13 results on '"McGee H"'
Search Results
2. The Michigan BioTrust for Health: using dried bloodspots for research to benefit the community while respecting the individual.
- Author
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Chrysler D, McGee H, Bach J, Goldman E, and Jacobson PD
- Subjects
- Beneficence, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Michigan, Ownership, Biomedical Research ethics, Biomedical Research legislation & jurisprudence, Blood Banks ethics, Blood Banks legislation & jurisprudence, Neonatal Screening ethics, Neonatal Screening legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Validity of a household gun question in a telephone survey.
- Author
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Rafferty AP, Thrush JC, Smith PK, and McGee HB
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Michigan, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Data Collection methods, Firearms statistics & numerical data, Telephone
- Abstract
The validity of self-reported data on the presence of guns in the home obtained in a telephone survey was assessed in samples of households where a hunting license had been purchased or a handgun registered. The survey was conducted among a random sample of Ingham County, MI, residents who had purchased a hunting license between April 1990 and March 1991 and among those registering a handgun during 1990. A third study sample was selected from the county's general adult population using a random digit dialing method. The interviews were conducted between November 1991 and January 1992. The proportion of respondents who reported that at least one gun was kept in their household was 87.3 percent among handgun registration households and 89.7 percent among hunting license households. In the survey of the general population of the county, approximately one-third of the respondents reported keeping a gun in the household, 67 percent of them for hunting and 23 percent for safety. Despite some limitations, the data indicate that a question on gun presence in a household can be used in a in a telephone survey.
- Published
- 1995
4. Proportionate mortality study of Vietnam-era veterans of Michigan.
- Author
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Visintainer PF, Barone M, McGee H, and Peterson EL
- Subjects
- Adult, Age Distribution, Cohort Studies, Humans, Male, Michigan, Middle Aged, Mortality, Vietnam, Warfare, Cause of Death, Veterans statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This study examines the proportion of deaths from major diseases among Michigan Vietnam veterans. The distribution of deaths among Michigan Vietnam veterans was compared to deaths among veterans serving elsewhere for 1974-1989 to generate a proportionate mortality ratio (PMR). PMRs were estimated overall and for Black versus non-Black veterans. Overall, Vietnam veterans had significantly elevated PMRs for infectious and parasitic diseases and endocrine disease and lower PMRs for all malignant neoplasms combined. Vietnam veterans overall and non-Black specifically had elevated PMRs for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Black Vietnam veterans had elevated PMRs for cancer of the digestive organs, peritoneum, and pancreas. The elevated PMR for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma is consistent with results of individuals exposed to phenoxy herbicides. Results suggest that future studies should examine risks among racial groups separately.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. An outbreak of shigellosis at an outdoor music festival.
- Author
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Lee LA, Ostroff SM, McGee HB, Johnson DR, Downes FP, Cameron DN, Bean NH, and Griffin PM
- Subjects
- Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Dysentery, Bacillary etiology, Dysentery, Bacillary prevention & control, Female, Hand Disinfection standards, Holidays, Humans, Infant, Michigan epidemiology, Music, Risk Factors, Rural Population, Surveys and Questionnaires, Toilet Facilities standards, Water Microbiology, Camping, Disease Outbreaks statistics & numerical data, Dysentery, Bacillary epidemiology, Food Handling standards, Food Microbiology, Shigella sonnei
- Abstract
In August 1988, an estimated 3,175 women who attended a 5-day outdoor music festival in Michigan became ill with gastroenteritis caused by Shigella sonnei. Onset of illness peaked 2 days after the festival ended, and patients were spread throughout the United States by the time the outbreak was recognized. An uncooked tofu salad served on the last day was implicated as the outbreak vehicle (odds ratio = 3.4, p less than 0.0001). Over 2,000 volunteer food handlers prepared the communal meals served during the festival. This large foodborne outbreak had been heralded by a smaller outbreak of shigellosis among staff shortly before the festival began and by continued transmission of shigellosis from staff to attendees during the festival. S. sonnei isolated from women who became ill before, during, and after the festival had identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns and plasmid profiles. Limited access to soap and running water for handwashing was one of the few sanitary deficits noted at this gathering. This investigation demonstrates the need for surveillance and prompt public health intervention when Shigella infections are recognized in persons attending mass outdoor gatherings, the singular importance of handwashing in reducing secondary transmission of shigellosis, and the potential for explosive outbreaks when communal meals are prepared by large numbers of food handlers.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Decreasing trends in Reye syndrome and aspirin use in Michigan, 1979 to 1984.
