413 results on '"Loeb R"'
Search Results
102. Reduction of the hypertrophic lobe
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Pitanguy, Ivo, primary and Loeb, R., additional
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- 1967
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103. The Adrenal Cortex
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Loeb, R. F., primary
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- 1936
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104. COMMENTS ON CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
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Loeb, R. F., primary
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- 1936
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105. Certain applications of the Donnan equilibrium to human blood serum
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Atchley, D. W., primary, Loeb, R. F., additional, and Benedict, E. M., additional
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- 1923
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106. Narrowing of the nasal base
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Loeb, R., primary
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- 1965
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107. Temporo-mastoid flap in reconstructions of the cheek
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Loeb, R., primary
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- 1963
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108. ACTIVITY OF A NEW ANTIMALARIAL AGENT, PENTAQUINE (SN 13,276)
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LOEB, R. F., primary
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- 1946
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109. The influence of proteins on the diffusibility of calcium.
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Loeb, R. F., primary and Nichols, E. G., additional
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- 1925
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110. Talent and Technology
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Loeb, R. F., primary
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- 1966
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111. Reflections on Undergraduate Medical Education
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Loeb, R. F., primary
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- 1963
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112. Correction of the wide nasal bone
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Loeb, R., primary and GONZÁLEZ-ULLOA, M., additional
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- 1965
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113. Nasal osteotomy—modification of technique
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Loeb, R, primary
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- 1962
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114. ACTIVITY OF A NEW ANTIMALARIAL AGENT, PENTAQUINE (SN 13,276): Statement Approved by the Board for Coordination of Malarial Studies
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LOEB, R. F.
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An intensive exploration of the behavior of pentaquine (SN 13,276) in experimental animals and in human beings has been in progress for over a year. Study of this new antimalarial agent has included evaluations of (1) antimalarial activities in the avian host, (2) pharmacologic and toxicologic properties in lower animals and in man and (3) prophylactic and curative activities in human infections due to Plasmodium vivax. These investigations have been carried out in civilian establishments under the sponsorship of the Committee on Medical Research of the Office of Scientific Research and Development and in various Army installations. The present report is a brief outline of the pertinent conclusions drawn from these studies.CHEMICAL FORMULA AND PREPARATIONPentaquine (SN 13,276) is 6-methoxy-8-(5-isopropylaminoamylamino)-quinoline.It is prepared by condensation of 6-methoxy-8-aminoquinoline with 5-isopropylaminoamylchloride. In all the laboratory and clinical tests, pentaquine has been used in the form of its diphosphate (75.5 per cent
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- 1946
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115. WALTER BAUER.
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LOEB, R F
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- 1964
116. Dependence of the UO 2-PuO 2 pellet structure on fabrication parameters
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Elbel, H., Klews, J., and Löb, R.
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- 1988
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117. The variables to influence the temporal drift of stoichiometry in FBR mixed oxide fuel
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Eichler, R., Hanus, D., Krellmann, J., Löb, R., and Roepenack, H.
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- 1984
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118. Long-term human disturbance of an urban park forest, New York City
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Loeb, R. E.
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HISTORY ,FORESTS & forestry - Published
- 1992
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119. Effect of Intraoperative Ketorolac on Postanesthesia Care Unit Comfort
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Valdrighi, J. B., Hanowell, L. H., Loeb, R. G., and Behrman, K. H.
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- 1994
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120. Hypertrophy of the orbicularismuscle and its influence on the relief of palpebral bags
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Marino, Héctor and Loeb, R.
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- 1977
121. Temporomastoid flap in reconstructions of the cheek
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Loeb, R.
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- 1963
122. Effectiveness of enhanced pulse oximetry sonifications for conveying oxygen saturation ranges: a laboratory comparison of five auditory displays.
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Paterson, E., Sanderson, P. M., Paterson, N. A. B., Loeb, R. G., and Boer, C
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PULSE oximeters , *OXIMETRY , *INFORMATION display systems , *AUDITORY perception , *PATIENT monitoring , *OXYGEN metabolism , *COMPARATIVE studies , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL students , *RESEARCH , *TASK performance , *EVALUATION research , *LABORATORY equipment & supplies , *EQUIPMENT & supplies ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
Background: Anaesthetists monitor auditory information about a patient's vital signs in an environment that can be noisy and while performing other cognitively demanding tasks. It can be difficult to identify oxygen saturation (SpO2) values using existing pulse oximeter auditory displays (sonifications).Methods: In a laboratory setting, we compared the ability of non-clinician participants to detect transitions into and out of an SpO2 target range using five different sonifications while they performed a secondary distractor arithmetic task in the presence of background noise. The control sonification was based on the auditory display of current pulse oximeters and comprised a variable pitch with an alarm. The four experimental conditions included an Alarm Only condition, a Variable pitch only condition, and two conditions using sonifications enhanced with additional sound dimensions. Accuracy to detect SpO2 target transitions was the primary outcome.Results: We found that participants using the two sonifications enhanced with the additional sound dimensions of tremolo and brightness were significantly more accurate (83 and 96%, respectively) at detecting transitions to and from a target SpO2 range than participants using a pitch only sonification plus alarms (57%) as implemented in current pulse oximeters.Conclusions: Enhanced sonifications are more informative than conventional sonification. The implication is that they might allow anaesthetists to judge better when desaturation decreases below, or returns to, a target range. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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123. The effectiveness of pulse oximetry sonification enhanced with tremolo and brightness for distinguishing clinically important oxygen saturation ranges: a laboratory study.
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Paterson, E., Sanderson, P. M., Paterson, N. A. B., Liu, D., and Loeb, R. G.
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OXIMETRY , *TREMOLO , *SATURATION (Chemistry) , *AUDITORY displays , *PATIENT monitoring - Abstract
Unlabelled: Our study examined the effectiveness of pulse oximetry sonification enhanced with acoustic tremolo and brightness to help listeners differentiate clinically relevant oxygen saturation ranges. In a series of trials lasting 30 s each, 76 undergraduate participants identified final oxygen saturation range (Target: 100% to 97%; Low: 96% to 90%; Critical: 89% and below), and detected threshold transitions into and out of the target range using conventional sonification (n = 38) or enhanced sonification (n = 38). Median (IQR [range]) accuracy for range identification with the conventional sonification was 80 (70-85 [45-95])%, whereas with the enhanced sonification it was 100 (99-100 [80-100])%; p < 0.001. Accuracy for detecting threshold transitions with the conventional sonification was 60 (50-75 [30-95])%, but with the enhanced sonification it was 100 (95-100 [75-100]%; p < 0.001. Participants can identify clinically meaningful oxygen saturation ranges and detect threshold transitions more accurately with enhanced sonification than with conventional sonification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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124. Factors associated with access and use of PPE during COVID-19: A cross-sectional study of Italian physicians
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Maria Pia Fantini, Elena Neri, Davide Gori, Giorgia Argentini, Rachael Piltch-Loeb, Elena Savoia, Savoia E., Argentini G., Gori D., Neri E., Piltch-Loeb R., and Fantini M.P.
