120,021 results on '"Has, C."'
Search Results
2. Self-identified rurality in a nationally representative population in the US
- Author
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Krutsinger, Dustin C, Yadav, Kuldeep N, and Hart, Joanna L
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- 2024
3. Evaluation of self-measure blood pressure monitoring in a southern rural West Virginia health system
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Durr, Andrya J, Robinson, Craig H, Seabury, Robin A, Calkins, Andrea L, Pollard, Cecil R, Thygeson, N Marcus, Lindberg, Curt C, McColley, Jessica M, and Baus, Adam D
- Published
- 2023
4. Caring for post-9/11 veterans in the civilian sector: Knowledge and readiness of registered and advance practice nurse providers
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Simoni, C, Costello, J, Blanchette, L, Ratliff, J, Bith-Melander, P, Jindal, C, Cassidy, K J, Choi, Y M, Kronsteadt, S, and Efird, J
- Published
- 2024
5. Regulating access to customary Fourth World foods and medicines: Culture, health and governance
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Ryser, Rudolph C, Gilio-Whitaker, Dina, and Korn, Leslie E
- Published
- 2024
6. Seasonality of acute Lyme disease in children
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Sundheim, Kathryn M, Levas, Michael N, Balamuth, Fran, Thompson, Amy D, Neville, Desiree N, Garro, Aris C, Kharbanda, Anupam B, Monuteaux, Michael C, and Nigrovic, Lise E
- Published
- 2021
7. Fair use in the US redux: Reformed or still deformed?
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Ginsburg, Jane C
- Published
- 2024
8. Characteristics of United States nursing homes with high percentages of stage 2-4 pressure injuries among high-risk nursing home residents with obesity
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Felix, Holly C, Brown, Clare C, Narcisse, Marie-Rachelle, Vincenzo, Jennifer L, Andersen, Jennifer A, Bradway, Christine W, and Weech-Maldonado, Robert
- Published
- 2023
9. Micronutrient Status During Military Training and Associations With Musculoskeletal Health, Injury, and Readiness Outcomes.
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Sekel, Nicole M., Lovalekar, Mita, Koltun, Kristen J., Bird, Matthew B., Forse, Jennifer N., Martin, Brian J., and Nindl, Bradley C.
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TIBIA physiology ,SKELETAL muscle injuries ,RISK assessment ,VITAMIN D deficiency ,IRON ,IRON in the body ,BONE density ,T-test (Statistics) ,DATA analysis ,MUSCULOSKELETAL system diseases ,IRON deficiency ,COMPUTED tomography ,SEX distribution ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MICRONUTRIENTS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,NUTRITIONAL status ,STATISTICS ,DATA analysis software ,MILITARY education ,MEMBRANE proteins ,VITAMIN D ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
Objective: Micronutrient status, specifically vitamin D and iron, represent modifiable factors for optimizing military readiness. The primary purpose of this investigation was to determine associations between micronutrient deficiency (i.e., iron status and 25-hydroxy-vitamin D [25(OH)D]) and operationally relevant outcomes (i.e., skeletal health, musculoskeletal injury) at baseline and post-10 weeks of arduous military training. Methods: A total of 227 (177 men, 50 women) Marine Officer Candidates School (OCS) candidates who completed OCS training with complete data sets were included in this analysis. Vitamin D and iron status indicators were collected at two timepoints, pre (baseline) and post OCS. Musculoskeletal outcomes at the mid- and proximal tibial diaphysis were assessed via peripheral quantitative computed tomography. Results: Micronutrient status declined following OCS training in men and women and was associated with musculoskeletal outcomes including greater bone strength (strength strain index) at the mid-diaphysis site in those with optimal status (M = 38.26 mm
3 , SE = 15.59) versus those without (M = −8.03 mm3 , SE = 17.27). In women (p =.037), endosteal circumference was greater in the deficient group (M = 53.26 mm, SE = 1.19) compared with the optimal group (M = 49.47 mm, SE = 1.31) at the proximal diaphysis. In men, greater baseline hepcidin concentrations were associated with an increased likelihood of suffering musculoskeletal injury during training. Conclusions: Vitamin D and iron status declined over the course of training, suggesting impaired micronutrient status. Differences in musculoskeletal outcomes by micronutrient group suggests optimal vitamin D and ferritin concentrations may exert beneficial effects on bone fatigability and fracture reduction during military training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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10. Needs assessment of Southeastern United States vector control agencies: Capacity improvement is greatly needed to prevent the next vector-borne disease outbreak
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Dye-Braumuller, Kyndall C, Gordon, Jennifer R, Johnson, Danielle, Morrissey, Josie, McCoy, Kaci, Dinglasan, Rhoel R, and Nolan, Melissa S
- Published
- 2022
11. The rules of war and fourth world nations
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Ryser, Rudolph C
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- 2023
12. Between indigenous nations and the state
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Ryser, Rudolph C
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- 2023
13. Emergence of arboviruses in the United States: The boom and bust of funding, innovation, and capacity
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Kading, Rebekah C, Cohnstaedt, Lee W, Fall, Ken, and Hamer, Gabriel L
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- 2020
14. Rural primary care providers’ attitudes towards sexual and gender minorities in a midwestern state in the USA
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Sharma, Akshay, Shaver, John C, and Stephenson, Rob B
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- 2019
15. Development and evaluation of a community-engaged research training program: Building capacity of Marshallese stakeholders and academic researchers to conduct health research
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McElfish, Pearl A, Rowland, Brett, Ayers, Britni L, O'Connor, Gail E, Purvis, Rachel S, Aitaoto, Nia, Capelle, Lucy, Laelan, Melisa, Felix, Holly C, Stewart, MKathryn, and Yeary, Karen HK
- Published
- 2019
16. Ethical collaboration and the need for training: Partnerships between Native American tribes and climate science organisations
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Kirby, Caitlin K, Haruo, Citralina, Whyte, Kyle P, Libarkin, Julie C, Caldwell, Chris, and Edler, Rebecca
- Published
- 2019
17. Trauma and alcohol characteristics related to high intensity binge drinking during college.
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Edalatian Zakeri, Shiva, Job, Greeshma A., Bing-Canar, Hanaan, Hallihan, Hagar, Paltell, Katherine C., and Berenz, Erin C.
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POST-traumatic stress disorder ,RISK assessment ,SEX crimes ,DATA analysis ,CONFORMITY ,RESEARCH funding ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,BINGE drinking ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,RESEARCH methodology ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,ALCOHOL drinking in college ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DATA analysis software ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
High intensity (HI) binge drinking has emerged as a high-risk drinking phenotype in young adult drinkers, yet few studies have evaluated clinically meaningful correlates of HI binge drinking among young adults at risk for co-occurring psychopathologies, such as interpersonal trauma-exposed drinkers. The present study compared three groups (i.e., HI binge, standard binge, non-binge drinkers) of interpersonal trauma-exposed college student drinkers (N = 221) on alcohol and interpersonal trauma characteristics. Results of one-way ANOVAs indicated that the HI binge group endorsed significantly greater negative alcohol-related consequences relative to the other two groups. The HI binge group endorsed significantly greater enhancement motives compared to the non-binge group, and no group differences were detected for PTSD and interpersonal trauma characteristics. Individuals who engage in HI binge drinking may experience greater alcohol problems due to their use of alcohol to enhance positive mood. HI binge drinking does not differentiate individuals on the basis of interpersonal trauma experiences or related psychopathology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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18. Lessons Learned From TranslateCovid, a Multilingual Online Resource Hub for Asian American and Pacific Islander Communities and Beyond.