- Author
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Remington PL, Rowley D, McGee H, Hall WN, and Monto AS
- Subjects
- Acetaminophen therapeutic use, Aspirin adverse effects, Child, Common Cold drug therapy, Fever drug therapy, Humans, Michigan, Reye Syndrome chemically induced, Aspirin therapeutic use, Reye Syndrome epidemiology
- Abstract
The incidence of Reye syndrome has been decreasing in Michigan, perhaps as a result of decreased aspirin use among children. To evaluate possible changes in the frequency of aspirin use, 199 families in Tecumseh, MI, with children younger than 18 years of age were interviewed by telephone in February 1981 and again in February 1983. Based on the reported use of medications for colds or influenza between 1981 and 1983, fewer parents gave aspirin (56% v 25%), but acetaminophen use did not change (59% v 55%). Younger parents and parents who had heard of the association between aspirin and Reye syndrome were more likely to stop giving aspirin. More parents chose to use either no medication or medications containing neither aspirin nor acetaminophen (6% v 32%) for the treatment of colds or influenza. Approximately 90% of parents who chose not to give aspirin for fever also gave medications for colds or influenza that did not contain aspirin. These results suggest that fewer children are receiving aspirin during illnesses that may precede Reye syndrome. The associated decrease in the incidence of Reye syndrome tends to support the hypothesis that the use of aspirin increases the risk for the development of Reye syndrome.
- Published
- 1986
7. Hemorrhagic colitis associated with a rare Escherichia coli serotype.
- Author
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Riley LW, Remis RS, Helgerson SD, McGee HB, Wells JG, Davis BR, Hebert RJ, Olcott ES, Johnson LM, Hargrett NT, Blake PA, and Cohen ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Diarrhea etiology, Escherichia coli classification, Female, Foodborne Diseases epidemiology, Humans, Male, Meat poisoning, Michigan, Middle Aged, Oregon, Colitis etiology, Disease Outbreaks, Escherichia coli Infections epidemiology, Foodborne Diseases etiology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology
- Abstract
We investigated two outbreaks of an unusual gastrointestinal illness that affected at least 47 people in Oregon and Michigan in February through March and May through June 1982. The illness was characterized by severe crampy abdominal pain, initially watery diarrhea followed by grossly bloody diarrhea, and little or no fever. It was associated with eating at restaurants belonging to the same fast-food restaurant chain in Oregon (P less than 0.005) and Michigan (P = 0.0005) and with eating any of three sandwiches containing three ingredients in common (beef patty, rehydrated onions, and pickles). Stool cultures did not yield previously recognized pathogens. However, a rare Escherichia coli serotype, O157:H7, that was not invasive or toxigenic by standard tests was isolated from 9 of 12 stools collected within four days of onset of illness in both outbreaks combined, and from a beef patty from a suspected lot of meat in Michigan. The only known previous isolation of this serotype was from a sporadic case of hemorrhagic colitis in 1975. This report describes a clinically distinctive gastrointestinal illness associated with E. coli O157:H7, apparently transmitted by undercooked meat.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. An outbreak of Pontiac fever related to whirlpool use, Michigan 1982.
- Author
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Mangione EJ, Remis RS, Tait KA, McGee HB, Gorman GW, Wentworth BB, Baron PA, Hightower AW, Barbaree JM, and Broome CV
- Subjects
- Adult, Antibodies, Bacterial analysis, Bacterial Infections etiology, Female, Humans, Legionella immunology, Legionella isolation & purification, Male, Michigan, Risk, Water Microbiology, Bacterial Infections epidemiology, Baths adverse effects, Disease Outbreaks epidemiology
- Abstract
Fourteen of 23 female members of a church group experienced an acute self-limited illness characterized by chills, fever, chest pain, cough, and nausea, consistent with the diagnosis of Pontiac fever. All 14 affected women had used a whirlpool located in the women's locker room during a racquetball party. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 6 was isolated from the women's whirlpool. Nine of 14 cases showed a seroconversion to heat-fixed antigen prepared from the L pneumophila serogroup 6 isolate. Aerosol size studies show that the whirlpool aerator produced water droplets small enough to travel deep into the tracheobronchial tree but large enough to transport L pneumophila. This outbreak demonstrated that Pontiac fever may be associated with L pneumophila serogroup 6, that whirlpools can serve as a reservoir for these organisms, and that seroconversion can occur in the absence of illness.
