20,364 results on '"Awareness"'
Search Results
2. Educational Intervention Among Adolescents and Young Adults on Emergency Contraception Options.
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Harper, Cynthia C, Jones, Erin, Brindis, Claire D, Watson, Annalisa, Schroeder, Rosalyn, Boyer, Cherrie B, Edelman, Alison, Trieu, Sang, and Yarger, Jennifer
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Humans ,Levonorgestrel ,Contraception ,Contraception ,Postcoital ,Odds Ratio ,Intrauterine Devices ,Intrauterine Devices ,Copper ,Awareness ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Adolescent and young adult contraceptive knowledge ,Emergency contraception ,Emergency contraceptive pills ,IUD for emergency contraception ,Levonorgestrel emergency contraceptive pills ,Ulipristal acetate ,Clinical Research ,Adolescent Sexual Activity ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeEmergency contraception (EC), the 'last chance' contraceptive method, has gained significance post-Roe, but most young people do not know their options.MethodsWe conducted an educational intervention on EC among 1,053 students aged 18-25 years. We assessed changes in knowledge of key aspects of EC using generalized estimating equations.ResultsAt baseline, virtually no one was aware of the intrauterine device for EC (4%), but postintervention, 89% correctly identified intrauterine devices as the most effective EC (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 116.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] 62.4, 217.8). Knowledge that levonorgestrel pills could be accessed without a prescription grew (60%-90%; aOR = 9.7, 95% CI 6.7-14.0), as did knowledge that pills work best when taken as soon as possible (75%-95%; aOR = 9.6, 95% CI 6.1-14.9). Multivariate results showed adolescent and young adult participants absorbed these key concepts across age, gender, and sexual orientation.DiscussionTimely interventions are needed to empower youth with knowledge of EC options.
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- 2023
3. Are Pathologists Self-Aware of Their Diagnostic Accuracy? Metacognition and the Diagnostic Process in Pathology
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Clayton, Dayna A, Eguchi, Megan M, Kerr, Kathleen F, Miyoshi, Kiyofumi, Brunyé, Tad T, Drew, Trafton, Weaver, Donald L, and Elmore, Joann G
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Applied Economics ,Economics ,Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Breast Cancer ,Cancer ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Humans ,Pathologists ,Metacognition ,Breast ,Biopsy ,Perception ,metacognitive sensitivity ,diagnostic accuracy ,cognitive science ,dermatopathology ,breast pathology ,secondary diagnostic actions ,awareness ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundMetacognition is a cognitive process that involves self-awareness of thinking, understanding, and performance. This study assesses pathologists' metacognition by examining the association between their diagnostic accuracy and self-reported confidence levels while interpreting skin and breast biopsies.DesignWe studied 187 pathologists from the Melanoma Pathology Study (M-Path) and 115 pathologists from the Breast Pathology Study (B-Path). We measured pathologists' metacognitive ability by examining the area under the curve (AUC), the area under each pathologist's receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve summarizing the association between confidence and diagnostic accuracy. We investigated possible relationships between this AUC measure, referred to as metacognitive sensitivity, and pathologist attributes. We also assessed whether higher metacognitive sensitivity affected the association between diagnostic accuracy and a secondary diagnostic action such as requesting a second opinion.ResultsWe found no significant associations between pathologist clinical attributes and metacognitive AUC. However, we found that pathologists with higher AUC showed a stronger trend to request secondary diagnostic action for inaccurate diagnoses and not for accurate diagnoses compared with pathologists with lower AUC.LimitationsPathologists reported confidence in specific diagnostic terms, rather than the broader classes into which the diagnostic terms were later grouped to determine accuracy. In addition, while there is no gold standard for the correct diagnosis to determine the accuracy of pathologists' interpretations, our studies achieved a high-quality reference diagnosis by using the consensus diagnosis of 3 experienced pathologists.ConclusionsMetacognition can affect clinical decisions. If pathologists have self-awareness that their diagnosis may be inaccurate, they can request additional tests or second opinions, providing the opportunity to correct inaccurate diagnoses.HighlightsMetacognitive sensitivity varied across pathologists, with most showing higher sensitivity than expected by chance.None of the demographic or clinical characteristics we examined was significantly associated with metacognitive sensitivity.Pathologists with higher metacognitive sensitivity were more likely to request additional tests or second opinions for their inaccurate diagnoses.
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- 2023
4. Making it okay: professionals in high-stress environments construct their understanding of the impact of a yoga-based retreat designed to build resilience.
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Reeves, Tegan, Dyer, Natalie, Borden, Sara, Dusek, Jeffery, and Khalsa, Sat
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Yoga ,awareness ,engagement ,integration ,mindfulness ,qualitative ,resilience ,stress ,Adult ,Humans ,Mental Health ,Mindfulness ,Occupational Stress ,Resilience ,Psychological ,Workplace ,Yoga - Abstract
PURPOSE: While there is growing evidence for resilience building programmes, to date research has not explored how professionals construct understanding of programme impact. RISE (resilience, integration, self-awareness, engagement), a 5-day yoga-based retreat programme, has been linked with positive wellness outcomes. This qualitative inquiry explores participants reflection and experience 3 months after programme completion. METHODS: Through a grounded constructivist lens, in-depth semi-structured phone interviews were conducted with 17 adult professionals in high-stress work environments who attended RISE. Initial hand-coding informed codebook development for systematic coding using directed content analysis using sensitizing structuring. RESULTS: Two integrated perceptions woven through five themes. Persistent threads of experiential learning and sense of permission provided structure for themes found. Five interrelated themes related to psychological health and workplace dynamics were (1) use of acquired behavioural skills and practices; (2) lived mindfulness; (3) resilience to stress and emotion regulation (4) self-care and self-compassion, and (5) sharing with others. CONCLUSION: Findings provide meaningful interpretation of previously reported programme efficacy by contextualizing perceived benefits within participants constructed understanding of change. Specifically, environmental, social, and experiential considerations have suggested implications for resilience building programmes.Abbreviations: RISE (resilience, integration, self-awareness, engagement).
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- 2022
5. Physician awareness of social determinants of health documentation capability in the electronic health record.
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Iott, Bradley, Pantell, Matthew, Adler-Milstein, Julia, and Gottlieb, Laura
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awareness ,documentation ,electronic health records ,social determinants of health ,Humans ,Electronic Health Records ,Social Determinants of Health ,Documentation ,Physicians ,Community Health Centers - Abstract
Healthcare organizations are increasing social determinants of health (SDH) screening and documentation in the electronic health record (EHR). Physicians may use SDH data for medical decision-making and to provide referrals to social care resources. Physicians must be aware of these data to use them, however, and little is known about physicians awareness of EHR-based SDH documentation or documentation capabilities. We therefore leveraged national physician survey data to measure level of awareness and variation by physician, practice, and EHR characteristics to inform practice- and policy-based efforts to drive medical-social care integration. We identify higher levels of social needs documentation awareness among physicians practicing in community health centers, those participating in payment models with social care initiatives, and those aware of other advanced EHR functionalities. Findings indicate that there are opportunities to improve physician education and training around new EHR-based SDH functionalities.
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- 2022
6. Do children unintentionally report maltreatment? Comparison of disclosures of neglect versus sexual abuse
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Lavoie, Jennifer, Williams, Shanna, Lyon, Thomas D, and Quas, Jodi A
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Criminology ,Human Society ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Physical Injury - Accidents and Adverse Effects ,Youth Violence ,Childhood Injury ,Clinical Research ,Violence Research ,Pediatric ,Child Abuse and Neglect Research ,Mental Health ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Child ,Child Abuse ,Disclosure ,Humans ,Sex Offenses ,Child maltreatment ,Investigative interviewing ,Awareness ,Social Work ,Psychology ,Developmental & Child Psychology ,Social work ,Applied and developmental psychology - Abstract
Background and aimsChildren's initial reports often play a key role in the identification of maltreatment, and a sizeable amount of scientific research has examined how children disclose sexual and physical abuse. Although neglect constitutes a large proportion of maltreatment experiences, relatively little attention has been directed toward understanding whether and how children disclose neglect. The overarching aim of the present study was to document this process by comparing disclosure patterns in cases of neglect to those in cases of sexual abuse.MethodRedacted jurisdiction reports (N = 136) of substantiated dependency cases of neglect (n = 71) and sexual abuse (n = 65) in 4- to 17-year-olds were coded for why maltreatment was suspected, and for children's perceived awareness and disclosure of the maltreatment.ResultsNeglect was most often initially suspected via contact with emergency services (e.g., police, emergency medical services), whereas sexual abuse was most often initially suspected as a result of children's statements. Children evidenced greater perceived awareness of sexual abuse than neglect and were more likely to disclose the former in their first investigative interview. Perceived awareness was further associated with a higher likelihood of children's statements initiating discovery of maltreatment and disclosing in the first investigative interview.ConclusionsChildren may benefit from greater knowledge about their needs for safety, supervision, and provision in the home, which could increase the likelihood they would disclose neglect. Such, in turn, could lead to earlier interventions for children and families.
