJ, Buddo D, Burke P, Cáceres C, Cardeñosa D, Carrier JC, Caselle JE, Charloo V, Claverie T, Clua E, Cochran JEM, Cook N, Cramp J, D'Alberto B, de Graaf M, Dornhege M, Estep A, Fanovich L, Farabaugh NF, Fernando D, Flam AL, Floros C, Fourqurean V, Garla R, Gastrich K, George L, Graham R, Guttridge T, Hardenstine RS, Heck S, Henderson AC, Hertler H, Hueter R, Johnson M, Jupiter S, Kasana D, Kessel ST, Kiilu B, Kirata T, Kuguru B, Kyne F, Langlois T, Lédée EJI, Lindfield S, Luna-Acosta A, Maggs J, Manjaji-Matsumoto BM, Marshall A, Matich P, McCombs E, McLean D, Meggs L, Moore S, Mukherji S, Murray R, Kaimuddin M, Newman SJ, Nogués J, Obota C, O'Shea O, Osuka K, Papastamatiou YP, Perera N, Peterson B, Ponzo A, Prasetyo A, Quamar LMS, Quinlan J, Ruiz-Abierno A, Sala E, Samoilys M, Schärer-Umpierre M, Schlaff A, Simpson N, Smith ANH, Sparks L, Tanna A, Torres R, Travers MJ, van Zinnicq Bergmann M, Vigliola L, Ward J, Watts AM, Wen C, Whitman E, Wirsing AJ, Wothke A, Zarza-Gonzâlez E, and Cinner JE
- Abstract
An Amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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- 2020
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18. Global status and conservation potential of reef sharks.
- Author
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MacNeil MA, Chapman DD, Heupel M, Simpfendorfer CA, Heithaus M, Meekan M, Harvey E, Goetze J, Kiszka J, Bond ME, Currey-Randall LM, Speed CW, Sherman CS, Rees MJ, Udyawer V, Flowers KI, Clementi G, Valentin-Albanese J, Gorham T, Adam MS, Ali K, Pina-Amargós F, Angulo-Valdés JA, Asher J, Barcia LG, Beaufort O, Benjamin C, Bernard ATF, Berumen ML, Bierwagen S, Bonnema E, Bown RMK, Bradley D, Brooks E, Brown JJ, Buddo D, Burke P, Cáceres C, Cardeñosa D, Carrier JC, Caselle JE, Charloo V, Claverie T, Clua E, Cochran JEM, Cook N, Cramp J, D'Alberto B, de Graaf M, Dornhege M, Estep A, Fanovich L, Farabaugh NF, Fernando D, Flam AL, Floros C, Fourqurean V, Garla R, Gastrich K, George L, Graham R, Guttridge T, Hardenstine RS, Heck S, Henderson AC, Hertler H, Hueter R, Johnson M, Jupiter S, Kasana D, Kessel ST, Kiilu B, Kirata T, Kuguru B, Kyne F, Langlois T, Lédée EJI, Lindfield S, Luna-Acosta A, Maggs J, Manjaji-Matsumoto BM, Marshall A, Matich P, McCombs E, McLean D, Meggs L, Moore S, Mukherji S, Murray R, Kaimuddin M, Newman SJ, Nogués J, Obota C, O'Shea O, Osuka K, Papastamatiou YP, Perera N, Peterson B, Ponzo A, Prasetyo A, Quamar LMS, Quinlan J, Ruiz-Abierno A, Sala E, Samoilys M, Schärer-Umpierre M, Schlaff A, Simpson N, Smith ANH, Sparks L, Tanna A, Torres R, Travers MJ, van Zinnicq Bergmann M, Vigliola L, Ward J, Watts AM, Wen C, Whitman E, Wirsing AJ, Wothke A, Zarza-Gonzâlez E, and Cinner JE
- Subjects
- Animals, Geographic Mapping, Population Density, Socioeconomic Factors, Conservation of Natural Resources statistics & numerical data, Coral Reefs, Ecosystem, Fisheries economics, Fisheries statistics & numerical data, Sharks physiology
- Abstract
Decades of overexploitation have devastated shark populations, leaving considerable doubt as to their ecological status
1,2 . Yet much of what is known about sharks has been inferred from catch records in industrial fisheries, whereas far less information is available about sharks that live in coastal habitats3 . Here we address this knowledge gap using data from more than 15,000 standardized baited remote underwater video stations that were deployed on 371 reefs in 58 nations to estimate the conservation status of reef sharks globally. Our results reveal the profound impact that fishing has had on reef shark populations: we observed no sharks on almost 20% of the surveyed reefs. Reef sharks were almost completely absent from reefs in several nations, and shark depletion was strongly related to socio-economic conditions such as the size and proximity of the nearest market, poor governance and the density of the human population. However, opportunities for the conservation of reef sharks remain: shark sanctuaries, closed areas, catch limits and an absence of gillnets and longlines were associated with a substantially higher relative abundance of reef sharks. These results reveal several policy pathways for the restoration and management of reef shark populations, from direct top-down management of fishing to indirect improvement of governance conditions. Reef shark populations will only have a high chance of recovery by engaging key socio-economic aspects of tropical fisheries.- Published
- 2020
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19. Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS) for chronic pain: the opportunity to begin again.
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Travers MJ, O'Connell NE, Tugwell P, Eccleston C, and Gibson W
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- Adult, Bias, Humans, Pain Measurement methods, Reproducibility of Results, Chronic Pain therapy, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation methods
- Published
- 2020
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20. Biomarkers of Exposure among Adult Smokeless Tobacco Users in the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study (Wave 1, 2013-2014).
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Cheng YC, Reyes-Guzman CM, Christensen CH, Rostron BL, Edwards KC, Wang L, Feng J, Jarrett JM, Ward CD, Xia B, Kimmel HL, Conway K, Leggett C, Taylor K, Lawrence C, Niaura R, Travers MJ, Hyland A, Hecht SS, Hatsukami DK, Goniewicz ML, Borek N, Blount BC, and van Bemmel DM
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- Adolescent, Adult, Biomarkers urine, Carcinogens analysis, Carcinogens toxicity, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Nicotine toxicity, Nicotine urine, Nitrosamines, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons toxicity, Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons urine, Prevalence, Smokers statistics & numerical data, Tobacco Use epidemiology, Tobacco Use urine, United States epidemiology, Volatile Organic Compounds toxicity, Volatile Organic Compounds urine, Young Adult, Tobacco Use adverse effects, Tobacco, Smokeless toxicity
- Abstract
Background: Monitoring population-level toxicant exposures from smokeless tobacco (SLT) use is important for assessing population health risks due to product use. In this study, we assessed tobacco biomarkers of exposure (BOE) among SLT users from the Wave 1 (2013-2014) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study., Methods: Urinary biospecimens were collected from adults ages 18 and older. Biomarkers of nicotine, tobacco-specific nitrosamines (TSNA), polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), volatile organic compounds (VOC), metals, and inorganic arsenic were analyzed and reported among exclusive current established SLT users in comparison with exclusive current established cigarette smokers, dual SLT and cigarette users, and never tobacco users., Results: In general, SLT users ( n = 448) have significantly higher concentrations of BOE to nicotine, TSNAs, and PAHs compared with never tobacco users; significant dose-response relationships between frequency of SLT use and biomarker concentrations were also reported among exclusive SLT daily users. Exclusive SLT daily users have higher geometric mean concentrations of total nicotine equivalent-2 (TNE2) and TSNAs than exclusive cigarette daily smokers. In contrast, geometric mean concentrations of PAHs and VOCs were substantially lower among exclusive SLT daily users than exclusive cigarette daily smokers., Conclusions: Our study produced a comprehensive assessment of SLT product use and 52 biomarkers of tobacco exposure. Compared with cigarette smokers, SLT users experience greater concentrations of some tobacco toxicants, including nicotine and TSNAs., Impact: Our data add information on the risk assessment of exposure to SLT-related toxicants. High levels of harmful constituents in SLT remain a health concern., (©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.)
