212 results on '"Davies SL"'
Search Results
2. Optimal healthcare delivery to care homes in the UK: A realist evaluation of what supports effective working to improve healthcare outcomes
- Author
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Gordon, AL, Goodman, C, Davies, SL, Dening, T, Gage, H, Meyer, J, Schneider, J, Bell, B, Jordan, J, Martin, FC, Iliffe, S, Bowman, C, Gladman, JRF, Victor, C, Mayrhofer, A, Handley, M, Zubair, M, Gordon, AL, Goodman, C, Davies, SL, Dening, T, Gage, H, Meyer, J, Schneider, J, Bell, B, Jordan, J, Martin, FC, Iliffe, S, Bowman, C, Gladman, JRF, Victor, C, Mayrhofer, A, Handley, M, and Zubair, M
- Abstract
© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. Introduction: care home residents have high healthcare needs not fully met by prevailing healthcare models. This study explored how healthcare configuration influences resource use. Methods: a realist evaluation using qualitative and quantitative data from case studies of three UK health and social care economies selected for differing patterns of healthcare delivery to care homes. Four homes per area (12 in total) were recruited. A total of 239 residents were followed for 12 months to record resource-use. Overall, 181 participants completed 116 interviews and 13 focus groups including residents, relatives, care home staff, community nurses, allied health professionals and General Practitioners. Results: context-mechanism-outcome configurations were identified explaining what supported effective working between healthcare services and care home staff: (i) investment in care home-specific work that legitimises and values work with care homes; (ii) relational working which over time builds trust between practitioners; (iii) care which 'wraps around' care homes; and (iv) access to specialist care for older people with dementia. Resource use was similar between sites despite differing approaches to healthcare. There was greater utilisation of GP resource where this was specifically commissioned but no difference in costs between sites. Conclusion: activities generating opportunities and an interest in healthcare and care home staff working together are integral to optimal healthcare provision in care homes. Outcomes are likely to be better where: focus and activities legitimise ongoing contact between healthcare staff and care homes at an institutional level; link with a wider system of healthcare; and provide access to dementia-specific expertise.
- Published
- 2018
3. Effective health care for older people living and dying in care homes: A realist review
- Author
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Goodman, C, Dening, T, Gordon, AL, Davies, SL, Meyer, J, Martin, FC, Gladman, JRF, Bowman, C, Victor, C, Handley, M, Gage, H, Iliffe, S, Zubair, M, Goodman, C, Dening, T, Gordon, AL, Davies, SL, Meyer, J, Martin, FC, Gladman, JRF, Bowman, C, Victor, C, Handley, M, Gage, H, Iliffe, S, and Zubair, M
- Abstract
© 2016 The Author(s). Background: Care home residents in England have variable access to health care services. There is currently no coherent policy or consensus about the best arrangements to meet these needs. The purpose of this review was to explore the evidence for how different service delivery models for care home residents support and/or improve wellbeing and health-related outcomes in older people living and dying in care homes. Methods: We conceptualised models of health care provision to care homes as complex interventions. We used a realist review approach to develop a preliminary understanding of what supported good health care provision to care homes. We completed a scoping of the literature and interviewed National Health Service and Local Authority commissioners, providers of services to care homes, representatives from the Regulator, care home managers, residents and their families. We used these data to develop theoretical propositions to be tested in the literature to explain why an intervention may be effective in some situations and not others. We searched electronic databases and related grey literature. Finally the findings were reviewed with an external advisory group. Results: Strategies that support and sustain relational working between care home staff and visiting health care professionals explained the observed differences in how health care interventions were accepted and embedded into care home practice. Actions that encouraged visiting health care professionals and care home staff jointly to identify, plan and implement care home appropriate protocols for care, when supported by ongoing facilitation from visiting clinicians, were important. Contextual factors such as financial incentives or sanctions, agreed protocols, clinical expertise and structured approaches to assessment and care planning could support relational working to occur, but of themselves appeared insufficient to achieve change. Conclusion: How relational working is str
- Published
- 2016
4. Prevalence and Correlates of Family Meals among Families of 3rd Graders
- Author
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Davies, SL, primary
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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5. Does short-term virologic failure translate to clinical events in antiretroviral-naïve patients initiating antiretroviral therapy in clinical practice?
- Author
