317 results on '"D, Hedeker"'
Search Results
2. Effective Medical Treatment of Opiate Addiction
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R. W. Pickens, J. R. Cooper, K. Bryant, M. Brown, J. S. Gustafson, J. Cott, D. D. Simpson, W. Berrettini, D. P. Desmond, A. Trachtenberg, J. E. Zweben, M. W. Parrino, M. Gossop, M. G. Marston, J. T. Payte, J. Frascella, B. S. Bunney, C. Clifford Attkisson, R. Etheridge, J. H. Ferguson, R. A. Dominguez, S. R. Zukin, R. G. Petersdorf, E. A. Bray, E. Mears, George E. Woody, Henrick J. Harwood, G. T. Gitchel, W. H. Hall, E. J. Nestler, A. Willoughby, R. O. Friedel, C. B.G. Murphy, N. Reuter, R. Mostaghim, A. T. McLellan, Dennis McCarty, Don C. Des Jarlais, S. Nightingale, D. N. Nurco, D. Hedeker, Igor Galynker, V. W. Pinn, H. E. Drummond, B. J. Turner, Frank Vocci, D. C. Lewis, John Grabowski, N. L. Buc, M. B. Max, B. Fletcher, Mary Jeanne Kreek, J. Merrill, H. D. Kleber, H. H. Hiatt, M. D. Anglin, C. R. Sherman, L. L. Judd, and J. H. Jaffe
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Medical treatment ,business.industry ,medicine ,General Medicine ,Opiate addiction ,Psychiatry ,business - Published
- 1998
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- View/download PDF
3. Impacts of foot orthoses on pain and disability in rheumatoid arthritics
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K J, Conrad, E, Budiman-Mak, K E, Roach, D, Hedeker, R, Caraballada, D, Burks, and H, Moore
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Adult ,Male ,Orthotic Devices ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Pain ,Arthritis ,Placebo ,law.invention ,Arthritis, Rheumatoid ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Double-Blind Method ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,medicine ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Disabled Persons ,Gait ,Aged ,Pain Measurement ,Foot ,business.industry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Orthotic device ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Clinical trial ,Rheumatoid arthritis ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Steroids ,Joint Diseases ,business ,Foot (unit) - Abstract
Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) frequently causes foot pain and swelling that affect ambulation. Pharmaceutical management of pain and disability is standard in clinical practice. The use of functional posted foot orthoses, as an adjunct to pharmaceutical treatment, is a promising treatment for managing foot pain and disability in RA. Its effectiveness, however, has not been rigorously evaluated. We performed a double-blind clinical trial using foot orthoses vs. placebo orthoses in the management of the rheumatoid arthritic foot, while subjects continued customary treatment. On the basis of findings of no effect on disability and pain measures, this study indicates no benefit of functional posted foot orthoses over placebos.
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- 1996
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- View/download PDF
4. Track C Epidemiology and Prevention Science
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E. Munyi, P. Iracheta, W. El Sadr, Thomas L. Patterson, N. McGrath, W. Areekul, J. Konikoff, J.S. Graff-Zivin, J. Valladares, O. Levina, A. Wohl, G. Kirk, C. Nhlapo, S. Hoffman, A. Hughes, S. Bertagnolio, S. Gari, B. Grinsztejn, L. Sherr, C. Mattson, T. Finlayson, M. Schim van der Loeff, J.M. Wekesa, R. Qazi, B. Elul, D. Nsona, B. Le, Margaret Hellard, L. Cottle, G. Kwesigabo, P. Mushati, M. Sangeeth, J.T. Maricato, S. Kippax, W. Aung, M. Yu, A. Ochieng, A. Bennani, I. Massud, K. Kardos, K. Muessig, M. Kato, D.N. Raugi, A. Mkhwanazi, M. Roehler, J. Casillas, G. Rutherford, S.J. Gange, N. Kumarasamy, O. Abaza, H.C. Johnson, J.B.F. de Wit, K. Brady, K. Sigaloff, Colleen F. Kelley, J. Kuruc, Supriya D. Mehta, M. Thrun, G. Likatavicius, K. Muldoon, P. Cherutich, M. Siminyu, C. Scanlon, B. Rodriguez, T. Okeyo Adipo, C. Nyamukapa, D. Reach, M. Morris, I. N'Doye, B. Engelsmann, V. Suwanvanichkij, S. Khobragade, J. Nielsen-Bobbit, J. Mitchell, S. Phillips, C.B. Borkowf, C. Nitrahally Mallachar, D.L. Sodora, T. Guadamuz, Christopher K Fairley, G. Phatedi, V. Tepper, J. Willig, Han-Zhu Qian, K. Underhill, E.R.M. Nunes, E. Machakaire, J. Bouscaillou, M. Boyes, L.D. Chava, M. Taylor, X. Zhang, Charles S. Morrison, V. Sharma, R. Firestone, M.R. Lamb, H. James, S.M. Cohen, H. Crane, J. Coleman, K.W. Ranby, H. Van Renterghem, J. Eckenrode, S. Mwalili, M.H. Ngolobe, J. Mitty, S. Sivalenka, T. Bhatnagar, S. Abel, I. Oumzil, J.R. Lama, E. Connick, S. Kennedy, K. Nielsen-Saines, H. Muyinda, Y.M. Nakamura, P. Thomas, R. Salata, I. Kuo, F. Sall, J. Menten, G. Mkandawire, E. Mills, K.A. Gebo, Rob J. Fredericksen, P. Kasonde, S. Braunstein, Erin M. Kahle, B. Kilama, L. Beer, I. de Beer, N. Elkot, C.K. Cunningham, G. Peytavin, T.-Y. Liu, J.W. Eaton, T. Chuenchitra, Jorge Sanchez, N. Hamunime, R. Grant, J.E. Mantell, T. Mashigo, N. Nazim, N.N. Zheng, B. Cutler, R. Rangsin, N. Knight, A.M. Malone, J. Zaidi, P. Edwards, J.T. Brooks, K. Alami, M.K. Mainkar, A. Kowalski, N. Jack, D. Pieterse, Mark Stoove, M. Mirira, C. Schumacher, A.J. Schmidt, W. Jaoko, C.M. Lowndes, S. Atallah, B. Yang, M. Fox, R. Lebelonyane, B. Feldman, S. Caffe, James Kiarie, A. Simo, E. Kajawo, L. Thomas, T.B. Masvawure, R. Staub, C. Ngoloyi, S. Galea, E.L. Ross, F. Noubary, J. Vanhommerig, S. Patel, S. Khanakwa, L. Hightow-Weidman, S. Braithwaite, P. Perchal, J. Mulilo, C.S. Meade, M. Tsepe, A. Suthar, W. Zule, B. Singh, B. Panchia, L. Yin, J. Skinner, S. Ramanathan, K.M. Gray, H. Ramy, S.M. Graham, M.T. Schechter, H. Zhang, R. Harrison, J.P. Zukurov, A. Gonzalez-Rodríguez, L. Johnston, Maria Prins, T. Smith, S. Stoelzl, N. Siegfried, D. De Angelis, G. Paz-Bailey, D. Taljaard, D. Operario, J.D. Fishel, Dobromir T. Dimitrov, Jared M. Baeten, K.J. Sikkema, A. Urbina, S. Birnel-Henderson, Deborah Donnell, J. Borders, R. Killian, G. Mavise, H. Gamieldien, S. Isac, D. Yang, J. Gunthorp, A. Lansky, K.N. Althoff, M. Vincent, J. Lingappa, Patrick S. Sullivan, M.E.E. Kretzschmar, W. Hanekom, M. De Klerk, C. Odhiambo, J. Shafi, V. Kodali, H. Jackson, S. Bharat, Michael Pickles, R. Geskus, R. Jones, L. Vu, P. Messeri, W. Duffus, R. Limaye, M. Collumbien, G. Allen, E. Elghamrawy, R. Spijker, F. Traore, N. Abdallar, K. Lythgoe, Eli S. Rosenberg, M. van de Laar, S. Stromdahl, A. Bowring, P. Schmid, Grant Colfax, S. Duncan, V. Elharrar, T. Madidimalo, H. Tran Viet, M. Tran Thi, K.E. Nelson, D.C. Sokal, S. Mathew, M. Baum, R. Hari Kumar, Sonia Napravnik, J. Lou, Paula M. Frew, M. Alary, Mari M. Kitahata, Tsungai Chipato, R.C. Berg, I. Maclean, D. Kimanga, Y.T. Duong, L. Jacobson, David R. Bangsberg, F. Odhiambo, A. Malone, G. Wang, E. Schiff, Y. Ding, C. Mlambo, D. Wheeler, J. Martin, A. Kwon, X. Xia, R. Granich, Yuhua Ruan, L.-G. Bekker, Stephen L. Boswell, S. Johnson, F. Njenga, F. Gardner, S. Sherman, Q. Abdool Karim, A. Hoare, K. Thomas, Connie Celum, A. Balaji, L. Metsch, M.J. Mugavero, J. Hahn, J. Denison, M. Kretzschmar, M.R. Lozada, A. Zee, J. Frohlich, P.-L. Chen, D. Vyas, Z.A. Stein, I. Hoffman, S. Weber, S. Abou Elmagd, J. Kriebs, D. Skinner, H. Cross, E. Piwowar-Manning, R. Wiegand, B. Furness, A.C. Voetsch, Q. Awori, S. Kapiga, V. Mugisha, R. Nkambule, F. Tanser, S.E. Hawes, R. Ochai, C. Mathews, Myron Essex, M. Chilila, P. MacPhail, P. Michel, J.H. McMahon, V. Sharp, P. Dupas, M. Schaan, Tonia Poteat, S.A. Kaplan, J. Peinado, L. Zhang, P. Weatherburn, N.M. Fernandes, I. Nieves-Rivera, M. Eberhart, A. Presanis, J. Tejero, A. Pettifor, N. Wadonda, R. Adhikary, S. Shoptaw, K. Page, Nelly Mugo, C. Kuo, D. Cohan, V. Delpech, G.D. Kirk, J. Stover, M. Cohen, V. Cummings, C. Johnson, J. Pilotto, J. Tiffany, S. Rajaram, F. Assouab, V. Akelo, Jeanne M. Marrazzo, Y. Shao, J. Schulden, M. Mahy, Z. Hennessey, A. Sunantarod, S. Meesiri, T. Hallett, J.R. Williams, K. Hayashi, M. Barone, A. La Marca, T. Gamble, J. Moguche, S.Y. Hong, K. Kana, B.R. Santos, Mary S. Campbell, B. Auvert, C.H. Watts, P. Ntshangase, A.M. Foss, A. Anglemyer, P. Li, S.P. Ravi, T.J. Smith, Mark N. Lurie, L. Laurenco, A. Chaturvedula, A.C. Justice, J. Sayles, K. Rou, S. Behel, G. de Bruyn, A. Cescon, S. Pont, Till Bärnighausen, R.A. Willis, D. Forrest, P. Vickerman, A. Cope, M. Eliya, J. Mellors, H.B. Jaspan, J. Grinsdale, Y. Dong, James I. Mullins, R. Detels, N. Roth, J.