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- 2020
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21. Use of Electronic Cigarettes in Smoke-Free Spaces by Smokers: Results from the 2014-2015 Population Assessment on Tobacco and Health Study.
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Dunbar ZR, Giovino G, Wei B, O'Connor RJ, Goniewicz ML, and Travers MJ
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Smoke-Free Policy, Smoking Cessation, Tobacco Products, Young Adult, Air Pollution, Indoor, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems statistics & numerical data, Smokers statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background : Smoke-free air policies exist to protect users and nonusers from exposure to tobacco smoke. Although electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS) may expose passerby to nicotine and particulate matter, few US states regulate indoor use of ENDS. The purpose of this study was to investigate reported rationales for ENDS use and reported ENDS use in public smoke-free places by dual cigarette/ENDS users. Methods : A population of ENDS/cigarette co-users ( n = 2051) was drawn from Wave 2 of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) dataset (2014-2015). Harm reduction beliefs and cessation behavior of co-users were investigated as predictors of ENDS use in public smoke-free places using logistic regression. Results: Fifty-eight percent of dual users reported past 30-day ENDS use in public smoke-free places. Reported use of ENDS to cut down on cigarette smoking (OR: 2.38, 95% CI: 1.86, 3.05), as an alternative to quitting tobacco (OR: 1.71, 95% CI: 1.37, 2.13), or because of belief that ENDS help people to quit cigarettes (OR: 1.52, 95% CI: 1.20, 1.92) were significantly associated with increased odds of ENDS use in smoke-free places. Conclusions: Beliefs that ENDS were useful as cessation tools or posed modified risk to users and nonusers were associated with elevated odds of use ENDS in locations where conventional tobacco is prohibited. Due to limitations in the survey instrument, in-home ENDS use could not be directly assessed in this analysis. However, these self-reported findings suggest that use of ENDS in public places where cigarette use is prohibited is prevalent enough to be of concern for future regulation and enforcement efforts., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2020
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22. Longitudinal e-Cigarette and Cigarette Use Among US Youth in the PATH Study (2013-2015).
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Stanton CA, Bansal-Travers M, Johnson AL, Sharma E, Katz L, Ambrose BK, Silveira ML, Day H, Sargent J, Borek N, Compton WM, Johnson SE, Kimmel HL, Kaufman AR, Limpert J, Abrams D, Cummings KM, Goniewicz ML, Tanski S, Travers MJ, Hyland AJ, and Pearson JL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, History, 21st Century, Humans, Male, Prevalence, Propensity Score, Public Health Surveillance, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems, Smoking epidemiology, Tobacco Products
- Abstract
Background: Evidence is accumulating that youth who try Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS, e-cigarettes) may go on to try cigarettes. This analysis examines the bidirectional patterns of ENDS and cigarette use among US youth over one year and uses propensity score matching (PSM) to examine frequency of ENDS use on changes in cigarette smoking., Methods: Our analysis included 11 996 participants who had two waves of available data (Wave 1 [W1] 2013-2014; Wave 2 [W2] 2014-2015) drawn from the longitudinal Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study. Cross-sectional weighted prevalence estimates are reported for cigarettes and ENDS. We used PSM to estimate the likelihood of ENDS use at W1 and to draw matched analytic samples, then used regression (logistic or linear) models to examine the effect of W1 ENDS use on W2 cigarette smoking. All statistical tests were two-sided., Results: In weighted analyses, 69.3% of W1 past-30-day cigarette smokers exhibited past-30-day smoking at W2; 42.2% of W1 past-30-day ENDS users were using ENDS at W2. W1 ever use of either product was similarly associated with W2 new use of the other product. Unweighted PSM models indicated W1 cigarette-naïve ENDS use was associated with W2 ever-cigarette smoking (n = 676; adjusted odds ratio = 3.21, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.95 to 5.45, P < .001); W1 ever-ENDS use did not affect change in cigarette frequency at W2 (n = 1020, beta = 0.31, 95% CI = -0.76 to 1.39, P = .57); 1-5 days ENDS use compared with ever, no past-30-day ENDS use was associated with a statistically significant decrease of W2 smoking days (n = 256, beta = -2.64, 95% CI = -4.96 to -0.32; P = .03); and W1 6+ day ENDS users did not show a decrease in frequency of cigarette smoking., Conclusions: Ever-ENDS use predicts future cigarette smoking, and frequency of ENDS use has a differential impact on subsequent cigarette smoking uptake or reduction. These results suggest that both cigarettes and ENDS should be targeted in early tobacco prevention efforts with youth., (© The Author, 2019. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2019
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23. Biomarkers of Exposure among U.S. Adult Cigar Smokers: Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study Wave 1 (2013-2014).