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- 2022
7. Increasing awareness of HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and willingness to use HIV PrEP among men who have sex with men: a systematic review and meta‐analysis of global data
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Sun, Zhishan, Gu, Qianfei, Dai, Yifan, Zou, Huachun, Agins, Bruce, Chen, Qiaosen, Li, Peiyang, Shen, Junchun, Yang, Yi, and Jiang, Hongbo
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Public Health ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Infectious Diseases ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Infection ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Sexual Partners ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,men who have sex with men ,pre-exposure prophylaxis ,awareness ,willingness ,trend ,meta-analysis ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Public health - Abstract
IntroductionIntegrated knowledge regarding pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) awareness and willingness to use PrEP can be useful for HIV prevention in high incidence groups. This review summarizes the awareness of PrEP and willingness to use PrEP among men who have sex with men (MSM).MethodsOnline electronic databases were searched before 31 August 2021. A meta-analysis was conducted to pool studies analysing PrEP awareness and willingness to use PrEP. LOESS regression and linear regression were applied to fit the trends over time for the proportion of MSM aware of PrEP and willing to use PrEP. Dose-response meta-analysis (DRMA) was conducted by a restricted cubic spline model to explore the relationship between willingness to use PrEP and selected factors.Results and discussionA total of 156 articles involving 228,403 MSM were included. The pooled proportions of MSM aware of PrEP and willing to use PrEP were 50.0 (95% CI: 44.8-55.2) and 58.6% (95% CI: 54.8-62.4), respectively. PrEP awareness varied among countries with different economic status and different WHO regions, among different publication and research years, PrEP types and support policies. PrEP willingness differed among countries with different economic status and groups with different risks of HIV. The awareness of PrEP increased from 2007 to 2019 with a slope of 0.040260 (p
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- 2022
8. Scenario-Based Evaluation of Team Health Information Technology to Support Pediatric Trauma Care Transitions.
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Hoonakker, Peter, Hose, Bat-Zion, Carayon, Pascale, Eithun, Ben, Rusy, Deborah, Ross, Joshua, Dean, Shannon, Brazelton, Tom, Kelly, Michelle, and Kohler, Jonathan
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Awareness ,Child ,Cognition ,Humans ,Medical Informatics ,Patient Care Team ,Patient Transfer - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinicians need health information technology (IT) that better supports their work. Currently, most health IT is designed to support individuals; however, more and more often, clinicians work in cross-functional teams. Trauma is one of the leading preventable causes of childrens death. Trauma care by its very nature is team based but due to the emergent nature of trauma, critical clinical information is often missed in the transition of these patients from one service or unit to another. Teamwork transition technology can help support these transitions and minimize information loss while enhancing information gathering and storage. In this study, we created a large screen technology to support shared situational awareness across multiple clinical roles and departments. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to examine if the Teamwork Transition Technology (T3) supports teams and team cognition. METHODS: We used a scenario-based mock-up methodology with 36 clinicians and staff from the different units and departments who are involved in pediatric trauma to examine T3. RESULTS: Results of the evaluation show that most participants agreed that the technology helps achieve the goals set out in the design phase. Respondents thought that T3 organizes and presents information in a different way that was helpful to them. CONCLUSION: In this study, we examined a health IT (T3) that was designed to support teams and team cognition. The results of our evaluation show that participants agreed that T3 does support them in their work and increases their situation awareness.
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- 2022
9. Influencing factors of cancer prevention and control among urban and rural adults in Fujian, China: A cross-sectional survey
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Yang, Tian Bao, Lin, Xiu Jing, Lin, Jia Ling, Chen, Wei-Ti, and Huang, Fei Fei
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Rural Health ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Health Disparities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Adult ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Neoplasms ,China ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,awareness ,cancer prevention ,core knowledge ,survey ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
ObjectiveCancer burden can be reduced when the population's knowledge of cancer prevention and control measures is increased. However, current epidemiological research investigating cancer prevention and control knowledge in China is limited. This study aimed to examine the core knowledge levels of cancer prevention and control measures as well as its influencing factors among adults in Fujian, China.Study designA cross-sectional study.MethodsFrom September to December 2021, a total of 2,440 Chinese urban and rural adults from Fujian Province, located in Southeastern China, were randomly selected for this cross-sectional study. The probability proportionate approach to sampling was used. A 38-item questionnaire that covered demographics and basic knowledge of cancer, including concepts, screening, therapy, and rehabilitation-related key points was used to measure knowledge levels of cancer prevention and control measures among 2,074 participants. The level of each participants' core knowledge of cancer prevention and control measures was defined as a rate calculated by the number of correct answers divided by the total number of questions. The binary logistic regression model was used to determine if influencing factors were associated with core knowledge awareness.ResultsIn total, 1,290 participants (62.2%) were in the low knowledge group and 784 (37.8%) were in the high knowledge group. The average knowledge rate of cancer prevention and control measures among all participants was 56.01%. Participants from urban areas, who held white-collar jobs, were married, had a bachelor's degree or above, had a family history of cancer, or self-rated their health level as good or average were associated with higher rates of cancer prevention and control core knowledge (overall p < 0.05).ConclusionThese findings may assist healthcare providers and/or researchers in designing effective primary preventive interventions to enhance the general population's cancer prevention and control knowledge, and subsequently decrease the cancer burden in China.
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- 2022
10. Prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of type 2 diabetes mellitus among the adult residents of tehran: Tehran Cohort Study
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Oraii, Alireza, Shafiee, Akbar, Jalali, Arash, Alaeddini, Farshid, Saadat, Soheil, Masoudkabir, Farzad, Vasheghani-Farahani, Ali, Heidari, Amirhossein, Sadeghian, Saeed, Boroumand, Mohamamdali, Karimi, Abbasali, and H. Franco, Oscar
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Diabetes ,Prevention ,Autoimmune Disease ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Cohort Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Fasting ,Female ,Glucose ,Humans ,Hypertension ,Iran ,Male ,Prediabetic State ,Prevalence ,Diabetes mellitus ,Awareness ,Treatment ,Control ,Epidemiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Endocrinology & Metabolism - Abstract
BackgroundThe prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus has increased in the past decades. We investigated the prevalence of diabetes and its awareness, treatment, and control among adult residents of Tehran.MethodsWe used the recruitment phase data of the Tehran Cohort study, enrolling a random sample of adult residents of Tehran aged ≥35 years. Diabetes was defined as self-report, current use of glucose-lowering medications, and/or fasting plasma glucose (FPG) ≥126mg/dl. Impaired fasting glucose (IFG) was defined as an FPG of 100-125mg/dl. Awareness was defined as diabetes self-report, treatment as receiving glucose-lowering medications, and glycemic control as FPG
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- 2022
11. Validation of the Psychological Insight Scale: A new scale to assess psychological insight following a psychedelic experience
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Peill, Joseph M, Trinci, Katie E, Kettner, Hannes, Mertens, Lea J, Roseman, Leor, Timmermann, Christopher, Rosas, Fernando E, Lyons, Taylor, and Carhart-Harris, Robin L
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Awareness ,Female ,Hallucinogens ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Principal Component Analysis ,Prospective Studies ,Psychometrics ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Young Adult ,Psychedelic ,insight ,emotion ,mediation ,well-being ,therapy ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
IntroductionAs their name suggests, 'psychedelic' (mind-revealing) compounds are thought to catalyse processes of psychological insight; however, few satisfactory scales exist to sample this. This study sought to develop a new scale to measure psychological insight after a psychedelic experience: the Psychological Insight Scale (PIS).MethodsThe PIS is a six- to seven-item questionnaire that enquires about psychological insight after a psychedelic experience (PIS-6) and accompanied behavioural changes (PIS item 7). In total, 886 participants took part in a study in which the PIS and other questionnaires were completed in a prospective fashion in relation to a planned psychedelic experience. For validation purposes, data from 279 participants were analysed from a non-specific 'global psychedelic survey' study.ResultsPrincipal components analysis of PIS scores revealed a principal component explaining 73.57% of the variance, which displayed high internal consistency at multiple timepoints throughout the study (average Cronbach's α = 0.94). Criterion validity was confirmed using the global psychedelic survey study, and convergent validity was confirmed via the Therapeutic-Realizations Scale. Furthermore, PIS scores significantly mediated the relationship between emotional breakthrough and long-term well-being.ConclusionThe PIS is complementary to current subjective measures used in psychedelic studies, most of which are completed in relation to the acute experience. Insight - as measured by the PIS - was found to be a key mediator of long-term psychological outcomes following a psychedelic experience. Future research may investigate how insight varies throughout a psychedelic process, its underlying neurobiology and how it impacts behaviour and mental health.
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- 2022
12. Prevalence, awareness, and associated factors of high blood pressure among female migrant workers in Central South China
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Peng, Hua, Sun, Mei, Hu, Xin, Han, Huiwu, Su, Jing, Peng, Emin, Wiley, James, Lommel, Lisa, and Chen, Jyu-Lin
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Obesity ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,Humans ,Female ,Adult ,Transients and Migrants ,Overweight ,Prevalence ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hypertension ,Migrant workers ,Awareness ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
BackgroundAlthough many young Chinese women migrate to urban regions for better opportunities, little is known about the prevalence and awareness of having high blood pressure (HBP) in this population. This study investigated the prevalence, awareness, and factors associated with HBP among young female migrant workers in Central South China.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study to identify HBP (2017 ACC/AHA guidelines) among female migrant workers aged 18-45 years in Central South China. Demographics, anthropometric measurements, hypertension-related lifestyle, awareness of HBP, and blood pressure were recorded. Logistic regression analysis was used to identify the factors associated with HBP (blood pressure ≥ 130/80 mmHg).ResultsOverall, 232 female migrants participated in the study (mean age 34.4; standard deviation: 6.4 years). The prevalence of HBP was 27.2% (95% CI [21.6-33.2]), and 88.9% of the participants were unaware of their HBP status. Having rural medical insurance (odds ratio [OR] = 20.7; 95% confidence interval 95% CI [2.1-204.8]), awareness of having HBP (OR = 5.1; 95% CI [1.4-18.5]), physical inactivity (OR = 2.9; 95% CI [1.1-7.9]), and being overweight/obese (OR = 2.7; 95% CI [1.3-6.1]) were independently associated with HBP.ConclusionsThis study revealed a high prevalence of HBP among young Chinese female migrant workers, as well as a high frequency of being unaware of their condition and some associated factors (rural medical insurance, awareness of having HBP, physical inactivity, and overweight/obesity). The uncontrolled HBP among young Chinese female migrant workers suggested that health education needs further promotion in such a population.
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- 2022
13. Prevalence, Awareness, Treatment, and Control of Hypertension among Adult Residents of Tehran: The Tehran Cohort Study
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Oraii, Alireza, Shafiee, Akbar, Jalali, Arash, Alaeddini, Farshid, Saadat, Soheil, Sadeghian, Saeed, Poorhosseini, Hamidreza, Boroumand, Mohamamdali, Karimi, Abbasali, and Franco, Oscar H
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Hypertension ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Antihypertensive Agents ,Blood Pressure ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Iran ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prevalence ,Blood pressure ,Awareness ,Control ,Epidemiology ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundHigh levels of blood pressure (BP) remain undetected and poorly controlled in large segments of the population leading to an enormous burden in terms of disease and mortality.ObjectiveWe aimed to assess the prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension in Tehran.MethodsWe used the data of 8,296 adults aged ≥35 years from the Tehran Cohort Study who were enrolled between May 2016 and February 2019. Hypertension was defined as systolic BP ≥140 mmHg and/or diastolic BP ≥90 mmHg, self-report, and/or current antihypertensive medication use. The age- and sex-weighted prevalence of hypertension and high normal BP was calculated using the 2016 national census. Furthermore, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension were analyzed.ResultsThe mean age of the participants was 53.8 ±12.75 years, and 54.0% were women. The weighted prevalence of hypertension and high normal BP were 36.5% and 12.2%, respectively. Among hypertensive individuals, 68.2% were aware of hypertension, 53.3% were receiving medication, and 40.4% had adequate BP control. The awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension were significantly higher in women (72.2% vs. 63.4% [P < 0.001], 55.1% vs 51.1% [P = 0.020], and 42.7% vs. 37.7% [P = 0.004], respectively) and this gap considerably increased with advancing age. Hypertension was more prevalent in northern Tehran but with a better treatment rate and control in the same regions.ConclusionDespite the high prevalence of hypertension in the adult population of Tehran, the rates of awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension are unsatisfactory and demand comprehensive strategies to improve this situation, especially in younger men.