-A.S. Passmore, S.E. Bradley, R. King, C. Latkin, S. Kandula, E. Wahome, D. Celentano, P. Goswami, B. Tee, A. Thiongo, K. Kaplan, J. Pienaar, M.W. Ross, P. Kaleebu, S. Chariyalertsak, K.F. Kelley, E. Valverde, Susan Scheer, M. Bhattacharya, J. Kinuthia, R. Brookmeyer, E. Mwamburi, A. Castel, G. Trapence, R. Helmy, G. Bicego, Carol El-Hayek, P. Chavez, E. Brown, C. Frangakis, E. Rodríguez-Nolasco, M. Colvin, Stefan Baral, A. Delgado-Borrego, J. Kessler, M.C. Weinstein, H. Shasulwe, B. Koblin, M. Magnus, W. Zhou, M.H. Watt, David Moore, J.B. Reed, C. Debaulieu, M.R. Jordan, F. Martinson, K. Nucifora, P.W. Young, L. Kayla, W. Matthews, M. Motamedi, J. Gweshe, B. El Omari, R. Ondondo, C. Kahlert, X. Cao, J. Okanda, G. Makana, V. Go, R. Colebunders, R. Simba, I. Hall, R. Bakker, P. Vernazza, D. Exner-Cortens, A. Brown, L. Kurtz, K.R. Amico, H. Ntalasha, R. Baggaley, N. Song, T. Aragon, R.S. Hogg, J. Nikisi, F. Mwanga, C. Shepard, O. Koole, K. Buchacz, P. Gonzales, A. Martin, B. Santos, D. Lewis, G. Anderson, C. Polis, S. Derendinger, K. Mayer, S. Vermund, A. Griffin, Samuel R. Friedman, M.S. Cohen, F.J. Muro, D. Patel, A. Sugarbaker, M. Musheke, C. Beyrer, C. Kwok, B.P. Yadav, J. Kaplan, R. Zulz, C. Mullis, R. Bailey, R. Dickson, T. Subramaniam, Katerina A. Christopoulos, K.A. Webb, J. Mbwambo, A. Phillips, M.A. Lampe, M. Muthui, R. Washington, T. Abdalla, J. Margolick, Matthew J. Mimiaga, Helen Rees, H.M.J.P. Vidanapathirana, R. Kamwi, Z. Yin, E.L. Frazier, M. Orkin, M. Beksinska, S.A. Strathdee, Andrea L. Wirtz, S. Elkamhawi, C. Soliman, T. Kerr, G. Pappas, Renee Heffron, S. Bachman, N. Forster, C. Mapanje, M. Goldstein, J. McMahon, P. Nair, J. Banda, M. Kall, R. Fichorova, Nelson K. Sewankambo, W. Zhu, D. Nicca, J.A. Moss, N. Habarta, E.J. Sanders, B. Riggan, P. Roberts, W. Heneine, D. Shabangu, J.L. Burgos, R. Ducharme, M. Toure, G.P. Garnett, R. Arafat, C. Ryan, E. Grapsa, P.M. Spittal, Kenneth Ngure, J. Waldura, M. Hosseinipour, N. Mensah, J. Ellard, T. Tang, R. Smith, J. Grund, R. Wood, Dean Murphy, M.-P. Sy, S. Gregson, R.A. Coutinho, D. Burns, Robert W. Coombs, N. Rafif, J.G. Hakim, S. Sahay, M.-L. Newell, M.L. Ngeruka, S.P. Fiorillo, C.-P. Pau, M. Decker, M. Getahun, E. Eduardo, L. Dumba, Joseph Makhema, T. Crea, J. Schillinger, Y. Jia, M. Sulkowski, Grace John-Stewart, F. Mbofana, Sam Phiri, N.B. Kiviat, B.P.X. Grady, V. Cambiano, T. Friel, David E Leslie, Y. Gebre, N. Muraguri, L. Valleroy, J. Skarbinski, P. Nadol, C. Kerr, T. Brewer, A. Ghani, M. Chen, L. Mills, S. Mital, C. Qiu, A.D. Paltiel, Janet J. Myers, C. van Gemert, R. Panchia, S. Agolory, A. Koler, P. Dietze, A. Jonas, N. Taruberekera, N. Philip, S.R. Nesheim, S. Tsui, J.P. Bitega, R. Abdool, C. Nekesa, J.G. Kahn, S. Townsell, S. Chan, A. Mujugira, V. Capo-Chichi, P. Rebeiro, Y. van Weert, J. Limba, K. Morrow, J. Birungi, E. Van Praag, L. Juárez-Figueroa, W. Miller, L.X. Deng, D. MacKellar, D. Kiima, V.D. Ojeda, P.L. Chu, S. Ohaga, J. Bradley, T. Sripaipan, C. Nguyen, R. Coutinho, E. Gardner, K.L. Vincent, A. Surendera Babu, A. Pharris, N. He, M. Maskew, S. Moses, A. Khan, H. Wang, M. Akello, Brandon O'Hara, J. Evans, D.E. Bennett, G.F. Webb, U. Abbas, C. Pretorius, M. Egger, R.S. Gupta, M. Mulenga, M. Odiit, C.E. Jones, M.F. Schim van der Loeff, I. Shaikh, A.D. Smith, D. Mark, G. Otieno, M. van Rooijen, T. Exner, A. Aghaizu, A. Vu, T. Ahmed, M. Wolverton, L. Seemann, Gustavo F. Doncel, A. Kharsany, C. Botao, J. Brown, J. Eaton, D. Krakower, J. Justman, Sheryl A. McCurdy, J. Otchere Darko, I. Denham, S. Fields, T. Taha, V. Jumbe, Z. Mwandi, K. Sey, T. Webster-León, M.A. Chiasson, W. Burman, E. Daniel, F. Deyounks, R. Willis, C. Kunzel, B. Greenberg, M. Lalota, B. George, R. Sitta, S. Abdool Karim, M. Kganakga, N. van der Knaap, S. Griffith, Z. Wu, C. del Rio, A. Briceno, R.P. Walensky, M.G. Anderson, Q. Vu Minh, R. Cabello, J.R.S. Malungo, H.J. Prudden, M. Mulatu, Y.Q. Chen, M.M. Baum, F. Mawazini, G. Phillips, B. Williams, F. van Aar, T. Noori, K. Curtis, L. Cluver, S. Huang, S. Safren, N. Westercamp, M. Pereyra, B. Nichols, L. Robertson, A. Oster, G. Kamanga, I. Butkyavichene, S. Ketende, W. Dothi, T. van de Laar, S. Bodika, L. Pang, S.J. de Vlas, B. Bearnot, M. Wallace, E. Duflo, F.M. Chimbwandira, L. Ramakrishnan, W. Kanjipite, A. Del Riego, S. Willis, S.L. Cherne, S. Merten, D. Hoover, A.K. Hesseling, E. Daniloff, K. Agot, L. Wang, Y. Ma, T. Heijman, Marie-Claude Boily, Susan Buchbinder, N. Luhmann, A.E. Phillips, D. Kamba, E. Op de Coul, L.M.R. Janini, M. Kolber, D. Reirden, G. Osorio, S.C. Kalichman, S. Combes, A. Auld, J. Rosenberger, H. Lin, A.S. de Vos, M. Paczkowski, E. Pouget, W. Davis, C. Mauck, M. Berry, S. Godbole, S. Mannheimer, N. Bock, C. Sexton, O. Whiteside, A. Bocour, S.K. Mohammed, J.G. Garcia-Lerma, T. Quinn, E. Losina, J.H.d.S. Pilotto, L. Werner, D. Newman, K. Russell, M. Chakela, S. Rowan, E. Wood, K.M. Mitchell, D. Novak, S. Rao, S. Roux, L. Ti, Edwin Were, J. Moss, G. Seage, A. Wongthanee, A. Muadinohamba, A. Crooks, X. Li, W. Motta, Noah Kiwanuka, M. McCauley, M.G. Rangel, G. Ravasi, B. Pick, T. West, R.N. Rimal, K. Bowa, J. Xu, P. Rhodes, J. Thorne, C. Avila, Michael S. Saag, E.A. Kelvin, A. Nqeketo, G.-M. Santos, H. El Rhilani, G.S. Gottlieb, N. Wang, S. Williams, I. Halldorsdottir, L.P. Jacobson, O. Mellouk, M. Sweat, L.R. Metsch, K. Sabin, S. Philip, S. Badal-Faesen, G. Sal y Rosas, D.H. Evans, R. Kumari, B. Tempalski, H.S. Okuku, I. Sanne, R.D. Moore, Y. Wang, A. Mbandi, S. Messinger, I. Balan, K. Kahuure, D. Kerrigan, J.J. van der Helm, D.L. Ellenberger, S.E. Kellerman, M. Sweeney, J. Opoku, H. Ginindza, D. Suryawanshi, N. Kikumbih, B.S. Parekh, J. Heffelfinger, C. Hart, B. Marshall, M. Jordan, O. Laeyendecker, O.N. Gill, S. Lee, G.R. Seage, C.-C. Udeagu, Travis Sanchez, J. White, J. Mwambi, J. Gilman, J. Talley, R. Baltussen, P. Galatowitsch, Kenneth H. Fife, T.R. Sterling, C. Mao, T. Frasca, A. Speksnijder, M. Nguyen Le, E. Dinenno, S. Kawichai, S. Hong, A. Gagner, L. Ouarsas, J. Goller, C. Watson, E. White, R. Monasch, N. Chotirosniramit, L. McNamara, D. van de Vijver, V. Hu, Sarah E. Rutstein, R. Glaubius, R.S. Paranjape, J. Peterson, P. Swain, Johnstone Kumwenda, Elizabeth A. Bukusi, F. Wabwire-Mangen, A. Buchanan, K.A. Freedberg, K. Shannon, J.C. Makoni, N. Rosenberg, J. Montaner, R. Koul, J. Zhang, E. Shihepo, J. Wang, H. Tran Vu, J.A. Smit, M. Sinunu, K. Chesang, G. Muzaaya, E.J. Schouten, V. Joseph, C. Karema, B.M. Ramesh, J.A.C. Hontelez, K. Torpey, G. Guillon, R. Taljaard, J. Elliott, R. Rao, D. Wilson, T.B. Hallett, Y.D. Mukadi, D.R. Holtgrave, K. Yotruean, M. Rasi, K.H. Mayer, M. Horberg, C. Chariyalertsak, C.-S. Leu, S. Billy, R. Lee, P. Suwannawong, Barrot H. Lambdin, R. Heimer, J. Tosswill, Marsha Rosengarten, A. Tripathi, M. Williams-Sherlock, C. Dolezal, M. Makhanya, A.T. Urbanus, C. Hendrix, C. Mwangi, P. Srikantiah, W. Jimbo, A. Puren, T. Smolskaia, M. Kamal, H. Li, G. Murphy, P. Masson, N. Benbow, E. Umar, A. Binagwaho, Papa Salif Sow, P. Lissouba, G. Olilo, P. Pathela, M. Mugavero, M. Cousins, S. Swindells, D. Callander, Z. Mabude, G. Cardenas, M.B. Klein, D. Sherard, C. Toohey, M. Holt, A. Pandey, D. Hedeker, Kimberly A. Powers, J. Astemborski, R. Gregg, M. Cribbin, Edith Nakku-Joloba, C. Furlow-Parmley, A. Abadie, Joseph J. Eron, D. Stéphanie, E. Kersh, P. Oyaro, P. Kohler, D.B. Hanna, H. Götz, H.I. Hall, S. Eshleman, K. Eritsyan, A. Carballo-Diéguez, G. Mujaranji, R. Needle, L. Lacroix, S. Singh, L. Wilton, J. Gallant, A. Howard, H.A. Pollack, J. Mermin, J. Schinkel, and S. Lovelace
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medicine.medical_specialty ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Gonorrhea ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Miami ,medicine.disease_cause ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cross matching ,0302 clinical medicine ,Infectious Diseases ,Family medicine ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business - Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. An application of the thresholds of change model to the analysis of mental health data
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H, Xie, G, McHugo, A, Sengupta, D, Hedeker, and R, Drake
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Community Mental Health Centers ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Middle Aged ,Models, Psychological ,Mental Health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Odds Ratio ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,New Hampshire ,Female ,Case Management ,Program Evaluation - Abstract
The threshold of change model (TCM) is a statistical technique for analyzing ordered stages of change variables. TCM focuses on the thresholds that separate the ordered stages, and the effects of explanatory variables are evaluated in terms of raising or lowering the thresholds. TCM also allows the explanatory variables to exert differential influence on each threshold. In this paper, we use TCM to analyze the data from a clinical trial that compared assertive community treatment (ACT) with standard case management (SCM) for patients with co-occurring severe mental illness and substance use disorder. Endpoint data (36-month follow up) were used for this analysis. The response variable is the recoded Substance Abuse Treatment Scale with three ordered levels (engagement/persuasion, active treatment, and recovery/relapse prevention), and hence two thresholds. The explanatory variables are gender and group (ACT vs. SCM). The results indicate that gender exerts constant and significant effects on both thresholds. The group effect is somewhat mixed: ACT lowers the first threshold (active treatment), but raises the second threshold (recovery/relapse prevention).