- Author
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Chang CM, Rostron BL, Chang JT, Corey CG, Kimmel HL, Sosnoff CS, Goniewicz ML, Edwards KC, Hatsukami DK, Wang Y, Del Valle-Pinero AY, Yang M, Travers MJ, Arnstein S, Taylor K, Conway K, Ambrose BK, Borek N, Hyland A, Wang L, Blount BC, and van Bemmel DM
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Biomarkers urine, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nicotine adverse effects, Nitrosamines urine, Prognosis, Smoking adverse effects, Smoking epidemiology, Tobacco Products adverse effects, Tobacco Products classification, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Carcinogens analysis, Cotinine urine, Environmental Exposure analysis, Nicotine urine, Smoking urine, Tobacco Products analysis
- Abstract
Background: Given the diverse cigar market and limited data on biomarker patterns by cigar type, we compared biomarkers of nicotine and tobacco toxicants among cigar smokers and other groups., Methods: Using Wave 1 urinary biomarker data from 5,604 adults in the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study, we compared geometric mean concentrations among cigar-only smokers (all cigars and separately for traditional, cigarillo, and filtered cigars), cigarette-only smokers, dual cigar/cigarette smokers, and never users of tobacco. We calculated geometric mean ratios comparing groups with never users adjusting for sex, age, race/ethnicity, education and creatinine., Results: Some day cigar-only smokers had lower biomarker concentrations than every day cigar-only smokers, but higher than never users. Every day cigar-only smokers ( n = 61) had lower TNE-2 (cotinine+trans-3'-hydroxycotinine) compared to every day cigarette-only ( n = 2217; P < 0.0001) and dual cigar/cigarette smokers ( n = 601; P < 0.0001). Several biomarkers, including NNAL (NNK metabolite) and CYMA (metabolite of acrylonitrile), were comparable in these groups. In exploratory analyses, every day filtered cigar-only ( n = 7) smokers had higher biomarker concentrations compared with every day traditional cigar-only smokers ( n = 12) and cigarillo-only smokers ( n = 24). Every day smokers of each cigar type were similar to exclusive cigarette smokers. For some biomarkers, particularly for every day filtered cigar-only smokers, concentrations were higher., Conclusions: For some biomarkers, every day cigar-only smokers were comparable with every day cigarette-only smokers. Exploratory analyses suggest that biomarkers vary by cigar type with every day filtered cigar-only smokers having the highest concentrations., Impact: High exposure to harmful constituents among cigar smokers is a continuing health issue., (©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2019
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24. An examination of introgression and incomplete lineage sorting among three closely related species of chocolate-dipped damselfish (genus: Chromis ).
- Author
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He S, Robitzch V, Hobbs JA, Travers MJ, Lozano-Cortés D, Berumen ML, and DiBattista JD
- Abstract
Aim: To determine the impact of ecological and environmental histories on the evolution of coral reef damselfishes at two adjacent marine biogeographic suture zones., Location: Indo-West Pacific, notably including two suture zones: Socotra and Christmas and Cocos/Keeling Islands., Taxon: Chromis dimidiata , Chromis margaritifer , and Chromis fieldi ., Methods: We utilized a combination of nuclear and mitochondrial genetic markers in addition to visual abundance survey data of these fishes., Results: Despite genetic patterns consistent with incomplete lineage sorting and relatively low genetic differentiation among the three studied Chromis species, there is evidence of hybridization between C. margaritifer and C. fieldi at Christmas Island based on molecular and visual identification. Introgression appears to be spreading westwards to other C. fieldi populations based on COI haplotype comparison. Moreover, the genetic distance between C. margaritifer and C. fieldi suggests that Pleistocene sea-level fluctuations may have contributed to allopatric divergence and secondary contact between these two closely related species., Main Conclusions: Our study highlights that evolutionary processes in coral reef fishes operate differently between suture zones, possibly due to different ecological and environmental predispositions regulating secondary contact of sister species. While secondary contact likely led to hybridization and introgression at Christmas and Cocos/Keeling Islands, none of those processes seem present at Socotra for the chocolate-dipped damselfish. This difference is likely due to an environmental barrier caused by hydrodynamic regimes in the Gulf of Aden., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2019
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25. The Microbiome of the Gastrointestinal Tract of a Range-Shifting Marine Herbivorous Fish.
- Author
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Jones J, DiBattista JD, Stat M, Bunce M, Boyce MC, Fairclough DV, Travers MJ, and Huggett MJ
- Abstract
Globally, marine species' distributions are being modified due to rising ocean temperatures. Increasing evidence suggests a circum-global pattern of poleward extensions in the distributions of many tropical herbivorous species, including the ecologically important rabbitfish Siganus fuscescens . Adaptability of a species to such new environments may be heavily influenced by the composition of their gastrointestinal microbe fauna, which is fundamentally important to animal health. Siganus fuscescens thus provides an opportunity to assess the stability of gastrointestinal microbes under varying environmental conditions. The gastrointestinal microbial communities of S. fuscescens were characterized over 2,000 km of Australia's western coast, from tropical to temperate waters, including near its current southern distributional limit. Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene demonstrated that each population had a distinct hindgut microbial community, and yet, 20 OTUs occurred consistently in all samples. These OTUs were considered the 'core microbiome' and were highly abundant, composing between 31 and 54% of each population. Furthermore, levels of short chain fatty acids, an indicator of microbial fermentation activity, were similar among tropical and temperate locations. These data suggest that flexibility in the hindgut microbiome may play a role in enabling such herbivores to colonize new environments beyond their existing range.
- Published
- 2018
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26. Commentary: Trunk Muscle Activity during Drop Jump Performance in Adolescent Athletes with Back Pain.
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Palsson TS, Caneiro JP, Hirata RP, Griffin D, Gibson W, and Travers MJ
- Published
- 2018
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27. Urinary Metabolite Levels of Flame Retardants in Electronic Cigarette Users: A Study Using the Data from NHANES 2013-2014.
- Author
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Wei B, Goniewicz ML, O'Connor RJ, Travers MJ, and Hyland AJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Biomarkers urine, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Nutrition Surveys, Organophosphorus Compounds urine, Pilot Projects, Young Adult, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems, Flame Retardants analysis, Organophosphates urine
- Abstract
Evaluating the safety of e-cigarettes and making informed judgement about developing potential standards require sufficient scientific evidence. Since e-cigarettes are highly engineered products containing plastic, glass and metal parts, and e-liquids are largely different matrices, many toxic compounds which are not typical hazards for the users of combustible tobacco products (e.g., cigarettes), could exist in e-liquids, and consequently, posing potential health risk to e-cigarette users. We combined the measurements of urinary metabolites of organophosphate flame retardants (OPFRs) with questionnaire data collected in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES) from 2013 to 2014, and we compared adjusted geometric means (GM) for each biomarker in e-cigarette users with levels in non-users and users of various tobacco products using multiple regression analyses to adjust for potential confounders. We found diphenyl phosphate (DPhP), bis(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (BDCPP), bis(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (BCEP), and dibutyl phosphate (DBUP) were detected in all e-cigarette users. The adjusted GM of BCEP, the metabolite of tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (TCEP), was 81% higher than nonusers ( p = 0.0124) and significantly higher than those for both cigarette and cigar users ( p < 0.05). The findings in this pilot study suggest that certain OPFRs may present in e-cigarettes as contaminants, and consequently, resulting in higher exposure levels in e-cigarette users compared to nonusers. As we only identified 14 e-cigarette users in the survey, the findings in this study need to be confirmed in future study at a larger scale. A better examination of the types and levels of FRs and their potential contamination sources in e-cigarettes is also needed., Competing Interests: M.L.G. received a research grant from Pfizer and served as a member of advisory board to Johnson & Johnson, manufacturers of smoking cessation medication. The other authors declare no actual or potential competing financial interests.