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Antiretroviral Therapy Cohort Collaboration, Mugavero, Mj, May, M, Harris, R, Saag, Ms, Costagliola, D, Egger, M, Phillips, A, Günthard, Hf, Dabis, F, Hogg, R, de Wolf, F, Fatkenheuer, G, Gill, Mj, Justice, A, D'Arminio Monforte, A, Lampe, F, Miró, Jm, Staszewski, S, Collaborators: Casabona J, Sterne J. A., Geneviè, C, del Amo, J, Fätkenheuer, G, Gill, J, Guest, J, Kitahata, M, Ledergerber, B, Mocroft, A, Reiss, P, Saag, M, Sterne, J, Sterne, Ja, Abgrall, S, Barin, F, Bentata, M, Billaud, E, Boué, F, Burty, C, Cabié, A, Cotte, L, De Truchis, P, Duval, X, Duvivier, C, Enel, P, Fredouille Heripret, L, Gasnault, J, Gaud, C, Gilquin, J, Grabar, S, Katlama, C, Khuong, Ma, Lang, Jm, Lascaux, As, Launay, O, Mahamat, A, Mary Krause, M, Matheron, S, Meynard, Jl, Pavie, J, Pialoux, G, Pilorgé, F, Poizot Martin, I, Pradier, C, Reynes, J, Rouveix, E, Simon, A, Tattevin, P, Tissot Dupon, H, Viard, Jp, Viget, N, Pariente Khayat, A, Salomon, V, Jacquemet, N, Rivet, A, Abgral, S, Guiguet, M, Kousignian, I, Lanoy, E, Lièvre, L, Potard, V, Selinger Leneman, H, Bouvet, E, Crickx, B, Ecobichon, Jl, Leport, C, Picard Dahan, C, Yeni, P, Tisne Dessus, D, Weiss, L, Salmon, D, Sicard, D, Auperin, I, Roudière, L, Fior, R, Delfraissy, Jf, Goujard, C, Jung, C, Lesprit, P, Desplanque, N, Meyohas, Mc, Picard, O, Cadranel, J, Mayaud, C, Bricaire, F, Herson, S, Clauvel, Jp, Decazes, Jm, Gerard, L, Molina, Jm, Diemer, M, Sellier, P, Berthé, H, Dupont, C, Chandemerle, C, Mortier, E, de Truchis, P, Honoré, P, Jeantils, V, Tassi, S, Mechali, D, Taverne, B, Gourdon, F, Laurichesse, H, Fresard, A, Lucht, F, Eglinger, P, Faller, Jp, Bazin, C, Verdon, R, Boibieux, A, Peyramond, D, Livroze, Jm, Touraine, Jl, Trepo, C, Ravaux, I, Tissot Dupont, H, Delmont, Jp, Moreau, J, Gastaut, Ja, Retornaz, F, Soubeyrand, J, Allegre, T, Blanc, Pa, Galinier, A, Ruiz, Jm, Lepeu, G, Granet Brunello, P, Esterni, Jp, Pelissier, L, Cohen Valensi, R, Nezri, M, Chadapaud, S, Laffeuillade, A, Laffeuillade, J, May, T, Rabaud, C, Raffi, F, Pugliese, P, Arvieux, C, Michelet, C, Borsa Lebas, F, Caron, F, Fraisse, P, Rey, D, Arlet Suau, E, Cuzin, L, Massip, P, Thiercelin Legrand MF, Yasdanpanah, Y, Pradinaud, R, Sobesky, M, Contant, M, Montroni, M, Scalise, G, Braschi, Mc, Riva, A, Tirelli, U, Cinelli, R, Pastore, G, Ladisa, N, Suter, F, Arici, C, Chiodo, F, Colangeli, V, Fiorini, C, Carosi, Giampiero, Cristini, G, Torti, Carlo, Minardi, C, Bertelli, D, Quirino, T, Manconi, Pe, Piano, P, Cosco, L, Scerbo, A, Vecchiet, J, D'Alessandro, M, Santoro, D, Pusterla, L, Carnevale, G, Zoncada, A, Viganò, P, Mena, M, Ghinelli, F, Sighinolfi, L, Leoncini, F, Mazzotta, F, Pozzi, M, Lo Caputo, S, Angarano, G, Grisorio, B, Saracino, A, Ferrara, S, Grima, P, Grima, F, Pagano, G, Cassola, G, Alessandrini, A, Piscopo, R, Toti, M, Trezzi, M, Soscia, F, Tacconi, L, Orani, A, Perini, P, Scasso, A, Vincenti, A, Chiodera, F, Castelli, P, Scalzini, A, Palvarini, L, Moroni, M, Lazzarin, A, Rizzardini, G, d'Arminio Monforte, A, Galli, A, Merli, S, Pastecchia, C, Moioli, Mc, Esposito, R, Mussini, C, Abresci, N, Chirianni, A, Izzo, Cm, Piazza, M, De Marco, M, Viglietti, R, Manzillo, E, Nappa, S, Colomba, A, Abbadessa, V, Prestileo, T, Mancuso, S, Ferrari, C, Pizzaferri, P, Filice, G, Minoli, L, Bruno, R, Novati, S, Baldelli, F, Tinca, M, Petrelli, E, Cioppi, A, Cioppi, F, Ruggieri, A, Menichetti, F, Martinelli, C, De Stefano, C, La Gala, A, Ballardini, G, Rizzo, E, Magnani, G, Ursitti, Ma, Arlotti, M, Ortolani, P, Cauda, R, Dianzani, F, Ippolito, G, Antinori, A, Antonucci, G, Ciardi, M, Narciso, P, Petrosillo, N, Vullo, V, De Luca, A, Zaccarelli, M, Acinapura, R, De Longis, P, Brandi, A, Trotta, Mp, Noto, P, Lichtne, M, Capobianch, Mr, Carletti, F, Girardi, E, Pezzotti, P, Rezza, G, Mura, Ms, Mannazzu, M, Caramello, P, Di Perri, G, Sciandra, M, Orofino, Gc, Grossi, Pa, Basilico, C, Poggio, A, Bottari, G, Raise, E, Ebo, F, Pellizzer, G, Buonfrate, D, Resta, F, Loso, K, Cozzi Lepri, A, Battegay, M, Bernasconi, E, Böni, J, Bucher, Hc, Bürgisser, P, Calmy, A, Cattacin, S, Cavassini, M, Dubs, R, Elzi, L, Fischer, M, Flepp, M, Fontana, A, Francioli, P, Furrer, H, Fux, C, Gorgievski, M, Günthard, H, Hirsch, H, Hirschel, B, Hösli, I, Kahlert, Ch, Kaiser, L, Karrer, U, Kind, C, Klimkait, T, Martinetti, G, Martinez, B, Martinez, N, Nadal, D, Opravil, M, Paccaud, F, Pantaleo, G, Rauch, A, Regenass, S, Rickenbach, M, Rudin, C, Schmid, P, Schultze, D, Schüpbach, J, Speck, R, Taffé, P, Telenti, A, Trkola, A, Vernazza, P, Weber, R, Yerly, S, Gras, La, van Sighem AI, Smit, C, Prins, Jm, Branger, J, Eeftinck Schattenkerk JK, Gisolf, J, Godfried, Mh, Lange, Jm, Lettinga, Kd, van der Meer JT, Nellen, Fj, van der Poll, T, Ruys, Ta, Steingrover, R, Vermeulen, Jn, Vrouenraets, Sm, van Vugt, M, Wit, Fw, Kuijpers, Tw, Pajkrt, D, Scherpbier, Hj, van Eeden, A, Brinkman, K, van den Berk GE, Blok, Wl, Frissen, Ph, Roos, Jc, Schouten, We, Mulder, Jw, van Gorp EC, Wagenaar, J, Veenstra, J, Danner, Sa, Van Agtmael MA, Claessen, Fa, Perenboom, Rm, Rijkeboer, A, van Vonderen MG, Richter, C, van der Berg, J, Vriesendorp, R, Jeurissen, Fj, Kauffmann, Rh, Pogány, K, Bravenboer, B, Sprenger, Hg, van Assen, S, van Leeuwen JT, Doedens, R, Scholvinck, Eh, ten Kate RW, Soetekouw, R, van Houte, D, Polée, Mb, Kroon, Fp, van den Broek PJ, van Dissel JT, Schippers, Ef, Schreij, G, van der Geest, S, Lowe, S, Verbon, A, Koopmans, Pp, Van Crevel, R, de Groot, R, Keuter, M, Post, F, van der Ven AJ, Warris, A, van der Ende ME, Gyssens, Ic, van der Feltz, M, Nouwen, Jl, Rijnders, Bj, de Vries TE, Driessen, G, van der Flier, M, Hartwig, Ng, Juttman, Jr, van Kasteren ME, Van de Heul, C, Hoepelman, Im, Schneider, Mm, Bonten, Mj, Borleffs, Jc, Ellerbroek, Pm, Jaspers, Ca, Mudrikove, T, Schurink, Ca, Gisolf, Eh, Geelen, Sp, Wolfs, Tf, Faber, T, Tanis, Aa, Groeneveld, Ph, den Hollander