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- 2002
6. Modelling ordinal responses from co-twin control studies
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F B, Hu, J, Goldberg, D, Hedeker, and W G, Henderson
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Cohort Studies ,Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic ,Likelihood Functions ,Warfare ,Logistic Models ,Vietnam ,Odds Ratio ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Twin Studies as Topic ,United States ,Dreams ,Veterans - Abstract
The co-twin control design has been widely used in studying the effects of environmental factors on the development of diseases. For binary outcomes that arise from co-twin control studies, the conditional likelihood method is commonly used. This approach, however, does not readily extend to ordinal response data because the standard conditional likelihood does not exist for cumulative logit or proportional odds models. In this paper, we investigate the applicability of the random-effects and GEE approaches in analysing ordinal response data from co-twin control studies. Using both approaches, we re-analyse data from a co-twin control study of the impact of military services during the Vietnam era on post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSD). The ordinal models have considerably increased power in detecting the effects of exposure when compared to the analyses using a dichotomized response. We discuss the interpretation of the estimates from GEE and random-effect models in the context of the twin data.
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- 1998
7. Random effects probit and logistic regression models for three-level data
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R D, Gibbons and D, Hedeker
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Clinical Trials as Topic ,Random Allocation ,Models, Statistical ,Patient Education as Topic ,Health Behavior ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Regression Analysis ,Smoking Cessation ,Television ,Longitudinal Studies - Abstract
In analysis of binary data from clustered and longitudinal studies, random effect models have been recently developed to accommodate two-level problems such as subjects nested within clusters or repeated classifications within subjects. Unfortunately, these models cannot be applied to three-level problems that occur frequently in practice. For example, multicenter longitudinal clinical trials involve repeated assessments within individuals and individuals are nested within study centers. This combination of clustered and longitudinal data represents the classic three-level problem in biometry. Similarly, in prevention studies, various educational programs designed to minimize risk taking behavior (e.g., smoking prevention and cessation) may be compared where randomization to various design conditions is at the level of the school and the intervention is performed at the level of the classroom. Previous statistical approaches to the three-level problem for binary response data have either ignored one level of nesting, treated it as a fixed effect, or used first- and second-order Taylor series expansions of the logarithm of the conditional likelihood to linearize these models and estimate model parameters using more conventional procedures for measurement data. Recent studies indicate that these approximate solutions exhibit considerable bias and provide little advantage over use of traditional logistic regression analysis ignoring the hierarchical structure. In this paper, we generalize earlier results for two-level random effects probit and logistic regression models to the three-level case. Parameter estimation is based on full-information maximum marginal likelihood estimation (MMLE) using numerical quadrature to approximate the multiple random effects. The model is illustrated using data from 135 classrooms from 28 schools on the effects of two smoking cessation interventions.
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- 1998
8. Application of random-effects regression models in relapse research
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D, Hedeker and R J, Mermelstein
- Subjects
Alcoholism ,Social Facilitation ,Models, Statistical ,Treatment Outcome ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Recurrence ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Smoking Cessation ,Longitudinal Studies ,Personality Assessment - Abstract
This article describes and illustrates use of random-effects regression models (RRM) in relapse research. RRM are useful in longitudinal analysis of relapse data since they allow for the presence of missing data, time-varying or invariant covariates, and subjects measured at different timepoints. Thus, RRM can deal with "unbalanced" longitudinal relapse data, where a sample of subjects are not all measured at each and every timepoint. Also, recent work has extended RRM to handle dichotomous and ordinal outcomes, which are common in relapse research. Two examples are presented from a smoking cessation study to illustrate analysis using RRM. The first illustrates use of a random-effects ordinal logistic regression model, examining longitudinal changes in smoking status, treating status as an ordinal outcome. The second example focuses on changes in motivation scores prior to and following a first relapse to smoking. This latter example illustrates how RRM can be used to examine predictors and consequences of relapse, where relapse can occur at any study timepoint.
- Published
- 1996
9. The patterns and predictors of smokeless tobacco onset among urban public school teenagers
- Author
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F B, Hu, D, Hedeker, B R, Flay, S, Sussman, L E, Day, and O, Siddiqui
- Subjects
Male ,Tobacco, Smokeless ,Adolescent ,Urban Population ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Age Factors ,California ,Peer Group ,Habits ,Plants, Toxic ,Adolescent Behavior ,Risk Factors ,Odds Ratio ,Humans ,Female - Abstract
This study describes the patterns and predictors of smokeless tobacco (ST) use in a large sample of urban public school students in Los Angeles and San Diego. The use of ST is more common among men than women and among Caucasians than African Americans, Hispanics, and others. Approximately 20% of the male respondents and 5% of the female respondents reported use of ST at least once, and 10.1% of male students and 3.1% of female students who had never tried ST by seventh grade started to use it by eighth grade. Among Caucasians, about 30% of boys reported trying ST at least once and 13.7% of those who had never used ST by seventh grade initiated experimentation by eighth grade. These data are used to examine the family, peer, and intrapersonal predictors of ST onset. The family risk factors for ST onset include living with a single parent, parent-child conflicts, and parental alcohol use. The peer risk factors for ST use include peer drug use and activities with friends, such as parties and participation in sports. The intrapersonal risk factors include poor grades in school, risk taking, and stress. The study also shows that those who use cigarettes, alcohol, or marijuana are at higher risk of using ST and vice versa. This study supports a problem-prone behavior perspective of ST use and cigarette smoking. We suggest that both products be targeted because the same programs are likely to apply to both products to counteract problem-prone type variables. Medical Subject Headings (MeSH): tobacco, smokeless chewing tobacco, adolescent behavior.
- Published
- 1996
10. Initial severity and differential treatment outcome in the National Institute of Mental Health Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program
- Author
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I, Elkin, R D, Gibbons, M T, Shea, S M, Sotsky, J T, Watkins, P A, Pilkonis, and D, Hedeker
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Depressive Disorder ,Imipramine ,Treatment Outcome ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Personality Assessment ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Person-Centered Psychotherapy - Abstract
Random regression models (RRMs) were used to investigate the role of initial severity in the outcome of 4 treatments (cognitive-behavior therapy [CBT], interpersonal psychotherapy [IPT], imipramine plus clinical management [IMI-CM], and placebo plus clinical management [PLA-CM]) for outpatients with major depressive disorder seen in the National Institute of Mental Health Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program. Initial severity of depression and impairment of functioning significantly predicted differential treatment effects. A larger number of differences than previously reported were found among the active treatments for the more severely ill patients; this was due, in large part, to the greater power of the present statistical analyses.
- Published
- 1995
11. Role of previous claims and specialty on the effectiveness of risk-management education for office-based physicians
- Author
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P R, Frisch, S C, Charles, R D, Gibbons, and D, Hedeker
- Subjects
Insurance Claim Review ,Oregon ,Risk Management ,Legislation, Medical ,Models, Statistical ,Malpractice ,Humans ,Insurance, Liability ,health care economics and organizations ,Specialization ,Specialties, Surgical ,Research Article - Abstract
We analyzed the medical malpractice claims data of 1,903 physicians between 1981 and 1990 to assess the efficacy--a reduced incidence of future claims and decreased payout in the event of a claim--of risk-management education for office-based physicians. Physicians were participants in the Oregon Medical Association's medical liability program and represented all recognized specialties and all geographic areas of the state. Each physician's claim and payout history before and after 4 sequential risk-management education programs was entered into a random-effects probit model that allowed for a longitudinal rather than a cross-sectional analysis. For most physicians, there was increased claim vulnerability following 1 or 2 risk-management education courses but decreased vulnerability after additional courses. Among all physicians, having a previous claim substantially increased the risk for a future claim. Risk for an additional claim doubled (from 7% to 14%) for physicians who had a claim in the previous year. Of all specialists who have had claims, anesthesiologists (reduction in claims incidence from 18.8% to 9.1% and in payout from 14.6% to 5%) and obstetrician-gynecologists (reduction in claims incidence from 23.3% to 15.2% and in payout from 11.6% to 4.2%) benefit most from cumulative risk-management education.
- Published
- 1995
12. The television, school, and family smoking prevention and cessation project. VIII. Student outcomes and mediating variables
- Author
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B R, Flay, T Q, Miller, D, Hedeker, O, Siddiqui, C F, Britton, B R, Brannon, C A, Johnson, W B, Hansen, S, Sussman, and C, Dent
- Subjects
Male ,Schools ,Humans ,Family ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,Smoking Prevention ,Television ,Child ,Health Education - Abstract
This paper presents the student outcomes of a large-scale, social-influences-based, school and media-based tobacco use prevention and cessation project in Southern California.The study provided an experimental comparison of classroom delivery with television delivery and the combination of the two in a 2 x 2 plus 1 design. Schools were randomly assigned to conditions. Control groups included "treatment as usual" and an "attention control" with the same outcome expectancies as the treatment conditions. Students were surveyed twice in grade 7 and once in each of grades 8 and 9. The interventions occurred during grade 7.We observed significant effects on mediating variables such as knowledge and prevalence estimates, and coping effort. The knowledge and prevalence estimates effects decayed partially but remained significant up to a 2-year follow-up. The coping effort effect did not persist at follow-ups. There were significant main effects of both classroom training and TV programming on knowledge and prevalence estimates and significant interactions of classroom and TV programming on knowledge (negative), disapproval of parental smoking, and coping effort. There were no consistent program effects on refusal/self-efficacy, smoking intentions, or behavior.Previous reports demonstrated successful development and pilot testing of program components and measures and high acceptance of the program by students and parents. The lack of behavioral effects may have been the result of imperfect program implementation or low base rates of intentions and behavior.
- Published
- 1995
13. A random-effects ordinal regression model for multilevel analysis
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D, Hedeker and R D, Gibbons
- Subjects
Random Allocation ,Models, Statistical ,Adolescent ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Smoking Cessation ,Smoking Prevention ,Curriculum ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Health Education ,Mathematics ,Probability - Abstract
A random-effects ordinal regression model is proposed for analysis of clustered or longitudinal ordinal response data. This model is developed for both the probit and logistic response functions. The threshold concept is used, in which it is assumed that the observed ordered category is determined by the value of a latent unobservable continuous response that follows a linear regression model incorporating random effects. A maximum marginal likelihood (MML) solution is described using Gauss-Hermite quadrature to numerically integrate over the distribution of random effects. An analysis of a dataset where students are clustered or nested within classrooms is used to illustrate features of random-effects analysis of clustered ordinal data, while an analysis of a longitudinal dataset where psychiatric patients are repeatedly rated as to their severity is used to illustrate features of the random-effects approach for longitudinal ordinal data.