- Published
- 2018
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28. Brief Report: Lead Levels in Selected Electronic Cigarettes from Canada and the United States.
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Dunbar ZR, Das A, O'Connor RJ, Goniewicz ML, Wei B, and Travers MJ
- Subjects
- Administration, Inhalation, Canada, Chromatography, Gas, Consumer Behavior, Humans, Nicotine administration & dosage, United States, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems, Lead analysis
- Abstract
Few published studies have investigated the presence of lead in the e-liquid of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS). Lead inhalation is associated with increased risk of stroke, heart disease, and other diseases. This study used a novel application of graphite furnace technology to compare the concentration of lead between e-liquids of different packaging and product designs using e-liquids that are or were commercially available in the United States and Canada. Eleven nicotine-free disposable ENDS devices and 12 bottled refill solutions that contained nicotine were purchased from retailers in Canada and the United States between 2015 and 2017. E-liquids extracted from the disposable products and individual containers were analyzed for lead content by graphite furnace using atomic absorption detection. The lead concentration of open-wick ENDS devices ranged from 25.2 ppb to 838.4 ppb, with a standard deviation of 187.4 ppb. None of the bottled e-liquids contained quantifiable levels of lead. This study found that quantifiable levels of lead are present in certain disposable e-cigarette devices, and there is evidence from this study that the design of ENDS devices may contribute to lead exposure. These findings suggest that lead testing should be incorporated into future chemical analyses of ENDS devices., Competing Interests: M.L.G. received a research grant from Pfizer and served as a member of advisory board to Johnson & Johnson, manufacturers of smoking cessation medications.
- Published
- 2018
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29. Patterns of Use of Smokeless Tobacco in US Adults, 2013-2014.
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Cheng YC, Rostron BL, Day HR, Stanton CA, Hull LC, Persoskie A, Travers MJ, Taylor K, Conway KP, Ambrose BK, and Borek N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Smoking, United States, Tobacco Products statistics & numerical data, Tobacco Use trends, Tobacco, Smokeless statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine patterns of smokeless tobacco (SLT) use, by type, in wave 1 (2013-2014) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study in the United States., Methods: We analyzed data from 32 320 adults (aged ≥ 18 years) to assess the use of pouched snus and other SLT products (loose snus, moist snuff, dip, spit, and chewing tobacco)., Results: Overall, SLT use was most common among men, younger adults, non-Hispanic Whites, and nonurban respondents. Pouched snus users were more likely to report nondaily and polytobacco use than users of other SLT products. Respondents who used SLT some days were more likely to be current established cigarette smokers than those who used SLT every day (57.9% vs 20.2%). Furthermore, current established smokers who used SLT some days were more likely to smoke every day and had a higher median number of cigarettes smoked per day than smokers who used SLT every day., Conclusions: Polytobacco use, especially cigarette smoking, is common among SLT users. Pouched snus users are more likely to report nondaily snus use and polytobacco use than users of other SLT products.
- Published
- 2017
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30. Strong population structure deduced from genetics, otolith chemistry and parasite abundances explains vulnerability to localized fishery collapse in a large Sciaenid fish, Protonibea diacanthus .
- Author
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Taillebois L, Barton DP, Crook DA, Saunders T, Taylor J, Hearnden M, Saunders RJ, Newman SJ, Travers MJ, Welch DJ, Greig A, Dudgeon C, Maher S, and Ovenden JR
- Abstract
As pressure on coastal marine resources is increasing globally, the need to quantitatively assess vulnerable fish stocks is crucial in order to avoid the ecological consequences of stock depletions. Species of Sciaenidae (croakers, drums) are important components of tropical and temperate fisheries and are especially vulnerable to exploitation. The black-spotted croaker, Protonibea diacanthus , is the only large sciaenid in coastal waters of northern Australia where it is targeted by commercial, recreational and indigenous fishers due to its food value and predictable aggregating behaviour. Localized declines in the abundance of this species have been observed, highlighting the urgent requirement by managers for information on fine- and broad-scale population connectivity. This study examined the population structure of P. diacanthus across north-western Australia using three complementary methods: genetic variation in microsatellite markers, otolith elemental composition and parasite assemblage composition. The genetic analyses demonstrated that there were at least five genetically distinct populations across the study region, with gene flow most likely restricted by inshore biogeographic barriers such as the Dampier Peninsula. The otolith chemistry and parasite analyses also revealed strong spatial variation among locations within broad-scale regions, suggesting fine-scale location fidelity within the lifetimes of individual fish. The complementarity of the three techniques elucidated patterns of connectivity over a range of spatial and temporal scales. We conclude that fisheries stock assessments and management are required at fine scales (100 s of km) to account for the restricted exchange among populations (stocks) and to prevent localized extirpations of this species. Realistic management arrangements may involve the successive closure and opening of fishing areas to reduce fishing pressure.
- Published
- 2017
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31. Characterization, development and multiplexing of microsatellite markers in three commercially exploited reef fish and their application for stock identification.
- Author
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Taillebois L, Dudgeon C, Maher S, Crook DA, Saunders TM, Barton DP, Taylor JA, Welch DJ, Newman SJ, Travers MJ, Saunders RJ, and Ovenden J
- Abstract
Thirty-four microsatellite loci were isolated from three reef fish species; golden snapper Lutjanus johnii, blackspotted croaker Protonibea diacanthus and grass emperor Lethrinus laticaudis using a next generation sequencing approach. Both IonTorrent single reads and Illumina MiSeq paired-end reads were used, with the latter demonstrating a higher quality of reads than the IonTorrent. From the 1-1.5 million raw reads per species, we successfully obtained 10-13 polymorphic loci for each species, which satisfied stringent design criteria. We developed multiplex panels for the amplification of the golden snapper and the blackspotted croaker loci, as well as post-amplification pooling panels for the grass emperor loci. The microsatellites characterized in this work were tested across three locations of northern Australia. The microsatellites we developed can detect population differentiation across northern Australia and may be used for genetic structure studies and stock identification., Competing Interests: The authors declare there are no competing interests. David J. Welch is an employee of C2O Fisheries, Cairns, Queensland, Australia.
- Published
- 2016
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32. Indoor air quality due to secondhand smoke: Signals from selected hospitality locations in rural and urban areas of Bangalore and Dharwad districts in Karnataka, India.