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Male ,Viral Diseases ,Pulmonology ,Epidemiology ,Cross-sectional study ,Health Care Providers ,030501 epidemiology ,Geographical locations ,Medical Conditions ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Pandemic ,Health care ,Odds Ratio ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Surveys and Questionnaire ,Medicine ,Public and Occupational Health ,Medical Personnel ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Young adult ,Multidisciplinary ,Middle Aged ,Europe ,Professions ,Infectious Diseases ,Italy ,Engineering and Technology ,Female ,Safety Equipment ,Safety ,Coronavirus Infections ,0305 other medical science ,Human ,Research Article ,Biotechnology ,Adult ,Risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Adolescent ,Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) ,Health Personnel ,Science ,Pneumonia, Viral ,MEDLINE ,Equipment ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Bioengineering ,Betacoronavirus ,Young Adult ,Respiratory Disorders ,03 medical and health sciences ,Physicians ,Humans ,European Union ,COVID-19 ,Medical risk factors ,Surgical and invasive medical procedures ,Respiratory infections ,Medical devices and equipmen ,Safety equipment ,Pandemics ,Personal Protective Equipment ,Personal protective equipment ,Aged ,Cross-Sectional Studie ,Infection Control ,Betacoronaviru ,Coronavirus Infection ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Covid 19 ,Odds ratio ,Health Care ,Risk perception ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Physician ,Medical Risk Factors ,Family medicine ,People and Places ,Respiratory Infections ,Population Groupings ,Medical Devices and Equipment ,Self Report ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesDuring the course of the Novel Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic, Italy has reported one of the highest number of infections. Nearly ten percent of reported coronavirus infections in Italy occurred in healthcare workers. This study aimed to understand physicians’ access to personal protective equipment (PPE) and to information about their use, risk perception and strategies adopted to prevent contracting the infection.MethodsWe undertook a cross-sectional, online self-reported survey implemented between March 31 and April 5 2020 of Italian physicians.ResultsResponses were received from 529 physicians, only 13% of which reported to have access to PPE every time they need them. Approximately half of the physicians reported that the information received about the use of PPE was either clear (47%) or complete (54%). Risk perception about contracting the infection was influenced by receiving adequate information on the use of PPE. Access to adequate information on the use of PPE was associated with better ability to perform donning and doffing procedures [OR=2.2 95% C.I. 1.7–2.8] and reduced perception of risk [OR=0.5, 95% C.I. 0.4–0.6].ConclusionsResults from this rapid survey indicate that while ramping up supplies on PPE for healthcare workers is certainly of mandatory importance, adequate training and clear instructions are just as important.
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- 2020
125. Letters.
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Sudhoff, Erna, Walters, Lois J., Adamson, Malcolm M., Ryan, Philip E., Curd, H. L., Combs, Ruth, Reed, Thomas H., Steele, George E., Dean, Leslie J., Emmons Jr., S. E., Tillman, George, Hereford, Peggy G., Haskett, Thomas D., Sax, Robert B., Loeb, R. W., Clarke, Edward, Callahan, H. J., Vickers, Gayle, and Hawkes, Estes G.
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LETTERS to the editor , *STUDENT volunteers in social services , *PEOPLE with mental illness , *AIRPORT planning , *TRUCKING - Abstract
Presents letters to the editor referencing articles and topics discussed in previous issues. "They Befriend the Mentally Ill," which featured the social welfare service rendered by high school students to the mentally ill; "Chicago's Airport of the Future," which covered the problems in airport planning; "Runaway Rig," which presented a short story on trucking.
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- 1957
126. Corrigendum: Reframing human trafficking awareness campaigns in the United States: goals, audience, and content.
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Savoia E, Piltch-Loeb R, Muibu D, Leffler A, Hughes D, and Montrond A
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[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1195005.]., (Copyright © 2024 Savoia, Piltch-Loeb, Muibu, Leffler, Hughes and Montrond.)
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- 2024
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127. Exploring COVID-19 Vaccine Decision Making: Insights from 'One-Shot Wonders' and 'Booster Enthusiasts'.
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Nuñez Sahr J, Parcesepe AM, You W, Nash D, Penrose K, Wainberg ML, Balasubramanian S, Chan BXJ, and Piltch-Loeb R
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Male, Middle Aged, Depression, United States, Anxiety, SARS-CoV-2, Aged, Young Adult, Vaccination psychology, COVID-19 Vaccines administration & dosage, Decision Making, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 psychology
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Within the USA, the uptake of the updated COVID-19 vaccines is suboptimal despite health authority recommendations. This study used qualitative methods to examine factors influencing COVID-19 vaccine decision making and the effects of anxiety and depression on these decisions within the CHASING COVID Cohort (C3). Between October and December 2023, we conducted 25 interviews with participants from 16 different US states, 14 of whom endorsed recent symptoms of anxiety and/or depression. Using grounded theory methodology for coding and thematic analysis, we categorized participants into "One-Shot Wonders" and "Booster Enthusiasts". Our findings indicate that the US COVID-19 vaccination environment has shifted from active promotion to a notable absence of COVID-19 discussions, leading to reduced worry about infection and severe illness, diminished perception of the benefits of the vaccine on personal and community levels, and fewer cues to action. Initially influential factors like family, personal experiences, and physician recommendations lost impact over time. Although the relationship between symptoms of depression and anxiety and vaccination was not prominent, one case highlighted a direct relationship. The study emphasizes the importance of timely and accurate public health messaging adaptable to individuals' needs and misconceptions, highlighting the need for dynamic communication strategies in future initiatives with rapidly changing landscapes.
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- 2024
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128. Robust evaluation of deep learning-based representation methods for survival and gene essentiality prediction on bulk RNA-seq data.