- Published
- 1985
9. Reyes syndrome update.
- Author
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Hall WN and McGee H
- Subjects
- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Michigan, Reye Syndrome epidemiology
- Published
- 1988
10. Aspirin as a risk factor in Reye's syndrome.
- Author
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Waldman RJ, Hall WN, McGee H, and Van Amburg G
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Child, Disease Outbreaks epidemiology, Fever drug therapy, Humans, Michigan, Reye Syndrome epidemiology, Reye Syndrome microbiology, Risk, Virus Diseases drug therapy, Aspirin adverse effects, Reye Syndrome etiology
- Published
- 1982
11. Reye syndrome and juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in Michigan.
- Author
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Remington PL, Shabino CL, McGee H, Preston G, Sarniak AP, and Hall WN
- Subjects
- Aspirin therapeutic use, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Michigan, Arthritis, Juvenile drug therapy, Aspirin adverse effects, Reye Syndrome chemically induced
- Abstract
Reye syndrome (RS) is believed to occur infrequently among children receiving long-term aspirin therapy. We reviewed all cases of RS reported to the Michigan Department of Public Health during 1982 and 1983. Three of the 36 patients were receiving aspirin for the treatment of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. All three patients had clinical courses characteristic of RS and two had supportive histologic findings on liver biopsy. The incidence of RS among children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis is significantly greater than the incidence of RS among children who do not have juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. These findings support previous studies that showed that the use of aspirin during the antecedent illness may be a risk factor for the development of RS. Physicians should be aware of the potential for the development of RS among children who are receiving long-term aspirin therapy for the treatment of systemic inflammatory illnesses.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Salmonellosis associated with marijuana: a multistate outbreak traced by plasmid fingerprinting.
- Author
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Taylor DN, Wachsmuth IK, Shangkuan YH, Schmidt EV, Barrett TJ, Schrader JS, Scherach CS, McGee HB, Feldman RA, and Brenner DJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Alabama, Child, Female, Georgia, Humans, Infant, Male, Michigan, Middle Aged, Ohio, Salmonella isolation & purification, Salmonella Infections epidemiology, Salmonella Infections microbiology, United States, Cannabis microbiology, Disease Outbreaks epidemiology, Drug Contamination, Gastroenteritis etiology, Plasmids, Salmonella genetics, Salmonella Infections etiology
- Abstract
In January and February of 1981, 85 cases of enteritis caused by Salmonella muenchen were reported from Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, and Alabama. Initial investigation failed to implicate a food source as a common vehicle, but in Michigan 76 per cent of the patients, in contrast to 21 per cent of the control subjects, admitted personal or household exposure to marijuana (P less than 0.001, relative risk = 20). Marijuana samples obtained from patients' households contained as many as 10(7) S. muenchen per gram. The outbreak-related isolates of S. muenchen were sensitive to all antibiotics and were phenotypically indistinguishable from other S. muenchen. Plasmid fingerprinting, however, revealed that all isolates related to marijuana exposure contained two low-molecular-weight plasmids (3.1 and 7.4 megadaltons), which were absent in control strains. Plasmid analysis of the isolates showed that the outbreaks in Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, and Alabama were related, and analysis of isolates submitted from various other states demonstrated that cases associated with marijuana may have been dispersed as far as California and Massachusetts.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Q fever. A call to heighten our index of suspicion.
- Author
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Sienko DG, Bartlett PC, McGee HB, Wentworth BB, Herndon JL, and Hall WN
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Animals, Child, Female, Goats immunology, Humans, Male, Michigan, Middle Aged, Q Fever diagnosis, Q Fever immunology, Q Fever transmission, Rural Population, Antibodies, Bacterial analysis, Coxiella immunology, Q Fever epidemiology
- Abstract
The prevalence of Q fever infection is probably underestimated. In Michigan, the first two reported human cases of Q fever occurred in 1984. The case-patients lived in adjacent, rural counties and had multiple exposures to goats. We conducted a serosurvey of goat owners and a reference population to compare the prevalence of Q fever antibodies in the two-county area. Goat owners were almost three times more likely to be seropositive with Q fever antibodies than the reference population (43% vs 15%). Among goat owners, individual and household seropositivity prevalences were positively correlated with the number of goats, the number of positive goats, and the number of goat births on the farm. Q fever should be considered more often in the differential diagnosis of patients with compatible illness, especially those with frequent animal contact.
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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