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Shea, Sheila, Nguyen, Tom, Kim, Daniel H., Gee, Gilbert C., Wang, May C., and Umemoto, Karen
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HEALTH information services ,IMMIGRANTS ,SOCIAL media ,ASIAN Americans ,RESEARCH funding ,INFORMATION resources ,COMMUNITIES ,MISINFORMATION ,COVID-19 vaccines ,MULTILINGUALISM ,PACIFIC Islander Americans ,WEB development ,HEALTH equity ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MEDICINE information services ,ACCESS to information ,COVID-19 - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated health disparities among immigrant communities. Delivering accurate information and addressing misinformation on protective measures and vaccination to linguistically disadvantaged groups was critical for mitigating the effects of the pandemic. One group that was especially vulnerable to miscommunication about COVID-19 was non–native English-speaking immigrants. To address these disparities, the Asian American Studies Center and the Fielding School of Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles, partnered to create a multilingual resource hub, TranslateCovid.org, to disseminate credible and reliable information about COVID-19 safety measures, the science behind the vaccines, and vaccine safety. We identified >1300 verified resources in 60 languages from government, academic, and nonprofit organizations and reposted them on the TranslateCovid website. We also developed public service announcement videos on handwashing, use of face masks, and social distancing in 10 languages and a fact sheet for frequently asked questions in 20 languages. We used a participatory approach to develop strategies for disseminating these resources. We discuss lessons learned, including strategies for forming government, community, and academic partnerships to support the timely development and dissemination of information. We conclude with a discussion on the unique role of universities in promoting equitable access to public health resources among immigrant communities in times of crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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19. The economic and social costs of body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination in the United States.
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Yetsenga, Rhiannon, Banerjee, Rhea, Streatfeild, Jared, McGregor, Katherine, Austin, S. Bryn, Lim, Belle W.X., Diedrichs, Phillippa C., Greaves, Kayla, Mattei, Josiemer, Puhl, Rebecca M., Slaughter-Acey, Jaime C., Solanke, Iyiola, Sonneville, Kendrin R., Velasquez, Katrina, and Cheung, Simone
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,PREJUDICES ,LABOR productivity ,RESEARCH funding ,COST analysis ,BODY weight ,HEALTH ,BODY image ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,PERSONAL beauty ,ECONOMIC impact ,RESEARCH methodology ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,COLOR ,ECONOMIC aspects of diseases ,MEDICAL care costs ,SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) ,ECONOMICS ,EVALUATION - Abstract
This study estimated the social and economic costs of body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination (specifically, weight and skin-shade discrimination) in the United States (USA) in the 2019 calendar year. We used a prevalence-based approach and a cost-of-illness method to estimate the annual cost of harmful appearance ideals for cases of body dissatisfaction and discrimination based on weight and skin shade. Impacts on conditions/illnesses such as eating disorders that are attributable to body dissatisfaction, weight discrimination and skin-shade discrimination were identified through a quasi-systematic literature review, which captured financial, economic, and non-financial costs. For each impact attributable to body dissatisfaction or appearance-based discrimination, annual health system and productivity costs (or labor market costs) were primarily estimated by using a population attributable fraction methodology. Only direct costs that resulted from body dissatisfaction and appearance-based discrimination were included (for example, costs associated with conditions such as depression attributable to body dissatisfaction or appearance-based discrimination). In contrast, indirect costs (e.g. costs associated with a health condition developed following skin bleaching, which was undertaken as a result of body dissatisfaction) were not included. In 2019 body dissatisfaction incurred $84 billion in financial and economic costs and $221 billion through reduced well-being. Financial costs of weight discrimination and skin-shade discrimination were estimated to be $200 billion and $63 billion, respectively, and reduced well-being was estimated to be $206.7 billion due to weight discrimination and $8.4 billion due to skin-shade discrimination. Sensitivity testing revealed the costs likely range between $226 billion and $507 billion for body dissatisfaction, between $175 billion and $537 billion for skin-shade discrimination, and between $126 billion and $265 billion for weight discrimination. This study demonstrates that the prevalence and economic costs of body dissatisfaction and weight and skin-shade discrimination are substantial, which underscores the urgency of identifying policy actions designed to promote prevention. Plain English Summary: Appearance ideals in the USA have been widely critiqued for placing unfair burden on people of color and women of all race/ethnicity groups, but little is known about the economic consequences of biased appearance standards. To attain a comprehensive understanding of the economic impact of these harmful appearance ideals on the US economy, we estimated the one-year financial, economic and non-financial costs to the economy caused by body dissatisfaction, weight discrimination, and skin-shade discrimination. We considered a wide range of costs, including costs to the healthcare system, workplace, and other costs for individuals, households, employers, and government. We found that the impact of harmful appearance ideals on the USA economy is substantial. In 2019 body dissatisfaction incurred $84 billion in financial and economic costs and $221 billion through reduced well-being. Financial costs of weight discrimination and skin-shade discrimination were estimated to be $200 billion and $63 billion, respectively, and reduced well-being was estimated to be $207 billion due to weight discrimination and $8 billion due to skin-shade discrimination. Women of all race/ethnicity groups bore the bulk of the burden, shouldering 58% of the costs for body dissatisfaction and 66% for weight discrimination. Women bore 50% of the costs for skin-shade discrimination. These costs are substantial and underscore the urgency of identifying effective policy actions to reduce the damaging effects of harmful appearance ideals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Projected changes in mangrove distribution and vegetation structure under climate change in the southeastern United States.
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Bardou, Rémi, Osland, Michael J., Alemu, Jahson B., Feher, Laura C., Harlan, David P., Scyphers, Steven B., Shepard, Christine C., Swinea, Savannah H., Thorne, Kalaina, Andrew, Jill E., and Hughes, A. Randall
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GREENHOUSE gases ,COASTAL changes ,SALT marshes ,MANGROVE forests ,COASTAL wetlands ,CLIMATE change ,MANGROVE plants - Abstract
Aim: The climate change‐induced transition from grass‐dominated marshes to woody‐plant‐dominated mangrove forests has the potential to impact the ecosystem goods and services provided by coastal wetlands. To better anticipate and prepare for these impacts, there is a need to advance understanding of future changes in mangrove distribution and coastal wetland vegetation structural properties due to warming winters. Location: Southeastern United States. Time Period: Recent (1981–2010) and future (2071–2100). Major Taxa Studied: Coastal wetland vegetation. Methods: We estimated changes in mangrove distribution and coastal wetland vegetation structure using known climate‐ecological relationships, recent climate data for the period 1981–2010, and future projected climate data for the period 2071–2100. We quantified potential changes in mangrove presence, mangrove relative abundance, coastal wetland vegetation height, and coastal wetland vegetation aboveground biomass under two Shared Socio‐Economic Pathway scenarios (SSPs; SSP2‐4.5 and SSP5‐8.5), which correspond to intermediate and high greenhouse gas emissions scenarios, respectively. Results: Our analyses indicate that mangrove presence and relative abundance will dramatically increase in the northern Gulf of Mexico and the southeast Atlantic coast of the United States, particularly under the high emissions scenario. Because of the higher stature of mangroves relative to salt marsh vegetation, this expansion will cause a transformative change in coastal wetland vegetation height and aboveground biomass in many areas. However, along the arid southern Texas coast, low precipitation and high salinities are expected to constrain mangrove expansion and growth. Main Conclusions: Our results show where and to what extent climate change, in the form of winter temperature warming, is projected to enable the transition from shorter, grass‐dominated salt marshes to taller, woody plant‐dominated mangrove forests in the southeastern United States, with consequent impacts on ecosystem goods and services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. Autism Prevalence and the Intersectionality of Assigned Sex at Birth, Race, and Ethnicity on Age of Diagnosis.