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Gross B, Dauvin A, Cabeli V, Kmetzsch V, El Khoury J, Dissez G, Ouardini K, Grouard S, Davi A, Loeb R, Esposito C, Hulot L, Ghermi R, Blum M, Darhi Y, Durand EY, and Romagnoni A
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- Humans, Neoplasms genetics, Neoplasms mortality, Computational Biology methods, Deep Learning, Genes, Essential, RNA-Seq methods
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Deep learning (DL) has shown potential to provide powerful representations of bulk RNA-seq data in cancer research. However, there is no consensus regarding the impact of design choices of DL approaches on the performance of the learned representation, including the model architecture, the training methodology and the various hyperparameters. To address this problem, we evaluate the performance of various design choices of DL representation learning methods using TCGA and DepMap pan-cancer datasets and assess their predictive power for survival and gene essentiality predictions. We demonstrate that baseline methods achieve comparable or superior performance compared to more complex models on survival predictions tasks. DL representation methods, however, are the most efficient to predict the gene essentiality of cell lines. We show that auto-encoders (AE) are consistently improved by techniques such as masking and multi-head training. Our results suggest that the impact of DL representations and of pretraining are highly task- and architecture-dependent, highlighting the need for adopting rigorous evaluation guidelines. These guidelines for robust evaluation are implemented in a pipeline made available to the research community., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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129. The Complex Relationship Between Pain, Mental Health, and Quality-of-Life in Patients With Cirrhosis Undergoing Liver Transplant Evaluation.
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Wong RJ, Loeb R, Seal KH, Barry F, Stark Kent D, Seetharaman S, Sharma A, Lai JC, and Rubin JB
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Goals and Background: Patients with cirrhosis undergoing liver transplant evaluation have high rates of pain and mental health comorbidities; both may significantly impair health-related quality of life (HRQL). We investigated the association between pain, anxiety/depression, and HRQL in this population., Study: In 62 patients with cirrhosis undergoing liver transplant evaluation, we performed 4 validated assessments to characterize: pain (Brief Pain Inventory-Short Form, BPI-SF), anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7), depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-8), and liver-specific HRQL (Chronic Liver Disease Questionnaire). The presence of pain was determined using the BPI-SF screening question. Linear regression was used to identify demographic or clinical factors predictive of pain severity (PS) and interference (PI) and to evaluate the association between pain, anxiety/depression, and HRQL., Results: Seventy-one percent of patients reported pain, 26% had clinical depression, and 24% had moderate-severe anxiety. Neither liver disease severity, nor its complications were associated with pain (PS or PI), but anxiety and depression were predictors of pain on bivariate analysis. Only depression remained a significant predictor of PS (b=0.28, P<0.05) and PI (b=0.30, P<0.05) in multivariable models. HRQL was inversely associated with PS, PI, depression, and anxiety, but only anxiety (b=-0.14, P=0.003) remained associated with HRQL in the adjusted model., Conclusions: Pain is present in over 70% of patients with cirrhosis undergoing liver transplant evaluation. Anxiety and depression were highly correlated with pain and appeared to be key drivers in predicting poor HRQL. Evaluating and managing mental health comorbidities should be explored as a strategy to improve HRQL in patients with cirrhosis and pain., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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130. The association between emotional and physical intimate partner violence and COVID-19 vaccine uptake in a community-based U.S. Cohort.
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Penrose K, Abraham A, Robertson M, Berry A, Xi Jasmine Chan B, Shen Y, Srivastava A, Balasubramanian S, Yadav S, Piltch-Loeb R, Nash D, and Parcesepe AM
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Objective: To estimate risk of being unvaccinated against COVID-19 by experience of intimate partner violence (IPV)., Methods: Among 3,343 partnered individuals in a community-based U.S. cohort, we quantified emotional and physical IPV experienced between March and December 2020 and estimated risk of being unvaccinated against COVID-19 through June 2021 by experience of IPV. Experience of recent IPV was defined as endorsement of more frequent or severe IPV since the start of the pandemic or report of any past-month IPV in at least one of four follow-up surveys conducted by the end of December 2020. We created a three-level composite variable - no experience of IPV, experience of emotional but not physical IPV, and experience of physical IPV., Results: Cisgender women, non-binary, or transgender individuals who reported experiencing emotional, but not physical, IPV and those who reported experiencing physical IPV were both at significantly higher risk of being unvaccinated for COVID-19 compared to those who reported experiencing no IPV (ARR
emotional violence : 1.28 [95 % CI: 1.09 - 1.51]; ARRphysical violence : 1.70 [95 % CI: 1.41 - 2.05]). Cisgender men who reported experiencing physical IPV were also at significantly higher risk of being unvaccinated for COVID-19 (ARRphysical violence : 1.52 [95 % CI: 1.15 - 2.02])., Conclusions: IPV may increase the risk of low vaccine uptake. Results highlight the need to incorporate IPV prevention and support into public health responses, with targeted resources and consideration for reducing barriers to public health interventions among those impacted., Competing Interests: The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Denis Nash discloses consulting fees from Abbvie and Gilead, and a research grant from Pfizer paid to his institution. Kate Penrose, Yanhan Shen, McKaylee Robertson, Avantika Srivastava, and Subha Balasubramanian report support from Pfizer through a research grant paid to their institution., (© 2024 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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131. A Systems Map of the Challenges of Climate Communication.
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Heneghan J, John DC, Bartsch SM, Piltch-Loeb R, Gilbert C, Kass D, Chin KL, Dibbs A, Shah TD, O'Shea KJ, Scannell SA, Martinez MF, and Lee BY
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- Humans, Systems Analysis, Communication, Climate Change, Health Communication methods
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Over the past sixty years, scientists have been warning about climate change and its impacts on human health, but evidence suggests that many may not be heeding these concerns. This raises the question of whether new communication approaches are needed to overcome the unique challenges of communicating what people can do to slow or reverse climate change. To better elucidate the challenges of communicating about the links between human activity, climate change and its effects, and identify potential solutions, we developed a systems map of the factors and processes involved based on systems mapping sessions with climate change and communication experts. The systems map revealed 27 communication challenges such as "Limited information on how individual actions contribute to collective human activity," "Limited information on how present activity leads to long-term effects," and "Difficult to represent and communicate complex relationships." The systems map also revealed several themes among the identified challenges that exist in communicating about climate change, including a lack of available data and integrated databases, climate change disciplines working in silos, a need for a lexicon that is easily understood by the public, and the need for new communication strategies to describe processes that take time to manifest.