JG, Duits, Aj, Winkel, K, Back, Nk, Bakker, Me, Berkhout, B, Jurriaans, S, Zaaijer, Hl, Cuijpers, T, Rietra, Pj, Roozendaal, Kj, Pauw, W, van Zanten AP, Smits, Ph, von Blomberg BM, Savelkoul, P, Pettersson, A, Swanink, Cm, Franck, Pf, Lampe, As, Jansen, Cl, Hendriks, R, Benne, Ca, Veenendaal, D, Storm, H, Weel, J, van Zeijl JH, Kroes, Ac, Claas, Hc, Bruggeman, Ca, Goossens, Vj, Galama, Jm, Melchers, Wj, Poort, Ya, Doornum, Gj, Niesters, Mg, Osterhaus, Ad, Schutten, M, Buiting, Ag, Swaans, Ca, Boucher, Ca, Schuurman, R, Boel, E, Jansz, Af, Veldkamp, A, Beijnen, Jh, Huitema, Ad, Burger, Dm, Hugen, Pw, van Kan HJ, Losso, M, Duran, A, Vetter, N, Karpov, I, Vassilenko, A, Clumeck, N, De Wit, S, Poll, B, Colebunders, R, Machala, L, Rozsypal, H, Sedlacek, D, Nielsen, J, Lundgren, J, Benfield, T, Kirk, O, Gerstoft, J, Katzenstein, T, Hansen, Ab, Skinhøj, P, Pedersen, C, Zilmer, K, Girard, Pm, Saint Marc, T, Vanhems, P, Dietrich, M, Manegold, C, van Lunzen, J, Stellbrink, Hj, Staszewsk, S, Bickel, M, Goebel, Fd, Rockstroh, J, Schmidt, R, Kosmidis, J, Gargalianos, P, Sambatakou, H, Perdios, J, Panos, G, Filandras, A, Karabatsaki, E, Banhegyi, D, Mulcahy, F, Yust, I, Turner, D, Burke, M, Pollack, S, Hassoun, G, Sthoeger, Z, Maayan, S, Chiesi, A, Borghi, R, Pristera, R, Mazzott, F, Gabbuti, A, Vullo, Lichtner, M, Montesarchio, E, Iacomi, F, Finazzi, R, Viksna, L, Chaplinskas, S, Hemmer, R, Staub, T, Bruun, J, Maeland, A, Ormaasen, V, Knysz, B, Gasiorowski, J, Horban, A, Prokopowicz, D, Wiercinska Drapalo, A, Boron Kaczmarska, A, Pynka, M, Beniowski, M, Mularska, E, Trocha, H, Antunes, F, Valadas, E, Mansinho, K, Matez, F, Duiculescu, D, Babes, V, Streinu Cercel, A, Vinogradova, E, Rakhmanova, A, Jevtovic, D, Mokrás, M, Staneková, D, González Lahoz, J, Sánchez Conde, M, García Benayas, T, Martin Carbonero, L, Soriano, V, Clotet, B, Jou, A, Conejero, J, Tural, C, Gatell, Jm, Blaxhult, A, Karlsson, A, Pehrson, P, Soravia Dunand, V, Kravchenko, E, Chentsova, N, Barton, S, Johnson, Am, Mercey, D, Johnson, Ma, Murphy, M, Weber, J, Scullard, G, Fisher, M, Brettle, R, Loveday, C, Gatell, J, Johnson, A, Vella, S, Gjørup, I, Friis Moeller, N, Bannister, W, Mollerup, D, Podlevkareva, D, Holkmann Olsen, C, Kjaer, J, Raffanti, S, Dieterch, D, Becker, S, Scarsella, A, Fusco, G, Most, B, Balu, R, Rana, R, Beckerman, R, Ising, T, Fusco, J, Irek, R, Johnson, B, Hirani, A, Dejesus, E, Pierone, G, Lackey, P, Irek, C, Burdick, J, Leon, S, Arch, J, Helm, Eb, Carlebach, A, Müller, A, Haberl, A, Nisius, G, Lennemann, T, Stephan, C, Mösch, M, Gute, P, Locher, L, Lutz, T, Klauke, S, Knecht, G, Khaykin, P, Doerr, Hw, Stürmer, M, Babacan, E, von Hentig, N, Beylot, J, Chêne, G, Dupon, M, Longy Boursier, M, Pellegrin, Jl, Ragnaud, Jm, Salamon, R, Thiébaut, R, Lewden, C, Lawson Ayayi, S, Mercié, P, Moreau, Jf, Morlat, P, Bernard, N, Lacoste, D, Malvy, D, Neau, D, Blaizeau, Mj, Decoin, M, Delveaux, S, Hannapier, C, Labarrère, S, Lavignolle Aurillac, V, Uwamaliya Nziyumvira, B, Palmer, G, Touchard, D, Balestre, E, Alioum, A, Jacqmin Gadda, H, Bonarek, M, Bonnet, F, Coadou, B, Gellie, P, Nouts, C, Bocquentin, F, Dutronc, H, Lafarie, S, Aslan, A, Pistonne, T, Thibaut, P, Vatan, R, Chambon, D, De La Taille, C, Cazorla, C, Ocho, A, Viallard, Jf, Caubet, O, Cipriano, C, Lazaro, E, Couzigou, P, Castera, L, Fleury, H, Lafon, Me, Masquelier, B, Pellegrin, I, Breilh, D, Blanco, P, Loste, P, Caunègre, L, Bonna, F, Farbos, S, Ferrand, M, Ceccaldi, J, Tchamgoué, S, De Witte, S, Buy, E, Akagi, L, Brandson, E, Druyts, E, Gataric, Kf, Harrigan, Pr, Harris, M, Hayden, A, Lima, V, Montaner, J, Moore, D, Wood, E, Yip, B, Zhang, W, Bhagani, S, Byrne, P, Carroll, A, Cuthbertson, Z, Dunleavy, A, Geretti, Am, Heelan, B, Johnson, M, Kinloch de Loes, S, Lipman, M, Madge, S, Marshall, N, Nair, D, Nebbia, G, Prinz, B, Swaden, L, Tyrer, M, Youle, M, Chaloner, C, Grabowska, H, Holloway, J, Puradiredja, J, Ransom, D, Tsintas, R, Bansi, L, Fox, Z, Harris, E, Hill, T, Lodwick, R, Reekie, J, Sabin, C, Smith, C, Amoah, E, Booth, C, Clewley, G, Garcia Diaz, A, Gregory, B, Labbett, W, Tahami, F, Thomas, M, Read, R, Krentz, H, Beckthold, B, Faetkenheuer, G, Casabona, J, Miró, Jl, Alquézar, A, Esteve, A, Podzamczer, D, Murillas, J, Romero, A, Agustí, C, Agüero, F, Ferrer, E, Riera, M, Segura, F, Segura, G, Force, L, Vilaró, J, Masabeu, A, García, I, Guadarrama, M, Montoliu, A, Ortega, N, Lazzari, E, Puchol, E, Sanchez, M, Blanco, Jl, Garcia Alcaide, F, Martinez, E, Mallolas, J, López Dieguez, M, García Goez JF, Sirera, G, Romeu, J, Negredo, E, Miranda, C, Capitan, Mc, Olmo, M, Barragan, P, Saumoy, M, Bolaof, F, Cabellos, C, Peña, C, Sala, M, Cervantes, M, Amengual, Mj, Navarro, M, Penelo, E, Barrufet, P, Willig, Jh, Raper, Jl, Allison, Jj, Kempf, Mc, Schumacher, Je, Wes, Ao, Lin, Hy, Pisu, M, Moneyham, L, Vance, D, Bachmann, L, Davies, Sl, Berner, E, Acosta, E, King, J, Savage, K, Nevin, C, Walton, Fb, Marler, Ml, Lawrence, S, Files Kennedy, B, Batey, Ds, Patil, Ma, Patil, U, Varshney, M, Gibson, E, Guzman, A, Rinehart, D, Justice, Ac, Fiellin, Da, Bryant, K, Rimland, D, Jones Taylor, C, Oursler, Ka, Titanji, R, Brown, S, Garrison, S, Rodriguez Barradas, M, Masozera, N, Goetz, M, Leaf, D, Simberkoff, M, Blumenthal, D, Leung, J, Butt, A, Hoffman, E, Gibert, C, Peck, R, Mattocks, K, Braithwaite, S, Brandt, C, Cook, R, Conigliaro, J, Crothers, K, Chang, J, Crystal, S, Day, N, Erdos, J, Freiberg, M, Kozal, M, Gaziano, M, Gerschenson, M, Good, B, Gordon, A, Goulet, J, Kraemer, K, Lim, J, Maisto, S, Miller, P, O'Connor, P, Papas, R, Rinaldo, C, Roberts, M, Samet, J, Cohen, D, Consorte, A, Gordon, K, Kidwai, F, Levin, F, Mcginnis, K, Rambo, M, Rogers, J, Skanderson, M, and Whitsett, F.