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Goldblum, Jessica E., McFayden, Tyler C., Bristol, Stephanie, Putnam, Orla C., Wylie, Amanda, and Harrop, Clare
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DIAGNOSIS of autism , *RESEARCH funding , *AUTISM , *SEX distribution , *PROBABILITY theory , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *INTERSECTIONALITY , *RACE , *SURVEYS , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *DELAYED diagnosis , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *DATA analysis software , *ASSIGNED gender , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Purpose: An official autism diagnosis is required to access timely intervention and is associated with better long-term wellbeing and mental health. Certain demographic characteristics, such as being female or a racially or ethnically minoritized youth, have been associated with significant diagnostic lag. However, it remains unclear how assigned sex, race, and ethnicity interact with each other in predicting the prevalence and age of autism diagnosis. Methods: To examine the interactions between assigned sex, race, and ethnicity, we used data from the National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH; 2016 > 2021). Results: One in 38 children had an autism diagnosis and 3.8 males were diagnosed per 1 female. Hierarchical linear regressions yielded diagnostic delays in some females, particularly those who were non-Hispanic white, Black, and Asian. Ethnic and racial minority children had significantly earlier diagnoses than white and non-Hispanic children when not accounting for sex. Conclusion: This study demonstrates slight increases in reported autism prevalence, a diagnostic lag in some autistic females that was strongly associated with ethnicity, and earlier diagnoses in racial and ethnic minority youth, a finding that may be explained by factors associated with phenotypic differences. This study has important implications for the diagnosis of minority autistic youth, particularly females and females who are non-Hispanic, who may experience a greater propensity for diagnostic delays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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22. Clinical performance of existing diagnostic criteria for pneumonia in older emergency patients: A prospective cohort study.
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Hunold, Katherine M., Mion, Lorraine C., Gure, Tanya R., Schwaderer, Andrew L., Exline, Matthew, Hebert, Courtney, Lampert, Brent C., Southerland, Lauren T., Stephens, Julie A., Boyer, Edward W., Hill, Michael, Chu, Ching‐Min B., Reider, Carson, and Caterino, Jeffrey M.
- Subjects
- *
PNEUMONIA diagnosis , *PNEUMONIA , *PATIENTS , *RESEARCH funding , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *EMERGENCY medical services , *DECISION making , *DIAGNOSIS , *SYMPTOMS , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *CHEST X rays , *FEVER , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors , *COUGH , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SENSITIVITY & specificity (Statistics) , *OLD age - Abstract
Background: Pneumonia accounts for over half a million older adult emergency department (ED) visits annually, but ED pneumonia diagnosis is inaccurate. Geriatric‐specific pneumonia diagnostic criteria exist for other settings; no prospective data exist to determine if application in the older adult ED population is feasible. The objective was to prospectively evaluate the utility of four current diagnostic criteria (Loeb; Modified McGeer; Infectious Disease Society of America/American Thoracic Society; American College of Emergency Physicians) in older adult ED patients. Methods: This was a prospective, observational cohort study of older adult ED patients ≥65 years of age in two U.S. EDs with suspected pneumonia defined as having chest radiography ordered and treating physician suspicion. The standard we used for defining the presence, absence, or inability to determine a diagnosis of pneumonia diagnosis was expert physician chart adjudication. We report the summary statistics for demographic characteristics and symptoms/exam findings and sensitivity, specificity, and likelihood ratios with 95% confidence intervals of the existing diagnostic criteria. Pre‐specified cutoff values of a positive LR >10 and a negative LR <0.3 were considered clinically significant. Results: Of 135 patients enrolled, 27 had pneumonia by adjudicator review. Typical patient‐reported pneumonia symptoms, such as fever (18.5%) and new/worse cough (51.9%), were not consistently present in pneumonia. The IDSA/ATS and ACEP criteria had positive LR >10 and negative LR <0.3; however, all confidence intervals included pre‐specified cutoffs. Conclusions: Older adults presented to the ED with low frequency of typical pneumonia symptoms. Although existing diagnostic definitions had promising test characteristics, they may not perform well enough for clinical application without refinement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Patterns of simultaneous and nonsimultaneous use of cannabis and alcohol among American Indian adolescents.
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Douglass, Morgan A., Stanley, Linda R., Karoly, Hollis C., Prince, Mark A., Crabtree, Meghan A., and Swaim, Randall C.
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INDIAN Americans ,IMMIGRANTS ,HIGH schools ,ADOLESCENT health ,RESEARCH funding ,WOMEN ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CANNABIS (Genus) ,ALCOHOL drinking ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: American Indian (AI) adolescents report earlier initiation and higher rates of cannabis and alcohol use compared to their non-AI peers. Simultaneous cannabis and alcohol (SCA) use is increasingly common. A primary goal of our research was to identify profiles of cannabis and alcohol use, including SCA use, among AI adolescents using latent class analysis (LCA). Method: Data from 1,673 7th–12th grade students attending 45 reservation-area schools throughout the United States who reported using alcohol and/or cannabis in the past year were used to identify the latent classes. Multinomial logistic regression analysis determined associations of sex, grade, and multiethnicity to class membership. Results: A four-class solution was found: (1) SCA-Heavier Use (16.1%); (2) SCA-Lighter Use (25.2%); (3) Primarily Cannabis Use (33.3%); and (4) Primarily Alcohol Use (25.4%). Multinomial regression showed higher grade, identifying as multiethnic, and being female were associated with higher likelihood of membership in the SCA class. Conclusion: AI adolescents were more likely to be classified in the Primarily Cannabis Use class as compared to all other classes. Characterizing profiles of use may help identify those engaging in risky or co-use and help researchers and clinicians better understand how AI adolescents engage with alcohol and marijuana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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24. Internalized Heterosexism Magnifies the Association of Hazardous or Harmful Alcohol Use on Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration Rates of Sexual Minority and Same-Sex-Attracted Men.
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Schramm, Andrew T., Swan, Suzanne C., Lambdin, Nell, deRoon-Cassini, Terri A., Srivastava, Pranjal, and Shorey, Ryan C.
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INTIMATE partner violence ,SEXUAL minority men ,ALCOHOL drinking ,HETEROSEXISM ,MINORITY stress ,SEXUAL orientation - Abstract
Objective: To test whether internalized heterosexism, a form of minority stress, heightens the effect of hazardous or harmful alcohol use on frequency of intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration among sexual minority and same-sex-attracted men. Method: We recruited participants online via Amazon Mechanical Turk (MTurk). Inclusion criteria were adult cisgender men living in the United States who identified as a sexual minority (i.e., gay, bisexual) or who endorsed being sexually attracted to men and who reported a male partner in the preceding year. Participants (N = 198) completed self-report questionnaires measuring sexual orientation and attraction, internalized heterosexism, IPV perpetration (sexual, physical, and psychological), and hazardous or harmful alcohol use. Results: Hazardous or harmful alcohol use and internalized heterosexism were associated with frequency of IPV perpetration. Internalized heterosexism moderated the effect of hazardous or harmful alcohol use on IPV perpetration, such that greater hazardous or harmful alcohol use and higher levels of internalized heterosexism were associated with the greatest rates of IPV perpetration. Results were consistent for each type of IPV (sexual, physical, and psychological). Conclusions: Our findings highlight the association between high levels of internalized heterosexism, magnified by the presence of hazardous or harmful alcohol use, and physical, sexual, and psychological IPV. Alleviating internalized heterosexism is a potential target for decreasing IPV in this at-risk population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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25. A Delphi Panel Study for Public Education about Vascularized Composite Allograft Donation in the United States.
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Downey, Max C., Sidoti, Carolyn N., Ferzola, Alexander, Anderson, Naomi, Sung, Hannah C., Van Pilsum Rasmussen, Sarah E., Vanterpool, Karen B., Segev, Dorry L., Cooney, Carisa M., Kimberly, Laura L., Warren, Daniel S., Johnson, Ieesha D., Brandacher, Gerald, Gordon, Elisa J., and Levan, Macey L.