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- 2022
14. Real-time prediction of short-timescale fluctuations in cognitive workload
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Boehm, Udo, Matzke, Dora, Gretton, Matthew, Castro, Spencer, Cooper, Joel, Skinner, Michael, Strayer, David, and Heathcote, Andrew
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Advance Directives ,Automation ,Awareness ,Humans ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Workload ,Cognitive workload ,Detection response task ,Cross-validation ,Workload prediction ,Human-automation teaming ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Human operators often experience large fluctuations in cognitive workload over seconds timescales that can lead to sub-optimal performance, ranging from overload to neglect. Adaptive automation could potentially address this issue, but to do so it needs to be aware of real-time changes in operators' spare cognitive capacity, so it can provide help in times of peak demand and take advantage of troughs to elicit operator engagement. However, it is unclear whether rapid changes in task demands are reflected in similarly rapid fluctuations in spare capacity, and if so what aspects of responses to those demands are predictive of the current level of spare capacity. We used the ISO standard detection response task (DRT) to measure cognitive workload approximately every 4 s in a demanding task requiring monitoring and refueling of a fleet of simulated unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). We showed that the DRT provided a valid measure that can detect differences in workload due to changes in the number of UAVs. We used cross-validation to assess whether measures related to task performance immediately preceding the DRT could predict detection performance as a proxy for cognitive workload. Although the simple occurrence of task events had weak predictive ability, composite measures that tapped operators' situational awareness with respect to fuel levels were much more effective. We conclude that cognitive workload does vary rapidly as a function of recent task events, and that real-time predictive models of operators' cognitive workload provide a potential avenue for automation to adapt without an ongoing need for intrusive workload measurements.
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- 2021
15. Congenital syphilis in East Baton Rouge parish, Louisiana: providers’ and women’s perspectives
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Harville, Emily W, Giarratano, Gloria P, Buekens, Pierre, Lang, Eurydice, and Wagman, Jennifer
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Perinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Period ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Awareness ,Female ,Focus Groups ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Health Personnel ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Louisiana ,Mass Screening ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Infectious ,Prenatal Care ,Prenatal Diagnosis ,Qualitative Research ,Syphilis ,Congenital ,Treponema pallidum ,Young Adult ,Syphilis ,congenital ,Prenatal care ,Social determinants of health ,Qualitative methods ,Syphilis ,congenital ,Microbiology ,Clinical Sciences ,Medical Microbiology ,Clinical sciences ,Medical microbiology ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundCongenital syphilis is completely preventable through screening and treatment, but rates have been rising in the United States. Certain areas are at particularly high risk. We aimed to assess attitudes, knowledge, and barriers around effective prevention of congenital syphilis among health care providers and community women potentially at risk.MethodsTwo parallel studies were conducted: in-depth interviews with health care providers and focus groups with community women in the area of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Each group was questioned about their experience in providing or seeking prenatal care, knowledge and attitudes about congenital syphilis, sources of information on testing and treatment, perceptions of risk, standards of and barriers to treatment. Results were transcribed into QSR NVivo V10, codes developed, and common themes identified and organized.ResultsProviders identified delays in testing and care, lack of follow-through with partner testing, and need for community connection for prevention, as major contributors to higher rates of congenital syphilis. Women identified difficulties in accessing Medicaid contributing to delayed start of prenatal care, lack of transportation for prenatal care, and lack of knowledge about testing and prevention for congenital syphilis.ConclusionsProviders and community members were in broad agreement about factors contributing to higher rates of congenital syphilis, although some aspects were emphasized more by one group or another. Evidence-based interventions, likely at multiple levels, need to be tested and implemented to eliminate congenital syphilis.
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- 2021
16. Meditation training modulates brain electric microstates and felt states of awareness
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Zanesco, Anthony P, Skwara, Alea C, King, Brandon G, Powers, Chivon, Wineberg, Kezia, and Saron, Clifford D
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Biological Psychology ,Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Complementary and Integrative Health ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Aged ,Awareness ,Cerebral Cortex ,Electroencephalography ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Meditation ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Net ,Young Adult ,EEG ,meditation ,microstates ,mindful awareness ,resting state ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Meditation practice is believed to foster states of mindful awareness and mental quiescence in everyday life. If so, then the cultivation of these qualities with training ought to leave its imprint on the activity of intrinsic functional brain networks. In an intensive longitudinal study, we investigated associations between meditation practitioners' experiences of felt mindful awareness and changes in the spontaneous electrophysiological dynamics of functional brain networks. Experienced meditators were randomly assigned to complete 3 months of full-time training in focused-attention meditation (during an initial intervention) or to serve as waiting-list controls and receive training second (during a later intervention). We collected broadband electroencephalogram (EEG) during rest at the beginning, middle, and end of the two training periods. Using a data-driven approach, we segmented the EEG into a time series of transient microstate intervals based on clustering of topographic voltage patterns. Participants also provided daily reports of felt mindful awareness and mental quiescence, and reported daily on four experiential qualities of their meditation practice during training. We found that meditation training led to increases in mindful qualities of awareness, which corroborate contemplative accounts of deepening mental calm and attentional focus. We also observed reductions in the strength and duration of EEG microstates across both interventions. Importantly, changes in the dynamic sequencing of microstates were associated with daily increases in felt attentiveness and serenity during training. Our results connect shifts in subjective qualities of meditative experience with the large-scale dynamics of whole brain functional EEG networks at rest.
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- 2021
17. A situational awareness Bayesian network approach for accurate and credible personalized adaptive radiotherapy outcomes prediction in lung cancer patients
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Luo, Yi, Jolly, Shruti, Palma, David, Lawrence, Theodore S, Tseng, Huan-Hsin, Valdes, Gilmer, McShan, Daniel, Ten Haken, Randall K, and Ei Naqa, Issam
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Cancer ,Awareness ,Bayes Theorem ,Carcinoma ,Non-Small-Cell Lung ,Humans ,Lung Neoplasms ,Radiation Pneumonitis ,Accuracy and credibility ,Bayesian networks ,Personalized adaptive radiotherapy ,Situational awareness ,Physical Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging - Abstract
PurposeA situational awareness Bayesian network (SA-BN) approach is developed to improve physicians' trust in the prediction of radiation outcomes and evaluate its performance for personalized adaptive radiotherapy (pART).Methods118 non-small-cell lung cancer patients with their biophysical features were employed for discovery (n = 68) and validation (n = 50) of radiation outcomes prediction modeling. Patients' important characteristics identified by radiation experts to predict individual's tumor local control (LC) or radiation pneumonitis with grade ≥ 2 (RP2) were incorporated as expert knowledge (EK). Besides generating an EK-based naïve BN (EK-NBN), an SA-BN was developed by incorporating the EK features into pure data-driven BN (PD-BN) methods to improve the credibility of LC or / and RP2 prediction. After using area under the free-response receiver operating characteristics curve (AU-FROC) to assess the joint prediction of these outcomes, their prediction performances were compared with a regression approach based on the expert yielded estimates (EYE) penalty and its variants.ResultsIn addition to improving the credibility of radiation outcomes prediction, the SA-BN approach outperformed the EYE penalty and its variants in terms of the joint prediction of LC and RP2. The value of AU-FROC improves from 0.70 (95% CI: 0.54-0.76) using EK-NBN, to 0.75 (0.65-0.82) using a variant of EYE penalty, to 0.83 (0.75-0.93) using PD-BN and 0.83 (0.77-0.90) using SA-BN; with similar trends in the validation cohort.ConclusionsThe SA-BN approach can provide an accurate and credible human-machine interface to gain physicians' trust in clinical decision-making, which has the potential to be an important component of pART.
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- 2021
18. Race and Gender Differences in Awareness of Colorectal Cancer Screening Tests and Guidelines Among Recently Diagnosed Colon Cancer Patients in an Urban Setting
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Carnahan, Leslie R, Jones, Lindsey, Brewer, Katherine C, Watts, Elizabeth A, Peterson, Caryn E, Ferrans, Carol Estwing, Cipriano-Steffens, Toni, Polite, Blase, Maker, Ajay V, Chowdhery, Rozina, Molina, Yamilé, and Rauscher, Garth H
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Digestive Diseases ,Cancer ,Colo-Rectal Cancer ,Prevention ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,4.4 Population screening ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Colonic Neoplasms ,Colonoscopy ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Humans ,Male ,Mass Screening ,Occult Blood ,Sex Factors ,Awareness ,Colon cancer ,Gender ,Racial disparities ,Screening ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology and carcinogenesis ,Public health - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to first characterize the prevalence of recall, recognition, and knowledge of colon cancer screening tests and guidelines (collectively, "awareness") among non-Hispanic black (NHB) and NH white (NHW) urban colon cancer patients. Second, we sought to examine whether awareness was associated with mode of cancer detection. Low awareness regarding colon cancer screening tests and guidelines may explain low screening rates and high prevalence of symptomatic detection. We examined recall, recognition, and knowledge of colorectal cancer (CRC) screening tests and guidelines and their associations with mode of cancer detection (symptomatic versus screen-detected) in 374 newly diagnosed NHB and NHW patients aged 45-79. Patients were asked to name or describe any test to screen for colon cancer (recall); next, they were given descriptions of stool testing and colonoscopy and asked if they recognized each test (recognition). Lastly, patients were asked if they knew the screening guidelines (knowledge). Overall, awareness of CRC screening guidelines was low; just 20% and 13% of patients knew colonoscopy and fecal test guidelines, respectively. Awareness of CRC screening tests and guidelines was especially low among NHB males, socioeconomically disadvantaged individuals, and those diagnosed at public healthcare facilities. Inability to name or recall a single test was associated with reduced screen-detected cancer compared with recall of at least one test (36% vs. 22%, p = 0.01). Low awareness of CRC screening tests is a risk factor for symptomatic detection of colon cancer.