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- 2024
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132. Engaging the Next Generation in Communication to Address Information Quality.
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Piltch-Loeb R, John J, Zenoff A, and Swan-Potras L
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- Humans, Young Adult, Adolescent, Consumer Health Information, Data Accuracy, Health Communication methods, Communication
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Information disorder can have adverse consequences on health. While there has been growing attention to health information quality among the general population, there has been less focus on the young adult age group and how their insights and ideas can help to explore the effects and potential interventions to address information quality. Since certain information consumption habits and effects vary among young people, their perspective can provide valuable insights for tackling the increasing issue of misinformation. This Perspective examines past youth involvement efforts to suggest ways to incorporate the youth perspective into improving the quality of health information, particularly through engagement strategies aimed at combating misinformation traits. We then propose a set of five recommendations to advance research to address information disorder, researchers can consider the following steps to engage youth.
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- 2024
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133. The burden of significant pain in the cirrhosis population: Risk factors, analgesic use, and impact on health care utilization and clinical outcomes.
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Rubin JB, Loeb R, Fenton C, Huang CY, Keyhani S, Seal KH, and Lai JC
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Aged, Liver Transplantation statistics & numerical data, Pain Measurement, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Severity of Illness Index, Emergency Service, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Cost of Illness, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Liver Cirrhosis mortality, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Pain drug therapy, Pain etiology, Analgesics therapeutic use
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Background: We aimed to characterize pain and analgesic use in a large contemporary cohort of patients with cirrhosis and to associate pain with unplanned health care utilization and clinical outcomes in this population., Methods: We included all patients with cirrhosis seen in UCSF hepatology clinics from 2013 to 2020. Pain severity and location were determined using documented pain scores at the initial visit; "significant pain" was defined as moderate or severe using established cutoffs. Demographic, clinical, and medication data were abstracted from electronic medical records. Associations between significant pain and our primary outcome of 1-year unplanned health care utilization (ie, emergency department visit or hospitalization) and our secondary outcomes of mortality and liver transplantation were explored in multivariable models., Results: Among 5333 patients with cirrhosis, 32% had a nonzero pain score at their initial visit and 25% had significant (ie moderate/severe) pain. Sixty percent of patients with significant pain used ≥1 analgesic; 34% used opioids. Patients with cirrhosis with significant pain had similar Model for End-Stage Liver Disease-Sodium scores (14 vs. 13), but higher rates of decompensation (65% vs. 55%). The most common pain location was the abdomen (44%). Patients with abdominal pain, compared to pain in other locations, were more likely to have decompensation (72% vs. 56%). Significant pain was independently associated with unplanned health care utilization (adjusted odds ratio: 1.3, 95% CI: 1.1-1.5) and mortality (adjusted hazard ratio: 1.4, 95% CI: 1.2-1.6)., Conclusions: Pain among patients with cirrhosis is often not well-controlled despite analgesic use, and significant pain is associated with unplanned health care utilization and mortality in this population. Effectively identifying and treating pain are essential in reducing costs and improving quality of life and outcomes among patients with cirrhosis., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.)
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- 2024
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134. MELLODDY: Cross-pharma Federated Learning at Unprecedented Scale Unlocks Benefits in QSAR without Compromising Proprietary Information.
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Heyndrickx W, Mervin L, Morawietz T, Sturm N, Friedrich L, Zalewski A, Pentina A, Humbeck L, Oldenhof M, Niwayama R, Schmidtke P, Fechner N, Simm J, Arany A, Drizard N, Jabal R, Afanasyeva A, Loeb R, Verma S, Harnqvist S, Holmes M, Pejo B, Telenczuk M, Holway N, Dieckmann A, Rieke N, Zumsande F, Clevert DA, Krug M, Luscombe C, Green D, Ertl P, Antal P, Marcus D, Do Huu N, Fuji H, Pickett S, Acs G, Boniface E, Beck B, Sun Y, Gohier A, Rippmann F, Engkvist O, Göller AH, Moreau Y, Galtier MN, Schuffenhauer A, and Ceulemans H
- Subjects
- Biological Assay, Machine Learning, Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship, Benchmarking
- Abstract
Federated multipartner machine learning has been touted as an appealing and efficient method to increase the effective training data volume and thereby the predictivity of models, particularly when the generation of training data is resource-intensive. In the landmark MELLODDY project, indeed, each of ten pharmaceutical companies realized aggregated improvements on its own classification or regression models through federated learning. To this end, they leveraged a novel implementation extending multitask learning across partners, on a platform audited for privacy and security. The experiments involved an unprecedented cross-pharma data set of 2.6+ billion confidential experimental activity data points, documenting 21+ million physical small molecules and 40+ thousand assays in on-target and secondary pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. Appropriate complementary metrics were developed to evaluate the predictive performance in the federated setting. In addition to predictive performance increases in labeled space, the results point toward an extended applicability domain in federated learning. Increases in collective training data volume, including by means of auxiliary data resulting from single concentration high-throughput and imaging assays, continued to boost predictive performance, albeit with a saturating return. Markedly higher improvements were observed for the pharmacokinetics and safety panel assay-based task subsets.
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- 2024
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135. COVID-19 Vaccine Information Seeking Patterns and Vaccine Hesitancy: A Latent Class Analysis to Inform Practice.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Silver D, Kim Y, and Abramson D
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- Adult, Humans, Information Seeking Behavior, Vaccination Hesitancy, Latent Class Analysis, Pandemics, Vaccination, COVID-19 Vaccines therapeutic use, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Context: Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, state and local health departments served as risk communicators to the public; however, public health practitioners have limited resources at their disposal when trying to communicate information, especially when guidance is rapidly changing. Identifying how the population gathers information across channels and which subsets of the population utilize which channels can help practitioners make the best use of these limited resources., Objective: To identify how individuals utilized different information channels to get COVID-19-related information and determine its effect on one COVID-19-related action: vaccine intentions., Design: This study applies latent class analysis to utilization of information channels to characterize information consumption patterns during the COVID-19 infodemic and then explores the relationship between these patterns and vaccine hesitancy., Setting: The data were collected from the COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Survey , which is a nationally representative sample of US adults 18 years and older recruited from Social Science Research Solutions (SSRS)'s Opinion Panel., Participants: The online survey was conducted between April 7 and April 11, 2021, after the COVID-19 vaccine was available to all adults and enrolled more than 3000 respondents (n = 3014)., Main Outcome Measures: Respondents were asked about their frequency of information seeking related to the COVID-19 vaccine, sociodemographics, and vaccine perceptions., Results: Based on fit statistics and prior research, we identified 6 latent classes that characterize information seeking: Nonseekers, Legacy, Legacy + Facebook/Instagram, Traditional Omnivore, Omnivore + Broad Social Media, and Twitter. Sociodemographics, political, economic, and COVID-19 exposure variables are associated with different patterns of seeking information about COVID-19. Membership in 3 of these classes was associated with higher rates of vaccine refusal and vaccine hesitancy., Discussion: The study has implications for public health officials and policymakers who use media channels to share news and health information with the public. Information should be tailored to the sociodemographic profiles of those users who are likely consuming information across multiple different channels., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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136. One year later: What role did trust in public officials and the medical profession play in decisions to get a booster and to overcome vaccine hesitancy?