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WORLD Wide Web ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH funding ,TEACHING aids ,HOMOGRAFTS ,ORGAN donation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,JUDGMENT sampling ,SURVEYS ,THEMATIC analysis ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH education ,DELPHI method ,DATA analysis software ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
Introduction: Improving public awareness about the opportunity to become a vascularized composite allograft (VCA) donor is crucial to increasing access to organs. Prior research identified a need for comprehensive and comprehensible public education materials. A 2-round Delphi panel was conducted to garner US expert consensus on the topics and language to include in public education materials via an organ procurement organization-hosted website. Methods: The round 1 survey assessed the importance of educational topics and statements (n = 19) using 5-point Likert scales. The round 2 survey asked experts to rate new and repeated educational topics (n = 27). Open-ended comment boxes elicited experts' feedback and language revisions for educational statements. Responses were analyzed using descriptive statistics and rapid qualitative analysis. Findings: Eighteen experts responded to the round 1 survey and 15 to round 2. After round 2, 20 topics had mean (M) importance greater than neutral (M > 3.00) and were retained in the educational materials. The 5 most important topics by mean Likert ratings were: consent process for donation (M = 4.73), potential recipients (M = 4.73), most common vascularized composite organs transplanted (M = 4.47), purpose (M = 4.47), and definition (M = 4.47). Seven themes emerged from experts' open-ended comments about the importance and language of educational statements. Conclusions: Delphi panel findings identified expert-endorsed topics and educational statements for public education about vascularized composite organ donation via an educational website. Future research should assess the website's impact on public knowledge of VCA donation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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26. Rural comprehensive cancer care: Qualitative analysis of current challenges and opportunities.
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Evans, Sydney, Seaman, Aaron T., Johnson, Erin C., Engelbart, Jacklyn M., Gao, Xiang, Vikas, Praveen, Phadke, Sneha, Schroeder, Mary C., Lizarraga, Ingrid M., and Charlton, Mary E.
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL quality control ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,CANCER patient medical care ,RURAL hospitals ,INTERVIEWING ,DECISION making in clinical medicine ,CONTINUING medical education ,RURAL health services ,EXPERIENCE ,THEMATIC analysis ,RURAL population ,RURAL conditions ,RESEARCH methodology ,URBAN hospitals ,CANCER patient psychology ,ONCOLOGISTS ,URBAN health - Abstract
Purpose: While limited resources can make high‐quality, comprehensive, coordinated cancer care provision challenging in rural settings, rural cancer patients often rely on local hospitals for care. To develop resources and strategies to support high‐quality local cancer care, it is critical to understand the current experiences of rural cancer care physicians, including perceived strengths and challenges of providing cancer care in rural areas. Methods: Semi‐structured interviews were conducted with 13 cancer providers associated with all 12 non‐metropolitan/rural Iowa hospitals that diagnose or treat >100 cancer patients annually. Iterative thematic analysis was conducted to develop domains. Findings: Participants identified geographic proximity and sense of community as strengths of local care. They described decision‐making processes and challenges related to referring patients to larger centers for complex procedures, including a lack of dedicated navigators to facilitate and track transfers between institutions and occasional lack of respect from academic physicians. Participants reported a desire for strengthening collaborations with larger urban/academic cancer centers, including access to educational opportunities, shared resources and strategies to collect and monitor data on quality, and clinical trials. Conclusions: Rural cancer care providers are dedicated to providing high‐quality care close to home for their patients and would welcome opportunities to increase collaboration with larger centers to improve coordination and comprehensiveness of care, collect and monitor data on quality of care, and access continuing education opportunities. Further research is needed to develop implementation approaches that will extend resources, services, and expertise to rural providers to facilitate high‐quality cancer care for all cancer patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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27. Empowerment Moderates the Relationship Between Partner Abuse and Suicidal Ideation for Immigrant Women.
- Author
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Butter, Sara E., Sabri, Bushra, Hanson, Ginger C., and Campbell, Jacquelyn C.
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IMMIGRANTS ,CROSS-sectional method ,INTIMATE partner violence ,SUICIDAL ideation ,SELF-efficacy ,STATISTICAL sampling ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PSYCHOLOGY of women ,SEVERITY of illness index ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,THEORY ,DATA analysis software ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,EMPLOYMENT ,REGRESSION analysis ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Purpose: Research shows strong associations between intimate partner violence (IPV) among women and suicidal ideation but this topic is understudied among immigrant women in abusive relationships in the United States. Empowerment may play a significant role in protecting abused immigrant women from suicidal ideation but has not been studied with quantitative data. Method: The current study used convenience sampling. Immigrant women who experienced IPV were asked about IPV severity, empowerment, and where they were born. Bivariate associations among variables were assessed; empowerment was tested as a moderator of the relationship between IPV and suicidal ideation. Results: The sample comprised 293 immigrant women, with 62.8% reporting suicidal ideation with a significantly greater proportion of women from South America than elsewhere reporting suicidal ideation. Empowerment buffered the effect of IPV on suicidal ideation. Conclusion: Prevalence of suicidal ideation among immigrant women experiencing IPV is concerning. Severity of IPV, region of the world where women were born, and empowerment were all related to suicidal ideation, showing directions for future research. Empowerment nursing interventions are needed to address IPV and resulting mental health problems among immigrant women. [Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services, 62(9), 19–28.] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. Trade mark ownfringement
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Fromer, Jeanne C
- Published
- 2023
29. Shifting the Energy Toward Los Angeles: Comparing the Energetic Contribution and Pacing Approach Between 2000- and 1500-m Maximal Ergometer Rowing.
- Author
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Astridge, Daniel J., Peeling, Peter, Goods, Paul S.R., Girard, Olivier, Watts, Sophie P., Dennis, Myles C., and Binnie, Martyn J.
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ENERGY metabolism ,OXYGEN consumption ,ROWING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HEART beat ,LACTATES ,EXERCISE ,ERGOMETRY ,ATHLETIC ability ,ANAEROBIC exercises - Abstract
Purpose: To compare the energetic contribution and pacing in 2000- and 1500-m maximal rowing-ergometer performances. Methods: On separate visits (>48 h apart, random order), 18 trained junior (16.7 [0.4] y) male rowers completed 3 trials: a 7 × 4-minute graded exercise test, a 2000-m time trial (TT
2000 ), and a 1500-m TT (TT1500 ). Respiratory gases were continuously measured throughout each trial. The submaximal power-to-oxygen-consumption relationship from the graded exercise test was used to determine the accumulated oxygen deficit for each TT. Differences in mean power output (MPO), relative anaerobic contribution, percentage of peak oxygen uptake, pacing index, maximum heart rate, rating of perceived exertion, and blood lactate concentration were assessed using linear mixed modeling. Results: Compared to TT2000 (324 [24] W), MPO was 5.2% (3.3%) higher in TT1500 (341 [29 W]; P <.001, η p 2 =.70). There was a 4.9% (3.3%) increase (P <.001, η p 2 =.71) in anaerobic contribution from 17.3% (3.3%) (TT2000 ) to 22.2% (4.3%) (TT1500 ). Compared to TT1500 , maximum heart rate, rating of perceived exertion, and blood lactate concentration were all greater (P <.05) in TT2000 . The pacing index was not different between trials. Percentage increase in MPO from TT2000 to TT1500 was negatively associated with pacing variance in TT1500 (R2 =.269, P =.027). Conclusions: Maximal ergometer performance over 1500 m requires a significantly greater anaerobic contribution compared with 2000 m. Junior male athletes adopt a consistent pacing strategy across both distances. However, those who experienced greater percentage increases in MPO over the shorter test adopted a more even pacing strategy. To prepare for 1500-m performance, greater emphasis should be placed on developing capacity for work in the severe domain and completing race simulations with a more even pacing strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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30. Diversity Washing.
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BAKER, ANDREW C., LARCKER, DAVID F., M c CLURE, CHARLES G., SARAPH, DURGESH, and WATTS, EDWARD M.