- Published
- 2008
6. CONTRACEPTIVE USE IN ADOLESCENTS AMBIVALENT ABOUT PREGNANCY
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Crosby, RA, primary, DiClement, RJ, additional, Wingood, GM, additional, Davies, SL, additional, and Harrington, K, additional
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- 2003
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7. Response to ICRF-159 in cell lines resistant to cleavable complex-forming topoisomerase II inhibitors
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Davies, SL, Bergh, J, Harris, AL, Hickson, ID, Davies, SL, Bergh, J, Harris, AL, and Hickson, ID
- Published
- 1997
8. Condom Carrying is Not Associated with Condom Use and Lower Prevalence of Sexually Transmitted Diseases Among Minority Adolescent Females
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DiClemente, RJ, primary, Wingood, GM, additional, Crosby, R, additional, Sionean, C, additional, Cobb, BK, additional, Harrington, K, additional, Davies, SL, additional, Hook, EW, additional, and Oh, MK, additional
- Published
- 2002
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9. Response to ICRF-159 in cell lines resistant to cleavable complex-forming topoisomerase II inhibitors
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Davies, SL, primary, Bergh, J, additional, Harris, AL, additional, and Hickson, ID, additional
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- 1997
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10. Relationship between expression of topoisomerase II isoforms and intrinsic sensitivity to topoisomerase II inhibitors in breast cancer cell lines
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Houlbrook, S, primary, Addison, CM, additional, Davies, SL, additional, Carmichael, J, additional, Stratford, IJ, additional, Harris, AL, additional, and Hickson, ID, additional
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- 1995
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11. Nurse case management and general practice: implications for GP consortia.
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Iliffe S, Drennan V, Manthorpe J, Gage H, Davies SL, Massey H, Scott C, Brearley S, Goodman C, Iliffe, Steve, Drennan, Vari, Manthorpe, Jill, Gage, Heather, Davies, Sue L, Massey, Helen, Scott, Cherill, Brearley, Sally, and Goodman, Claire
- Abstract
Background: Case management is widely promoted as a means of ensuring continuity of care, improving patient outcomes, and achieving efficient management of resources. Community matrons have been introduced recently as specialists in the case management of patients with multiple complex problems.Aim: To understand how nurse case managers are seen by GPs and NHS managers.Setting: (1) Telephone interviews with 41 community nurse managers recruited from 10 English strategic health authorities and two Welsh health boards; (2) face-to-face interviews with 12 nurse case managers, 12 GPs and five NHS community service managers in three study sites with different population and practitioner characteristics.Method: Semi-structured individual interviews, by telephone or face to face.Results: Attitudes among GPs to nurse case managers were shaped by perceptions of the quality of community nursing on the one hand and the perceived benefit of case management as a method of reducing hospital use on the other. The dominant mood was scepticism about the ability of nurse case managers to reduce hospital admissions. Community matrons were seen as staff who were imposed on local health services, sometimes to detrimental effect.Conclusion: The introduction of case management and community matrons may disrupt existing communities of practice and be perceived negatively, at least in areas where good working relationships between nurses and GPs have developed. Commissioners should be aware of the potential resistance to changes in skill mix and role in nursing services, and promote innovation in ways that minimise disruption to functional communities of practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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12. Regulation of hepatic apolipoprotein synthesis in the 17 alpha-ethinyl estradiol-treated rat.
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Seishima, M, primary, Bisgaier, CL, additional, Davies, SL, additional, and Glickman, RM, additional
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- 1991
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13. HIV discrimination and the health of women living with HIV.
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Wingood GM, Diclemente RJ, Mikhail I, McCree DH, Davies SL, Hardin JW, Harris Peterson S, Hook EW, and Saag M
- Abstract
Women living with HIV are especially vulnerable to discrimination because of the stigma associated with the disease, as well as their race, gender and class status. To investigate the association between self-reported HIV discrimination and health outcomes among African- American and white women living with HIV, 366 women living with HIV were recruited from HIV/AIDS clinics in Georgia and Alabama. In this cross-sectional study, participants completed an interview that assessed self-reported HIV discrimination and depressive symptomatology, suicidal ideation, self-esteem, stress, quality of life, sexual health and HIV/AIDS related health care seeking. Nearly a sixth of the sample reported experiencing HIV discrimination. Women reporting HIV discrimination had higher mean scores for stress, suicidal ideation, depressive symptoms, number of unprotected sexual episodes; they had lower mean scores for self-esteem, and quality of life, and were more likely to have not sought medical care for HIV/AIDS. In race-specific analyses, none of the relationships between HIV discrimination and health outcomes were significant for white women. African-American women who reported HIV discrimination had higher mean scores for stress, suicidal ideation, depressive symptoms, number of unprotected sexual episodes; they had lower mean scores for self-esteem, and quality of life, and were more likely not to have sought medical care for HIV/AIDS. The findings indicated that HIV discrimination adversely affects women's mental, sexual and physical health. However, separate race-specific analyses indicated that compared to white women, African-American women were markedly more likely to experience the adverse affects of HIV discrimination. Eradication of HIV discrimination remains an important public health priority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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14. Evaluation of an intervention for hospitalized African American smokers.
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Davies SL, Kohler CL, Fish L, Taylor BE, Foster GE, and Annang L
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effectiveness of a smoking cessation intervention based on the transtheoretical model of change with a sample of low-income African American smokers admitted to an indigent-care hospital. METHODS: The intervention incorporated components shown to be effective in increasing cessation in other populations, tailored to a bedside counseling format with follow-up contact postdischarge. RESULTS: Intervention patients were significantly more likely to advance in stage than were control patients. CONCLUSION: A hospital-offered bedside intervention offers promise in reaching underserved smokers with effective, though limited, cessation assistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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15. Attitudes of young African American fathers toward early childbearing.
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Davies SL, Dix ES, Rhodes SD, Harrington KF, Frison S, and Willis L
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To qualitatively examine the perceptions of young fathers toward issues related to early childbearing. METHODS: Focus groups were held with male partners of adolescent females who had become pregnant while participating in an HIV-prevention trial. RESULTS: Primary domains that emerged included young male's desire for pregnancy, their attitudes toward father/child involvement, and their perceived social support as young fathers. CONCLUSIONS: Findings may help in developing gender-appropriate interventions to delay early childbearing and prevent HIV/STD transmission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
16. Transtheoretical model of change among hospitalized African American smokers.
- Author
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Kohler CL, Fish L, and Davies SL
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine predicted relationships among transtheoretical model of change measures in a sample of 211 low-income, African American hospitalized smokers. METHODS: We used discriminant analysis to examine differences in decisional balance and self-efficacy across stages of change for quitting. RESULTS: Differences in decisional balance and self-efficacy were concurrent with stage differences. The function discriminated among all 3 stages with the clearest differences between precontemplation and preparation. CONCLUSION: Although results with this specialized sample are not generalizable, they add to the evidence that transtheoretical model of change variables are robust across populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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17. Using cognitive mapping to develop a community-based family intervention.