- Author
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Travers MJ, Nayak NS, Annigeri VB, and Billava NN
- Subjects
- Air Pollution, Indoor adverse effects, Environmental Exposure, Humans, India, Rural Population, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects, Urban Population, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Background: Tobacco smoke has compounds that are known as human carcinogens. With every breath of secondhand smoke we inhale thousands of chemicals. The Government of India in the interest of public health has enacted the Cigarette and Other Tobacco Products Act (COTPA), 2003, which bans smoking in all the public places including hotels and restaurants. The purpose of this study was to observe and record air pollution in smoke free and smoke observed locations and thereby find out whether the owners/managers of hotels, restaurants, and bars comply with rules of COTPA., Objectives: The objectives of the study were to measure and compare the level of particulate air pollution from secondhand smoke (PM2.5) in smoking and nonsmoking venues., Materials and Methods: The study was conducted from September 2009 to March 2010 in Karnataka, India following a nonrandom sample of 79 locations, which included restaurants, bars, cafes, hotels, and tea stalls in two districts. The concentration of PM2.5 was measured using a TSI SidePak AM510 Personal Aerosol Monitor., Results: In Karnataka out of the 79 hospitality locations, smoking was observed in 58% places and only 28% had displayed the required "No Smoking" signage. Places where indoor smoking was observed had high levels of air pollution with average 135 PM2.5, which were 3.1 times higher than the average 43 PM2.5 in smoke-free locations and 14 times higher than the World Health Organization (WHO) target air quality guideline for PM2.5. The average PM2.5 levels in different locations ranged from 11 to 417 μg/m(3) and was lower in the case of apparently compliant designated smoking area (DSR)., Conclusions: The patrons and the workers in the hospitality sector continue to be exposed to secondhand smoke despite the enactment of COTPA, which bans smoking in public places. This situation demands stringent measures for effective implementation of the Smoke Free Act and negative response to smoking among civil society.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Caught in the middle: combined impacts of shark removal and coral loss on the fish communities of coral reefs.
- Author
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Ruppert JL, Travers MJ, Smith LL, Fortin MJ, and Meekan MG
- Subjects
- Animals, Australia, Conservation of Natural Resources, Humans, Species Specificity, Anthozoa physiology, Coral Reefs, Fishes physiology, Sharks physiology
- Abstract
Due to human activities, marine and terrestrial ecosystems face a future where disturbances are predicted to occur at a frequency and severity unprecedented in the recent past. Of particular concern is the ability of systems to recover where multiple stressors act simultaneously. We examine this issue in the context of a coral reef ecosystem where increases in stressors, such as fisheries, benthic degradation, cyclones and coral bleaching, are occurring at global scales. By utilizing long-term (decadal) monitoring programs, we examined the combined effects of chronic (removal of sharks) and pulse (cyclones, bleaching) disturbances on the trophic structure of coral reef fishes at two isolated atoll systems off the coast of northwest Australia. We provide evidence consistent with the hypothesis that the loss of sharks can have an impact that propagates down the food chain, potentially contributing to mesopredator release and altering the numbers of primary consumers. Simultaneously, we show how the effects of bottom-up processes of bleaching and cyclones appear to propagate up the food chain through herbivores, planktivores and corallivores, but do not affect carnivores. Because their presence may promote the abundance of herbivores, the removal of sharks by fishing has implications for both natural and anthropogenic disturbances involving the loss of corals, as herbivores are critical to the progress and outcome of coral recovery.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Indoor air quality in Virginia waterpipe cafes.
- Author
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Cobb CO, Vansickel AR, Blank MD, Jentink K, Travers MJ, and Eissenberg T
- Subjects
- Humans, Virginia, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Occupational Exposure analysis, Restaurants, Smoking, Tobacco Products, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Introduction: A revised indoor air quality law has been implemented in Virginia to protect the public from the harmful effects of secondhand smoke exposure. This legislation contains exemptions that include allowances for smoking in a room that is structurally separated and separately ventilated. The objective of the current study was to examine the impact of this law on air quality in waterpipe cafés, as well as to compare the air quality in these cafés to restaurants that allow cigarette smoking and those where no smoking is permitted., Methods: Indoor air quality in 28 venues (17 waterpipe cafés, five cigarette smoking-permitted restaurants and six smoke-free restaurants (five with valid data)) in Virginia was assessed during 4 March to 27 May 2011. Real-time measurements of particulate matter (PM) with 2.5 μm aerodynamic diameter or smaller (PM2.5) were obtained and occupant behaviour/venue characteristics were assessed., Results: The highest mean PM2.5 concentration was observed for waterpipe café smoking rooms (374 μg/m(3), n=17) followed by waterpipe café non-smoking rooms (123 μg/m(3), n=11), cigarette smoking-permitted restaurant smoking rooms (119 μg/m(3), n=5), cigarette smoking-permitted restaurant non-smoking rooms (26 μg/m(3), n=5) and smoke-free restaurants (9 μg/m(3), n=5). Smoking density was positively correlated with PM2.5 across smoking rooms and the smoke-free restaurants. In addition, PM2.5 was positively correlated between smoking and non-smoking rooms of venues., Conclusions: The PM2.5 concentrations observed among the waterpipe cafés sampled here indicated air quality in the waterpipe café smoking rooms was worse than restaurant rooms in which cigarette smoking was permitted, and state-required non-smoking rooms in waterpipe cafés may expose patrons and employees to PM2.5 concentrations above national and international air quality standards. Reducing the health risks of secondhand smoke may require smoke-free establishments in which tobacco smoking sources such as water pipes are, like cigarettes, prohibited.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Secondhand smoke exposure levels in outdoor hospitality venues: a qualitative and quantitative review of the research literature.
- Author
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Licht AS, Hyland A, Travers MJ, and Chapman S
- Subjects
- Environmental Exposure analysis, Environmental Monitoring methods, Humans, Occupational Exposure analysis, Air Pollutants analysis, Restaurants, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Objective: This paper considers the evidence on whether outdoor secondhand smoke (SHS) is present in hospitality venues at high levels enough to potentially pose health risks, particularly among employees., Data Sources: Searches in PubMed and Web of Science included combinations of environmental tobacco smoke, secondhand smoke, or passive smoke AND outdoor, yielding 217 and 5,199 results, respectively through June, 2012., Study Selection: Sixteen studies were selected that reported measuring any outdoor SHS exposures (particulate matter (PM) or other SHS indicators)., Data Extraction: The SHS measurement methods were assessed for inclusion of extraneous variables that may affect levels or the corroboration of measurements with known standards., Data Synthesis: The magnitude of SHS exposure (PM2.5) depends on the number of smokers present, measurement proximity, outdoor enclosures, and wind. Annual excess PM2.5 exposure of full-time waitstaff at outdoor smoking environments could average 4.0 to 12.2 μg/m3 under variable smoking conditions., Conclusions: Although highly transitory, outdoor SHS exposures could occasionally exceed annual ambient air quality exposure guidelines. Personal monitoring studies of waitstaff are warranted to corroborate these modeled estimates.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Attitudes, experiences, and acceptance of smoke-free policies among US multiunit housing residents.