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DIVERSITY in the workplace ,PUBLIC sector ,DISCLOSURE ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,ENVIRONMENTAL, social, & governance factors ,EMPLOYEE selection ,INVESTMENTS - Abstract
We provide large‐sample evidence on whether U.S. publicly traded corporations use voluntary disclosures about their commitments to employee diversity opportunistically. We document significant discrepancies between companies' external stances on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and their hiring practices. Firms that discuss DEI excessively relative to their actual employee gender and racial diversity ("diversity washers") obtain superior scores from environmental, social, and governance (ESG) rating organizations and attract more investment from institutional investors with an ESG focus. These outcomes occur even though diversity‐washing firms are more likely to incur discrimination violations and have negative human‐capital‐related news events. Our study provides evidence consistent with growing allegations of misleading statements from firms about their DEI initiatives and highlights the potential consequences of selective ESG disclosures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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31. Modeling raccoon ('Procyon lotor') habitat connectivity to identify potential corridors for rabies spread
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Algeo, Timothy P, Slate, Dennis, Caron, Rosemary M, Atwood, Todd, Recuenco, Sergio, Ducey, Mark J, Chipman, Richard B, Palace, Michael, Casaysay, Nadine Joy G, Tamesis, Gene Marie L, Yude, Tricia Marie G, Romero, Sarah Joyce E, and Gayoba, Raziel C
- Published
- 2017
32. Women's health care: The experiences and behaviors of rural and urban lesbians in the USA
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Barefoot, K N, Warren, J C, and Smalley, K B
- Published
- 2017
33. Remote eye care screening for rural veterans with Technology-based Eye Care Services: A quality improvement project
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Maa, A Y, Wojciechowski, B, Hunt, K, Dismuke, C, Janjua, R, and Lynch, M G
- Published
- 2017
34. Learning by doing: The MD-PA interprofessional education rural rotation
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Palmer, R T and Stilp, C
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- 2017
35. Rural-urban differences in unpaid caregivers of adults
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Crouch, Elizabeth, Probst, Janice C, and Bennett, Kevin
- Published
- 2017
36. Community adaptations to an impending food desert in rural Appalachia, USA
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Miller, W C, Rogalla, D, Spencer, D, Zia, N, Griffith, B N, and Heinsberg, H B
- Published
- 2016
37. Hailstone size dichotomy in a warming climate.
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Gensini, Vittorio A., Ashley, Walker S., Michaelis, Allison C., Haberlie, Alex M., Goodin, Jillian, and Wallace, Brendan C.
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GLOBAL warming ,HAILSTORMS ,GREENHOUSE gases ,THUNDERSTORMS ,VERTICAL drafts (Meteorology) - Abstract
Hailstorms are analyzed across the United States using explicit hailstone size calculations from convection-permitting regional climate simulations for historical, mid-century, and end of twenty-first-century epochs. Near-surface hailstones <4 cm are found to decrease in frequency by an average of 25%, whereas the largest stones are found to increase by 15–75% depending on the greenhouse gas emissions pathway. Decreases in the frequency of near-surface severe hail days are expected across the U.S. High Plains, with 2–4 fewer days projected—primarily in summer. Column-maximum severe hail days are projected to increase robustly in most locations outside of the southern Plains, a distribution that closely mimics projections of thunderstorm days. Primary mechanisms for the changes in hailstone size are linked to future environments supportive of greater instability opposed by thicker melting layers. This results in a future hailstone size dichotomy, whereby stronger updrafts promote more of the largest hailstones, but significant decreases occur for a majority of smaller diameters due to increased melting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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38. Pre-existing Immunocompromising Conditions and Outcomes of Acute COVID-19 Patients Admitted for Pediatric Intensive Care.
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Rowan, Courtney M, LaBere, Brenna, Young, Cameron C, Zambrano, Laura D, Newhams, Margaret M, Kucukak, Suden, McNamara, Elizabeth R, Mack, Elizabeth H, Fitzgerald, Julie C, Irby, Katherine, Maddux, Aline B, Schuster, Jennifer E, Kong, Michele, Dapul, Heda, Schwartz, Stephanie P, Bembea, Melania M, Loftis, Laura L, Kolmar, Amanda R, Babbitt, Christopher J, and Nofziger, Ryan A
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PUBLIC health surveillance ,PRIMARY immunodeficiency diseases ,LEUKOCYTE count ,HEMATOLOGIC malignancies ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,PLATELET count ,CRITICALLY ill ,PATIENTS ,IMMUNOCOMPROMISED patients ,HOSPITAL care ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HOSPITALS ,HOSPITAL mortality ,AGE distribution ,SEVERITY of illness index ,PEDIATRICS ,INTENSIVE care units ,AUTOIMMUNE diseases ,LENGTH of stay in hospitals ,KIDNEY diseases ,COVID-19 ,CRITICAL care medicine ,COMORBIDITY ,MIXED infections ,EVALUATION ,CHILDREN - Abstract
Background We aimed to determine if pre-existing immunocompromising conditions (ICCs) were associated with the presentation or outcome of patients with acute coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) admitted for pediatric intensive care. Methods Fifty-five hospitals in 30 US states reported cases through the Overcoming COVID-19 public health surveillance registry. Patients <21 years admitted 12 March 2020–30 December 2021 to the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) or high-acuity unit for acute COVID-19 were included. Results Of 1274 patients, 105 (8.2%) had an ICC, including 33 (31.4%) hematologic malignancies, 24 (22.9%) primary immunodeficiencies and disorders of hematopoietic cells, 19 (18.1%) nonmalignant organ failure with solid-organ transplantation, 16 (15.2%) solid tumors, and 13 (12.4%) autoimmune disorders. Patients with ICCs were older, had more underlying renal conditions, and had lower white blood cell and platelet counts than those without ICCs, but had similar clinical disease severity upon admission. In-hospital mortality from COVID-19 was higher (11.4% vs 4.6%, P =.005) and hospitalization was longer (P =.01) in patients with ICCs. New major morbidities upon discharge were not different between those with and without ICC (10.5% vs 13.9%, P =.40). In patients with ICCs, bacterial coinfection was more common in those with life-threatening COVID-19. Conclusions In this national case series of patients <21 years of age with acute COVID-19 admitted for intensive care, existence of a prior ICCs were associated with worse clinical outcomes. Reassuringly, most patients with ICCs hospitalized in the PICU for severe acute COVID-19 survived and were discharged home without new severe morbidities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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39. Health and Economic Benefits of Routine Childhood Immunizations in the Era of the Vaccines for Children Program -- United States, 1994-2023.
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Zhou, Fangjun, Jatlaoui, Tara C., Leidner, Andrew J., Carter, Rosalind J., Xiaoyu Dong, Santoli, Jeanne M., Stokley, Shannon, Daskalakis, Demetre C., and Peacock, Georgina
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IMMUNIZATION , *CHILDREN , *RUBELLA vaccines , *ROTAVIRUS vaccines - Abstract
Since 1994, the U.S. Vaccines for Children (VFC) program has covered the cost of vaccines for children whose families might not otherwise be able to afford vaccines. This report assessed and quantified the health benefits and economic impact of routine U.S. childhood immunizations among both VFC-eligible and non--VFC-eligible children born during 1994-2023. Diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis vaccine; Haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccine; oral and inactivated poliovirus vaccines; measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine; hepatitis B vaccine; varicella vaccine; pneumococcal conjugate vaccine; hepatitis A vaccine; and rotavirus vaccine were included. Averted illnesses and deaths and associated costs over the lifetimes of 30 annual cohorts of children born during 1994--2023 were estimated using established economic models. Net savings were calculated from the payer and societal perspectives. Among approximately 117 million children born during 1994--2023, routine childhood vaccinations will have prevented approximately 508 million lifetime cases of illness, 32 million hospitalizations, and 1,129,000 deaths, at a net savings of $540 billion in direct costs and $2.7 trillion in societal costs. From both payer and societal perspectives, routine childhood vaccinations among children born during 1994--2023 resulted in substantial cost savings. Childhood immunizations continue to provide substantial health and economic benefits, while promoting health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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40. The Relationship Between Patient Experience Special Care Measures and Joint Commission Accreditation Standards Compliance.
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Longo, Beth A., Schmaltz, Stephen P., Barrett, Stacey C., Patrianakos, Jamie, and Williams, Scott C.