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Shewchuk RM, Franklin FA, Harrington KF, Davies SL, and Windle M
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the development of a consumer-oriented intervention for increasing intake of fruits and vegetables (FVs) in families (n=265). METHOD: A cognitive-mapping approach was used to specify intervention performance objectives and a tailoring strategy. RESULTS: MDS and hierarchical cluster analysis indicated that FV perceptions are organized into 6 clusters arrayed along 3 dimensions. In combination with 3 general family-functioning measures, 11 perceptions explained approximately 18% of the variance in parent FVI. K-means cluster analysis revealed 4 types of families. CONCLUSION: Cognitive mapping provides a systematic approach for including qualitative data in the design of tailored interventions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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18. Pregnancy desire among disadvantaged African American adolescent females.
- Author
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Davies SL, DiClemente RJ, Wingood GM, Harrington KF, Crosby RA, and Sionean C
- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the prevalence and correlates of wanting to become pregnant among a sample of 462 sexually active nonpregnant African American adolescent females. METHODS: Multivariate logistic regression was used to calculate adjusted odds ratios, their 95% confidence intervals, and respective P values. RESULTS: Significant correlates with pregnancy desire included having a male partner who desired pregnancy, having a boyfriend at least 5 years older, having low self-esteem, perceiving greater perceived barriers to condom use, and perceiving low family support. CONCLUSIONS: Pregnancy prevention programs designed for economically disadvantaged African American adolescent females should address these correlates of their pregnancy desire. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
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19. Sexual risk behaviors associated with having older sex partners: a study of black adolescent females.
- Author
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DiClemente RJ, Wingood GM, Crosby RA, Sionean C, Cobb BK, Harrington K, Davies SL, Hook EW III, Oh MK, DiClemente, Ralph J, Wingood, Gina M, Crosby, Richard A, Sionean, Catlainn, Cobb, Brenda K, Harrington, Kathy, Davies, Susan L, Hook, Edward W 3rd, and Oh, M Kim
- Published
- 2002
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20. Psychosocial correlates of adolescents' worry about STD versus HIV infection: similarities and differences.
- Author
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Crosby R, DiClemente RJ, Wingood GM, Sionéan C, Harrington K, Davies SL, Hook EW III, Oh MK, Crosby, R, DiClemente, R J, Wingood, G M, Sionéan, C, Harrington, K, Davies, S L, Hook, E W 3rd, and Oh, M K
- Published
- 2001
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21. ISOLATION OF CDNA CLONES ENCODING THE BETA-ISOZYME OF HUMAN DNA TOPOISOMERASE-II AND LOCALIZATION OF THE GENE TO CHROMOSOME 3P24
- Author
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Jenkins, Jr, Ayton, P., Jones, T., Davies, Sl, Simmons, Dl, Harris, Al, Denise Sheer, and Hickson, Id
22. Adolescents' ambivalence about becoming pregnant predicts infrequent contraceptive use: a prospective analysis of nonpregnant African American females.
- Author
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Crosby RA, DiClemente RJ, Wingood GM, Davies SL, Harrington K, Crosby, Richard A, Diclemente, Ralph J, Wingood, Gina M, Davies, Susan L, and Harrington, Kathy
- Abstract
This study prospectively investigated the hypothesis that ambivalence about becoming pregnant is associated with comparatively less frequent use of contraception. Findings from a sample of sexually active African American adolescent, nonpregnant females (n = 375) supported this hypothesis. Prevention programs may benefit from content designed to redress adolescents' positive beliefs about early parenthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2002
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23. Gang involvement and the health of African American female adolescents.
- Author
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Wingood GM, DiClemente RJ, Crosby R, Harrington K, Davies SL, and Hook EW III
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase type I is involved in hypersensitivity of human breast cells to topoisomerase II inhibitors
- Author
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Tortora, G., Fortunato Ciardiello, Damiano, V., Pepe, S., Bianco, C., Di Isernia, G., Davies, S. L., North, P., Harris, A. L., Hickson, I. D., Bianco, A. R., Tortora, G, Ciardiello, Fortunato, Damiano, V, Pepe, S, Bianco, C, DI ISERNIA, G, Davies, Sl, North, P, Harris, Al, Hickson, Id, Tortora, Giampaolo, F., Ciardiello, Damiano, Vincenzo, Pepe, Stefano, C., Bianco, G., di Isernia, S. L., Davie, P., North, A. L., Harri, I. D., Hickson, and Bianco, ANGELO RAFFAELE
- Subjects
Amsacrine ,Cell Survival ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Type II ,Transforming Growth Factor alpha ,Transfection ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases ,ZD6474 ,TKI ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Recombinant Proteins ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Bleomycin ,DNA Topoisomerases, Type II ,Genes, ras ,KDR ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Humans ,Topoisomerase II Inhibitors ,Female ,RET ,Cell Division ,Etoposide ,Teniposide - Abstract
Topoisomerase II (Topo II) is an essential enzyme that catalyzes the breakage of double-strand DNA and is the target of several effective anticancer drugs, including the epipodophyllotoxins. The regulatory subunits of the cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase are differentially expressed in normal and cancer cells. The RIalpha subunit is overexpressed in cells transformed by transforming growth factor-alpha (TGF-alpha) or Ha-ras oncogene. It has been shown that murine cells transformed by Ha-ras become hypersensitive to Topo II-targeting anticancer drugs. In this report we have tested whether any correlation exists between the expression of RIalpha protein and cellular sensitivity of Topo II-targeting drugs. Normal human breast MCF-10A cells and their derivatives overexpressing TGF-alpha, Ha-ras, or the different protein kinase subunits were treated with either Topo II inhibitors, such as etoposide, teniposide, or amsacrine, or with drugs which act independently of Topo II, such as bleomycin. Here we show that MCF-10A TGF-alpha and MCF-10A Ha-ras cells overexpress the RIalpha protein and become hypersensitive to epypodophyllotoxins and amsacrine but not to bleomycin. Direct introduction of the RIalpha gene into MCF-10A induces hypersensitivity to Topo II inhibitor drugs. In contrast, the overexpression of the other protein kinase subunits, RIIbeta or Calpha, does not modify the drug sensitivity of MCF-10A cells. No differences in the mRNA/protein content or in the activity of Topo II were found between hypersensitive cells and parental MCF-10A cells, suggesting that RIalpha may influence drug sensitivity via modulation of events downstream of the Topo II-DNA cleavable complex.
- Published
- 1995
25. Overexpression of the RI alpha subunit of protein kinase A confers hypersensitivity to topoisomerase II inhibitors and 8-chloro-cyclic adenosine 3'5'-monophosphate in Chinese hamster ovary cells
- Author
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Ps, North, Sl, Davies, Ciardiello F, Damiano V, Bianco C, Pepe S, Ar, Bianco, Al, Harris, Id, Hickson, Giampaolo Tortora, North, P, Davies, Sl, Ciardiello, Fortunato, Damiano, V, Bianco, C, Pepe, S, Bianco, Ar, Harris, Al, Hickson, Id, and Tortora, G.