- Published
- 1994
14. Differential influence of parental smoking and friends' smoking on adolescent initiation and escalation of smoking
- Author
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B R, Flay, F B, Hu, O, Siddiqui, L E, Day, D, Hedeker, J, Petraitis, J, Richardson, and S, Sussman
- Subjects
Male ,Parents ,Likelihood Functions ,Adolescent ,Risk Factors ,Smoking ,Humans ,Female ,Models, Psychological ,California ,Peer Group - Abstract
Smoking-related behaviors and attitudes of significant others (especially friends and parents) are among the most consistent predictors of adolescent smoking. However, theorists remain divided on whether the behaviors of significant others influence adolescent smoking directly or indirectly, and the relative influence of parental and peer smoking on adolescents' own smoking is still a matter of debate. In addition, little research has examined the role of significant others' behavior on different stages of smoking onset. In particular, not much information is available regarding gender and ethnic differences in social influences on smoking behavior. We use structural equation modeling to address these issues. Different theoretical perspectives from cognitive-affective theories (Ajzen 1985; Ajzen and Fishbein 1980) and social learning theories (Akers et al. 1979; Bandura 1969, 1982, 1986) have been integrated into a structural model of smoking influence. The results show that friends' smoking affects adolescent initiation into smoking both directly and indirectly, whereas parental smoking influences smoking initiation only indirectly. The data also show that friends' and parents' smoking affect smoking escalation only indirectly. In general, friends' smoking has a stronger effect on adolescents' smoking behavior, particularly on initiation. Multiple group comparisons of the structural models predicting smoking initiation among males and females reveal that parental approval of smoking plays a significant mediating role for females, but not for males. Comparisons of Whites, Blacks, Hispanics, and other ethnic groups reveal that there are some significant differences in the pathways of friends' influences among the four groups.
- Published
- 1994
15. Random-effects regression models for clustered data with an example from smoking prevention research
- Author
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D, Hedeker, R D, Gibbons, and B R, Flay
- Subjects
Schools ,Computers ,Humans ,Smoking Prevention ,Health Promotion ,Models, Theoretical ,Students ,Attitude to Health - Abstract
A random-effects regression model is proposed for analysis of clustered data. Unlike ordinary regression analysis of clustered data, random-effects regression models do not assume that each observation is independent but do assume that data within clusters are dependent to some degree. The degree of this dependency is estimated along with estimates of the usual model parameters, thus adjusting these effects for the dependency resulting from the clustering of the data. A maximum marginal likelihood solution is described, and available statistical software for the model is discussed. An analysis of a dataset in which students are clustered within classrooms and schools is used to illustrate features of random-effects regression analysis, relative to both individual-level analysis that ignores the clustering of the data, and classroom-level analysis that aggregates the individual data.
- Published
- 1994
16. Application of random-effects probit regression models
- Author
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R D, Gibbons and D, Hedeker
- Subjects
Models, Statistical ,Psychometrics ,Mental Disorders ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
A random-effects probit model is developed for the case in which the outcome of interest is a series of correlated binary responses. These responses can be obtained as the product of a longitudinal response process where an individual is repeatedly classified on a binary outcome variable (e.g., sick or well on occasion t), or in "multilevel" or "clustered" problems in which individuals within groups (e.g., firms, classes, families, or clinics) are considered to share characteristics that produce similar responses. Both examples produce potentially correlated binary responses and modeling these person- or cluster-specific effects is required. The general model permits analysis at both the level of the individual and cluster and at the level at which experimental manipulations are applied (e.g., treatment group). The model provides maximum likelihood estimates for time-varying and time-invariant covariates in the longitudinal case and covariates which vary at the level of the individual and at the cluster level for multilevel problems. A similar number of individuals within clusters or number of measurement occasions within individuals is not required. Empirical Bayesian estimates of person-specific trends or cluster-specific effects are provided. Models are illustrated with data from mental health research.
- Published
- 1994
17. Effects of social support and relapse prevention training as adjuncts to a televised smoking-cessation intervention
- Author
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C L, Gruder, R J, Mermelstein, S, Kirkendol, D, Hedeker, S C, Wong, J, Schreckengost, R B, Warnecke, R, Burzette, and T Q, Miller
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,Recurrence ,Humans ,Social Support ,Female ,Smoking Cessation ,Television ,Health Education ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Smokers registering for a televised cessation program who also expressed interest in joining a support group and who had a nonsmoking buddy were randomly assigned to 3 conditions: no-contact control, discussion, and social support. All Ss received a self-help manual and were encouraged to watch the daily TV program. Ss in the discussion and social support conditions were scheduled to attend 3 group meetings (one with a buddy). Social support Ss and buddies received training in support and relapse prevention. A 4th analysis group was composed of Ss who failed to attend any of the scheduled meetings (no shows). There were strong group effects at the end of treatment. Abstinence rates were highest in the social support group, followed, in order, by the discussion group, no shows, and no-contact controls. The social support group improved outcome by increasing both the level of support and program material use (reading the manual and watching TV).
- Published
- 1993
18. Predicting risk for medical malpractice claims using quality-of-care characteristics
- Author
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S C, Charles, R D, Gibbons, P R, Frisch, C E, Pyskoty, D, Hedeker, and N K, Singha
- Subjects
Male ,Risk ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Malpractice ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,Clinical Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Quality of Health Care ,Research Article - Abstract
The current fault-based tort system assumes that claims made against physicians are inversely related to the quality of care they provide. In this study we identified physician characteristics associated with elements of medical care that make physicians vulnerable to malpractice claims. A sample of physicians (n = 248) thought to be at high or low risk for claims was surveyed on various personal and professional characteristics. Statistical analysis showed that 9 characteristics predicted risk group. High risk was associated with increased age, surgical specialty, emergency department coverage, increased days away from practice, and the feeling that the litigation climate was "unfair." Low risk was associated with scheduling enough time to talk with patients, answering patients' telephone calls directly, feeling "satisfied" with practice arrangements, and acknowledging greater emotional distress. Prediction was more accurate for physicians in practice 15 years or less. We conclude that a relationship exists between a history of malpractice claims and selected physician characteristics.
- Published
- 1992
19. Random regression models for multicenter clinical trials data
- Author
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D, Hedeker, R D, Gibbons, and J M, Davis
- Subjects
Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Regression Analysis ,Models, Theoretical - Abstract
A random-effects regression model is proposed for the analysis of data arising from multicenter clinical trials. Advantages of the random regression model (RRM) in this context include that it allows for varying numbers of subjects within the different centers, it can assess the influence of variables measured both at the level of the subject and at the level of the center on the subject's clinical outcome, and it controls for and estimates the amount of intracenter variation that is present in the data. An example utilizing data collected in the National Institute of Mental Health schizophrenia collaborative study, where subjects were clustered within nine centers, illustrates the usefulness of the statistical model. Other applications and extensions of RRM within a psychiatric framework are discussed.
- Published
- 1991
20. Heightened vasopressin secretion following psychotic exacerbations in polydipsic schizophrenic patients with hyponatremia
- Author
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G.L. Robertson, G.N. Pandey, D. Hedeker, MorrisB. Goldman, and DanielJ. Luchins
- Subjects
Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Vasopressin secretion ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Hyponatremia ,medicine.disease ,business ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 1995
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21. Response of psychotic and nonpsychotic depressed patients to tricyclic antidepressants
- Author
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C H, Chan, P G, Janicak, J M, Davis, E, Altman, S, Andriukaitis, and D, Hedeker
- Subjects
Male ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Depressive Disorder ,Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care ,Humans ,Female ,Antidepressive Agents, Tricyclic - Abstract
The response to tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) is studied in 75 of 121 depressed patients classified as psychotic or nonpsychotic subtypes by Research Diagnostic Criteria. Response was assessed by a clinical global evaluation scale. Of the 75 patients treated with TCAs, 40 (68%) of the nonpsychotic subtype responded in contrast to only 4 (25%) of the psychotic subtype. Adjusting for the effects of chronicity, sex, age, incapacity, agitation, retardation, endogenicity, and the unipolar-bipolar distinction as covariates, it was found that these variables failed to alter the differential response rate of the psychotic and nonpsychotic depressed groups. A literature review of 1054 patients revealed that 67% of the nonpsychotic depressed patients responded to TCAs compared with only 35% of the psychotic depressed patients.
- Published
- 1987
22. Random regression models: a comprehensive approach to the analysis of longitudinal psychiatric data
- Author
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R D, Gibbons, D, Hedeker, C, Waternaux, and J M, Davis
- Subjects
Mental Disorders ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Longitudinal Studies ,Models, Psychological - Published
- 1988
23. Investigating drug plasma levels and clinical response using random regression models
- Author
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D, Hedeker, R D, Gibbons, C, Waternaux, and J M, Davis
- Subjects
Psychotropic Drugs ,Mental Disorders ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Models, Biological - Abstract
The reanalysis of the Riesby dataset using a random regression model indicates a significant effect of DMI plasma measurements on HAM-D scores across the four timepoints of the study. This effect is especially strong when the HAM-D change from baseline score is used in place of the actual HAM-D score at the four timepoints. A significant effect of IMI was not found for either the actual HAM-D score or the HAM-D change from baseline score. An endogenous effect was marginally significant when the actual HAM-D score was used; however, this effect was not observed when the HAM-D change score was used as the dependent measure. There also was evidence of a marginally significant effect due to autocorrelation of the residuals, indicating that the residuals at a given timepoint were related to the residuals from previous timepoints according to a first-order autoregressive process. In contrast, when the repeated measures MANOVA was used to analyze these data, a significant effect of DMI was not observed, since subjects without complete data at all timepoints had to be dropped from the analysis. In longitudinal psychiatric studies where missing data are the rule (rather than the exception), the random regression approach provides an attractive alternative to the traditional methods of analyzing longitudinal data.
- Published
- 1989
24. The moderating effect of access to food facilities and recreational activity space on mHealth multiple health behavior change intervention.
- Author
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Battalio SL, Barrett BW, Arnaoudova II, Press DJ, Hedeker D, Pfammatter AF, Kershaw KN, and Spring B
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Chicago, Restaurants, Telemedicine, Sedentary Behavior, Recreation psychology, Built Environment, Fruit, Vegetables, Health Promotion methods, Fast Foods, Health Behavior, Residence Characteristics, Exercise psychology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate whether the neighborhood social and built environment moderates response to a mobile health multiple health behavior change intervention targeting fruit/vegetable intake, sedentary behavior, and physical activity., Methods: Participants were 156 Chicago-residing adults with unhealthy lifestyle behaviors. Using linear mixed models, we evaluated whether access to food facilities (fast food restaurants and grocery stores) and recreational activity spaces (gyms and parks) moderated the difference in behavior change between the active intervention condition relative to control. Using spatial data analysis (cross K functions), we also assessed whether participants who achieved goal levels of behaviors ("responders") were more or less likely than those who did not achieve intervention goals ("non-responders") to reside near fast food restaurants, grocery stores, gyms, or parks., Results: According to linear mixed models, none of the neighborhood social and built environment factors moderated the difference in behavior change between the active intervention condition and the control condition (Likelihood Ratio (χ²[1] = 0.02-2.33, P-values > 0.05). Cross K functions showed that diet behavior change responders were more likely than non-responders to reside near fast food restaurants, but not grocery stores. The results for activity behavior change were more variable. Sedentary screen time responders were more likely to reside around recreational activity spaces than non-responders. Moderate-vigorous physical activity responders had greater and lesser clustering than non-responders around parks, dependent upon distance from the park to participant residence., Conclusions: A complex relationship was observed between residential proximity to Chicago facilities and response to multiple health behavior change intervention. Replication across diverse geographic settings and samples is necessary., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A machine-learned model for predicting weight loss success using weight change features early in treatment.
- Author
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Shahabi F, Battalio SL, Pfammatter AF, Hedeker D, Spring B, and Alshurafa N
- Abstract
Stepped-care obesity treatments aim to improve efficiency by early identification of non-responders and adjusting interventions but lack validated models. We trained a random forest classifier to improve the predictive utility of a clinical decision rule (>0.5 lb weight loss/week) that identifies non-responders in the first 2 weeks of a stepped-care weight loss trial (SMART). From 2009 to 2021, 1058 individuals with obesity participated in three studies: SMART, Opt-IN, and ENGAGED. The model was trained on 80% of the SMART data (224 participants), and its in-distribution generalizability was tested on the remaining 20% (remaining 57 participants). The out-of-distribution generalizability was tested on the ENGAGED and Opt-IN studies (472 participants). The model predicted weight loss at month 6 with an 84.5% AUROC and an 86.3% AUPRC. SHAP identified predictive features: weight loss at week 2, ranges/means and ranges of weight loss, slope, and age. The SMART-trained model showed generalizable performance with no substantial difference across studies., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
26. "Smoker" and "Vaper" identity in people who use both cigarettes and E-cigarettes: Changes over time and associations with smoking behaviors.