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HEALTH services administration ,HOME care services ,MEDICAL quality control ,PATIENT safety ,MEDICAL care ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,PATIENT care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SURVEYS ,COMMUNICATION ,REGULATORY approval ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
Accreditation evaluates healthcare organization quality of care and patient safety processes, but the influence of this activity on the patient experience is not well understood. This study was designed to explore the relationship between accreditation survey scoring and patient experience of care using a subset of The Joint Commission (TJC) accreditation standards that are conceptually aligned with the Home Health Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HHCAHPS) Special Care Issues composite. This was an observational study that used 2018 to 2019 CMS HHCAHPS data and TJC survey findings for 1464 accredited HHAs. The presence or absence of Requirements for Improvement (RFIs) indicating observed noncompliance and the Survey Analysis for Evaluating Risk (SAFER) score were used as independent variables in the analysis. Dependent variables included 3 HHCAHPS composite measures and 2 global rating measures. Data were analyzed using 2 sets of random effects logistic regression models. We found that an increase in RFIs scored on an HHA survey was associated with lower HHCAHPS score on all measures. When the frequency of RFIs and SAFER scores increased, there was a corresponding decline in HHCAHPS ratings, suggesting that patient experience ratings can potentially identify quality of care issues, when experience questions and quality concepts are sufficiently aligned. Adherence to Joint Commission accreditation standards may positively influence some aspects of the patient experience of care. While causality remains uncertain, accreditation appears to play a role in contributing to these outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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41. EAES/SAGES evidence-based recommendations and expert consensus on optimization of perioperative care in older adults.
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Keller, Deborah S., Curtis, Nathan, Burt, Holly Ann, Ammirati, Carlo Alberto, Collings, Amelia T., Polk Jr, Hiram C., Carrano, Francesco Maria, Antoniou, Stavros A., Hanna, Nader, Piotet, Laure-Meline, Hill, Sarah, Cuijpers, Anne C. M., Tejedor, Patricia, Milone, Marco, Andriopoulou, Eleni, Kontovounisios, Christos, Leeds, Ira L., Awad, Ziad T., Barber, Meghan Wandtke, and Al-Mansour, Mazen
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ABDOMINAL surgery ,MEDICAL protocols ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,CONSENSUS (Social sciences) ,SURGICAL robots ,RESEARCH funding ,PREHABILITATION ,META-analysis ,GASTROENTEROLOGISTS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,ENHANCED recovery after surgery protocol ,ENDOSCOPIC gastrointestinal surgery ,MEDICAL databases ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,ONLINE information services ,PERIOPERATIVE care - Abstract
Background: As the population ages, more older adults are presenting for surgery. Age-related declines in physiological reserve and functional capacity can result in frailty and poor outcomes after surgery. Hence, optimizing perioperative care in older patients is imperative. Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS) pathways and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS) may influence surgical outcomes, but current use and impact on older adults patients is unknown. The aim of this study was to provide evidence-based recommendations on perioperative care of older adults undergoing major abdominal surgery. Methods: Expert consensus determined working definitions for key terms and metrics related to perioperative care. A systematic literature review and meta-analysis was performed using the PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Clinicaltrials.gov databases for 24 pre-defined key questions in the topic areas of prehabilitation, MIS, and ERAS in major abdominal surgery (colorectal, upper gastrointestinal (UGI), Hernia, and hepatopancreatic biliary (HPB)) to generate evidence-based recommendations following the GRADE methodology. Result: Older adults were defined as 65 years and older. Over 20,000 articles were initially retrieved from search parameters. Evidence synthesis was performed across the three topic areas from 172 studies, with meta-analyses conducted for MIS and ERAS topics. The use of MIS and ERAS was recommended for older adult patients particularly when undergoing colorectal surgery. Expert opinion recommended prehabilitation, cessation of smoking and alcohol, and correction of anemia in all colorectal, UGI, Hernia, and HPB procedures in older adults. All recommendations were conditional, with low to very low certainty of evidence, with the exception of ERAS program in colorectal surgery. Conclusions: MIS and ERAS are recommended in older adults undergoing major abdominal surgery, with evidence supporting use in colorectal surgery. Though expert opinion supported prehabilitation, there is insufficient evidence supporting use. This work has identified evidence gaps for further studies to optimize older adults undergoing major abdominal surgery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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42. "I Thought Cancer was a Tobacco Issue": Perspectives of Veterans with and without HIV on Cancer and Other Health Risks Associated with Alcohol and Tobacco/Nicotine Use.
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Briggs, Elsa S., Thomas, Rachel M., Frost, Madeline C., Fletcher, Olivia V., Crothers, Kristina, Chalal, Clementine K., Shahrir, Shahida F., McClure, Jennifer B., Catz, Sheryl L., and Williams, Emily C.
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TUMOR risk factors ,COMPLICATIONS of alcoholism ,RISK assessment ,HEALTH literacy ,ATTITUDES toward illness ,RESEARCH funding ,SMOKING ,NICOTINE ,INTERVIEWING ,JUDGMENT sampling ,PSYCHOLOGY of veterans ,PSYCHOLOGY of HIV-positive persons ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,RESEARCH methodology ,RISK perception ,PATIENTS' attitudes - Abstract
U.S. Veterans and people living with HIV (PWH) experience higher rates of unhealthy alcohol and tobacco/nicotine use than non-Veterans and people without HIV (PWoH). Both groups are susceptible to adverse health outcomes associated with alcohol and tobacco/nicotine use. We explored awareness of alcohol- and tobacco/nicotine-related cancer and immune health risks among Veterans Health Administration (VA) patients with and without HIV. Among a sample of 41 (46% PWH; 73% male; 39% Black) purposively-selected VA patients receiving care 2020–2021 we conducted semi-structured interviews via telephone; interviews were recorded, transcribed and analyzed using a Rapid Assessment Process. Purposive selection was based on HIV status, alcohol and/or tobacco/nicotine use, and demographics. Among participants, 66% reported current smoking, and most screened positive for unhealthy alcohol use. Participants had high awareness of cancer and other health risks related to smoking but low awareness of synergistic risks and cancer risks associated with alcohol use despite awareness of a range of other alcohol-related risks. Awareness of alcohol and/or tobacco/nicotine's impacts on the immune system was variable. Findings did not distinctly differ between PWH and PWoH. Low awareness of alcohol-related cancer risk, risks of co-occurring use, and varying awareness of the impacts of alcohol and tobacco/nicotine on the immune system suggest a need for improved messaging regarding substance use-related cancer and immune risk. This may be especially important among PWH, for whom the prevalence and adverse effects of alcohol and tobacco use, and immune dysfunction are higher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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43. Spatiotemporal patterns of forest pollinator diversity across the southeastern United States.
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Ulyshen, Michael, Adams, Cory, Adams, Jacqui, Adams, Susan B., Bland, Mickey, Bragg, Don C., Burdine, Chuck, Callaham, Mac A., Chaney, Richard, Chapman, Gregg, Clinton, Patsy, Dixon, Cinnamon, Floyd, Jacob, Jordan, Phillip, Keyser, Tara, Laseter, Stephanie, Mallinger, Rachel, McDaniel, Virginia, Mudder, Bryan, and Nelson, C. Dana
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FOREST biodiversity ,INSECT pollinators ,SYRPHIDAE ,BROADLEAF forests ,BUTTERFLIES ,COASTAL plains ,POLLINATION by bees ,PINACEAE - Abstract
Aim: Efforts to understand how pollinating insect diversity is distributed across large geographic areas are rare despite the importance of such work for conserving regional diversity. We sought to relate the diversity of bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea), hover flies (Diptera: Syrphidae), and butterflies (Lepidoptera) to ecoregion, landscape context, canopy openness, and forest composition across southeastern U.S. forests. Location: Nineteen experimental forests across nine states in the southeastern U.S. Methods: We established 5–7 plots on each experimental forest. In each, we sampled pollinators monthly (March–September) using coloured pan traps, and collected data on local forest characteristics. We used the National Land Cover Database (NLCD) to quantify surrounding landcover at different spatial scales. Results: Bee richness was negatively correlated with both the amount of conifer (pine) forest and the extent of wetlands in the surrounding landscape but was positively correlated with canopy openness. Hover flies and butterflies were less sensitive to landscape context and stand conditions. Pollinator communities differed considerably among ecoregions, with those of the Central Appalachian and Coastal Plain ecoregions being particularly distinct. Bee richness and abundance peaked 2 months earlier in Central Appalachia than in the Coastal Plain and Southeastern Mixed Forest ecoregions. Main Conclusions: Our findings reveal ecoregional differences in pollinator communities across the southeastern U.S. and highlight the importance of landscape context and local forest conditions to this diverse fauna. The closed broadleaf forests of Appalachia and the open conifer‐dominated forests of the Coastal Plain support particularly distinct pollinator communities with contrasting seasonality. Our results suggest pine forests may reduce pollinator diversity in regions historically dominated by broadleaf forests. However, efforts to create more open canopies can help improve conditions for pollinators in planted pine forests. Research exploring associations between forest pollinators and different broadleaf tree taxa is needed to better anticipate the impacts of various management activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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44. Biologics and Small Molecule Targeted Therapies for Pediatric Alopecia Areata, Psoriasis, Atopic Dermatitis, and Hidradenitis Suppurativa in the US: A Narrative Review.