- Published
- 2021
19. Similarities and Differences in Interoceptive Bodily Awareness Between US-American and Japanese Cultures: A Focus-Group Study in Bicultural Japanese-Americans
- Author
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Freedman, A, Hu, H, Liu, ITHC, Stewart, AL, Adler, S, and Mehling, WE
- Subjects
Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Awareness ,Factor Analysis ,Statistical ,Focus Groups ,Humans ,Interoception ,Perception ,United States ,Culture ,Japanese Culture ,Qualitative research ,Psychiatry - Abstract
Interoceptive awareness is the conscious perception of sensations that create a sense of the physiological condition of the body. A validation study for the Japanese translation of the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA) surprised with a factor structure different from the original English-language version by eliminating two of eight scales. This prompted an exploration of the similarities and differences in interoceptive bodily awareness between Japanese and European Americans. Bicultural Japanese-Americans discussed concepts and experiences in the two cultures. We conducted focus groups and qualitative thematic analyses of transcribed recordings. 16 participants illustrated cross-cultural differences in interoceptive bodily awareness: switching between languages changes embodied experience; external versus internal attention focus; social expectations and body sensations; emphasis on form versus self-awareness; personal space; and mind-body relationship; context dependency of bodily awareness and self-construal. The participants explained key concepts that present challenges for a Japanese cultural adaptation of the MAIA, specifically the concept of self-regulation lost in the factor analysis. In Japanese culture, self-regulation serves the purpose of conforming to social expectations, rather than achieving an individual self-comforting sense of homeostasis. Our findings will inform the next phase of improving the MAIA's cross-cultural adaptation.
- Published
- 2021
20. Boundary-anchored neural mechanisms of location-encoding for self and others.
- Author
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Stangl, Matthias, Topalovic, Uros, Inman, Cory S, Hiller, Sonja, Villaroman, Diane, Aghajan, Zahra M, Christov-Moore, Leonardo, Hasulak, Nicholas R, Rao, Vikram R, Halpern, Casey H, Eliashiv, Dawn, Fried, Itzhak, and Suthana, Nanthia
- Subjects
Temporal Lobe ,Neurons ,Humans ,Electrodes ,Implanted ,Cognition ,Awareness ,Space Perception ,Biological Clocks ,Adult ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Spatial Navigation ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Underpinning research ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Mental health ,Neurological ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Everyday tasks in social settings require humans to encode neural representations of not only their own spatial location, but also the location of other individuals within an environment. At present, the vast majority of what is known about neural representations of space for self and others stems from research in rodents and other non-human animals1-3. However, it is largely unknown how the human brain represents the location of others, and how aspects of human cognition may affect these location-encoding mechanisms. To address these questions, we examined individuals with chronically implanted electrodes while they carried out real-world spatial navigation and observation tasks. We report boundary-anchored neural representations in the medial temporal lobe that are modulated by one's own as well as another individual's spatial location. These representations depend on one's momentary cognitive state, and are strengthened when encoding of location is of higher behavioural relevance. Together, these results provide evidence for a common encoding mechanism in the human brain that represents the location of oneself and others in shared environments, and shed new light on the neural mechanisms that underlie spatial navigation and awareness of others in real-world scenarios.
- Published
- 2021
21. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere – From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Health Services ,Kidney Disease ,Aging ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney ,Primary Prevention ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Secondary Prevention ,Kidney diseases ,Detection ,Awareness ,for the World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2021
22. Knowledge and Attitude of Polish Dental Healthcare Professionals during the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
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Turska-Szybka, Anna, Prokopczyk, Maria, Winkielman, Piotr, and Olczak-Kowalczyk, Dorota
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Dentistry ,Prevention ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Attitude of Health Personnel ,COVID-19 ,Dentists ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Pandemics ,Poland ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,dentist ,pandemic ,awareness ,personal protective equipment ,Toxicology - Abstract
This study analyzed Polish dentists' knowledge of the SARS-CoV-2 virus and the main problems in their work during the early phase of the pandemic. Dentists responded to an online anonymous survey consisting of 57 questions relating to socio-demographics, knowledge about COVID-19, and office procedures. The obtained data were analyzed using basic descriptive statistics, significance of dependencies and Chi square and Mann-Whitney tests; p < 0.05. Ultimately, responses from 730 dentists were included. The mean age was 43.62 ± 11.57. Almost 3/4 of the respondents followed the information on COVID-19. A total of 95.5% had knowledge about COVID-19. Genetic testing was the basic test according to 69.2%. Further, 56.0% were concerned about the pandemic, and 23.6% were significantly anxious. In addition, 42.1% considered a risk of infection with the SARS-CoV-2 in the workplace as very high. A total of 84.0% admitted patients performing a triage and using personal protective equipment (PPE). Further, 44.5% planned to become vaccinated. Continuing the work during the pandemic was strongly correlated with age, sector, and location and duration of work. Most Polish dentists follow the information on the COVID-19 protocol and have sufficient knowledge about COVID-19. Dentists are concerned and anxious about the situation. The vast majority admitted patients during the pandemic and use PPE. Only almost half plan to be vaccinated.
- Published
- 2021
23. Communicating Awareness About COVID-19 Through Songs: An Example From Ghana
- Author
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Thompson, Rachel GA, Nutor, Jerry John, and Johnson, Julene K
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Coronaviruses ,Good Health and Well Being ,Awareness ,COVID-19 ,Communication ,Ghana ,Health Education ,Humans ,Music ,Public Health ,Religion ,Social Media ,infectious disease ,edutainment ,preventive measure ,song lyrics ,multilingual population ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
Research has shown that music can be used to educate or disseminate information about public health crises. Grounded in the edutainment approach, we explored how songs are being used to create awareness about COVID-19 in Ghana, a sub-Saharan African country. YouTube was searched, and 28 songs met the study inclusion criteria. We conducted a thematic analysis of the song lyrics. Most lyrics were in English, Ghanaian Pidgin English, Akan, Ga, or Dagbani. Reflecting the multilingual population of Ghana, half of the songs contained three languages to convey their message, and only five songs were in one language. Eight themes emerged from the analysis: public health guidelines, COVID-19 is real and not a hoax, COVID-19 is infectious, prayer as method to stop the virus, emotional reaction and disruption of "everyday" activities; verbally expelling the virus, call for unity and collective efforts, and inspiring hope. We show that songs have the potential as a method for rapidly sharing information about emerging public health crises. Even though, it is beyond the scope of this study to draw conclusions about the reception and impact of songs on awareness and knowledge, the study shows that examining song lyrics can still be useful in understanding local attitudes toward COVID-19, as well as strategies for promoting preventive behaviors. We note that additional multidimensional efforts are needed to increase awareness among the general public about the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
24. The understanding of research ethics at health sciences schools in Jordan: a cross-sectional study
- Author
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Tarboush, Nafez Abu, Alkayed, Zaid, Alzoubi, Karem H, and Al-Delaimy, Wael K
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Education ,Specialist Studies In Education ,Clinical Sciences ,Adult ,Allied Health Occupations ,Authorship ,Conflict of Interest ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Ethics Committees ,Research ,Ethics ,Research ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Jordan ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Ownership ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Awareness ,Conflict of interest ,Ethical principles ,Informed consent ,Research ethics committees ,Public Health and Health Services ,Medical Informatics ,Clinical sciences ,Curriculum and pedagogy ,Specialist studies in education - Abstract
BackgroundResearch ethics is required for high-quality research that positively influences society. There is limited understanding of research ethics in Middle Eastern countries including Jordan. Here, we aim to investigate the level of understanding of research ethics principles among health sciences faculty members in Jordan.MethodsThis is a cross sectional study where faculty members from the University of Jordan were surveyed for their knowledge and, attitude of research ethics principles. The study was conducted in the period between July 2016 to July 2017 using a customized-design questionnaire involving demographic data and participants' contributions toward research, and assessment of participants' knowledge, belief and attitude towards research ethics. Different question-formats have been used including multiple-choice, yes or no, and a four point Likert-type questions. Obtained responses were tabulated according to gender, academic-rank, and knowledge about research ethics principles.ResultsThe study had a response rate of 51%. Among the 137 participants of this study, most (96%) were involved in human and animal research, yet, only 2/3 had prior training in research ethics. Moreover, 91% believed that investigators should have training in research ethics and 87% believed that there should be a mandatory postgraduate course on that. The average correct scores for correct understanding of researchers towards research ethics was 62%. Yet, there were some misconceptions about the major ethical principles as only 43% identified them correctly. Additionally, the role of research ethics committees was not well understood by most of the respondents.ConclusionsAlthough there is acceptable knowledge about research ethics, discrepancies in understanding in research ethics principles seems to exist. There is a large support for further training in responsible conduct of research by faculty in health sciences in Jordan. Thus, such training should be required by universities to address this knowledge gap in order to improve research quality and its impact on society.
- Published
- 2020
25. Kidney health for everyone everywhere—from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
-
Li, Philip Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing-Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Aging ,Health Services ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Disease Progression ,Global Burden of Disease ,Health Plan Implementation ,Health Policy ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Kidney Transplantation ,Mass Screening ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Secondary Prevention ,Kidney diseases ,Detection ,Awareness ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD are often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions-be it primary, secondary, or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, the management of comorbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management, and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
26. Predictors of Awareness, Accessibility and Acceptability of Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) Among English- and Spanish-Speaking Latino Men Who have Sex with Men in Los Angeles, California
- Author
-
Brooks, Ronald A, Landrian, Amanda, Lazalde, Gabriela, Galvan, Frank H, Liu, Honghu, and Chen, Ying-Tung
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Infectious Diseases ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Awareness ,HIV Infections ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Hispanic or Latino ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Language ,Logistic Models ,Los Angeles ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Sexual Behavior ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Undocumented Immigrants ,Young Adult ,Latino ,Hispanic ,Men who have sex with men ,Pre-exposure prophylaxis ,Acceptability ,Accessibility ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology ,Public health ,Sociology - Abstract
Uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among Latino men who have sex with men (LMSM) remains low. We examined awareness, accessibility, acceptability and use of PrEP among LMSM. LMSM were recruited using social/sexual networking apps. Multiple Logistic regressions identified significant predictors of PrEP awareness, accessibility and acceptability. Among 276 participants, only 6% reported current PrEP use. Among non-PrEP users, 85% reported PrEP awareness, 71% indicated high likelihood of future PrEP use, but only 35% reported knowledge about accessing PrEP. In multiple logistic regressions, a lower likelihood of PrEP awareness was associated with lower level education, whereas a higher likelihood was associated with reporting 6-10 or over 10 sexual partners. A lower likelihood of PrEP accessibility was associated with lower level education and undocumented status. A lower likelihood of PrEP acceptability was associated with an income of $15,001-30,000, whereas a higher likelihood was associated with lower level education and reporting 6-10 or over 10 sexual partners. PrEP promotion targeting Latino MSM should be expanded for those with lower levels of education and those who are undocumented.