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Silver D, Kim Y, Piltch-Loeb R, and Abramson D
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Physicians may have an important role to play in promoting boosters as well as reducing COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy, but the relationship between hesitancy and trust in the medical profession and these behaviors has been underexplored. A representative online panel of 1,967 US adults that included oversamples of minoritized and rural populations were surveyed in April 2021 and June 2022 regarding their booster and vaccine status and intentions, their views of the medical profession, and their levels of trust in their own doctors, and national and state/local officials. Eighty percent of those vaccinated in 2021 had received a booster by 2022, while fewer than half of those initially reluctant to get a vaccine had gotten one by Wave 2 of the survey. Mean factor scores were calculated for response to a validated scale measuring trust in the medical profession. Linear and logistic regression models estimated the relationship between these factors scores and trust in other officials for those vaccinated as well initial hesitaters/refusers in Wave 1, controlling for population factors. Trust in one's own physician was associated with those vaccinated/eager to be vaccinated getting a booster, while trust in the medical profession was associated with getting a vaccine among those who had previously refused or were hesitant. Trust in other experts was not significantly associated with these behaviors, but wide confidence intervals suggest a need for future research. Innovative strategies, including mobilizing the medical community is needed to address reluctance, uncertainty, and distrust of therapeutic agents in pandemic response., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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137. Learning from COVID-19: government leaders' perspectives to improve emergency risk communication.
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Savoia E, Piltch-Loeb R, Stanton EH, and Koh HK
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- Humans, Communication, Public Health, Politics, Government, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
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Background: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic highlighted the challenges of effective emergency risk communication (ERC) to protect public health, including the difficulty in tackling the spread of inaccurate information. This study aimed to understand those challenges and potential solutions by interviewing leading government spokespersons and their advisors from around the world with experience during large scale emergencies. Interviews were conducted with 27 individuals representing governments from 19 countries across five continents. Thematic analysis, using both a deductive and inductive approach, organized and identified salient themes and patterns that emerged from the interview data., Results: The thematic analysis of the interviews' data led to the identification of 9 principles of communication: 1) Timeliness, 2) Transparency, 3) Coordination, 4) Accuracy and Consistency, 5) Accountability and Integrity, 6) Independence from politics, 7) Responsiveness, 8) Equity, 9) Trust and Empathy. We also developed 36 recommendations actionable by government agencies to enhance the practice of the 9 principles. Examples include the need for: proactive communication strategies, permanent communication task forces integrated into preparedness and response efforts, robust processes to enhance open discussion of controversial topics within government agencies, clarification of how various branches of government coordinate to oversee specific aspects of the overall communication, and development of relationships across public and private entities ahead of a crisis., Conclusions: Our findings suggest key practical recommendations for leaders of government agencies to enhance ERC capabilities going forward. Before a crisis, they must constantly review internal processes and integrate ERC functions into overall communication planning efforts. During a crisis, they must coordinate roles and responsibilities across branches of governments, strive to communicate to a range of populations to uphold equity, maintain transparency by avoiding information voids on controversial issues and build trust by building relationships with a variety of community leaders. After a crisis, government agencies should continue the practice of social listening to hear more about the public's informational needs, strengthen civic participation processes, and understand how an always evolving information environment can best be leveraged during future crises., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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138. Safety, Efficacy, and Ill Intent: Examining COVID-19 Vaccine Perceptions among the New Undervaccinated Moveable Middle in a U.S. Cohort, October 2022.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Penrose K, Stanton E, Parcesepe AM, Shen Y, Fleary SA, and Nash D
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Individuals who received their primary vaccine series only (with no subsequent booster) may be a new type of "moveable middle" given their receipt of the original COVID-19 vaccination. One population within the moveable middle for whom tailored interventions may be needed is individuals with common mental disorders (CMD). The purpose of this paper is to understand the vaccine perceptions among this new moveable middle-the undervaccinated-and within the undervaccinated to examine the extent to which COVID-19 vaccine perceptions and motivations differ among those with and without symptoms of CMD. Using data from the CHASING COVID Cohort, we examine the relationship between vaccination status, CMD, and vaccine perceptions in the undervaccinated. Among 510 undervaccinated participants who had completed the primary vaccine series but were not boosted, the most common reasons for undervaccination focused on efficacy (not seeing a need for an additional dose, 42.4%; there not being enough evidence that a booster dose is effective, 26.5%; already having had COVID-19, 19.6%). Other concerns were related to safety (long-term side effects, 21.0%; short-term side effects, 17.6%) and logistics (plan to get a booster but haven't had time yet, 18.8%). Overall, the greatest vaccine concerns (over 30%) for the undervaccinated focused on efficacy and safety issues. Symptoms of depression or anxiety were associated with lower levels of vaccine efficacy and greater safety concerns in adjusted models. The implications of our study are that campaigns that are hoping to maximize vaccination uptake should consider focusing on and emphasizing messaging on efficacy and safety issues.
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- 2023
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139. Reframing human trafficking awareness campaigns in the United States: goals, audience, and content.