- Author
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Denson RK, Rest EC, Diviak K, Hedeker D, and Mermelstein RJ
- Abstract
Background: Individuals who use both cigarettes and e-cigarettes may have multiple nicotine product use self-identities, each of which may be associated with patterns of use, including cessation., Objectives: This study examined changes in "smoker" and "vaper" identities and product use behaviors over one year among adults who used both cigarettes and e-cigarettes. We hypothesized that stronger baseline vaping identities would be associated with higher odds of smoking cessation, and stronger baseline smoking identities would be associated with continued cigarette use., Methods: Participants ( N = 364), who were recruited for an observational study of cigarette and e-cigarette use, completed measures of "smoker" and "vaper" identity, nicotine dependence, and product use at baseline and 12 months. We examined associations between smoking and vaping identities and tobacco product use. Logistic regression evaluated the effects of age, gender, and baseline smoking and vaping identities on continued smoking or abstinence at 12 months., Results: Smoking and vaping identities were independent at baseline ( p = .51) but associated at 12 months ( p = .0001). At 12 months, "ex-smokers" had higher e-cigarette use than "smokers" and "social/occasional smokers" ( p <.0001). Those who identified as "vapers" at baseline had lower odds of smoking at 12 months (OR = 2.27, "non-/ex-vaper" vs "vaper"; OR = 2.05, "social/occasional vaper" vs "vaper")., Smoking and vaping identities are associated with changes in tobacco product use over time.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
27. Moving Beyond Mean Levels: Associations Between Subject-Level Variability in Psychological Determinants and Physical Activity in Older Adults.
- Author
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Maher JP, Labban JD, Hudgins BL, Hevel DJ, Bittel KM, Kennedy-Malone L, and Hedeker D
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Intention, Aged, 80 and over, Health Behavior, Exercise psychology, Self Efficacy, Accelerometry, Ecological Momentary Assessment
- Abstract
Background: Research investigating the psychological determinants of physical activity (PA) tends to conceptualize determinants as stable, trait-like factors. Growing evidence suggests that people and the processes that regulate people's behavior fluctuate over short timescales (eg, hours and days). This study explores the extent to which subject-level variability (vs stability) in determinants of PA, as well as the interaction between subject-level mean and variability in those determinants, is associated with moderate- to vigorous-intensity PA (MVPA) in older adults., Methods: Older adults (N = 202) enrolled in a measurement burst design study with 3 data collection waves occurring over a 1-year period. Each data collection wave consisted of accelerometers and ecological momentary assessment to capture MVPA and psychological determinants of MVPA, respectively. Mixed-effects location scale modeling was first used to estimate subject-level means and variability in psychological determinants. These estimates were then used as predictors of daily MVPA using multilevel modeling., Results: Subject-level variability in PA intentions (β = 0.199, SE = 0.062, P = .001), self-efficacy (β = 0.133, SE = 0.064, P = .037), and planning (β = 0.154, SE = 0.062, P = .014) were positively associated with daily MVPA. Associations between subject-level variability in PA intentions and self-efficacy decreased in strength, becoming nonsignificant at higher mean levels of PA intentions (β = -0.147, SE = 0.062, P = .018) and self-efficacy (β = -0.116, SE = 0.063, P = .062)., Conclusions: Greater subject-level variability in psychological determinants may be adaptive for PA engagement, especially among older adults experiencing low levels of those determinants. Moving beyond mean levels to include subject-level variability in psychological determinants of PA may help to improve our understanding of the processes that drive PA engagement.
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
28. Pleasure and Satisfaction as Predictors of Future Cigarette and E-cigarette Use: A Novel Two-Stage Modeling Approach.
- Author
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Hedeker D, Brooks J, Diviak K, Jao N, and Mermelstein RJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Tobacco Products, Cigarette Smoking psychology, Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems statistics & numerical data, Personal Satisfaction, Pleasure, Vaping psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Subjective experience of e-cigarettes may be an important factor in helping people who use combustible cigarettes switch completely to e-cigarettes to reduce harm from smoking. This paper describes a novel two-stage analysis using pleasure and satisfaction responses from ecological momentary assessments (EMA) of both cigarette and e-cigarette use to predict future cigarette and e-cigarette tobacco use., Aims and Methods: This observational study included adult users of cigarettes and e-cigarettes who provided 7 days of EMA, capturing cigarette and e-cigarette use, followed by biweekly reports of cigarette and e-cigarette use over 1 year. Participants were 279 adults who provided both cigarette and e-cigarette responses during the EMA. We employed a two-stage analytic approach in which EMA data were used to predict subsequent levels of cigarette and e-cigarette use. In the first stage, EMA responses to cigarette and e-cigarette events were modeled via a mixed-effects location scale model to yield summaries of participants' means and variability on event-related ratings of pleasure and satisfaction. These EMA summaries served as predictors in the second stage analysis of the biweekly post-EMA longitudinal cigarette and e-cigarette use data., Results: EMA pleasure and satisfaction ratings were similar for both products and predicted both longitudinal cigarette and e-cigarette use, even after controlling for baseline cigarette and e-cigarette dependence. Relatively higher levels of satisfaction with e-cigarettes were associated with greater decreases in cigarette use over time., Conclusions: Pleasure and satisfaction are important predictors of subsequent cigarette and e-cigarette use., Implications: Experienced subjective pleasure and satisfaction from e-cigarettes relative to cigarettes may be an important factor in helping individuals who smoke to switch completely to e-cigarettes as a harm reduction approach. In order to help sustain complete product switching and reduce dual use or relapse to smoking, e-cigarettes may need to deliver more satisfaction to the user compared to that experienced from cigarettes., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
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29. The Relative Reinforcing Value of Menthol Among Young Adult Cigarette Smokers: Results From a Behavioral Choice Task.
- Author
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Cohn AM, Elmasry H, Ashare R, Pickworth W, Murphy JG, Villanti AC, Hedeker D, Dunn D, Wyatt R, Niznik T, Margaritis WD, Smith MA, Ehlke SJ, and Audrain-McGovern J
- Abstract
Introduction: Menthol cigarettes are associated with experimentation and progression to regular use. Although reinforcement processes likely underlie menthol's appeal, the reinforcing value of menthol cigarettes remains unknown., Aims and Methods: This study examined the relative reinforcing value (RRV) of menthol versus nonmenthol cigarettes in young adult menthol (n = 54) and nonmenthol (n = 53) smokers, and differences in menthol's RRV by race, ethnicity, and sexual orientation. Overnight abstinent participants completed a choice task assessing willingness to "work" to click targets on a computer screen to earn menthol or nonmenthol cigarette puffs. A progressive ratio schedule was used where the menthol target had to be clicked progressively more times, over 10 trials, to earn a menthol cigarette puff, while clicks for the nonmenthol target were fixed across trials. RRV for menthol was defined by the breakpoint, or the highest trial (out of to 10) completed for a menthol cigarette puff. Number of clicks for menthol and nonmenthol puffs were also examined., Results: Menthol smokers worked harder for menthol versus nonmenthol cigarette puffs (breakpoint = 9.17; ~1236 clicks vs. 24 clicks). Breakpoint was higher among Hispanic (6.49) versus NH White (4.83) and NH non-White smokers (4.43). In exploratory analyses of interactions of menthol preference with race and ethnicity, nonmenthol Hispanic smokers worked harder for menthol cigarette puffs versus NH non-White and NH White nonmenthol smokers., Conclusions: Menthol cigarettes are highly reinforcing for young adult menthol and Hispanic smokers. A menthol ban may reduce addiction risk among younger individuals and some minoritized groups of smokers., Implications: This study provides evidence of the greater relative reinforcing value of menthol compared to nonmenthol cigarettes among young adults who had a cigarette flavor preference, suggesting increased addiction risk of menthol cigarettes. Young adult menthol smokers and Hispanic (vs. non-Hispanic) smokers worked harder to earn menthol (vs. nonmenthol) cigarette puffs. Findings add to the evidence base supporting the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) intent to ban menthol in cigarettes. Further, prevention messaging campaigns and cessation programs should take into account the reinforcing value of menthol in cigarettes, especially in vulnerable and at-risk populations., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Secular Trends in Gross Motor Coordination: A Study of Peruvian Children Living at High Altitude.
- Author
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Bustamante A, Maia J, Santos C, Garbeloto F, Vasconcelos O, Tani G, Hedeker D, Katzmarzyk PT, and Pereira S
- Abstract
Purpose: To (1) describe secular trends in gross motor coordination (GMC) scores by sex and age; (2) investigate GMC trends adjusted for concomitant secular trends in height, weight, and overall physical fitness; and (3) examine trends in children's frequencies within different GMC categories., Method: The sample comprises 1562 Peruvian children (690 in 2009 and 872 in 2019), aged 6-11 years, from Junín (a high-altitude region). GMC was assessed with the KörperkoordinationsTest für Kinder. Physical fitness was assessed with handgrip strength, standing long jump, and shuttle-run test. Height and weight were measured with standardized protocols. Analysis of variance, covariance, and logistic regression were used., Results: A negative secular trend in GMC (based on raw scores) for boys and girls aged 6-8 years was observed. However, a positive trend was observed at 11 years of age but only in boys. Finally, there were no significant changes in the likelihood of children having below-normal GMC from 2009 to 2019., Conclusions: Secular trends in GMC were negative in Peruvian children, especially at 6-8 years of age. Further, body size and physical fitness trends did not affect the negative secular trend. A high prevalence of children had below-normal GMC in both 2009 and 2019.
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- 2024
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31. Developing a Framework to Evaluate the Validity of Longitudinal Accelerometer-Based Indicators of Physical Activity Maintenance.
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Dunton GF, Wang WL, Li J, Hedeker D, Intille SS, and Rothman AJ
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- Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Longitudinal Studies, Accelerometry, Exercise
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- 2024
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32. An Adaptive Behavioral Intervention for Weight Loss Management: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Spring B, Pfammatter AF, Scanlan L, Daly E, Reading J, Battalio S, McFadden HG, Hedeker D, Siddique J, and Nahum-Shani I
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Body Mass Index, Exercise, Mobile Applications, Telemedicine, Telephone, Wireless Technology, Black or African American, White, Behavior Therapy methods, Fitness Trackers, Mentoring, Obesity therapy, Weight Loss, Weight Reduction Programs methods
- Abstract
Importance: Lifestyle interventions for weight loss are difficult to implement in clinical practice. Self-managed mobile health implementations without or with added support after unsuccessful weight loss attempts could offer effective population-level obesity management., Objective: To test whether a wireless feedback system (WFS) yields noninferior weight loss vs WFS plus telephone coaching and whether participants who do not respond to initial treatment achieve greater weight loss with more vs less vigorous step-up interventions., Design, Setting, and Participants: In this noninferiority randomized trial, 400 adults aged 18 to 60 years with a body mass index of 27 to 45 were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to undergo 3 months of treatment initially with WFS or WFS plus coaching at a US academic medical center between June 2017 and March 2021. Participants attaining suboptimal weight loss were rerandomized to undergo modest or vigorous step-up intervention., Interventions: The WFS included a Wi-Fi activity tracker and scale transmitting data to a smartphone app to provide daily feedback on progress in lifestyle change and weight loss, and WFS plus coaching added 12 weekly 10- to 15-minute supportive coaching calls delivered by bachelor's degree-level health promotionists viewing participants' self-monitoring data on a dashboard; step-up interventions included supportive messaging via mobile device screen notifications (app-based screen alerts) without or with coaching or powdered meal replacement. Participants and staff were unblinded and outcome assessors were blinded to treatment randomization., Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was the between-group difference in 6-month weight change, with the noninferiority margin defined as a difference in weight change of -2.5 kg; secondary outcomes included between-group differences for all participants in weight change at 3 and 12 months and between-group 6-month weight change difference among nonresponders exposed to modest vs vigorous step-up interventions., Results: Among 400 participants (mean [SD] age, 40.5 [11.2] years; 305 [76.3%] women; 81 participants were Black and 266 were White; mean [SD] body mass index, 34.4 [4.3]) randomized to undergo WFS (n = 199) vs WFS plus coaching (n = 201), outcome data were available for 342 participants (85.5%) at 6 months. Six-month weight loss was -2.8 kg (95% CI, -3.5 to -2.0) for the WFS group and -4.8 kg (95% CI, -5.5 to -4.1) for participants in the WFS plus coaching group (difference in weight change, -2.0 kg [90% CI, -2.9 to -1.1]; P < .001); the 90% CI included the noninferiority margin of -2.5 kg. Weight change differences were comparable at 3 and 12 months and, among nonresponders, at 6 months, with no difference by step-up therapy., Conclusions and Relevance: A wireless feedback system (Wi-Fi activity tracker and scale with smartphone app to provide daily feedback) was not noninferior to the same system with added coaching. Continued efforts are needed to identify strategies for weight loss management and to accurately select interventions for different individuals to achieve weight loss goals., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02997943.