- Author
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Licht AS, King BA, Travers MJ, Rivard C, and Hyland AJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Female, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Organizational Policy, United States, Young Adult, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Housing, Smoke-Free Policy, Smoking Prevention, Tobacco Smoke Pollution prevention & control
- Abstract
We assessed factors related to smoke-free policies among a cross-sectional, nationally representative, random-digit-dial sample (landline and cell phone) of US multiunit housing residents (n = 418). Overall, 29% reported living in smoke-free buildings, while 79% reported voluntary smoke-free home rules. Among those with smoke-free home rules, 44% reported secondhand smoke incursions in their unit. Among all respondents, 56% supported smoke-free building policy implementation. These findings suggest that smoke-free building policies are needed to protect multiunit housing residents from secondhand smoke in their homes.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Smokefree policies in Latin America and the Caribbean: making progress.
- Author
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Sebrié EM, Schoj V, Travers MJ, McGaw B, and Glantz SA
- Subjects
- Caribbean Region, Government Regulation, Humans, Latin America, Public Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
We reviewed the adoption and implementation of smokefree policies in all Latin American and the Caribbean (LAC) countries. Significant progress has been achieved among LAC countries since the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) was adopted in 2005. Both national and sub-national legislation have provided effective mechanisms to increase the fraction of the population protected from secondhand tobacco smoke. Civil society has actively promoted these policies and played a main role in enacting them and monitoring their enforcement. The tobacco industry, while continuing to oppose the approval and regulation of the laws at legislative and executive levels, has gone a step further by litigating against them in the Courts. As in the US and elsewhere, this litigation has failed to stop the legislation.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Subtle genetic structure reveals restricted connectivity among populations of a coral reef fish inhabiting remote atolls.
- Author
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Underwood JN, Travers MJ, and Gilmour JP
- Abstract
We utilized a spatial and temporal analyses of genetic structure, supplemented with ecological and oceanographic analysis, to assess patterns of population connectivity in a coral reef fish Chromis margaritifer among the unique and remote atolls in the eastern Indian Ocean. A subtle, but significant genetic discontinuity at 10 microsatellite DNA loci was detected between atoll systems corresponding with a low (≤ 1%) probability of advection across the hundreds of kilometers of open ocean that separates them. Thus, although genetic connections between systems are likely maintained by occasional long-distance dispersal of C. margaritifer larvae, ecological population connectivity at this spatial scale appears to be restricted. Further, within one of these atoll systems, significant spatial differentiation among samples was accompanied by a lack of temporal pairwise differentiation between recruit and adult samples, indicating that restrictions to connectivity also occur at a local scale (tens of kilometers). In contrast, a signal of panmixia was detected at the other atoll system studied. Lastly, greater relatedness and reduced genetic diversity within recruit samples was associated with relatively large differences among them, indicating the presence of sweepstakes reproduction whereby a small proportion of adults contributes to recruitment in the next generation. These results are congruent with earlier work on hard corals, suggesting that local production of larvae drives population replenishment in these atoll systems for a range of coral reef species.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A cross-sectional study on levels of secondhand smoke in restaurants and bars in five cities in China.
- Author
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Liu RL, Yang Y, Travers MJ, Fong GT, O'Connor RJ, Hyland A, Li L, Nan Y, Feng GZ, Li Q, and Jiang Y
- Subjects
- China, Cross-Sectional Studies, Environmental Monitoring instrumentation, Environmental Monitoring methods, Humans, Particulate Matter analysis, Restaurants legislation & jurisprudence, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Smoking Prevention, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Restaurants statistics & numerical data, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess indoor secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure in restaurants and bars via PM(2.5) level measurements in five cities in China., Methods: The study was conducted from July to September in 2007 in Beijing, Xi'an, Wuhan, Kunming and Guiyang. PM(2.5) concentrations were measured in 404 restaurants and bars using portable aerosol monitors. The occupant density and the active smoker density were calculated for each venue sampled., Results: Among the 404 surveyed venues, 23 had complete smoking bans, nine had partial smoking bans and 313 (77.5%) had smoking observed during sampling. The geometric mean of indoor PM(2.5) levels in venues with smoking observed was 208 μg/m(3) and 99 μg/m(3) in venues without smoking observed. When outdoor PM(2.5) levels were adjusted, indoor PM(2.5) levels in venues with smoking observed were consistently significantly higher than those in venues without smoking observed (F=80.49, p<0.001). Indoor PM(2.5) levels were positively correlated with outdoor PM(2.5) levels (partial ρ=0.37 p<0.001) and active smoker density (partial ρ=0.34, p<0.001)., Conclusions: Consistent with findings in other countries, PM(2.5) levels in smoking places are significantly higher than those in smoke-free places and are strongly related to the number and density of active smokers. These findings document the high levels of SHS in hospitality venues in China and point to the urgent need for comprehensive smoke-free laws in China to protect the public from SHS hazards, as called for in Article 8 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which was ratified by China in 2005.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Restaurant and bar owners' exposure to secondhand smoke and attitudes regarding smoking bans in five Chinese cities.
- Author
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Liu R, Hammond SK, Hyland A, Travers MJ, Yang Y, Nan Y, Feng G, Li Q, and Jiang Y
- Subjects
- Adult, China, Female, Humans, Male, Occupational Exposure, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Restaurants statistics & numerical data, Smoking psychology, Tobacco Smoke Pollution
- Abstract
Despite the great progress made towards smoke-free environments, only 9% of countries worldwide mandate smoke-free restaurants and bars. Smoking was generally not regulated in restaurants and bars in China before 2008. This study was designed to examine the public attitudes towards banning smoking in these places in China. A convenience sample of 814 restaurants and bars was selected in five Chinese cities and all owners of these venues were interviewed in person by questionnaire in 2007. Eighty six percent of current nonsmoking subjects had at least one-day exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) at work in the past week. Only 51% of subjects knew SHS could cause heart disease. Only 17% and 11% of subjects supported prohibiting smoking completely in restaurants and in bars, respectively, while their support for restricting smoking to designated areas was much higher. Fifty three percent of subjects were willing to prohibit or restrict smoking in their own venues. Of those unwilling to do so, 82% thought smoking bans would reduce revenue, and 63% thought indoor air quality depended on ventilation rather than smoking bans. These results showed that there was support for smoking bans among restaurant or bar owners in China despite some knowledge gaps. To facilitate smoking bans in restaurants and bars, it is important to promote health education on specific hazards of SHS, provide country-specific evidence on smoking bans and hospitality revenues, and disseminate information that restricting smoking and ventilation alone cannot eliminate SHS hazards.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Secondhand tobacco smoke exposure in selected public places (PM2.5 and air nicotine) and non-smoking employees (hair nicotine) in Ghana.