- Subjects
8-Bromo Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate ,Antineoplastic Agents ,CHO Cells ,8-chloro-cyclic adenosine 3'5'-monophosphate ,Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases ,Bleomycin ,Cricetinae ,Animals ,Cisplatin ,Drug Screening Assays, Antitumor ,Cell Division ,Etoposide ,Teniposide - Abstract
We have shown that a mutant derivative of Chinese hamster ovary CHO-K1 cells, ADR-5, which shows hypersensitivity to topoisomerase II (topo II)-inhibitory drugs, is cross-sensitive to the site-selective cyclic AMP analogue 8-chloro-cyclic AMP. We tested the hypothesis that overexpression of the type I alpha regulatory subunit of protein kinase A may represent a common element conferring hypersensitivity to both topo II inhibitors and 8-chloro-cyclic AMP in ADR-5 cells. We have demonstrated that ADR-5 cells overexpress RI alpha protein, compared to parental CHO-K1 cells. Moreover, retroviral vector-mediated transfer of the RI alpha gene into CHO-K1 cells was able to confer a drug-hypersensitive phenotype similar to that exhibited by ADR-5 cells. Analysis of topo II protein levels and activity revealed no differences between parental and infected cells, suggesting that protein kinase A may be involved in the downstream processing of topo II-mediated events.
26. Sexual Debut in Early Adolescence and Individual, School, and Neighborhood Social Capital.
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Cribb Fabersunne C, Milliren C, Schuster MA, Elliott MN, Emery ST, Cuccaro PM, Davies SL, and Richmond T
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Female, Male, Longitudinal Studies, Adolescent Behavior, Residence Characteristics statistics & numerical data, Neighborhood Characteristics, Sexual Behavior statistics & numerical data, Social Capital, Schools
- Abstract
Purpose: Sexual debut in early adolescence is associated with poor health outcomes in adulthood. We examined the associations of social capital within families, schools, and neighborhoods with early sexual debut., Methods: Using data from the Healthy Passages cohort, a longitudinal multilevel study of adolescents, we performed a series of cross-classified multilevel logistic regression models to examine (1) the relative contribution of schools and neighborhoods to the variance and (2) the association of markers of social cohesion/social capital in families, schools, and neighborhoods with sexual debut by 10th grade., Results: There were 4,001 youth participants nested in 115 schools and 751 neighborhoods, with a high degree of cross-classification (1,340 unique combinations of school and neighborhoods). In models adjusting for individual demographics, neighborhoods contributed more to the variance (log odds U [95% confidence interval {CI}] [intra class correlation {ICC}%]) in sexual debut than schools: U
neighborhoods = 0.11 (0.02, 0.23) [3.2%] versus Uschools = 0.07 (0.01, 0.16) [2%]. Restriction of dating and family cohesion, markers of family social capital, were associated with reduced odds of sexual debut by 10th grade (odds ratio = 0.45 95% CI: 0.41-0.49 and 0.93, 95% CI: 0.86, 1.00). Neighborhood cohesion and education level were associated with early debut. Although reduced, there remained significant, unexplained variance in both the school and neighborhood level in the fully adjusted model (Uschool = 0.08 [0.01, 0.17] [2.3%], Uneighborhood = 0.08 [0.02, 0.17] [2.2%])., Discussion: Markers of social capital at the family and neighborhood levels were associated with sexual debut by 10th grade. Developers of public health programs aiming to delay sexual debut should consider family-focused and neighborhood-focused interventions., (Copyright © 2024 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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27. Working towards a culturally safe optometry workforce for first nations peoples in Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand.
- Author
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Watene R, Davies SL, Bandler LG, Murray D, Anstice N, Hopkins S, Collins A, Anjou MD, Baldwin K, and Kelly SL
- Subjects
- Humans, New Zealand, Australia, Workforce, Optometry, Health Services, Indigenous
- Published
- 2023
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28. Parents' Acceptance of COVID-19 Compared to Human Papillomavirus Vaccines.
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Footman A, Kanney N, Niccolai LM, Zimet GD, Overton ET, Davies SL, and Van Der Pol B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, United States, COVID-19 Vaccines, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, SARS-CoV-2, Parents, Vaccination, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Papillomavirus Vaccines, Papillomavirus Infections prevention & control, COVID-19 prevention & control
- Abstract
Purpose: The first vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) for adolescents 16 years and older in the United States received Emergency Use Authorization in December 2020. Soon after its approval, parents expressed concerns about vaccine safety for adolescents. Similar concerns about vaccine safety partially explain suboptimal human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine uptake. This qualitative study explores similarities and differences in parents' attitudes about these two vaccines., Methods: Parents were recruited through social media and at health centers in Alabama. Semi-structured interviews with parents of adolescents aged 9-17 years were conducted before and after Alabama expanded age eligibility to those 16 and older. Topics included knowledge about HPV and COVID-19 vaccines, and parents' intentions to have children vaccinated. Interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis., Results: From March 11, 2021 to April 24, 2021, 21 in-depth interviews were conducted. Parents discussed the importance of HPV and COVID-19 vaccines for protecting their children's health but differences between the two related to community protection. Parents were concerned about vaccine safety but media coverage about the COVID-19 vaccine led to more favorable attitudes about the benefits of vaccination, which was not observed for HPV vaccines. Instead for HPV vaccination, parents wanted their healthcare providers' opinions about the vaccine before making a vaccination decision., Discussion: Parents had similar concerns about HPV and COVID-19 vaccines. Although provider recommendations can improve vaccine uptake, local news reports were seen to have a positive impact on COVID-19 vaccine acceptance in lieu of provider recommendation. Disseminating information online could be beneficial to promote HPV and COVID-19 vaccines., (Copyright © 2022 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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29. Perceived Need and Acceptance of a Future Chlamydia Vaccine Among Health Care Providers.
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Footman A, Kanney N, Niccolai LM, Zimet GD, Overton ET, Davies SL, and Van Der Pol B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Personnel education, Humans, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Vaccination, Chlamydia, Papillomavirus Vaccines, Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: Chlamydia vaccination is a potentially important strategy to prevent infections and reduce the global burden of disease. Ideally, chlamydia immunization programs would require vaccinating adolescents before they engage in sexual activity. Communication by health care providers (HCPs) has been shown to have an impact on vaccine acceptance. Therefore, it is imperative to understand their opinions on chlamydia vaccines and factors that would promote strong vaccine recommendations to patients to promote uptake., Methods: Semi-structured interviews with adolescent HCPs were conducted and focused on perceived need for chlamydia vaccine. Additional topics included vaccine characteristics, such as efficacy, cost, and booster vaccines, and potential vaccine recommendation strategies., Results: From January to July 2021, 22 interviews were completed. Health care providers discussed how chlamydia vaccines are needed, especially in settings with high prevalence rates. Health care providers thought a chlamydia vaccine would need to be very efficacious in preventing infections and related sequalae and cost-effective. However, there were concerns about low completion rates if this vaccine required multiple doses or boosters. In addition, vaccine misinformation was prevalent among HCPs regarding potential benefits of vaccination., Conclusions: Health care providers' perceptions that an adolescent chlamydia vaccine would be beneficial offers great promise for future promotion. However, there is need for targeted education programs about chlamydia and the benefits of vaccination for HCPs. These programs will be especially important in order for HCPs to effectively communicate about the benefits of vaccination to parents and adolescents provide strong vaccine recommendations., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest: L.M.N. has served as a scientific advisor for Merck, Moderna, and Janssen. G.D.Z. has served as a consultant and advisory committee member for Merck regarding HPV vaccination and as an advisory committee member for Moderna regarding COVID-19 vaccination. He has also received investigator-initiated research funding from Merck, administered through Indiana University. E.T.O. served as a consultant for ViiV. All other authors have no conflicts to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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30. Chlamydia Vaccination: Parent Opinions and Implications for Future Promotion Programs.