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- 2024
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33. Is there an association between proficiency in fundamental movement skills and mderate-to-vigorous physical activity in childhood on weekdays and weekends? The REACT project.
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Garbeloto F, Maia J, Barreira TV, Hedeker D, Chaput JP, Garganta R, Farias C, Santos R, Stodden DF, Tani G, Katzmarzyk PT, and Pereira S
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Exercise, Accelerometry, Motor Skills physiology
- Abstract
Objective: The present study probes into the association between children's fundamental movement skills (FMS) and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) during weekdays and weekends., Methods: This cross-sectional sample included 1014 children aged 6-10 years from the REACT project. Physical activity was assessed with accelerometry, and five FMS (stationary dribble, kick, catch, overhand throw, and underhand roll) were assessed with the digital platform Meu Educativo®. Three groups were formed based on the frequency of FMS that each child mastered: group 1 (wizard level in four or five FMS); group 2 (wizard level in two or three FMS); and group 3 (wizard level in at most one skill). Multilevel models were used to analyze the data treating children (level-1) nested within schools (level-2)., Results: Compared to group 1, groups 2 (-12.9 ± 2.3 min day
-1 ) and 3 (-23.9 ± 2.4 min day-1 ) were less physically active during weekdays and weekends (group 2: -14.7 ± 2.7 min day-1 and group 3: -22.4 ± 2.9 min day-1 ), independent of age and sex. There was a decline in MVPA during the weekend. Further, on average, boys were more active than girls, and with increasing age, children were less active., Conclusion: On average, children with higher FMS levels are generally more physically active than their peers with lower FMS levels. Even though MVPA tends to decline on weekends, FMS proficiency is a significant factor in maintaining 60 min of MVPA on weekends., (© 2024 The Authors. American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)- Published
- 2024
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34. Individual and school correlates of body mass index and cardiorespiratory fitness in primary school children from the REACT project: A multivariate multilevel analysis.
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Pereira S, Katzmarzyk PT, Garbeloto F, Chaput JP, Hedeker D, Barreira TV, Borges R, Garganta R, Santos C, Farias C, Stodden DF, Tani G, and Maia J
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Portugal, Multilevel Analysis, Multivariate Analysis, Exercise, Cardiorespiratory Fitness physiology, Body Mass Index, Schools statistics & numerical data
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Objective: This paper examines the relationship between body mass index (BMI) and cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) using a multivariate multilevel approach and investigates the links between individual and school-related correlates with children's BMI and CRF., Methods: This cross-sectional sample included 1014 children (6-10 years) from 25 Portuguese primary schools. BMI was calculated, and CRF was assessed with the PACER test. Fundamental movement skills (FMS) included five object control tasks. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), sleep, and sedentary time were assessed with the ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometer. Socioeconomic status (SES) and school variables were also obtained. A multivariate multilevel model was used, and alpha was set at 5%., Results: BMI and CRF systematically increased with age. Most of the joint variance (94.4%) was explained at the child level, and BMI and CRF were correlated at this level (ρ = -.37). More active children demonstrated higher CRF levels and had lower BMI levels; sedentary and sleep time were not significantly associated with BMI or CRF. FMS were positively associated with CRF but were not significantly associated with BMI. Children at higher SES were more fit and had lower BMI than their peers of lower SES. Finally, school-level variables were not significantly related to BMI and CRF., Conclusion: BMI and CRF had a low but statistically significant negative correlation in this sample of children. Most of the variation in BMI and CRF was explained by child-level characteristics., (© 2024 The Authors. American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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35. Validity and reliability of Meu Educativo®: A new tool to assess fundamental movement skills in school-aged children.
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Garbeloto F, Pereira S, Tani G, Chaput JP, Stodden DF, Garganta R, Hedeker D, Katzmarzyk PT, and Maia J
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- Humans, Child, Reproducibility of Results, Female, Male, Movement, Motor Skills physiology
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Objectives: There is evidence showing that children's proficiency in fundamental movement skills (FMS) is positively related to weight status, physical activity, fitness levels, cognitive development, as well as academic performance. Yet, the feasibility of FMS assessment is challenging, especially with relatively large samples of children. This article presents a new tool named Meu Educativo® to assess children's FMS levels, including its validity and reliability., Methods: We relied on the validity evidence approach based on test content to develop the FMS assessment checklist and the rating system with a team of experts. In this article, we used five FMS (stationary dribbling, kick, overhand throw, catch the ball, and underhand roll). Further, we conducted a series of reliability studies and used percent agreement and Cohen's kappa (κ) as statistics., Results: Experts agreed highly on the checklist's components in the five FMS. Inter-rater reliability ranged from 0.63 for stationary dribbling to 0.93 for overhand throw, and the intra-rater reliability ranged from 0.46 to 0.94., Conclusion: Based on the first results, Meu Educativo® was not only easy to use, but was also a reliable tool for FMS assessments. Notwithstanding the need for future studies, Meu Educativo® is a new tool that can be used by teachers, coaches, and motor development specialists dealing with school-aged children and researchers working with large samples., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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36. Statistical analysis of the longitudinal fundamental movement skills data in the REACT project using the multilevel ordinal logistic model.
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Hedeker D, Pereira S, Garbeloto F, Barreira TV, Garganta R, Farias C, Tani G, Chaput JP, Stodden DF, Maia J, and Katzmarzyk PT
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- Humans, Child, Longitudinal Studies, Logistic Models, Adolescent, Female, Male, Multilevel Analysis, Child, Preschool, SARS-CoV-2, Motor Skills physiology, Child Development, COVID-19 epidemiology
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Objectives: The REACT project was designed around two main aims: (1) to assess children's growth and motor development after the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) to follow their fundamental movement skills' developmental trajectories over 18 months using a novel technological device (Meu Educativo®) in their physical education classes. In this article, our goal is to describe statistical analysis of the longitudinal ordinal motor development data that was obtained from these children using the multilevel ordinal logistic model., Methods: Longitudinal ordinal data are often collected in studies on motor development. For example, children or adolescents might be rated as having poor, good, or excellent performance levels in fundamental movement skills, and such ratings may be obtained yearly over time to assess changes in fundamental movement skills levels of performance. However, such longitudinal ordinal data are often analyzed using either methods for continuous outcomes, or by dichotomizing the ordinal outcome and using methods for binary data. These approaches are not optimal, and so we describe in detail the use of the multilevel ordinal logistic model for analysis of such data from the REACT project. Our intent is to provide an accessible description and application of this model for analysis of ordinal motor development data., Discussion: Our analyses show both the between-subjects and within-subjects effects of age on motor development outcomes across three timepoints. The between-subjects effect of age indicate that children that are older have higher motor development ratings, relative to thoese that are younger, whereas the within-subject effect of age indicates higher motor development ratings as a child ages. It is the latter effect that is particularly of interest in longitudinal studies of motor development, and an important advantage of using the multilevel ordinal logistic model relative to more traditional methods., (© 2023 The Authors. American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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37. A multivariate multilevel approach to unravel the associations between individual and school factors on children's motor performance in the REACT project.
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Maia J, Santos C, Pereira S, Hedeker D, Barreira TV, Garganta R, Farias C, Garbeloto F, Tani G, Cruz H, Chaput JP, Stodden DF, and Katzmarzyk PT
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Portugal, Motor Skills physiology, Multivariate Analysis, Exercise, Multilevel Analysis, Schools statistics & numerical data, Physical Fitness
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Objective: The aim was to (1) estimate the relationship between physical fitness (PF) and object control fundamental movement skills (FMS), (2) identify child characteristics that relate with PF and FMS, and (3) examine associations between the school environment, PF, and FMS., Methods: The sample included 1014 Portuguese children aged 6-10 years from the REACT project. PF was assessed via running speed, shuttle run, standing long jump, handgrip, and the PACER test. Object control FMS were assessed with stationary dribble, kick, catch, overhand throw, and underhand roll. Test performances were transformed into z-scores, and their sum was expressed as overall PF and FMS. Child-level variables included body mass index (BMI) z-scores, accelerometer-measured sedentary time and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, and socioeconomic status (SES). School size, physical education classes, practice areas, and equipment were also assessed., Results: Approximately, 90% of the variance in object control PF and FMS was at the child level, and 10% at the school level. The correlation between PF and object control FMS was .62, which declined to .43 with the inclusion of covariates. Older, more active, and higher SES children had higher object control PF and FMS, and boys outperformed girls. BMI was negatively associated with PF but not with object control FMS. Sedentary time and number of physical education classes were not significant predictors. Most school predictors did not jointly associate with PF and object control FMS., Conclusion: PF and object control FMS z-scores were moderately related. Not all child characteristics were associated with both PF and object control FMS, and their effect sizes were different. School characteristics only explained 10% of the total variation in PF and object control FMS., (© 2024 The Authors. American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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38. Sleep and fundamental movement skills in primary schoolchildren: The REACT project.
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Chaput JP, Pereira S, Katzmarzyk PT, Hedeker D, Barreira TV, Garganta R, Farias C, Garbeloto F, Tani G, Stodden DF, and Maia J
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Portugal, Exercise, Sleep physiology, Motor Skills physiology
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Objective: Whether sleep is related to fundamental movement skills (FMS) in the pediatric population is largely unknown. The objective of this study was to examine the association between sleep characteristics (duration, efficiency, regularity) and FMS proficiency levels in school-aged children., Methods: This cross-sectional study included 996 children (mean age: 8.3 ± 1.2 years) from 25 of the 32 primary schools in Matosinhos, northern Portugal. Data collection occurred between January and June 2022. Sleep was assessed using an ActiGraph wGT3X-BT accelerometer worn on the wrist for 7 consecutive days. FMS proficiency levels were assessed in the schools with a new digital platform (Meu Educativo®) that evaluated five object control skills (dribble, kick, catch, throw, and underhand roll), with a total score ranging between 5 and 15. Multilevel ordinal logistic regression was used to test the associations between sleep characteristics and FMS proficiency levels. Covariates included age, sex, body mass index z-score, socioeconomic status, and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity., Results: The results showed that sleep characteristics (duration, efficiency, and regularity) were not related to FMS proficiency. Being a boy, older age, and higher moderate-to-vigorous physical activity levels were all significantly associated with better FMS proficiency levels. There were no significant sex-by-age interactions., Conclusion: Sleep was not found to be related to FMS performance in children. This finding suggests that sleep is not a good correlate of FMS proficiency levels in school-aged children, and attention should be dedicated to other more important factors such as skill-learning-specific physical activity., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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39. Associations of obesity, movement behaviors, and socioeconomic status with fundamental movement skills in children: Results from the REACT project.