- Author
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Agbenyikey W, Wellington E, Gyapong J, Travers MJ, Breysse PN, McCarty KM, and Navas-Acien A
- Subjects
- Ghana, Humans, Public Health, Hair chemistry, Nicotine analysis, Occupational Exposure analysis, Restaurants, Smoking adverse effects, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis, Workplace
- Abstract
Background: Secondhand tobacco smoke (SHS) exposure is a global public health problem. Ghana currently has no legislation to prevent smoking in public places. To provide data on SHS levels in hospitality venues in Ghana the authors measured (1) airborne particulate matter <2.5 μm (PM(2.5)) and nicotine concentrations and (2) hair nicotine concentrations in non-smoking employees. Quantifying SHS exposure will provide evidence needed to develop tobacco control legislation., Method: PM(2.5) was measured for 30 min in 75 smoking and 13 non-smoking venues. Air nicotine concentrations were measured for 7 days in 8 smoking and 2 non-smoking venues. Additionally, 63 non-smoking employees provided hair samples for nicotine analysis., Result: Compared to non-smoking venues, smoking venues had markedly elevated PM(2.5) (median 553 [IQR 259-1038] vs 16.0 [14.0-17.0]μg/m(3)) and air nicotine (1.83 [0.91-4.25] vs 0.03 [0.02-0.04]μg/m(3)) concentrations. Hair nicotine concentrations were also higher in non-smoking employees working in smoking venues (median 2.49 [0.46-6.84] ng/mg) compared to those working in non-smoking venues (median 0.16 [0.08-0.79]ng/mg). Hair nicotine concentrations correlated with self-reported hours of SHS exposure (r=0.35), indoor air PM(2.5) concentrations (r=0.47) and air nicotine concentrations (r=0.63)., Conclusion: SHS levels were unacceptably high in public places in Ghana where smoking is allowed, despite a relatively low-smoking prevalence in the country. This is one of the first studies to ascertain SHS and hair nicotine in Africa. Levels were comparable to those measured in American, Asian and European countries without or before smoking bans. Implementing a comprehensive smoke-free legislation that protects workers and customers from exposure to secondhand smoke is urgently needed in Ghana.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Compliance still a problem with no smoking law.
- Author
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Tarnoki DL, Tarnoki AD, Travers MJ, Mechtler L, Tamas L, and Cummings KM
- Subjects
- Humans, Hungary, Legislation, Hospital, Occupational Exposure legislation & jurisprudence, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A cross-sectional study on levels of second-hand smoke in restaurants and bars in five cities in China.
- Author
-
Liu RL, Yang Y, Travers MJ, Fong GT, O'Connor RJ, Hyland A, Li L, Nan Y, Feng GZ, Li Q, and Jiang Y
- Subjects
- Air Pollution, Indoor legislation & jurisprudence, China, Cross-Sectional Studies, Data Collection, Environmental Exposure legislation & jurisprudence, Humans, Restaurants legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis, Tobacco Smoke Pollution legislation & jurisprudence, Air Pollution, Indoor statistics & numerical data, Environmental Exposure statistics & numerical data, Environmental Monitoring methods, Public Health, Restaurants statistics & numerical data, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess indoor second-hand smoke (SHS) exposure in restaurants and bars via PM(2.5) (fine particles 2.5 μm in diameter and smaller) level measurements in five cities in China., Methods: The study was conducted from July to September in 2007 in Beijing, Xi'an, Wuhan, Kunming and Guiyang. Portable aerosol monitors were used to measure PM(2.5) concentrations in 404 restaurants and bars. The occupant density and the active smoker density were calculated for each venue sampled., Results: Among the 404 surveyed venues, 23 had complete smoking bans, 9 had partial smoking bans and 313 (77.5%) were observed to have allowed smoking during sampling. The geometric mean of indoor PM(2.5) levels in venues with smoking observed was 208 μg/m(3) and 99 μg/m(3) in venues without observed smoking. When outdoor PM(2.5) levels were adjusted, indoor PM(2.5) levels in venues with smoking observed were consistently significantly higher than in venues without smoking observed (F=80.49, p<0.001). Indoor PM(2.5) levels were positively correlated with outdoor PM(2.5) levels (partial rho=0.37 p<0.001) and active smoker density (partial rho=0.34, p<0.001)., Conclusions: Consistent with findings in other countries, PM(2.5) levels in smoking places are significantly higher than those in smoke-free places and are strongly related to the number and density of active smokers. These findings document the high levels of SHS in hospitality venues in China and point to the urgent need for comprehensive smoke-free laws in China to protect the public from SHS hazards, as called for in Article 8 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which was ratified by China in 2005.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Secondhand smoke exposure (PM2.5) in outdoor dining areas and its correlates.
- Author
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Cameron M, Brennan E, Durkin S, Borland R, Travers MJ, Hyland A, Spittal MJ, and Wakefield MA
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring methods, Humans, Inhalation Exposure analysis, Restaurants, Victoria, Environmental Exposure analysis, Particulate Matter analysis, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Background: This study assessed the magnitude of secondhand smoke (SHS) exposure when people smoke in outdoor dining areas and explored conditions influencing exposure levels., Methods: Data were gathered from 69 outdoor dining areas in Melbourne, Australia, during April/May 2007. Sitting at tables within 1 metre of an active smoker, the authors measured the concentration of particulate pollution (PM(2.5)) using TSI SidePak Personal Aerosol Monitors. PM(2.5) data were recorded by the monitor at 30-second intervals, and data were collected over an average of 25.8 minutes per venue. Information was collected about the presence of overhead coverings and the number of patrons and lit cigarettes., Results: The average background level of PM(2.5) was 8.4 microg/m(3) (geometric mean (GM)=6.1 microg/m(3)), increasing to an average of 17.6 microg/m(3) (GM=12.7 microg/m(3)) over the observational period and 27.3 microg/m(3) (GM=17.6 microg/m(3)) during the time that cigarettes were actively smoked near the monitor. There was substantial variation in exposure levels, with a maximum peak concentration of 483.9 microg/m(3) when there were lit cigarettes close to the monitor. Average exposure levels increased by around 30% for every additional active smoker within 1 metre of the monitor. Being situated under an overhead cover increased average exposure by around 50%., Conclusions: When individuals sit in outdoor dining venues where smokers are present it is possible that they will be exposed to substantial SHS levels. Significant increases in exposure were observed when monitors were located under overhead covers, and as the number of nearby smokers increased. The role of outdoor smoking restrictions in minimising exposure to SHS must be considered.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Informing effective smokefree policies in Argentina: air quality monitoring study in 15 cities (2007-2009).