- Published
- 2020
27. CKD Awareness Among US Adults by Future Risk of Kidney Failure.
- Author
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Chu, Chi D, McCulloch, Charles E, Banerjee, Tanushree, Pavkov, Meda E, Burrows, Nilka R, Gillespie, Brenda W, Saran, Rajiv, Shlipak, Michael G, Powe, Neil R, Tuot, Delphine S, and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chronic Kidney Disease Surveillance Team
- Subjects
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Chronic Kidney Disease Surveillance Team ,Humans ,Kidney Failure ,Chronic ,Disease Progression ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Severity of Illness Index ,Nutrition Surveys ,Risk Assessment ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Disclosure ,Awareness ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,CKD awareness ,Chronic kidney disease ,albuminuria ,disease management ,estimated glomerular filtration rate ,health literacy ,kidney failure prevention ,nationally representative survey ,patient empowerment ,public health ,renal function ,renal insufficiency ,self-care ,urinary albumin-creatinine ratio ,Kidney Disease ,Nutrition ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
Rationale & objectivePersons with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are often unaware of their disease status. Efforts to improve CKD awareness may be most effective if focused on persons at highest risk for progression to kidney failure.Study designSerial cross-sectional surveys.Setting & participantsNonpregnant adults (aged≥20 years) with CKD glomerular filtration rate categories 3-4 (G3-G4) who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1999 to 2016 (n = 3,713).Predictor5-year kidney failure risk, estimated using the Kidney Failure Risk Equation. Predicted risk was categorized as minimal (
- Published
- 2020
28. Children’s awareness of the context-appropriate nature of emotion regulation strategies across emotions
- Author
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Quiñones-Camacho, Laura E and Davis, Elizabeth L
- Subjects
Cognitive and Computational Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Violence Research ,Youth Violence ,Mental Health ,Pediatric ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Age Factors ,Anger ,Attention ,Awareness ,Child ,Emotional Regulation ,Emotions ,Fear ,Female ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Male ,Sadness ,Emotion regulation ,context sensitivity ,childhood ,discrete emotions ,attentional control ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology ,Public health ,Cognitive and computational psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Emotion regulation (ER) substantially develops during the childhood years. This growth includes an increasing awareness that certain ER strategies are more appropriate in some contexts than others, but few studies have explored how children tailor ER strategies across contexts (i.e. context sensitivity). Understanding this could help clarify why some children have difficulties effectively regulating their emotions even when they have a broad strategy repertoire. The current study explored differences in Hispanic children's ER strategy context sensitivity across three emotions and explored attentional control as a possible moderator of this sensitivity. Children (N = 78; M = 9.91; SD = 1.14; 50% girls; household income M = 31-40k) completed an attentional control task and were interviewed about their ER strategy preferences for sadness, fear, and anger. Context sensitivity was measured as the proportion of endorsed ER strategies that theoretically "fit" the given emotion. Children showed more sensitivity for anger and fear compared to sadness. Attentional control predicted context sensitivity for sadness only, but this was qualified by age. Older children showed more context sensitivity with increasing attentional control. Findings provide insight into emotional development in late childhood by highlighting children's awareness of the context-appropriate nature of ER strategies across emotions.
- Published
- 2020
29. Achieving Health Equity in Embedded Pragmatic Trials for People Living with Dementia and Their Family Caregivers.
- Author
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Quiñones, Ana, Mitchell, Susan, Jackson, Jonathan, Aranda, María, Dilworth-Anderson, Peggye, McCarthy, Ellen, and Hinton, Ladson
- Subjects
AD/ADRD ,caregivers ,dementia ,health equity ,pragmatic trials ,Awareness ,Caregivers ,Delivery of Health Care ,Dementia ,Health Equity ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,National Institute on Aging (U.S.) ,Patient Selection ,Pragmatic Clinical Trials as Topic ,Research Design ,United States - Abstract
Embedded pragmatic clinical trials (ePCTs) advance research on Alzheimers disease/Alzheimers disease and related dementias (AD/ADRD) in real-world contexts; however, health equity issues have not yet been fully considered, assessed, or integrated into ePCT designs. Health disparity populations may not be well represented in ePCTs without special efforts to identify and successfully recruit sites of care that serve larger numbers of these populations. The National Institute on Aging (NIA) Imbedded Pragmatic Alzheimers disease (AD) and AD-Related Dementias (AD/ADRD) Clinical Trials (IMPACT) Collaboratorys Health Equity Team will contribute to the overall mission of the collaboratory by developing and implementing strategies to address health equity in the conduct of ePCTs and ensure the collaboratory is a national resource for all Americans with dementia. As a first step toward meeting these goals, this article reviews what is currently known about the inclusion of health disparities populations of people living with dementia (PLWD) and their caregivers in ePCTs, highlights unique challenges related to health equity in the conduct of ePCTs, and suggests priority areas in the design and implementation of ePCTs to increase the awareness and avoidance of pitfalls that may perpetuate and magnify healthcare disparities. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:S8-S13, 2020.
- Published
- 2020
30. Body Mistrust Bridges Interoceptive Awareness and Eating Disorder Symptoms
- Author
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Brown, Tiffany A, Vanzhula, Irina A, Reilly, Erin E, Levinson, Cheri A, Berner, Laura A, Krueger, Angeline, Lavender, Jason M, Kaye, Walter H, and Wierenga, Christina E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Nutrition ,Eating Disorders ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Age Factors ,Awareness ,Emotions ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Female ,Humans ,Interoception ,Male ,Young Adult ,network analysis ,interoceptive awareness ,eating disorder ,comorbidity ,Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Applied and developmental psychology ,Clinical and health psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Interoceptive awareness (IA), or the awareness of internal body states, is known to be impaired in individuals with eating disorders (EDs); however, little is understood about how IA and ED symptoms are connected. Network analysis is a statistical approach useful for examining how symptoms interrelate and how comorbidities may be maintained. The present study used network analysis to (1) test central symptoms within an IA-ED network, (2) identify symptoms that may bridge the association between IA and ED symptoms, and (3) explore whether central and bridge symptoms predict ED remission at discharge from intensive treatment. A regularized partial correlation network was estimated in a sample of 428 adolescent (n = 187) and adult (n = 241) ED patients in a partial hospital program. IA was assessed using items from the Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness, and ED symptoms were assessed using items from the Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire. Central symptoms within the network were strong desire to lose weight, feeling guilty, and listening for information from the body about emotional state. The most central symptom bridging IA and ED symptoms was (not) feeling safe in one's body. Of the central symptoms, greater desire to lose weight predicted lower likelihood of remission at treatment discharge. Bridge symptoms did not significantly predict remission. Body mistrust may be a mechanism by which associations between IA and EDs are maintained. Findings suggest targeting central and bridge symptoms may be helpful to improve IA and ED symptoms. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2020
31. Is Empathy the Default Response to Suffering? A Meta-Analytic Evaluation of Perspective Taking’s Effect on Empathic Concern
- Author
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McAuliffe, William HB, Carter, Evan C, Berhane, Juliana, Snihur, Alexander C, and McCullough, Michael E
- Subjects
Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Clinical Research ,Adult ,Altruism ,Awareness ,Default Mode Network ,Emotions ,Empathy ,Humans ,Imagination ,Interpersonal Relations ,Pain ,empathy ,perspective taking ,altruism ,meta-analysis ,publication bias ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
We conducted a series of meta-analytic tests on experiments in which participants read perspective-taking instructions-that is, written instructions to imagine a distressed persons' point of view ("imagine-self" and "imagine-other" instructions), or to inhibit such actions ("remain-objective" instructions)-and afterwards reported how much empathic concern they experienced upon learning about the distressed person. If people spontaneously empathize with others, then participants who receive remain-objective instructions should report less empathic concern than do participants in a "no-instructions" control condition; if people can deliberately increase how much empathic concern they experience, then imagine-self and imagine-other instructions should increase empathic concern relative to not receiving any instructions. Random-effects models revealed that remain-objective instructions reduced empathic concern, but "imagine" instructions did not significantly increase it. The results were robust to most corrections for bias. Our conclusions were not qualified by the study characteristics we examined, but most relevant moderators have not yet been thoroughly studied.
- Published
- 2020
32. Ironic Effects of Thought Suppression: A Meta-Analysis
- Author
-
Wang, Deming, Hagger, Martin S, and Chatzisarantis, Nikos LD
- Subjects
Attention ,Awareness ,Defense Mechanisms ,Humans ,Mental Recall ,Thinking ,thought suppression ,ironic effect ,immediate enhancement effect ,rebound effect ,cognitive load ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology - Abstract
The ironic effect of thought suppression refers to the phenomenon in which individuals trying to rid their mind of a target thought ironically experience greater levels of occurrence and accessibility of the thought compared with individuals who deliberately concentrate on the thought (Wegner, 1994, doi:10.1037/0033-295X.101.1.34). Ironic effects occurring after thought suppression, also known as rebound effects, were consistently detected by previous meta-analyses. However, ironic effects that occur during thought suppression, also known as immediate enhancement effects, were found to be largely absent. In this meta-analysis, we test Wegner's original proposition that detection of immediate enhancement effects depends on the cognitive load experienced by individuals when enacting thought suppression. Given that thought suppression is an effortful cognitive process, we propose that the introduction of additional cognitive load would compete for the allocation of existing cognitive resources and impair capacity for thought suppression. Studies (k = 31) consistent with Wegner's original thought-suppression paradigm were analyzed. Consistent with our predictions, rebound effects were observed regardless of cognitive load, whereas immediate enhancement effects were observed only in the presence of cognitive load. We discuss implications in light of ironic-process theory and suggest future thought-suppression research.