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Praxedes P, Maia J, Santos C, Garbeloto F, Hedeker D, Barreira TV, Garganta R, Farias C, Tani G, Chaput JP, Stodden DF, Katzmarzyk PT, and Pereira S
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Portugal, Cross-Sectional Studies, Pediatric Obesity epidemiology, Accelerometry, Social Class, Sedentary Behavior, Motor Skills physiology, Exercise
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Objective: To investigate the relationship of biological characteristics (age, sex, and obesity), movement behaviors (physical activity and sedentary time), and family socioeconomic status with fundamental movement skills (FMS) in primary school children., Methods: This cross-sectional study sampled 1014 children (537 girls) aged 6 to 10 years from 25 primary schools in Matosinhos, north of Portugal. Five object control skills (dribbling, kicking, catching, throwing, and underarm rolling) were assessed with a categorical scale using the Meu Educativo® platform. Body Mass Index (BMI) was calculated and transformed into z-scores. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and sedentary time were monitored with accelerometry (ActiGraph wGT3X-BT) for seven consecutive days. Family socioeconomic status (SES) was obtained from the Portuguese social support system. Ordinal multilevel logistic regression was used to analyze the associations of weight status, MVPA, sedentary time and SES with FMS, adjusted for sex and age., Results: Boys (odds ratio (OR) = 6.54; 95% CI: 5.13-8.36) and older children (OR = 2.04; 95% CI: 1.85-2.26) were more likely to achieve higher FMS scores. Children with obesity (OR = 0.60; 95% CI: 0.45-0.80), those less active (OR = 0.56; 95% CI: 0.42-0.75) and children with more sedentary time (OR = 0.86; 95%CI: 0.77-0.97) were less likely to score high on FMS. Family SES was not significantly associated with FMS scores., Conclusion: Primary school children's FMS are significantly related to biological and behavioral factors but not to family SES. These findings highlight the need for suitable strategies to enhance children's FMS proficiency, considering differences in these characteristics. Fostering adequate motor skill proficiency levels will assist in establishing a robust foundation for healthy lifestyles of all children., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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40. Background, rationale, and methodological overview of the REACT project-return-to-action on growth, motor development, and health after the COVID-19 pandemic in primary school children.
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Pereira S, Katzmarzyk PT, Hedeker D, Barreira TV, Garganta R, Farias C, Garbeloto F, Tani G, Chaput JP, Stodden DF, and Maia J
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- Humans, Child, Portugal epidemiology, Male, Female, Schools, SARS-CoV-2, Motor Skills, Exercise, COVID-19 epidemiology, Child Development, Physical Education and Training methods
- Abstract
Objectives: The REACT project was designed around two main aims: (1) to assess children's growth and motor development after the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) to follow their fundamental movement skills' developmental trajectories over 18 months using a novel technological device (Meu Educativo®) in their physical education classes. In this introductory article, the first of the Journal's special issue dedicated to REACT, our goal was to present the project rationale, its methodology, training and certification of the team, statistical approach, quality control, governance, and study management., Methods: We sampled 1000 children (6-10 years of age) from 25 of the 32 primary schools in Matosinhos, northern Portugal. The protocol included a set of variables clustered around the child (growth, physical fitness, fundamental movement skills, and health behaviors), family (demographics, socioeconomic status, parental support for sports participation and physical activity), school (policies and practices for health behaviors, infrastructure for physical education and sports practices), and neighborhood and home environments (safety, sidewalks, sports facilities, as well as children electronic devices and play equipment at home). A set of standard protocols were implemented in REACT together with a rigorous system of training and certification of all members of the research team. This was complemented with a pilot study to assess, in loco, the quality of data acquisition, data entry, and control., Discussion: Results from REACT will provide school administrators and teachers with novel and far-reaching information related to children's growth and motor development as well as health behaviors after the COVID-19 pandemic. It will also provide city-hall education officials with insight regarding children's physical fitness, fundamental movement skills, and sports practices that will be of great importance in devising novel intervention programs to increase health-enhancing physical activity, and combat sedentariness and obesity. Finally, it will offer parents a wealth of information regarding their children's growth, motor development, and health., (© 2024 The Author(s). American Journal of Human Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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41. An Introduction and Practical Guide to Strategies for Analyzing Longitudinal Data in Clinical Trials of Smoking Cessation Treatment: Beyond Dichotomous Point-Prevalence Outcomes.
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Kypriotakis G, Bernstein SL, Bold KW, Dziura JD, Hedeker D, Mermelstein RJ, and Weinberger AH
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- Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Tobacco Use Disorder therapy, Treatment Outcome, Prevalence, Smoking Cessation methods, Clinical Trials as Topic
- Abstract
Conceptualizing tobacco dependence as a chronic relapsing condition suggests the need to use analytic strategies that reflect that premise. However, clinical trials for smoking cessation typically define the primary endpoint as a measure of abstinence at a single timepoint distal to the intervention, typically 3-12 months. This reinforces the concept of tobacco outcomes as a dichotomous state-one is, or is not, abstinent. Fortunately, there are several approaches available to handle longitudinal data that reflect the relapsing and remitting nature of tobacco use during treatment studies. In this paper, sponsored by the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco's Treatment Research Network, we present an introductory overview of these techniques and their application in smoking cessation clinical trials. Topics discussed include models to examine abstinence outcomes (eg, trajectory models of abstinence, models for transitions in smoking behavior, models for time to event), models that examine reductions in tobacco use, and models to examine joint outcomes (eg, examining changes in the use of more than one tobacco product). Finally, we discuss three additional relevant topics (ie, heterogeneity of effects, handling missing data, and power and sample size) and provide summary information about the type of model that can be used based on the type of data collected and the focus of the study. We encourage investigators to familiarize themselves with these techniques and use them in the analysis of data from clinical trials of smoking cessation treatment. Implications Clinical trials of tobacco dependence treatment typically measure abstinence 3-12 months after participant enrollment. However, because smoking is a chronic relapsing condition, these measures of intervention success may not accurately reflect the common trajectories of tobacco abstinence and relapse. Several analytical techniques facilitate this type of outcome modeling. This paper is meant to be an introduction to these concepts and techniques to the global nicotine and tobacco research community including which techniques can be used for different research questions with visual summaries of which types of models can be used for different types of data and research questions., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2024
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42. Testing the feasibility of mobile ecological momentary assessment for symptom burden and management among metastatic cancer patients.
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Brasky TM, Newton AM, Stephens JA, Strassels SA, Benzo RM, Hays JL, Stevens E, Wagener TL, Hedeker D, and Krok-Schoen JL
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Background: Individuals who have metastatic cancer experience substantial physical and psychological distress (e.g., pain, depression, anxiety) from their disease and its treatment compared to patients with less advanced disease. As the burden of symptoms varies over time, ecological momentary assessment (EMA) may be used to better understand patients' symptom trajectories, complimenting traditional longitudinal data collection methods. However, few have used EMA in patients with metastatic disease. The current study adds to the existing literature by exploring interrelated, common cancer-related symptoms of pain, anxiety, and depression and use of cannabis-based products, opioid medications, other (nonopioid) pain medications, and medications for anxiety or depression., Methods: An eight-day prospective observational feasibility study was conducted among 50 patients with metastatic cancer recruited from seven solid cancer clinics at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center. Participants completed a week of interval-contingent mobile EMA, administered daily at 9 a.m., 3 p.m., and 8 p.m., and a comprehensive interviewer-administered questionnaire on Day 8. Participants were queried on their symptom burden and management strategies (i.e., use of medications and cannabis). We considered EMA to be feasible if a priori retention (80%) and adherence goals (75%) were met., Results: Seventy-nine percent of eligible patients contacted enrolled in the study ( n = 50 of 63). Among those enrolled, 92% were retained through Day 8 and 80% completed >90% of EMAs, exceeding a priori objectives. Participants' average pain, anxiety, and depressive symptoms across the week of EMA ranged from 1.7 to 1.8 (1 to 5 scale). Symptoms varied little by day or time of administration. On Day 8, significant proportions of participants reported past-week use of medications and cannabis for symptom management., Conclusions: Participants exceeded a priori adherence and retention objectives, indicating that mobile EMA is feasible among metastatic cancer patients, addressing a gap in the existing literature and informing future research. Restricting eligibility to participants with a minimum cutoff of symptom burden may be warranted to increase observations of symptom variability and provide opportunities for future health interventions. Future research is needed to test the acceptability and quality of data over a longer study period in this patient population., Competing Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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43. Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and measures of central hemodynamics and arterial stiffness among multiethnic Chicago residents.
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Tasmin S, Aschebrook-Kilfoy B, Hedeker D, Gopalakrishnan R, Connellan E, Kibriya MG, Young MT, Kaufman JD, and Ahsan H
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- Humans, Male, Female, Chicago epidemiology, Middle Aged, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Hemodynamics, Adult, Nitrogen Dioxide analysis, Nitrogen Dioxide adverse effects, Blood Pressure, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Black or African American, Vascular Stiffness drug effects, Air Pollutants analysis, Air Pollutants adverse effects, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Environmental Exposure analysis, Particulate Matter analysis, Particulate Matter adverse effects, Air Pollution adverse effects, Air Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine whether long-term air pollution exposure is associated with central hemodynamic and brachial artery stiffness parameters., Methods: We assessed central hemodynamic parameters including central blood pressure, cardiac parameters, systemic vascular compliance and resistance, and brachial artery stiffness measures [including brachial artery distensibility (BAD), compliance (BAC), and resistance (BAR)] using waveform analysis of the arterial pressure signals obtained from a standard cuff sphygmomanometer (DynaPulse2000A, San Diego, CA). The long-term exposures to particles with an aerodynamic diameter < 2.5 μm (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) for the 3-year periods prior to enrollment were estimated at residential addresses using fine-scale intra-urban spatiotemporal models. Linear mixed models adjusted for potential confounders were used to examine associations between air pollution exposures and health outcomes., Results: The cross-sectional study included 2,387 Chicago residents (76% African Americans) enrolled in the ChicagO Multiethnic Prevention And Surveillance Study (COMPASS) during 2013-2018 with validated address information, PM2.5 or NO2, key covariates, and hemodynamics measurements. We observed long-term concentrations of PM2.5 and NO2 to be positively associated with central systolic, pulse pressure and BAR, and negatively associated with BAD, and BAC after adjusting for relevant covariates. A 1-µg/m
3 increment in preceding 3-year exposures to PM2.5 was associated with 1.8 mmHg higher central systolic (95% CI: 0.98, 4.16), 1.0 mmHg higher central pulse pressure (95% CI: 0.42, 2.87), a 0.56%mmHg lower BAD (95% CI: -0.81, -0.30), and a 0.009 mL/mmHg lower BAC (95% CI: -0.01, -0.01)., Conclusion: This population-based study provides evidence that long-term exposures to PM2.5 and NO2 is related to central BP and arterial stiffness parameters, especially among African Americans., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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44. Geographic and Physician-Level Variation in the Use of Hypofractionated Radiation Therapy for Breast Cancer in the U.S.: A Cross-Classified Multilevel Analysis.