- Author
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Footman A, Kanney N, Niccolai LM, Zimet GD, Overton ET, Davies SL, and Van Der Pol B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Personnel, Humans, Parents, Sexual Behavior, Vaccination, Chlamydia, Papillomavirus Infections prevention & control, Papillomavirus Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: Chlamydia vaccines are currently under development and have the potential to lower the incidence of infection and disease, which are highest among adolescents and young adults. Ideally, a chlamydia vaccine would be administered to adolescents before sexual debut, a time when parents are the primary vaccine decision makers. This study explores parent opinions about an adolescent chlamydia vaccine to understand barriers and facilitators to uptake., Methods: Semistructured interviews were conducted with parents of adolescents. Topics included conversations parents have with their children about chlamydia, opinions on chlamydia vaccine development, and vaccine characteristics, such as efficacy and cost. Interviews were analyzed using a thematic analysis approach., Results: From March to April 2021, 21 interviews were completed. Few parents discuss chlamydia with their children and sex education was seen as limited. Overall, 16 parents indicated that a chlamydia vaccine is needed. However, there were mixed opinions about vaccinating their own children, related to the need to vaccinate at a young age, vaccine efficacy, and confusion about benefits of vaccination. Finally, healthcare provider recommendations were seen as important before deciding to vaccinate a child., Conclusions: Although parents think that chlamydia vaccines are needed, lack of awareness about infections and potential benefits of vaccination could serve as barriers to uptake. Healthcare provider recommendations can help to improve knowledge and vaccine uptake. However, there is a need for multilevel approaches to improve chlamydia awareness and ensure that vaccination initiation and completion rates remain high., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest and Sources of Funding: Dr Niccolai has served as a scientific advisor for Merck, Moderna, and Janssen. Dr Zimet has served as a consultant and advisory committee member for Merck regarding human papillomavirus vaccination and as an advisory committee member for Moderna regarding COVID-19 vaccination. He has also received investigator-initiated research funding from Merck, administered through Indiana University. Dr Overton served as a consultant for ViiV. All other authors have no conflicts to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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31. Analysis of Reported Health Care Use by Sexual Orientation Among Youth.
- Author
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Reisner SL, Mateo C, Elliott MN, Tortolero S, Davies SL, Lewis T, Li D, and Schuster M
- Subjects
- Alabama, California, Child, Cohort Studies, Female, Heterosexuality psychology, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Odds Ratio, Patient Acceptance of Health Care psychology, Sexual Behavior statistics & numerical data, Students psychology, Students statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Texas, Patient Acceptance of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Self Report statistics & numerical data, Sexual Behavior psychology
- Abstract
Importance: In the United States, adolescents who are lesbian, gay, or bisexual (LGB) face disparities across physical and mental health outcomes compared with non-LGB youth, yet few studies have looked at patterns of health care utilization by sexual orientation., Objective: To compare health care utilization indicators for LGB and non-LGB youth., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study analyzed wave 3 data from Healthy Passages, a longitudinal observational study of diverse public school students in Birmingham, Alabama; Houston, Texas; and Los Angeles County, California. Multivariable logistic regression models tested sexual-orientation differences in the past 12-month health care utilization measures, controlling for youth age, gender, race and ethnicity, household education, income, and marital status. Data collection began in 2010 when students were in the 5th grade (mean [SE] age, 11.13 [0.01] years) (wave 1) and continued 2 years later (wave 2, 7th grade) and 5 years later (wave 3, 10th grade). Permission to be contacted was provided for 6663 children, and 5147 (77%) participated in audio computer-assisted self-administered interviews. This study included 4256 youth (640 LGB, 3616 non-LGB) who completed interviews at wave 1 and wave 3 and answered key items used in this analysis. Analyses were completed in June 2021., Exposures: Sexual orientation (LGB vs non-LGB)., Main Outcomes and Measures: Health care utilization and communication difficulty with a physician in the past 12 months., Results: Among 4256 youths included in the study at baseline in 5th grade (wave 1), 2171 (48.9%) were female; 1502 (44.5%) were Hispanic or Latino; 1479 (28.9%) were Black; the mean (SE) age was 11.19 (0.03) years; and 640 (14.5%) were LGB at wave 3. Compared with non-LGB youth, a higher proportion of LGB youth reported not receiving needed medical care in the last 12 months (adjusted odds ratio [aOR], 1.68; 95% CI,1.38-2.05), most commonly for sexually transmitted infections, contraception, and substance use. LGB youth more frequently reported difficulty communicating with their physician (aOR, 1.71; 95% CI, 1.27-2.30) than non-LGB youth., Conclusions and Relevance: This study's results found that health care utilization differs by sexual orientation for youth. These findings suggest that clinician training is needed to address the health care needs of LGB youth. Routinely capturing sexual orientation data might enable tracking of health care utilization indicators for LGB youth.
- Published
- 2021
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32. Adolescent Chlamydia Rates by Region, Race, and Sex: Trends From 2013 to 2017.
- Author
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Corcoran JL, Li P, Davies SL, Knight CC, Lanzi RG, and Ladores SL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mass Screening, Sexual Behavior, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Chlamydia, Sexually Transmitted Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Chlamydia is the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection in the United States. Adolescents (ages 15-19 years) have the highest infection rate, second only to young adults (ages 20-24 years). The purpose of this secondary data analysis is to examine trends from 2013 to 2017 in adolescent chlamydia rates by region, race, and sex., Method: Adolescent chlamydia rate data were obtained from the Center for Disease Control's National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention database. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze the trends., Results: The overall trend in male and female adolescent chlamydia rates increased from 2013 to 2017. Specifically, the trend increased faster in males, White adolescents, and those in the Northeast and Midwest regions of the country., Discussion: Health care providers are uniquely positioned to positively affect adolescent chlamydia rates through targeted sexual health discussions and increased screening for sexually transmitted infections., (Copyright © 2020 National Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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33. CITY Health II - using entertainment education and social media to reduce HIV among emerging adults: A protocol paper for the Beat HIVe project.