- Published
- 2020
33. Self-awareness of problematic drug use: Preliminary validation of a new fMRI task to assess underlying neurocircuitry.
- Author
-
Moeller, Scott, Kundu, Prantik, Bachi, Keren, Maloney, Thomas, Malaker, Pias, Parvaz, Muhammad, Alia-Klein, Nelly, London, Edythe, and Goldstein, Rita
- Subjects
Addiction ,Behavior change ,Insight ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Self-awareness ,fMRI ,Adult ,Awareness ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Brain Mapping ,Choice Behavior ,Cognition ,Female ,Humans ,Judgment ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Net ,Psychomotor Performance ,Reproducibility of Results ,Substance-Related Disorders - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiple psychopathologies feature impaired clinical insight. Emerging evidence suggests that insight problems may similarly characterize addiction, perhaps due to aberrant functioning of self-referential brain circuitry, including the rostral anterior cingulate and ventromedial prefrontal cortices (rACC/vmPFC). We developed a new fMRI task to probe whether rACC/vmPFC abnormalities in cocaine use disorder (CUD) constitute neural correlates of readiness to change, one facet of insight. METHODS: Eighteen individuals with current CUD and 15 healthy controls responded about their own need to change their drug use and eating behavior (control condition) and the need for a named acquaintance to do the same (two additional control conditions). Measures of simulated drug-choice behavior, addiction severity, and neuropsychological function were collected outside the scanner. RESULTS: CUD participants perceived a greater need for behavior change than controls (as expected, given their diagnosis), but fell short of agreeing to a need for change; in CUD, lower perceived need correlated with higher simulated drug-choice behavior, a proxy measure of drug-seeking. During drug-related insight judgments, CUD participants had higher activation than controls in an anatomically-defined region of interest (ROI) in the medial orbitofrontal cortex, part of the rACC/vmPFC. Although not showing group differences, activation in an anatomically-defined ACC ROI correlated with insight-related task behavior (in all participants) and memory performance (in CUD). CONCLUSIONS: As a group, individuals with current CUD appear to show mild insight problems and rACC/vmPFC abnormalities vis-à-vis readiness to change behavior. With replication and extension of these results, insight-related circuitry may emerge as a novel therapeutic target.
- Published
- 2020
34. Self-awareness of problematic drug use: Preliminary validation of a new fMRI task to assess underlying neurocircuitry
- Author
-
Moeller, Scott J, Kundu, Prantik, Bachi, Keren, Maloney, Thomas, Malaker, Pias, Parvaz, Muhammad A, Alia-Klein, Nelly, London, Edythe D, and Goldstein, Rita Z
- Subjects
Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Awareness ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Brain Mapping ,Choice Behavior ,Cognition ,Female ,Humans ,Judgment ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Nerve Net ,Psychomotor Performance ,Reproducibility of Results ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Addiction ,Insight ,Self-awareness ,Behavior change ,fMRI ,Orbitofrontal cortex ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences ,Epidemiology - Abstract
BackgroundMultiple psychopathologies feature impaired clinical insight. Emerging evidence suggests that insight problems may similarly characterize addiction, perhaps due to aberrant functioning of self-referential brain circuitry, including the rostral anterior cingulate and ventromedial prefrontal cortices (rACC/vmPFC). We developed a new fMRI task to probe whether rACC/vmPFC abnormalities in cocaine use disorder (CUD) constitute neural correlates of readiness to change, one facet of insight.MethodsEighteen individuals with current CUD and 15 healthy controls responded about their own need to change their drug use and eating behavior (control condition) and the need for a named acquaintance to do the same (two additional control conditions). Measures of simulated drug-choice behavior, addiction severity, and neuropsychological function were collected outside the scanner.ResultsCUD participants perceived a greater need for behavior change than controls (as expected, given their diagnosis), but fell short of "agreeing" to a need for change; in CUD, lower perceived need correlated with higher simulated drug-choice behavior, a proxy measure of drug-seeking. During drug-related insight judgments, CUD participants had higher activation than controls in an anatomically-defined region of interest (ROI) in the medial orbitofrontal cortex, part of the rACC/vmPFC. Although not showing group differences, activation in an anatomically-defined ACC ROI correlated with insight-related task behavior (in all participants) and memory performance (in CUD).ConclusionsAs a group, individuals with current CUD appear to show mild insight problems and rACC/vmPFC abnormalities vis-à-vis readiness to change behavior. With replication and extension of these results, insight-related circuitry may emerge as a novel therapeutic target.
- Published
- 2020
35. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere, from Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care.
- Author
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Kam-Tao Li, Philip, Garcia-Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Wing-Shing Fung, Winston, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, and Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Kidney Disease ,Prevention ,Aging ,Health Services ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Global Burden of Disease ,Health Education ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Primary Prevention ,Renal Dialysis ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Secondary Prevention ,kidney diseases ,prevention ,detection ,awareness ,Public Health and Health Services ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. Aggravatingly, CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary, or tertiary. This complementing article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention; including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of the importance of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
36. Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere—From Prevention to Detection and Equitable Access to Care
- Author
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Li, Philip Kam‐Tao, Garcia‐Garcia, Guillermo, Lui, Siu‐Fai, Andreoli, Sharon, Fung, Winston Wing‐Shing, Hradsky, Anne, Kumaraswami, Latha, Liakopoulos, Vassilios, Rakhimova, Ziyoda, Saadi, Gamal, Strani, Luisa, Ulasi, Ifeoma, Kalantar‐Zadeh, Kamyar, and Committee, for the World Kidney Day Steering
- Subjects
Health Services ,Aging ,Nutrition ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,Renal and urogenital ,Quality Education ,Good Health and Well Being ,Health Services Accessibility ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Kidney ,Mass Screening ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Awareness ,Detection ,Kidney diseases ,World Kidney Day Steering Committee ,Clinical Sciences ,Nursing ,Public Health and Health Services ,Urology & Nephrology - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is increasing with a projection of becoming the fifth leading cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the entire annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. Crucially, however, both the onset and progression of CKD is potentially preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions-be it primary, i.e. to prevent de novo CKD, or secondary or tertiary, i.e. prevention of worsening early CKD or progression of more advanced CKD to end-stage kidney disease, respectively. Primary prevention should focus on the modification of CKD risk factors and address the structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, and exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization, glycemic control and avoiding high-protein high-sodium diet should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with moderate to advanced CKD, the management of comorbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease along with low-protein diet are among the recommended preventative interventions to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Whereas national policies and strategies for noncommunicable diseases may exist in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, prevention and treatment are often lacking. There is an urgent need to increase awareness for preventive measures throughout populations, professionals and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
37. Attitudes and Knowledge of Adolescents in Jordan Regarding the Ethics of Social Media Data Use for Research Purposes
- Author
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Zou’bi, Hiba Wazeer Al, Khatatbeh, Moawiah, Alzoubi, Karem H, Khabour, Omar F, and Al-Delaimy, Wael K
- Subjects
Philosophy and Religious Studies ,Applied Ethics ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Development ,Awareness ,Comprehension ,Data Accuracy ,Data Collection ,Ethics ,Research ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Informed Consent ,Informed Consent By Minors ,Jordan ,Male ,Parents ,Privacy ,Research Design ,Social Media ,adolescents ,ethics ,research ,research ethics ,social media ,Psychology ,Other Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Applied ethics - Abstract
This study assessed the awareness and attitudes of adolescents in Jordan concerning the ethics of using their social media data for scientific studies. Using an online survey, 393 adolescents were recruited (mean age: 17.2 years ± 1.8). The results showed that 88% of participants were using their real personal information on social media sites, with males more likely to provide their information than females. More than two thirds of participants (72.5%) were aware that researchers may use their data for research purposes, with the majority believing that informed consent must be obtained from both the adolescents and their parents. However, more than three quarters of those surveyed (76%) did not trust the results of research that depended on collecting data from social media. These findings suggest that adolescents in Jordan understood most of the ethical aspects related to the utilization of their data from social media websites for research studies.
- Published
- 2020
38. Kidney health for everyone everywhere – from prevention to detection and equitable access to care
- Author
-
Li, P Kam-Tao, Garcia-Garcia, G, Lui, Siu-Fai, Andreoli, S, Fung, W Wing-Shing, Hradsky, A, Kumaraswami, L, Liakopoulos, V, Rakhimova, Z, Saadi, G, Strani, L, Ulasi, I, and Kalantar-Zadeh, K
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Kidney Disease ,Prevention ,Aging ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Quality Education ,Early Diagnosis ,Global Burden of Disease ,Health Equity ,Health Policy ,Health Promotion ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Preventive Health Services ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Kidney diseases ,Detection ,Awareness ,World Kidney Day 2020 Steering Committee ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences - Abstract
The global burden of chronic kidney disease (CKD) is rapidly increasing with a projection of becoming the 5th most common cause of years of life lost globally by 2040. CKD is a major cause of catastrophic health expenditure. The costs of dialysis and transplantation consume up to 3% of the annual healthcare budget in high-income countries. However, the onset and progression of CKD is often preventable. In 2020, the World Kidney Day campaign highlights the importance of preventive interventions - be it primary, secondary, or tertiary. This article focuses on outlining and analyzing measures that can be implemented in every country to promote and advance CKD prevention. Primary prevention of kidney disease should focus on the modification of risk factors and addressing structural abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tracts, as well as exposure to environmental risk factors and nephrotoxins. In persons with pre-existing kidney disease, secondary prevention, including blood pressure optimization and glycemic control, should be the main goal of education and clinical interventions. In patients with advanced CKD, management of co-morbidities such as uremia and cardiovascular disease is a highly recommended preventative intervention to avoid or delay dialysis or kidney transplantation. Political efforts are needed to proliferate the preventive approach. While national policies and strategies for non-communicable diseases might be present in a country, specific policies directed toward education and awareness about CKD screening, management, and treatment are often lacking. Hence, there is an urgent need to increase the awareness of preventive measures throughout populations, professionals, and policy makers.