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Sun Y, Saulsberry L, Liao C, Hedeker D, and Huo D
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Purpose: We aimed to assess geographic and physician-level variation for hypofractionated whole-breast irradiation (HF-WBI) use for early-stage breast cancer patients in the United States. We further evaluated the association between HF-WBI use and demographic factors after accounting for these variations., Methods and Materials: We performed a retrospective study of early-stage breast cancer patients using private employer-sponsored insurance claims from 2008 to 2017. Patients were clustered according to geographic level and by radiation oncologist. Bayesian cross-classified multilevel logistic models were used to examine the geographic heterogeneity and variation of radiation oncologists simultaneously. Intracluster correlation coefficient (ICC) and median odds ratios (MOR) were calculated to quantify the variation at different levels. We also used the cross-classified model to identify patient demographic factors associated with receiving HF-WBI., Results: The study included 79,747 women (74.0%) who received conventionally fractionated whole-breast irradiation (CF-WBI) and 27,999 women (26.0%) who underwent HF-WBI. HF-WBI adoption increased significantly across time (2008-2017). The variation in HF-WBI utilization was attributed mostly to physician-level variability (MOR = 2.59). The variability of HF-WBI utilization across core-based statistical areas (CBSAs) (MOR = 1.55) was found to be the strongest among all geographic classifications. After accounting for variability in both CBSAs and radiation oncologists, age, receiving chemotherapy, and several community-level factors, including distance from home to facility, community education level, and racial composition, were found to be associated with HF-WBI utilization., Conclusion: This study demonstrated geographic and physician-level heterogeneity in the use of HF-WBI among early-stage breast cancer patients. HF-WBI utilization was also found to be associated with patient and community-level characteristics. Given observed physician-level variability, intervention through continuing medical education could help doctors to better understand the advantages of HF-WBI and promote the adoption of HF-WBI in the U.S. Influence of physician-level characteristics on HF-WBI utilization merits further study., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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45. Investigating the day-level associations between affective variability and physical activity using ecological momentary assessment.
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Do B, Hedeker D, Wang WL, Mason TB, Belcher BR, Miller KA, Rothman AJ, Intille SS, and Dunton GF
- Subjects
- Humans, Young Adult, Health Behavior, Smartphone, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adult, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Exercise psychology
- Abstract
Background: Understanding affect as a determinant of physical activity has gained increased attention in health behavior research. Fluctuations in affect intensity from moment-to-moment (i.e., affective variability) may interfere with cognitive and regulatory processes, making it difficult to engage in goal-directed behaviors such as physical activity. Preliminary evidence indicates that those with greater trait-level affective variability engage in lower levels of habitual physical activity. However, the extent to which daily fluctuations in affect variability are associated with same-day physical activity levels is unknown. This study used ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to investigate day-level associations between affective variability (i.e., within-subject variance) and physical activity., Methods: Young adults (N = 231, M = 23.58 ± 3.02 years) provided three months of smartphone-based EMA and smartwatch-based activity data. Every two weeks, participants completed a 4-day EMA measurement burst (M = 5.17 ± 1.28 bursts per participant). Bursts consisted of hourly randomly-prompted EMA surveys assessing momentary positive-activated (happy, energetic), positive-deactivated (relaxed), negative-activated (tense, stressed), and negative-deactivated (sad, fatigued) affect. Participants continuously wore a smartwatch to measure physical activity across the three months. Mixed-effects location scale modeling examined the day-level associations of affective variability (i.e., positive-activated, positive-deactivated, negative-activated, and negative-deactivated) and physical activity, controlling for covariates such as mean levels of affect, between-subject effects of physical activity, time of day, day of week, day in study, and smartwatch wear time., Results: There were 41,546 completed EMA surveys (M = 182.22 ± 69.82 per participant) included in the analyses. Above and beyond mean levels of affect, greater day-level variability in positive-activated affect was associated with greater physical activity on that same day compared to other days (τ = 0.01, p < .001), whereas greater day-level variability in negative-deactivated affect was associated with less physical activity on that same day compared to other days (τ = -0.01, p < .001). Day-level variability in positive-deactivated affect or negative-activated affect were not associated with day-level physical activity (ps > .05) CONCLUSIONS: Individuals were less active on days with greater variability in feeling sad and fatigued but more active on days with greater variability in feeling happy and energetic. Understanding the dynamic relationships of affective variability with day-level physical activity can strengthen physical activity interventions by considering how these processes differ within individuals and unfold within the context of daily life. Future research should examine causal pathways between affective variability and physical activity across the day., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest 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., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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46. Joint modeling the frequency and duration of accelerometer-measured physical activity from a lifestyle intervention trial.
- Author
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Siddique J, Daniels MJ, Inan G, Battalio S, Spring B, and Hedeker D
- Subjects
- Humans, Accelerometry methods, Time Factors, Clinical Trials as Topic, Exercise, Life Style
- Abstract
Physical activity (PA) guidelines recommend that PA be accumulated in bouts of 10 minutes or more in duration. Recently, researchers have sought to better understand how participants in PA interventions increase their activity. Participants can increase their daily PA by increasing the number of PA bouts per day while keeping the duration of the bouts constant; they can keep the number of bouts constant but increase the duration of each bout; or participants can increase both the number of bouts and their duration. We propose a novel joint modeling framework for modeling PA bouts and their duration over time. Our joint model is comprised of two sub-models: a mixed-effects Poisson hurdle sub-model for the number of bouts per day and a mixed-effects location scale gamma regression sub-model to characterize the duration of the bouts and their variance. The model allows us to estimate how daily PA bouts and their duration vary together over the course of an intervention and by treatment condition and is specifically designed to capture the unique distributional features of bouted PA as measured by accelerometer: frequent measurements, zero-inflated bouts, and skewed bout durations. We apply our methods to the Make Better Choices study, a longitudinal lifestyle intervention trial to increase PA. We perform a simulation study to evaluate how well our model is able to estimate relationships between outcomes., (© 2023 The Authors. Statistics in Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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47. Detecting influential subjects in intensive longitudinal data using mixed-effects location scale models.
- Author
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Zhang X and Hedeker D
- Subjects
- Humans, Longitudinal Studies
- Abstract
Background: Collection of intensive longitudinal health outcomes allows joint modeling of their mean (location) and variability (scale). Focusing on the location of the outcome, measures to detect influential subjects in longitudinal data using standard mixed-effects regression models (MRMs) have been widely discussed. However, no existing approach enables the detection of subjects that heavily influence the scale of the outcome., Methods: We propose applying mixed-effects location scale (MELS) modeling combined with commonly used influence measures such as Cook's distance and DFBETAS to fill this gap. In this paper, we provide a framework for researchers to follow when trying to detect influential subjects for both the scale and location of the outcome. The framework allows detailed examination of each subject's influence on model fit as well as point estimates and precision of coefficients in different components of a MELS model., Results: We simulated two common scenarios in longitudinal healthcare studies and found that influence measures in our framework successfully capture influential subjects over 99% of the time. We also re-analyzed data from a health behavior study and found 4 particularly influential subjects, among which two cannot be detected by influence analyses via regular MRMs., Conclusion: The proposed framework can help researchers detect influential subject(s) that will be otherwise overlooked by influential analysis using regular MRMs and analyze all data in one model despite influential subjects., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
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48. Associations Between Social Context and Mood During Alcohol Consumption in Young Adult Smokers.
- Author
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Brooks JM, Hedeker D, and Mermelstein RJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Male, Affect, Social Environment, Social Behavior, Ethanol, Alcohol Drinking epidemiology, Smokers
- Abstract
Objective: Differences in the subjective effects of alcohol in different social contexts have been well documented, but little research examines affect during drinking in real-world social contexts. This study examined differences by social context in negative affect and positive affect during alcohol consumption. We hypothesized that negative affect and positive affect with drinking would vary as a function of social context (alone or with others)., Method: A total of 257 young adults ( M age = 21.3, 53.3% female) who were enrolled in a longitudinal, observational study assessing risk for smoking completed 7 days of ecological momentary assessment assessing alcohol use, affect, and social context at two time points of the study. Mixed-effects location scale analyses examined effects of being alone versus with others on positive affect and negative affect after drinking and compared with nondrinking times., Results: Positive affect was higher when drinking with others versus alone, and negative affect was higher when drinking alone versus with others. Both negative affect and positive affect variability were higher when participants were drinking alone compared to with others, and negative affect variability was higher at low amounts of alcohol but decreased with increased drinking., Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that solitary drinking is less consistently reinforcing because of greater and more variable negative affect, as well as more variable positive affect. When drinking with others, increased and less variable positive affect suggests that social drinking may be particularly reinforcing in young adulthood.
- Published
- 2023
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49. Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and measures of central hemodynamics and arterial stiffness among multiethnic Chicago residents.
- Author
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Tasmin S, Aschebrook-Kilfoy B, Hedeker D, Gopalakrishnan R, Stepniak E, Kibriya MG, Young MT, Kaufman JD, and Ahsan H
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine whether air pollution exposure is associated with central hemodynamic and brachial artery stiffness parameters., Methods: We assessed central hemodynamic parameters, brachial artery stiffness measures [including brachial artery distensibility (BAD), compliance (BAC), and resistance (BAR)] using waveform analysis of the arterial pressure signals obtained from a standard cuff sphygmomanometer (DynaPulse2000A, San Diego, CA). The long-term exposures to particles with an aerodynamic diameter < 2.5μm (PM2.5) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) for the 3-year periods prior to enrollment were estimated at residential addresses using fine-scale intra-urban spatiotemporal models. Linear mixed models adjusted for potential confounders were used to examine associations between air pollution exposures and health outcomes., Results: The cross-sectional study included 2,387 Chicago residents (76% African Americans) enrolled in the ChicagO Multiethnic Prevention And Surveillance Study (COMPASS) during 2013-2018 with validated address information, PM2.5 or NO2, key covariates, and hemodynamics measurements. We observed long-term concentrations of PM2.5 and NO2 to be positively associated with central systolic, pulse pressure and BAR, and negatively associated with BAD, and BAC after adjusting for relevant covariates. A 1-μg/m
3 increment in preceding 3-year exposures to PM2.5 was associated with 1.8 mmHg higher central systolic (95% CI: 0.98, 4.16), 1.0 mmHg higher central pulse pressure (95% CI: 0.42, 2.87), a 0.56%mmHg lower BAD (95% CI: -0.81, -0.30), and a 0.009 mL/mmHg lower BAC (95% CI: -0.01, -0.01)., Conclusion: This population-based study provides evidence that long-term exposures to PM2.5 and NO2 is related to central BP and arterial stiffness parameters, especially among African Americans., Competing Interests: Disclosure The authors declare no conflict of interest.- Published
- 2023
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50. Parameters of EMA Compliance and Self-Reported Reactivity in a Longitudinal Study of Young Adult Cannabis and Tobacco Co-Users.
- Author
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Niznik T, Ehlke SJ, Mermelstein R, Vandrey R, Hedeker D, Villanti AC, and Cohn AM
- Abstract
Background: Co-use of cannabis and tobacco has become increasingly popular among young adults. Interactive voice response (IVR) based ecological momentary assessment (EMA) allows for measurement of behavior in or near real-time, but has limitations including non-compliance, missing data, and potential for reactivity (e.g., behavior change) from frequent assessments., Methods: This study examined tobacco and cannabis use characteristics and factors associated with IVR compliance and self-reported reactivity in 97 young adults who reported cannabis and tobacco co-use at baseline and completed daily IVR surveys of co-use behavior at three random times per day for 28 days., Results: Overall IVR compliance was 55%, with a modal compliance of 60%. Compliance rates did not differ across morning, midday, and evening surveys, but significantly declined over time. The sample was divided into high frequency responders (>70% calls completed, n=35) and low frequency responders (<70%, calls completed n=62). There were no differences between high and low frequency responders on any baseline demographic, tobacco use (nicotine dependence severity), alcohol, or cannabis use characteristics (past 30-day frequency of use). Participants were receptive to IVR-based EMA monitoring and, 16.5% reported purposely decreasing nicotine/tobacco use due to monitoring, while 19.6% reported purposely decreasing cannabis use, which predicted lower cannabis use post-EMA monitoring., Conclusions: Real-time assessment of co-use behavior among young adults does not appear to be impacted by specific demographics or substance use severity (nicotine dependence, heavy drinking). Data suggest some predictive utility of IVR-based EMA monitoring on short-term behavior change. More intensive approaches are needed to improve compliance among young adult cannabis and tobacco co-users., Competing Interests: No conflicts of interest to declare., (© 2023 Authors et al.)
- Published
- 2023
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