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Yi, Robin C., Moran, Shannon K., Gantz, Hannah Y., Strowd, Lindsay C., and Feldman, Steven R.
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ATOPIC dermatitis ,CHILDREN'S health ,ANTI-inflammatory agents ,ALOPECIA areata ,PSORIASIS ,SKIN diseases ,DERMATOLOGIC agents ,PATIENT safety ,IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents ,INVESTIGATIONAL drugs ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,DISEASE management ,PROTEIN-tyrosine kinase inhibitors ,HIDRADENITIS suppurativa ,BIOLOGICAL products ,ORAL drug administration ,PEDIATRICS ,DRUG approval ,MONOCLONAL antibodies ,ETANERCEPT ,PHOSPHODIESTERASE inhibitors ,ADALIMUMAB - Abstract
Background: The management of pediatric dermatological conditions such as alopecia areata (AA), psoriasis, atopic dermatitis (AD), and hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) has significantly evolved with the introduction of biologics and small molecule targeted therapies. The advancement in understanding the immunopathogenesis of these chronic skin conditions has led to the development and approval of novel biologics and small molecule therapies. Initially approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for adults, most of these therapies are now being evaluated in clinical trials for safety and efficacy in adolescents and children, expanding new treatment options for pediatric patients. The role of the FDA in drug approval is multifaceted from drug inception, ensuring that research, data, and evidence show that the proposed drug is effective and safe for the intended use. Objective: The goal of this review article is to provide an overview of the recently FDA-approved and potential biologic and oral small molecule therapies in clinical trials for AA, psoriasis, AD, and HS in pediatric patients. Methods: The search for this review included keywords in ClinicalTrials.gov, PubMed, and Google Scholar for the latest research and clinical trials relevant to these conditions and treatments without the PRISMA methodology. Results: For pediatric AA, ritlecitinib is FDA-approved, while baricitinib and updacitinib are in phase 3 clinical trials for pediatric approval. The FDA-approved drugs for pediatric psoriasis include secukinumab, ustekinumab, ixekizumab, etanercept, and apremilast. Other phase 3 clinical trials for pediatric psoriasis include risankizumab, guselkumab, tildrakizumab, brodalumab, and deucravacitinib. For pediatric AD, the FDA-approved drugs are dupilumab, tralokinumab, abrocitinib, and upadacitinib, with many other drugs in phase 3 trials. Adalimumab is an FDA-approved biologic for pediatric HS, with various clinical trials ongoing for adults. The approved biologics and small molecule therapies had higher efficacy and improved safety profiles compared to traditional medications. Conclusions: With numerous ongoing trials, the success of these clinical trials could lead to their inclusion in treatment guidelines for these chronic skin conditions. Biologics and small molecule therapies offer new avenues for effective disease management, enabling personalized therapeutic interventions and improving pediatric health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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45. Feasibility and acceptability of measuring positivity resonance in nurse–patient telehealth videoconferencing visits: A mixed‐methods observational study.
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Koppel, Paula D., De Gagne, Jennie C., Docherty, Sharron, Smith, Sophia K., Prose, Neil S., Thompson, Julie A., and Otero, Marcela C.
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TUMOR treatment , *NURSE-patient relationships , *PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *SATISFACTION , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *STATISTICAL significance , *RESEARCH funding , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *PILOT projects , *STATISTICAL sampling , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *TELEMEDICINE , *VIDEOCONFERENCING , *NURSES' attitudes , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTRACLASS correlation , *TRUST , *HEALTH behavior , *DATA analysis software , *PATIENTS' attitudes , *INTER-observer reliability , *WELL-being , *VIDEO recording - Abstract
Aim: To investigate the feasibility and acceptability of the training process, procedures, measures and recruitment strategies necessary for a future investigation to test the reliability and validity of using positivity resonance measures in health care encounters. Background: Although the measurement of positivity resonance is promising, and non‐participant observation is considered effective, their approaches to studying nurse–patient relationships have not been fully explored. Design: A mixed‐methods observational study. Methods: Video recordings of 30 nurse–patient dyads completing telehealth video visit encounters were edited and coded using behavioural indicators of positivity resonance. A post‐visit survey gathered data on the participants' perceptions of positivity resonance and the study procedures. The research team completed memos and procedural logs to provide narrative data on the study's training, coding, recruitment and operational procedures. The study included 33 persons with cancer and 13 oncology nurses engaging in telehealth video visit encounters at an academic oncology ambulatory care center located in the southeastern United States. Results: Study procedures were found to be feasible and acceptable to participants. An adequate sample of participants (N = 46) were enrolled and retained in the study. Interrater reliability, as evidenced by Cohen's weighted kappa, ranged from.575 to.752 and interclass correlation coefficients >.8 were attainable within a reasonable amount of time and with adequate training. Behavioural indicators of positivity resonance were observed in all telehealth visits and reported by the participants in the perceived positivity resonance survey. The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist guided reporting. Conclusions: Designing research around the concept of positivity resonance is an innovative and feasible approach to exploring how rapport is cultivated within nurse–patient relationships. Relevance to Professional Practice: Measuring positivity resonance may hold promise for exploring patient and nurse outcomes including trust, responsiveness, health‐related behaviours, well‐being, resilience and satisfaction. Reporting Method: The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) checklist guided the reporting of results to ensure that adequate details of the study were provided to ensure an accurate and complete report. Patient or Public Contribution: Planning of the research design and study procedures was done in consultation with nurse clinicians with experience with telehealth and managers responsible within the practice setting where the study was conducted. This ensured the study procedures were ethical, safe, secure and did not create unnecessary burden to the study participants. The study included collecting data from nurse and patient participants about the acceptability of the study procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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46. Social workers with lived experience of mental health concerns: perspectives of U.S. social work education leaders.
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Holley, Lynn C., Kondrat, David C., and Charles, Jennifer L. K.
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WORK , *SOCIAL workers , *MENTAL health services , *MENTAL illness , *HUMAN research subjects , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *FISHER exact test , *SOCIAL work education , *QUANTITATIVE research , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *EXPERIENCE , *COLLEGE teacher attitudes , *RESEARCH , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *INFORMED consent (Medical law) , *DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) , *DATA analysis software , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *SOCIAL stigma - Abstract
Professionals with lived experience (LE) of mental distress might better understand service users, educate colleagues, and serve as role models. This exploratory quantitative study asked U.S. social work education leaders if they perceive positives and negatives of professionals having LE; what advice they would offer students with LE; and analyzed whether certain experiences influenced responses. Having LE and/or close relationships with people with LE was associated with perceiving positives, which was associated with advising students about using LE to help others. Perceiving negatives was associated with advising about difficulties. Implications are offered for preparing professionals to use LE in practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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47. The Joys and Stresses of Social Relationships and the Effect on Resiliency During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Survey of U.S. Older Adults.