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Savoia E, Piltch-Loeb R, Muibu D, Leffler A, Hughes D, and Montrod A
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- Humans, Communication, Consensus, Focus Groups, Goals, Human Trafficking prevention & control
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Introduction: Human trafficking (HT) awareness campaigns can educate the public and specific professional figures about this crime and ways to prevent it. However, there currently remains a gap in terms of how to best frame such campaigns without stigmatizing groups of individuals or portraying victims in unrealistic ways., Methods: We conducted four focus groups with 22 experts in HT to explore their perspectives and opinions on current challenges in the framing of HT awareness campaigns in the United States. Focus groups were conducted via Zoom and transcribed verbatim. Two independent reviewers analyzed the transcripts to identify themes using an inductive approach. The results of the focus groups analysis were used to structure the guiding questions of a brainstorming technique named Nominal Group Technique (NGT). Fifteen of 22 experts that participated in the focus groups joined the in-person NGT with the intent of generating ideas and achieving consensus on target audiences, goals, and content of human trafficking awareness campaigns. At the end of the NGT participants ranked priority for actions in the development of HT awareness efforts in the United States., Results: During the NGT the experts provided a number of recommendations to improve HT awareness and to empower victims to reach for help. They pointed to the need for: awareness efforts that describe HT on a spectrum of human abuse and exploitation; training for professional figures about trauma-informed care and communication; and efforts that empower trafficked victims to seek support. They also pointed to the need to develop awareness efforts tailored to local needs in close collaborations with the community-based organizations that can champion their dissemination and be the primary point of access for victims seeking help., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Savoia, Piltch-Loeb, Muibu, Leffler, Hughes and Montrod.)
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- 2023
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140. COVID-19 vaccine uptake, confidence and hesitancy in rural KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa between April 2021 and April 2022: A continuous cross-sectional surveillance study.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Mazibuko L, Stanton E, Mngomezulu T, Gareta D, Nxumalo S, Kraemer JD, Herbst K, Siedner MJ, and Harling G
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High COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in South Africa limits protection against future epidemic waves. We evaluated how vaccine hesitancy and its correlates evolved April 2021-April 2022 in a well-characterized rural KwaZulu-Natal setting. All residents aged >15 in the Africa Health Research Institute's surveillance area were invited to complete a home-based, in-person interview. We described vaccine uptake and hesitancy trends, then evaluated associations with pre-existing personal factors, dynamic environmental context, and cues to action using ordinal logistic regression. Among 10,011 respondents, vaccine uptake rose as age-cohorts became vaccine-eligible before levelling off three months post-eligibility; younger age-groups had slower uptake and plateaued faster. Lifetime receipt of any COVID-19 vaccine rose from 3.0% in April-July 2021 to 32.9% in January-April 2022. Among 7,445 unvaccinated respondents, 47.7% said they would definitely take a free vaccine today in the first quarter of the study time period, falling to 32.0% in the last. By March/April 2022 only 48.0% of respondents were vaccinated or said they would definitely would take a vaccine. Predictors of lower vaccine hesitancy included being male (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 0.70, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.65-0.76), living with vaccinated household members (aOR:0.65, 95%CI: 0.59-0.71) and knowing someone who had had COVID-19 (aOR: 0.69, 95%CI: 0.59-0.80). Mistrust in government predicted greater hesitancy (aOR: 1.47, 95%CI: 1.42-1.53). Despite several COVID-19 waves, vaccine hesitancy was common in rural South Africa, rising over time and closely tied to mistrust in government. However, interpersonal experiences countered hesitancy and may be entry-points for interventions., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Piltch-Loeb et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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141. What Were the Information Voids? A Qualitative Analysis of Questions Asked by Dear Pandemic Readers between August 2020-August 2021.
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Piltch-Loeb R, James R, Albrecht SS, Buttenheim AM, Dowd JB, Kumar A, Jones M, Leininger LJ, Simanek A, and Aronowitz S
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- Humans, Pandemics prevention & control, Communication, Trust, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control
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In the current infodemic, how individuals receive information (channel), who it is coming from (source), and how it is framed can have an important effect on COVID-19 related mitigation behaviors. In light of these challenges presented by the infodemic, Dear Pandemic (DP) was created to directly address persistent questions related to COVID-19 and other health topics in the online environment. This is a qualitative analysis of 3806 questions that were submitted by DP readers to a question box on the Dear Pandemic website between August 30, 2020 and August 29, 2021. Analyses resulted in four themes: the need for clarification of other sources; lack of trust in information; recognition of possible misinformation; and questions on personal decision-making. Each theme reflects an unmet informational need of Dear Pandemic readers, which may be reflective of the broader informational gaps in our science communication efforts.This study highlights the role of an ad hoc risk communication platform in the current environment and uses questions submitted to the Dear Pandemic question box to identify informational needs of DP readers over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic. These findings may help clarify how organizations addressing health misinformation in the digital space can contribute to timely, responsive science communication and improve future communication efforts.
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- 2023
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142. Dear Pandemic: A topic modeling analysis of COVID-19 information needs among readers of an online science communication campaign.
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Golos AM, Guntuku SC, Piltch-Loeb R, Leininger LJ, Simanek AM, Kumar A, Albrecht SS, Dowd JB, Jones M, and Buttenheim AM
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- Child, Humans, United States, Pandemics prevention & control, SARS-CoV-2, COVID-19 Vaccines, Retrospective Studies, Communication, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Social Media
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Background: The COVID-19 pandemic was accompanied by an "infodemic"-an overwhelming excess of accurate, inaccurate, and uncertain information. The social media-based science communication campaign Dear Pandemic was established to address the COVID-19 infodemic, in part by soliciting submissions from readers to an online question box. Our study characterized the information needs of Dear Pandemic's readers by identifying themes and longitudinal trends among question box submissions., Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of questions submitted from August 24, 2020, to August 24, 2021. We used Latent Dirichlet Allocation topic modeling to identify 25 topics among the submissions, then used thematic analysis to interpret the topics based on their top words and submissions. We used t-Distributed Stochastic Neighbor Embedding to visualize the relationship between topics, and we used generalized additive models to describe trends in topic prevalence over time., Results: We analyzed 3839 submissions, 90% from United States-based readers. We classified the 25 topics into 6 overarching themes: 'Scientific and Medical Basis of COVID-19,' 'COVID-19 Vaccine,' 'COVID-19 Mitigation Strategies,' 'Society and Institutions,' 'Family and Personal Relationships,' and 'Navigating the COVID-19 Infodemic.' Trends in topics about viral variants, vaccination, COVID-19 mitigation strategies, and children aligned with the news cycle and reflected the anticipation of future events. Over time, vaccine-related submissions became increasingly related to those surrounding social interaction., Conclusions: Question box submissions represented distinct themes that varied in prominence over time. Dear Pandemic's readers sought information that would not only clarify novel scientific concepts, but would also be timely and practical to their personal lives. Our question box format and topic modeling approach offers science communicators a robust methodology for tracking, understanding, and responding to the information needs of online audiences., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Golos et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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143. The Exodus Of State And Local Public Health Employees: Separations Started Before And Continued Throughout COVID-19.