- Published
- 2020
39. Chronic Kidney Disease Awareness and Longitudinal Health Outcomes: Results from the REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke Study
- Author
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Tummalapalli, Sri Lekha, Vittinghoff, Eric, Crews, Deidra C, Cushman, Mary, Gutiérrez, Orlando M, Judd, Suzanne E, Kramer, Holly J, Peralta, Carmen A, Tuot, Delphine S, Shlipak, Michael G, and Estrella, Michelle M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Kidney Disease ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Stroke ,Renal and urogenital ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Albuminuria ,Coronary Disease ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Geography ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Race Factors ,Renal Insufficiency ,Chronic ,Risk Factors ,Severity of Illness Index ,United States ,Chronic kidney disease ,Awareness ,Patient education ,Urology & Nephrology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundThe majority of people with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are unaware of their kidney disease. Assessing the clinical significance of increasing CKD awareness has critical public health and healthcare delivery implications. Whether CKD awareness among persons with CKD is associated with longitudinal health behaviors, disease management, and health outcomes is unknown.MethodsWe analyzed data from participants with CKD in the REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke study, a national, longitudinal, population-based cohort. Our predictor was participant CKD awareness. Outcomes were (1) health behaviors (smoking avoidance, exercise, and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use); (2) CKD management indicators (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker use, statin use, systolic blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, and body mass index); (3) change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) and urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR); and (4) health outcomes (incident end-stage kidney disease [ESKD], coronary heart disease [CHD], stroke, and death). Logistic and linear regressions were used to examine the association of baseline CKD awareness with outcomes of interest, adjusted for CKD stage and participant demographic and clinical factors.ResultsOf 6,529 participants with baseline CKD, 285 (4.4%) were aware of their CKD. Among the 3,586 participants who survived until follow-up (median 9.5 years), baseline awareness was not associated with subsequent odds of health behaviors, CKD management indicators, or changes in eGFR and UACR in adjusted analyses. Baseline CKD awareness was associated with increased risk of ESKD (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 1.44; 95% CI 1.08-1.92) and death (aHR 1.18; 95% CI 1.00-1.39), but not with subsequent CHD or stroke, in adjusted models.ConclusionsIndividuals aware of their CKD were more likely to experience ESKD and death, suggesting that CKD awareness reflects disease severity. Most persons with CKD, including those that are high-risk, remain unaware of their CKD. There was no evidence of associations between baseline CKD awareness and longitudinal health behaviors, CKD management indicators, or eGFR decline and albuminuria.
- Published
- 2020
40. Communicating Awareness About COVID-19 Through Songs: An Example From Ghana.
- Author
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Thompson, Rachel GA, Nutor, Jerry John, and Johnson, Julene K
- Subjects
Humans ,Communication ,Awareness ,Public Health ,Health Education ,Music ,Religion ,Ghana ,Social Media ,COVID-19 ,edutainment ,infectious disease ,multilingual population ,preventive measure ,song lyrics ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
Research has shown that music can be used to educate or disseminate information about public health crises. Grounded in the edutainment approach, we explored how songs are being used to create awareness about COVID-19 in Ghana, a sub-Saharan African country. YouTube was searched, and 28 songs met the study inclusion criteria. We conducted a thematic analysis of the song lyrics. Most lyrics were in English, Ghanaian Pidgin English, Akan, Ga, or Dagbani. Reflecting the multilingual population of Ghana, half of the songs contained three languages to convey their message, and only five songs were in one language. Eight themes emerged from the analysis: public health guidelines, COVID-19 is real and not a hoax, COVID-19 is infectious, prayer as method to stop the virus, emotional reaction and disruption of "everyday" activities; verbally expelling the virus, call for unity and collective efforts, and inspiring hope. We show that songs have the potential as a method for rapidly sharing information about emerging public health crises. Even though, it is beyond the scope of this study to draw conclusions about the reception and impact of songs on awareness and knowledge, the study shows that examining song lyrics can still be useful in understanding local attitudes toward COVID-19, as well as strategies for promoting preventive behaviors. We note that additional multidimensional efforts are needed to increase awareness among the general public about the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2020
41. Barriers to accrual and enrollment in brain tumor trials
- Author
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Lee, Eudocia Q, Chukwueke, Ugonma N, Hervey-Jumper, Shawn L, de Groot, John F, Leone, Jose Pablo, Armstrong, Terri S, Chang, Susan M, Arons, David, Oliver, Kathy, Verble, Kay, Musella, Al, Willmarth, Nicole, Alexander, Brian M, Bates, Amanda, Doherty, Lisa, Galanis, Evanthia, Gaffey, Sarah, Halkin, Thomas, Friday, Bret E, Fouladi, Maryam, Lin, Nancy U, Macdonald, David, Mehta, Minesh P, Penas-Prado, Marta, Vogelbaum, Michael A, Sahebjam, Solmaz, Sandak, David, van den Bent, Martin, Weller, Michael, Reardon, David A, and Wen, Patrick Y
- Subjects
Brain Disorders ,Rare Diseases ,Brain Cancer ,Cancer ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Attitude to Health ,Awareness ,Brain Neoplasms ,Decision Making ,Educational Status ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Oncologists ,Patient Selection ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Referral and Consultation ,Travel ,brain tumors ,clinical trial accrual ,neuro-oncology ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Many factors contribute to the poor survival of malignant brain tumor patients, some of which are not easily remedied. However, one contributor to the lack of progress that may be modifiable is poor clinical trial accrual. Surveys of brain tumor patients and neuro-oncology providers suggest that clinicians do a poor job of discussing clinical trials with patients and referring patients for clinical trials. Yet, data from the Cancer Action Network of the American Cancer Society suggest that most eligible oncology patients asked to enroll on a clinical trial will agree to do so. To this end, the Society for Neuro-Oncology (SNO) in collaboration with the Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) Working Group, patient advocacy groups, clinical trial cooperative groups, including the Adult Brain Tumor Consortium (ABTC), and other partners are working together with the intent to double clinical trial accrual over the next 5 years. Here we describe the factors contributing to poor clinical trial accrual in neuro-oncology and offer possible solutions.
- Published
- 2019
42. Surgeon Awareness of the Relative Costs of Common Surgical Instruments
- Author
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Zhao, Beiqun, Childers, Christopher P, Hays, Ron D, Ettner, Susan L, Alban, Rodrigo F, Maggard-Gibbons, Melinda, and Clary, Bryan M
- Subjects
Awareness ,California ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Humans ,Operating Rooms ,Physician's Role ,Surgeons ,Surgical Instruments ,Surveys and Questionnaires - Abstract
This study surveys surgeons’ cost knowledge and ability to distinguish subtle price variations between surgical tools with similar functions or indications.
- Published
- 2019
43. Impact of pre-diagnosis awareness of HIV-related stigma and dispositional coping on linkage to HIV care among newly diagnosed HIV+ Peruvian patients
- Author
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Molina, Yamilé, Ulrich, Angela, Greer, Anna C, Primbas, Angela, Wandell, Grace, Sanchez, Hugo, Bain, Carolyn, Konda, Kelika A, Clark, Jesse L, De la Grecca, Robert, Villarán, Manuel V, Pasalar, Siavash, Lama, Javier R, and Duerr, Ann C
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Mental Health ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,HIV/AIDS ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Adult ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Awareness ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Mass Screening ,Middle Aged ,Perception ,Peru ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Social Stigma ,HIV stigma ,coping ,linkage to care ,Latinos ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
A substantial body of literature has characterized how psychosocial factors, including HIV-related stigma and coping, are associated with HIV testing and HIV care utilization post-diagnosis. Less is known about if certain psychosocial characteristics pre-diagnosis may also predict linkage to care among individuals who receive an HIV-positive diagnosis. We examined if pre-diagnosis awareness/perception about HIV-related stigma and dispositional coping styles predicted linkage to HIV care within three months post-diagnosis with a secondary analysis of 604 patients from a randomized controlled trial (Sabes Study). Awareness/perception about HIV-related stigma, dispositional maladaptive and adaptive coping were measured before patients underwent an HIV test. Linkage to care was measured as receipt of care within three months of receiving the diagnosis. After adjusting for covariates, individuals who reported greater dispositional maladaptive coping pre-diagnosis had lower odds of linking to care, OR = 0.82, 95%CI [0.67, 1.00], p = .05. There was also a non-significant inverse association between dispositional adaptive coping pre-diagnosis and linkage to care. These preliminary data suggest the need for further longitudinal research and highlight the potential utility of pre-diagnosis psychosocial assessment and tailored counseling when providing positive HIV diagnosis results.
- Published
- 2019
44. Conscious and unconscious memory differentially impact attention: Eye movements, visual search, and recognition processes.
- Author
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Ramey, Michelle M, Yonelinas, Andrew P, and Henderson, John M
- Subjects
Humans ,Eye Movements ,Awareness ,Consciousness ,Cues ,Mental Recall ,Pattern Recognition ,Visual ,Attention ,Adult ,Young Adult ,Recognition ,Psychology ,Contextual cueing ,Eyetracking ,Implicit memory ,Memory ,Recognition ,Visual search ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Eye Disease and Disorders of Vision ,Eye ,Mental health ,Information and Computing Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Language ,Communication and Culture ,Experimental Psychology - Abstract
A hotly debated question is whether memory influences attention through conscious or unconscious processes. To address this controversy, we measured eye movements while participants searched repeated real-world scenes for embedded targets, and we assessed memory for each scene using confidence-based methods to isolate different states of subjective memory awareness. We found that memory-informed eye movements during visual search were predicted both by conscious recollection, which led to a highly precise first eye movement toward the remembered location, and by unconscious memory, which increased search efficiency by gradually directing the eyes toward the target throughout the search trial. In contrast, these eye movement measures were not influenced by familiarity-based memory (i.e., changes in subjective reports of memory strength). The results indicate that conscious recollection and unconscious memory can each play distinct and complementary roles in guiding attention to facilitate efficient extraction of visual information.