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Westrick, Ashly C, Kobayashi, Lindsay C, Kirch, Matthias, Singer, Dianne, Malani, Preeti N, Kullgren, Jeffrey T, Solway, Erica, and Finlay, Jessica M
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PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *RESEARCH funding , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *SEX distribution , *SPOUSES , *EMOTIONS , *FAMILY relations , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Background and Objectives The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic placed unprecedented stress on older adults. Resiliency could mitigate deleterious effects of pandemic stressors. We described trends in resilience among U.S. adults aged 50–80 years approximately one and a half years after the onset of the pandemic, compared with before the pandemic, and evaluated associations between relationships and resilience. Research Design and Methods Data were from the National Poll on Healthy Aging (N = 2,100) in August 2021. Respondents rated their resiliency as compared with before the pandemic (more, about the same, or less) and different types of relationships (spouse/partner, friends, and neighbors) as sources of joy and/or stress during the pandemic (a lot, some, very little, and not at all). Multinomial logistic regressions (complete-case analysis) estimated the relationships between each joyful and stressful relationships and resiliency. Results Most participants reported feeling as resilient as before the pandemic (70.6%) with 14.5% feeling less resilient. More women than men felt less resilient than before the pandemic (16.7% vs 12.8%, p =.006). Feeling a lot of stress from one's spouse or neighbors was associated with increased likelihood of feeling less resilient than before the pandemic (odds ratio [OR] = 3.7; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.8, 7.7 and OR = 4.5; 95% CI: 1.5, 13.9, respectively), which was stronger among women (OR = 15.1; 95% CI: 4.8, 45.6) than men (OR = 1.03; 95% CI: 0.4, 2.7). Discussion and Implications Social relationships may have been more important for women than for men in supporting resiliency during the pandemic. Understanding patterns of resiliency can help to inform policymaking and support the well-being of older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. Association Between the United States Department of Health and Human Services' COVID-19 Public Education Campaign and Initial Adult COVID-19 Vaccination Uptake by Race and Ethnicity in the United States, 2020–2022.
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Luchman, Joseph N., Nighbor, Tyler, Kranzler, Elissa C., Denison, Benjamin, Dahlen, Heather, Kim, Jae-Eun C., Williams, Christopher, Trigger, Sarah, Bennett, Morgane, Hoffman, Leah, and Peck, Joshua
- Subjects
AFRICAN Americans ,RESEARCH funding ,HISPANIC Americans ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,COVID-19 vaccines ,WHITE people ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SURVEYS ,RACE ,VACCINE hesitancy ,HEALTH promotion ,COVID-19 - Abstract
Non-Hispanic Black (Black) and Hispanic/Latino (Latino) populations face an increased risk of COVID-19 infection, hospitalization, and death from COVID-19 relative to non-Hispanic White (White) populations. When COVID-19 vaccines became available in December 2020, Black and Latino adults were less likely than White adults to get vaccinated due to factors such as racial discrimination and structural barriers to uptake. In April 2021, the U.S. HHS COVID-19 public education campaign (the Campaign) was launched to promote vaccination through general and audience-tailored messaging. As of March 2022, Black and Latino adults had reached parity with White adults in COVID-19 vaccine uptake. This study evaluated the relationship between Campaign exposure and subsequent vaccine uptake among Black, Latino, and White adults in the United States and assessed whether participant race/ethnicity moderated the relationship between Campaign exposure and vaccine uptake. Campaign media delivery data was merged with survey data collected from a sample of U.S. adults (n = 2,923) over four waves from January 2021 to March 2022. Logistic regression analysis showed that cumulative Campaign digital impressions had a positive, statistically significant association with COVID-19 vaccine uptake, and that participant race/ethnicity moderated this association. Compared with White adults, the magnitude of the relationship between cumulative impressions and vaccination was greater among Black and Latino adults. Results from a simulation model suggested that the Campaign may have been responsible for closing 5.0% of the gap in COVID-19 vaccination by race/ethnicity from April to mid-September 2021. We discuss implications for future public education campaigns that aim to reduce health disparities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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49. Predicting the population viability of an endangered amphibian under environmental and demographic uncertainty.
- Author
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Brooks, George C., Chandler, Houston C., Jiao, Yan, Childs, Dylan Z., and Haas, Carola A.
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POPULATION viability analysis ,VERNAL pools ,MATING grounds ,AMPHIBIANS ,VITAL statistics ,SALAMANDERS ,WETLANDS - Abstract
Population viability analyses (PVAs) represent a key component of many recovery plans for threatened and endangered species. Demography links the processes that affect individuals to population‐level patterns, and hence projections constructed from demographic data are the most common tools for PVAs. We constructed a size‐structured integral projection model (IPM) for the United States federally endangered Reticulated Flatwoods Salamander, Ambystoma bishopi, to evaluate demographic influences on population growth and predict the efficacy of future management actions. Flatwoods salamanders breed in ephemeral wetlands in the Southeastern United States. The ephemeral nature of breeding sites can result in complete recruitment failure in drought years when wetlands fail to fill, or dry before metamorphosis occurs. As a result, this species exhibits marked temporal variability in vital rates that must be accounted for in projection models. We constructed a stochastic IPM using 13 years of mark‐recapture data (2010–2023) from two breeding wetlands. Variable survival rates exhibited by flatwoods salamanders, coupled with a high probability of recruitment failure, result in a low predicted probability of population persistence. Sensitivity analyses revealed age at maturity and the frequency of recruitment exerted the greatest influence on population growth, and thus managers should prioritize conservation efforts that target these demographic processes. Additional management should consider strategies to dampen temporal variability in larval survival, something that could be achieved through emergency salvage operations, captive rearing efforts, and manipulation of wetland hydroperiods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Health Insurance Navigation Tools Intervention: A Pilot Trial Within the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study.
- Author
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Park, Elyse R., Kirchhoff, Anne C., Donelan, Karen, Perez, Giselle K., McDonald, Aaron, Bliss, Cayley C., Foor, Allyson, van Thiel Berghuijs, Karely M., Waters, Austin R., Durieux, Natalie, Leisenring, Wendy, Armstrong, Gregory T., Ponzani, Colin, Lopez, Ana, Vaca Lopez, Perla L., Battaglia, Tracy, Galbraith, Alison A., and Kuhlthau, Karen A.
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TUMOR classification ,TUMOR surgery ,TUMORS in children ,ENDOWMENTS ,HUMAN services programs ,T-test (Statistics) ,HEALTH insurance ,PRESUMPTIONS (Law) ,PILOT projects ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,INTERVIEWING ,CONTENT analysis ,SEX distribution ,CANCER patients ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,AGE distribution ,AGE factors in disease ,RACE ,CANCER chemotherapy ,VIDEOCONFERENCING ,MARITAL status ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAID ,TUMORS ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
PURPOSE: Childhood cancer survivors are at increased risk for underinsurance and health insurance–related financial burden. Interventions targeting health insurance literacy (HIL) to improve the ability to understand and use health insurance are needed. METHODS: We codeveloped a four-session health insurance navigation tools (HINT) intervention, delivered synchronously by a patient navigator, and a corresponding booklet. We conducted a randomized pilot trial with survivors from the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study comparing HINT with enhanced usual care (EUC; booklet). We assessed feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy (HIL, primary outcome; knowledge and confidence with health insurance terms and activity) on a 5-month survey and exit interviews. RESULTS: Among 231 invited, 82 (32.5%) survivors enrolled (53.7% female; median age 39 years, 75.6% had employer-sponsored insurance). Baseline HIL scores were low (mean = 28.5; 16-64; lower scores better); many lacked knowledge of Affordable Care Act (ACA) provisions. 80.5% completed four HINT sessions, and 93.9% completed the follow-up survey. Participants rated HINT's helpfulness a mean of 8.9 (0-10). Exit interviews confirmed HINT's acceptability, specifically its virtual and personalized delivery and helpfulness in building confidence in understanding one's coverage. Compared with EUC, HINT significantly improved HIL (effect size = 0.94. P <.001), ACA provisions knowledge (effect size = 0.73, P =.003), psychological financial hardship (effect size = 0.64, P <.006), and health insurance satisfaction (effect size = 0.55, P =.03). CONCLUSION: Results support the feasibility and acceptability of a virtual health insurance navigation program targeted for childhood survivors to improve HIL. Randomized trials to assess the efficacy and sustainability of health insurance navigation on HIL and financial burden are needed. A virtual health insurance navigation intervention for cancer survivors improves health insurance literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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