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Leider JP, Castrucci BC, Robins M, Hare Bork R, Fraser MR, Savoia E, Piltch-Loeb R, and Koh HK
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- Humans, Pyrantel, Disease Outbreaks, Local Government, Public Health, COVID-19
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Understanding the size and composition of the state and local governmental public health workforce in the United States is critical for promoting and protecting the health of the public. Using pandemic-era data from the Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey fielded in 2017 and 2021, this study compared intent to leave or retire in 2017 with actual separations through 2021 among state and local public health agency staff. We also examined how employee age, region, and intent to leave correlated with separations and considered the effect on the workforce if trends were to continue. In our analytic sample, nearly half of all employees in state and local public health agencies left between 2017 and 2021, a proportion that rose to three-quarters for those ages thirty-five and younger or with shorter tenures. If separation trends continue, by 2025 this would represent more than 100,000 staff leaving their organizations, or as much as half of the governmental public health workforce in total. Given the likelihood of increasing outbreaks and future global pandemics, strategies to improve recruitment and retention must be prioritized.
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- 2023
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144. A Descriptive Analysis of the Relationship between Social Media Use and Vaccine Hesitancy among a Sample of Unvaccinated Adults in Canada.
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Chen TY, Piltch-Loeb R, Harriman NW, Testa M, and Savoia E
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Both traditional and social media information sources have disseminated information on the COVID-19 pandemic. The content shared may influence public opinion on different mitigation strategies, including vaccination. Misinformation can alter risk perception and increase vaccine hesitancy. This study aimed to explore the impact of using social media as the primary information source about the COVID-19 vaccine on COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among people living in Canada. Secondary objectives identified other predictors of vaccine hesitancy and distinguished the effects of using traditional and social media sources. We used quota sampling of adults in Canada [N = 985] to conduct an online survey on the Pollfish survey platform between 21st and 28th May 2021. We then used bivariate chi-squared tests and multivariable logistic regression modeling to explore the associations between using social media as one's primary source of information about the COVID-19 vaccine and vaccine hesitancy. We further analyzed the association between specific types of channels of information and vaccine hesitancy. After controlling for covariates such as age, sex, race, and ethnicity, individuals reporting social media as their primary source of COVID-19 vaccine information versus those who had not used social media as their primary source of COVID-19 vaccine information had 50% higher odds of vaccine hesitancy. Among different channels of information, we found that information from television was associated with a 40% lower odds ratio for vaccine hesitancy. Since social media platforms play an essential role in influencing hesitancy in taking the COVID-19 vaccination, it is necessary to improve the quality of social media information sources and raise people's trust in information. Meanwhile, traditional media channels, such as television, are still crucial for promoting vaccination programs.
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- 2022
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145. Freedom of Choice to Vaccinate and COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy in Italy.
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Denu MKI, Montrond A, Piltch-Loeb R, Bonetti M, Toffolutti V, Testa MA, and Savoia E
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Despite the availability of effective vaccines that lower mortality and morbidity associated with COVID-19, many countries including Italy have adopted strict vaccination policies and mandates to increase the uptake of the COVID-19 vaccine. Such mandates have sparked debates on the freedom to choose whether or not to get vaccinated. In this study, we examined the people's belief in vaccine choice as a predictor of willingness to get vaccinated among a sample of unvaccinated individuals in Italy. An online cross-sectional survey was conducted in Italy in May 2021. The survey collected data on respondents' demographics and region of residence, socioeconomic factors, belief in the freedom to choose to be vaccinated or not, risk perception of contracting and transmitting the disease, previous vaccine refusal, opinion on adequacy of government measures to address the pandemic, experience in requesting and being denied government aid during the pandemic, and intent to accept COVID-19 vaccination. The analysis employed binary logistic regression models using a hierarchical model building approach to assess the association between intent to accept vaccination and belief in the freedom to choose to vaccinate, while adjusting for other variables of interest. 984 unvaccinated individuals were included in the study. Respondents who agreed that people should be free to decide whether or not to vaccinate with no restrictions on their personal life had 85% lower odds of vaccine acceptance (OR = 0.15; 95% CI, 0.09,0.23) after adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic factors and their risk perception of contracting and transmitting COVID-19. Belief in the freedom to choose whether or not to accept vaccinations was a major predictor of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among a sample of unvaccinated individuals in Italy in May 2021. This understanding of how individuals prioritize personal freedoms and the perceived benefits and risks of vaccines, when making health care decisions can inform the development of public health outreach, educational programs, and messaging.
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- 2022
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146. Association between COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and trust in the medical profession and public health officials.
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Silver D, Kim Y, McNeill E, Piltch-Loeb R, Wang V, and Abramson D
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- Adult, Humans, COVID-19 Vaccines, Public Health, Vaccination Hesitancy, Vaccination, Trust, COVID-19 prevention & control
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One's personal physician, national and state or local public health officials, and the broader medical profession play important roles in encouraging vaccine uptake for COVID-19. However, the relationship between trust in these experts and vaccine hesitancy has been underexplored, particularly among racial/minority groups where historic medical mistrust may reduce uptake. Using an April 2021 online sample of US adults (n = 3041) that explored vaccine hesitancy, regression models estimate levels of trust in each of these types of experts and between trust in each of these experts and the odds of being COVID-19 vaccine takers vs refusers or hesitaters. Interaction terms assess how levels of trust in the medical profession by race/ethnicity are associated with vaccine hesitancy. Trust in each expert is positively associated with trust in other experts, except for trust in the medical profession. Only trust in one's own doctor was associated with trust in the medical profession, as measured by factor scores derived from a validated scale. Lower levels of trust in experts were significantly associated with being either a hesitater or a refuser compared to being a taker. Black respondents had higher odds of being either a hesitater or a refuser compared to white respondents but the interaction with trust was insignificant. For Hispanic respondents only, the odds of being a hesitater declined significantly when trust in the medical profession rose. Mistrust in the medical profession, one's doctor and national experts contributes to vaccine hesitancy. Mobilizing personal physicians to speak to their own patients may help., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Silver, Piltch-Loeb and Abramson are supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation. The sponsor had no role in the study design, collection, analysis or interpretation of data, nor did they assist in writing the report or in the decision to submit it for publication., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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147. Exploring the Association between Negative Emotions and COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Unvaccinated Adults in Sweden.