- Published
- 2019
45. The Psychological Health Benefits of Accepting Negative Emotions and Thoughts: Laboratory, Diary, and Longitudinal Evidence
- Author
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Ford, Brett Q, Lam, Phoebe, John, Oliver P, and Mauss, Iris B
- Subjects
Clinical and Health Psychology ,Social and Personality Psychology ,Psychology ,Mental Health ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mind and Body ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adaptation ,Psychological ,Adult ,Awareness ,Diaries as Topic ,Emotions ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Mindfulness ,Personal Satisfaction ,Stress ,Psychological ,Young Adult ,acceptance ,negative emotion ,stressors ,psychological health ,Marketing ,Cognitive Sciences ,Social Psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology ,Social and personality psychology - Abstract
Individuals differ in the degree to which they tend to habitually accept their emotions and thoughts without judging them-a process here referred to as habitual acceptance. Acceptance has been linked with greater psychological health, which we propose may be due to the role acceptance plays in negative emotional responses to stressors: acceptance helps keep individuals from reacting to-and thus exacerbating-their negative mental experiences. Over time, experiencing lower negative emotion should promote psychological health. To test these hypotheses, Study 1 (N = 1,003) verified that habitually accepting mental experiences broadly predicted psychological health (psychological well-being, life satisfaction, and depressive and anxiety symptoms), even when controlling for potentially related constructs (reappraisal, rumination, and other mindfulness facets including observing, describing, acting with awareness, and nonreactivity). Next, in a laboratory study (Study 2, N = 156), habitual acceptance predicted lower negative (but not positive) emotional responses to a standardized stressor. Finally, in a longitudinal design (Study 3, N = 222), acceptance predicted lower negative (but not positive) emotion experienced during daily stressors that, in turn, accounted for the link between acceptance and psychological health 6 months later. This link between acceptance and psychological health was unique to accepting mental experiences and was not observed for accepting situations. Additionally, we ruled out potential confounding effects of gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, and life stress severity. Overall, these results suggest that individuals who accept rather than judge their mental experiences may attain better psychological health, in part because acceptance helps them experience less negative emotion in response to stressors. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2018
46. Postural awareness and its relation to pain: validation of an innovative instrument measuring awareness of body posture in patients with chronic pain
- Author
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Cramer, Holger, Mehling, Wolf E, Saha, Felix J, Dobos, Gustav, and Lauche, Romy
- Subjects
Allied Health and Rehabilitation Science ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Chronic Pain ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pain Research ,Musculoskeletal ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Awareness ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Postural Balance ,Posture ,Psychometrics ,Reproducibility of Results ,Chronic pain ,Orthopedics ,Clinical sciences ,Allied health and rehabilitation science ,Sports science and exercise - Abstract
BackgroundHabitual postural patterns are associated with musculoskeletal pain, and improving a maladaptive posture requires postural awareness in order to lead to clinical improvements. This study aimed to develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of an innovative postural awareness scale.MethodsA 12-item Postural Awareness Scale (PAS) was developed and administered to 512 chronic pain patients (50.3 ± 11.4 years, 91.6% female, 37.1% spinal/shoulder pain) to assess its factor structure and reliability. To determine convergent validity, measures of body awareness, body responsiveness, body image, and mindfulness were correlated with the PAS, as were clinical measures of pain intensity, disability, and mental health. Sensitivity to change was assessed in 202 outpatients participating in a 10-week multimodal mind-body program.ResultsFactor analysis revealed two factors (Ease/Familiarity with Postural Awareness and Need for Attention Regulation with Postural Awareness) that explained 50.8% of the variance. Cronbach's alpha for the complete scale was 0.80; Spearman-Brown coefficient of split-half reliability was 0.67; and intra-class correlation was ICC2,1 = 0.75 (95% confidence interval = 0.71, 0.78). Significant positive correlations were found for body awareness (r = 0.23), body responsiveness (r = 0.41), body image (r = 0.22-0.32), and mindfulness (r = 0.38); negative correlations for pain intensity (r = - 0.14), disability (r = - 0.12), depression (r = - 0.23), and stress (r = - 0.29). Postural awareness scores increased with a mind-body program (p
- Published
- 2018
47. 25-Year trends in hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control in an Indian urban population: Jaipur Heart Watch
- Author
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Gupta, Rajeev, Gupta, Vijay P, Prakash, Hari, Agrawal, Aachu, Sharma, Krishna K, and Deedwania, Prakash C
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Adult ,Aged ,Awareness ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,Forecasting ,Humans ,India ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prevalence ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Urban Population ,Non-communicable diseases ,Lower-middle income countries ,Sustainable development goals ,Hypertension epidemiology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
ObjectivesWe evaluated trends in hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment and control in an Indian urban population over 25 years. Trends were projected to year 2030 to determine attainment of World Health Organization (WHO) Global Monitoring Framework targets.MethodsAdult participants (n=7440, men 4237, women 3203) enrolled in successive population based studies in Jaipur, India from years 1991 to 2015 were evaluated for hypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment and control. The studies were performed in years 1991-93 (n=2212), 1999-01 (n=1123), 2003-04 (n=458), 2006-07 (n=1127), 2009-10 (n=739) and 2012-15 (n=1781). Descriptive statistics are reported. We used logarithmic forecasting to year 2030 and compared outcomes to WHO target of 25% lower prevalence and >50% control.ResultsThe age-adjusted hypertension prevalence (%) among adults in successive studies increased from 29.5, 30.2, 36.5, 42.1, 34.4 to 36.1 (R2=0.41). Increasing trends were observed for hypertension awareness (13, 44, 49, 44, 49, 56; R2=0.63); treatment in all (9, 22, 38, 34, 41, 36; R2=0.68) and aware hypertensives (61, 66, 77, 79, 70, 64; R2=0.46); and control in all (2, 14, 13, 18, 21, 21; R2=0.82), aware (12, 33, 27, 46, 37, 37; R2=0.54) and treated (9, 20, 21, 48, 36, 49; R2=0.80) hypertensive participants. Projections to year 2030 show increases in prevalence to 44% (95% CI 43-45), awareness to 82% (81-83), treatment to 62% (61-63), and control to 36% (35-37).ConclusionHypertension prevalence, awareness, treatment and control rates are increasing among urban populations in India. Better awareness is associated with greater control. The rates of increase are off-target for WHO Global Monitoring Framework and UN Sustainable Development Goals.
- Published
- 2018
48. Evaluation of California’s ‘Tobacco 21’ law
- Author
-
Zhang, Xueying, Vuong, Tam D, Andersen-Rodgers, Elizabeth, and Roeseler, April
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,Cancer ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Tobacco ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Age Factors ,Awareness ,California ,Commerce ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Male ,Models ,Statistical ,Tobacco Products ,Tobacco Use ,Young Adult ,public opinion ,public policy ,surveillance and monitoring - Abstract
IntroductionCalifornia's law raising the minimum tobacco sales age to 21 went into effect on 9 June 2016. This law, known as 'Tobacco 21' or 'T21', also expanded the definition of tobacco to include electronic smoking devices. This paper describes the T21 evaluation plan and initial evaluation results.MethodsAn evaluation plan and logic model were created to evaluate T21. A tobacco retailer poll was conducted 7 months after the law went into effect to assess awareness, support and implementation; an online survey of California adults was fielded to provide data on tobacco use and attitudinal changes before and after T21 implementation; and tobacco purchase surveys were conducted to assess the retailer violation rate (RVR). Multivariate models estimated the odds of RVR and odds of being aware, agreeing with and observing advertisements related to T21.ResultsSeven months after the T21 effective date, 98.6% of retailers were aware of the law and 60.6% supported the law. Furthermore, 66.2% of retailers agreed that people who start smoking before 21 would become addicted to tobacco products. The RVR using youth decoys under age 18 statistically decreased from 10.3% before T21 to 5.7% after T21 (P=0.002). Furthermore, the RVR using young adult decoys ages 18-19 was 14.2% (95% CI 9.3% to 19.1%) for traditional tobacco and 13.1% (95% CI 10.2% to 16.1%) for electronic smoking devices.ConclusionsSurvey findings suggest that the high awareness and support for the law may have contributed to reducing illegal tobacco sales to youth under 18 and achieving widespread retailer conformity with the new law disallowing sales to young adults under 21.
- Published
- 2018
49. Continuous flash suppression and monocular pattern masking impact subjective awareness similarly.
- Author
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Lau, Hakwan, Peters, Megan, and Knotts, Jeffrey D
- Subjects
Binocular vision: Rivalry/ Bistable Perception ,Visual awareness ,visual perception ,Adult ,Awareness ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Perceptual Masking ,Vision ,Binocular ,Vision ,Monocular ,Visual Perception ,Young Adult - Abstract
Peters and Lau (eLife, 4, e09651, 2015) found that when criterion bias is controlled for, there is no evidence for unconscious visual perception in normal observers, in the sense that they cannot directly discriminate a target above chance without knowing it. One criticism of that study is that the visual suppression method used, forward and backward masking (FBM), may be too blunt in the way it interferes with visual processing to allow for unconscious forced-choice discrimination. To investigate this question, we compared FBM directly to continuous flash suppression (CFS) in a two-interval forced-choice task. Although CFS is popular, and may be thought of as a more powerful visual suppression technique, we found no difference in the degree of perceptual impairment between the two suppression types. To the extent that CFS impairs perception, both objective discrimination and subjective awareness are impaired to similar degrees under FBM. This pattern was consistently observed across three experiments in which various experimental parameters were varied. These findings provide evidence for an ongoing debate about unconscious perception: normal observers cannot perform forced-choice discrimination tasks unconsciously.
- Published
- 2018
50. HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis Initiation at a Large Community Clinic: Differences Between Eligibility, Awareness, and Uptake.
- Author
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Shover, Chelsea L, Javanbakht, Marjan, Shoptaw, Steven, Bolan, Robert K, Lee, Sung-Jae, Parsons, Jeffrey T, Rendina, Jonathon, and Gorbach, Pamina M
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Anti-HIV Agents ,Awareness ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Los Angeles ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis ,Risk Factors ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Transgender Persons ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesTo characterize uptake of HIV preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) in a community setting and to identify disparities in PrEP use by demographic and behavioral factors associated with increased HIV risk.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study of 19 587 men who have sex with men and transgender people visiting a Los Angeles, California, clinic specializing in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender care between August 2015 and February 2018 by using clinical care data.ResultsSeventy percent of patients met PrEP eligibility criteria, while 10% reported PrEP use. Using sex drugs, reporting both condomless anal intercourse and recent sexually transmitted infection, older age, and higher education level were associated with higher odds of PrEP use given eligibility. Latino or Asian race/ethnicity and bisexual orientation were associated with lower odds of PrEP use given eligibility. Higher odds of perceived need were associated with demographic risk factors but PrEP use was not similarly elevated.ConclusionsDiscrepancies between PrEP eligibility, perceived need, and use reveal opportunities to improve PrEP delivery in community settings. Public Health Implications. Efforts are needed to facilitate PrEP uptake in populations with highest HIV incidence.
- Published
- 2018
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