- Author
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Schoj V, Sebrié EM, Pizarro ME, Hyland A, and Travers MJ
- Subjects
- Air Pollution, Indoor prevention & control, Argentina, Tobacco Smoke Pollution prevention & control, Urban Health, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Air Pollution, Indoor legislation & jurisprudence, Environmental Monitoring, Health Policy legislation & jurisprudence, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Smoking Prevention, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis, Tobacco Smoke Pollution legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate indoor air pollution in hospitality venues in Argentina., Material and Methods: PM₂.₅ levels were measured in a convenience sample of venues in 15 cities with different legislative contexts following a protocol developed by Roswell Park Cancer Institute., Results: 554 samples were collected. Across all 5 smoke free cities the mean PM₂.₅ level was lower during daytime vs. evening hours, 24 vs. 98 PM₂.₅ respectively (p=.012). In the three cities evaluated before and after legislation, PM₂.₅ levels decreased dramatically (p<0.001 each). Overall, PM₂.₅ levels were 5 times higher in cities with no legislation vs. smoke free cities (p<0.001). In cities with designated smoking areas, PM₂.₅ levels were not statistically different between smoking and non-smoking areas (p=0.272). Non-smoking areas had significantly higher PM₂.₅ levels compared to 100% smoke free venues in the same city (twofold higher) (p=0.017)., Conclusions: Most of the participating cities in this study had significantly lower PM₂.₅ levels after the implementation of 100% smoke free legislation. Hence, it represents a useful tool to promote 100% smoke free policies in Argentina.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Promoting smoke-free environments in Latin America: a comparison of methods to assess secondhand smoke exposure.
- Author
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Avila-Tang E, Travers MJ, and Navas-Acien A
- Subjects
- Air Pollutants analysis, Environmental Exposure analysis, Equipment Design, Humans, Latin America, Nicotine analysis, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis, Environmental Exposure prevention & control, Environmental Monitoring instrumentation, Health Promotion, Smoking Prevention, Tobacco Smoke Pollution prevention & control
- Abstract
Secondhand smoke (SHS) contains toxicants and carcinogens that are known to cause premature death and disease. Objectively measuring SHS exposure can support and evaluate smoke-free legislation. In Latin America, the most commonly used methods to measure SHS exposure are airborne nicotine and respirable suspended particles (PM₂.₅). Here we present results from studies conducted in public places and homes across Latin American countries. Airborne nicotine was detected in most locations between 2002-2006, before the implementation of 100% smoke-free legislation in Uruguay, Panama, Guatemala and other large cities within Latin America. Between 2006 and 2008, PM₂.₅ levels were found to be five times higher in places where smoking was present at the time of sampling compared to those without smoking. Measuring SHS exposure across Latin America has increased our understanding of the magnitude of exposure in this region and results have been used to effectively promote smoke-free legislation.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. A 32-country comparison of tobacco smoke derived particle levels in indoor public places.
- Author
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Hyland A, Travers MJ, Dresler C, Higbee C, and Cummings KM
- Subjects
- Global Health, Humans, Public Facilities statistics & numerical data, Smoking epidemiology, Smoking Prevention, Tobacco Smoke Pollution adverse effects, World Health Organization, Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Objective: To compare tobacco smoke-derived particulate levels in transportation and hospitality venues with and without smoking in 32 countries using a standardised measurement protocol., Methods: The TSI SidePak AM510 Personal Aerosol Monitor was used to measure the concentration of particulate matter less than 2.5 microns in diameter (PM(2.5)) in 1822 bars, restaurants, retail outlets, airports and other workplaces in 32 geographically dispersed countries between 2003 and 2007., Results: Geometric mean PM(2.5) levels were highest in Syria (372 microg/m(3)), Romania (366 microg/m(3)) and Lebanon (346 microg/m(3)), while they were lowest in the three countries that have nationwide laws prohibiting smoking in indoor public places (Ireland at 22 microg/m(3), Uruguay at 18 microg/m(3) and New Zealand at 8 microg/m(3)). On average, the PM(2.5) levels in places where smoking was observed was 8.9 times greater (95% CI 8.0 to 10) than levels in places where smoking was not observed., Conclusions: Levels of indoor fine particle air pollution in places where smoking is observed are typically greater than levels that the World Health Organization and US Environmental Protection Agency have concluded are harmful to human health.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Particulate air pollution in Irish pubs is grossly underestimated.
- Author
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Travers MJ and Lee K
- Subjects
- Air Pollution, Indoor analysis, Air Pollution, Indoor legislation & jurisprudence, Humans, Ireland, Air Pollutants, Occupational analysis, Environmental Monitoring, Particulate Matter analysis, Restaurants, Smoking legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Environmental tobacco smoke in hospitality venues in Greece.
- Author
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Vardavas CI, Kondilis B, Travers MJ, Petsetaki E, Tountas Y, and Kafatos AG
- Subjects
- Environmental Monitoring, Epidemiological Monitoring, Greece, Humans, Prevalence, Public Facilities legislation & jurisprudence, Restaurants statistics & numerical data, Smoking epidemiology, Tobacco Smoke Pollution prevention & control, Tobacco Smoke Pollution statistics & numerical data, United Kingdom, United States, Air Pollutants analysis, Public Facilities statistics & numerical data, Public Policy, Restaurants legislation & jurisprudence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Background: Exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is a major threat to public health. Greece, having the highest smoking prevalence in the European Union is seriously affected by passive smoking. The purpose of this study was to measure environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure in the non smoking areas of hospitality venues and offices in Greece and to compare the levels of exposure to levels in the US, UK and Ireland before and after the implementation of a smoking ban., Methods: Experimental measurements of particulate matter 2.5 microm (PM2.5), performed during a cross sectional study of 49 hospitality venues and offices in Athens and Crete, Greece during February - March 2006., Results: Levels of ETS ranged from 19 microg/m3 to 612 microg/m3, differing according to the place of measurement. The average exposure in hospitality venues was 268 microg/m3 with ETS levels found to be highest in restaurants with a mean value of 298 microg/m3 followed by bars and cafes with 271 microg/m3. ETS levels were 76% lower in venues in which smoking was not observed compared to all other venues (p < 0.001). ETS levels in Greek designated non-smoking areas are similar to those found in the smoking sections of UK hospitality venues while levels in Ireland with a total smoking ban are 89% lower and smoke-free communities in the US are 91 - 96% lower than levels in Greece., Conclusion: Designated non-smoking areas of hospitality venues in Greece are significantly more polluted with ETS than outdoor air and similar venues in Europe and the United States. The implementation of a total indoor smoking ban in hospitality venues has been shown to have a positive effect on workers and patrons' health. The necessity of such legislation in Greece is thus warranted.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Demographics and tobacco outlet density.
- Author
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Hyland A, Travers MJ, Cummings KM, Bauer J, Alford T, and Wieczorek WF
- Subjects
- Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Hispanic or Latino statistics & numerical data, Humans, Massachusetts, New York, Research, Commerce statistics & numerical data, Poverty ethnology, Poverty Areas, Tobacco Industry statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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