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Wei Y, Harriman NW, Piltch-Loeb R, Testa MA, and Savoia E
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The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had a significant impact on individuals' mental health. This study aimed to investigate how negative emotions toward the COVID-19 pandemic, including feeling anxious, depressed, upset, and stressed, were associated with COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in Sweden. The study is a cross-sectional online survey conducted between 21-28 May 2021, using three nested hierarchical logistic regression models to assess the association. The study included 965 unvaccinated individuals, 51.2% (n = 494) of whom reported their intention to get vaccinated. We observed graded positive associations between reported negative emotions and vaccine acceptance. Individuals who experienced economic stress had lower odds of vaccine acceptance while having a positive opinion of the government's response to COVID-19 was associated with higher odds of being vaccine-acceptant. In conclusion, unvaccinated individuals experiencing negative emotions about the pandemic were more willing to get the vaccine. On the contrary, those with a negative opinion about the government's response, and those that had experienced economic stress were less likely to accept the immunization.
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- 2022
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148. Cross-National Vaccine Concerns and Predictors of Vaccine Hesitancy in Not-Fully Vaccinated Individuals: Findings from USA, Canada, Sweden, and Italy.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Su M, Bonetti M, Testa M, Stanton E, Toffolutti V, and Savoia E
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Vaccine hesitancy is a key contributor to reduced COVID-19 vaccine uptake and remains a threat to COVID-19 mitigation strategies as many countries are rolling out the campaign for booster shots. The goal of our study is to identify and compare the top vaccine concerns in four countries: Canada, Italy, Sweden, and the USA and how these concerns relate to vaccine hesitancy. While most individuals in these countries are now vaccinated, we expect our results to be helpful in guiding vaccination efforts for additional doses, and more in general for other vaccines in the future. We sought to empirically test whether vaccine related concerns followed similar thematic issues in the four countries included in this study, and then to see how these themes related to vaccine hesitancy using data from a cross-sectional survey conducted in May 2021. We applied CFA and created vaccine concern scales for analysis. We then utilized these results in regression-based modeling to determine how concerns related to vaccine hesitancy and whether there were similar or different concerns by country. The results quantitatively highlight that the same vaccine related concerns permeated multiple countries at the same point in time. This implies that COVID-19 vaccination communications could benefit from global collaboration.
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- 2022
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149. Engaging Community Leaders in Sharing Local Knowledge for Emergency Preparedness to Leverage Communication and Trusted Assets for Vulnerable Populations.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Bernard D, Quiñones Vallejo B, Harriman N, and Savoia E
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- Humans, Vulnerable Populations, Trust, Communication, Civil Defense, Disaster Planning methods
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Objective: Public health and emergency management agencies play a critical role in addressing the needs of vulnerable populations in preparation for and in response to emergencies. Identifying and leveraging community assets is a way to address such needs. This study focuses on the development of a process and tools to engage community leaders in sharing their knowledge about their community characteristics and assets useful for emergency planning., Methods: We conducted interviews with community leaders across five study sites with the goal of understanding what type of local knowledge community leaders are able to share in regard to emergency preparedness. Based on the interview results we developed and tested a mobile application as a mobile friendly directory of community assets., Results: We identified two main types of local knowledge about community assets for emergency preparedness: communication-based and trust-based local knowledge. We created an application to facilitate the sharing of such knowledge. Community leaders were able to share local knowledge across four areas: communication-based assets, trust-based assets, spatial-based assets and personal-preparedness assets., Conclusion: Community leaders' engagement in preparedness efforts is important to identify community assets that can be leveraged to address the needs of the most vulnerable segments of a community.
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- 2022
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150. Testing the Efficacy of Attitudinal Inoculation Videos to Enhance COVID-19 Vaccine Acceptance: Quasi-Experimental Intervention Trial.
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Piltch-Loeb R, Su M, Hughes B, Testa M, Goldberg B, Braddock K, Miller-Idriss C, Maturo V, and Savoia E
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- COVID-19 Vaccines, Humans, Pandemics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vaccination psychology, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 prevention & control, Vaccines
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Background: Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, a variety of COVID-19-related misinformation has spread and been amplified online. The spread of misinformation can influence COVID-19 beliefs and protective actions, including vaccine hesitancy. Belief in vaccine misinformation is associated with lower vaccination rates and higher vaccine resistance. Attitudinal inoculation is a preventative approach to combating misinformation and disinformation, which leverages the power of narrative, rhetoric, values, and emotion., Objective: This study seeks to test inoculation messages in the form of short video messages to promote resistance against persuasion by COVID-19 vaccine misinformation., Methods: We designed a series of 30-second inoculation videos and conducted a quasi-experimental study to test the use of attitudinal inoculation in a population of individuals who were unvaccinated (N=1991). The 3 intervention videos were distinguished by their script design, with intervention video 1 focusing on narrative/rhetorical ("Narrative") presentation of information, intervention video 2 focusing on delivering a fact-based information ("Fact"), and intervention video 3 using a hybrid design ("Hybrid"). Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) models were used to compare the main effect of the intervention on the 3 outcome variables: ability to recognize misinformation tactics ("Recognize"), willingness to share misinformation ("Share"), and willingness to take the COVID-19 vaccine ("Willingness")., Results: There were significant effects across all 3 outcome variables comparing inoculation intervention groups to controls. For the Recognize outcome, the ability to recognize rhetorical strategies, there was a significant intervention group effect (P<.001). For the Share outcome, support for sharing the mis- and disinformation, the intervention group main effect was statistically significant (P=.02). For the Willingness outcome, there was a significant intervention group effect; intervention groups were more willing to get the COVID-19 vaccine compared to controls (P=.01)., Conclusions: Across all intervention groups, inoculated individuals showed greater resistance to misinformation than their noninoculated counterparts. Relative to those who were not inoculated, inoculated participants showed significantly greater ability to recognize and identify rhetorical strategies used in misinformation, were less likely to share false information, and had greater willingness to get the COVID-19 vaccine. Attitudinal inoculation delivered through short video messages should be tested in public health messaging campaigns to counter mis- and disinformation., (©Rachael Piltch-Loeb, Max Su, Brian Hughes, Marcia Testa, Beth Goldberg, Kurt Braddock, Cynthia Miller-Idriss, Vanessa Maturo, Elena Savoia. Originally published in JMIR Public Health and Surveillance (https://publichealth.jmir.org), 20.06.2022.)
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- 2022
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