- Author
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Davies SL, Smith TL, Murphy B, Crawford MS, Kaiser KA, and Clay OJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Black or African American, Humans, Peer Group, Public Health, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Young Adult, HIV Infections prevention & control, Social Media
- Abstract
Background: Despite multiple efforts to reduce HIV rates among African American young adults, a significant racial disparity persists and continues to grow among this population. New approaches are needed to reach this at-risk group and engage them in prevention efforts. The Community Influences Transitions of Youth Health (CITY Health II) study aims to increase HIV preventive behaviors to decrease HIV rates among 18-25 year old African American emerging adults living in resource-poor southern urban communities., Methods: CITY Health II is a 5-year HIV prevention study that evaluates the efficacy of a peer-driven entertainment education intervention compared to an attention-control intervention using a cluster randomized trial design. Participants were recruited through respondent-driven sampling (RDS) to participate in a social media intervention. We enlisted eight musicians and groups to help us create an entertaining and educational web-based video series, "The Beat HIVe", for study participants to view on smartphones and share with peers on social media. Data collection interviews at baseline, 3-month, and 6-month follow-up assessed socio-demographics, risk and protective behaviors, social networks, and peer norms. Analyses will determine if participation is associated with improved HIV-related outcomes; examine whether intervention changes are mediated by perceived social norms and outcome expectations; determine whether intervention benefits vary by sociodemographic characteristics related to mediators, intervention outcome, or level of engagement; and examine the relationship between participant dose of intervention and outcomes., Discussion: Outcomes will inform ways to engage African American emerging adults through entertainment education and other strategies for increasing optimal sexual health behaviors., Trial Registration: NCT04320186., (Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2020
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34. Adolescents' perceptions of sexual health education programs: An integrative review.
- Author
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Corcoran JL, Davies SL, Knight CC, Lanzi RG, Li P, and Ladores SL
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Schools, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Health education, Students psychology
- Abstract
Introduction: Adolescents are key stakeholders in sexual health education, yet they are rarely consulted when developing sexual health programs. Their voices are integral to improving the delivery of relevant and appropriate school-based sexual health education to promote safer adolescent sexual behaviors., Methods: An integrative review was conducted utilizing three databases: Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) Complete, PubMed, and Education Resources Information Center (ERIC). The PRISMA and matrix method were used to search the literature and synthesize the findings from 16 articles regarding adolescent perceptions of school-based sexual health education., Results: The main themes that emerged from this review included: (a) factors influencing adolescent perceptions of sexual health education programs, (b) characteristics of good sexual health education programs, and (c) areas of improvement in sexual health education programs., Conclusion: Adolescents overwhelmingly requested honest, comprehensive content delivered by nonjudgmental, well-educated health professionals in a comfortable environment., (Copyright © 2020 The Foundation for Professionals in Services for Adolescents. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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35. School Social Capital and Tobacco Experimentation Among Adolescents: Evidence From a Cross-Classified Multilevel, Longitudinal Analysis.
- Author
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Sakai-Bizmark R, Richmond TK, Kawachi I, Elliott MN, Davies SL, Tortolero Emery S, Peskin M, Milliren CE, and Schuster MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Multilevel Analysis, Schools, Social Environment, Students psychology, Tobacco Products, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Peer Influence, Social Capital, Tobacco Smoking psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: School social capital incorporates the intangible prosocial resources from social networks, including expectations and social norms, found in a school environment. School social capital may influence health behaviors such as smoking. This study examined the association of school social capital with smoking behaviors from childhood into adolescence., Methods: We used a cohort sampled from three U.S. cities for the Healthy Passages Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. The primary outcome was cigarette smoking at grade 10 (Wave 3). The primary predictor of interest was school social capital at grade 5 (Wave 1). We included potential covariates at the individual, school, and neighborhood levels at Wave 1. To account for simultaneous clustering in schools and neighborhoods, cross-classified multilevel models were used., Results: After exclusions and imputations for missing variables, our final sample contained 3,968 students as constituents of 118 schools and 479 neighborhoods. With adjustment for the covariates, school social capital for grade 5 was negatively associated with cigarette smoking in grade 10. We estimated that a 1 standard deviation increase in the school average social capital for grade 5 is associated with an odds ratio of .86 (95% credible interval: .75-.98) for school-level smoking in grade 10., Conclusions: This study suggests that school social capital in late elementary years is associated with reduced smoking behaviors among adolescents in the U.S. Influencing school social capital through enrichment of positive social norms and parent/teacher expectations may be a useful strategy to reduce adolescent smoking, with long-term implications for adult health., (Copyright © 2019 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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36. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry for plasma metadrenalines.
- Author
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Davies SL and Davison AS
- Subjects
- Blood Chemical Analysis standards, Chromatography, Liquid standards, Diet, Humans, Kidney physiology, Tandem Mass Spectrometry standards, Blood Chemical Analysis methods, Chromatography, Liquid methods, Metanephrine blood, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods
- Abstract
Evidence is accumulating which may result in plasma free metadrenalines (PMets) becoming the preferred test for diagnosing phaeochromocytoma and paraganglioma. Moreover, increased availability and benefits over other analytical methods like liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection and immunoassay are causing liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) to become the method of choice for PMet measurement. This review explores the evidence-base supporting this, and summarises published LC-MS/MS analytical methods for PMet analysis. Key aspects of methods (including SPE extraction, HILIC chromatography, MRM MS-detection and standardisation) are discussed. Common causes of analytical interference (e.g. ion suppression/enhancement, ionic cross talk, in source transformation and isobaric interferences) are outlined to illustrate the importance of sample purification and chromatographic resolution. The importance of supine, fasting sampling and Bayesian interpretation against supine, fasting reference intervals are explained, as well as the importance of age-specific reference intervals for normetadrenaline. Confounding factors like diet, drugs, renal function and acute illness are explored, along with potential strategies to address these (e.g. CKD-specific reference intervals)., (Crown Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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37. Mechanisms and Frequency of Violent Injuries Among Victims and Perpetrators of Bullying.
- Author
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Jetelina KK, Reingle Gonzalez JM, Cuccaro PM, Peskin MF, Pompeii L, Atem F, Elliott MN, Earnshaw VA, Davies SL, and Schuster MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Child, Female, Firearms, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prevalence, United States, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Aggression, Bullying statistics & numerical data, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data, Wounds and Injuries
- Abstract
Purpose: This article aims to (1) evaluate whether bullying typology predicts violent injury; (2) longitudinally examine whether violent injury trajectories differ across bullying typology as children age; and (3) longitudinally determine whether children who consistently reported perpetration or victimization (i.e., reported bullying at fifth, seventh, and 10th grade) were different from children who inconsistently reported perpetration or victimization., Methods: Longitudinal data were obtained from 4,297 children at three waves (fifth, seventh, and 10th grade) in three United States communities. Children were categorized into four mutually exclusive bullying typologies: neither victim nor perpetrator; victim only; perpetrator only; victim-perpetrator. Children self-reported mechanisms of violent injuries that needed medical attention in the past year. Regression models were used to evaluate the relationship between bullying group and the likelihood of violent injury over time., Results: Seventeen percent (n=857) of children in fifth grade reported a violent injury. Prevalence of overall violent injuries, and specifically firearm and knife injuries, increased over time. Children who reported perpetration in the absence of victimization were at increased odds for violent injury (adjusted odds ratio = 1.41, 95% confidence interval: 1.24, 1.60) compared with children who reported neither victimization nor perpetration, while children who reported victimization in the absence of perpetration were at decreased odds (adjusted odds ratio=.84, 95% confidence interval: .73, .97). A significant linear dose-response relationship was observed between duration of bullying perpetration and violent injury., Conclusions: The relationship between bullying perpetration and violent injury over time was strong. Future research should investigate potential mediating behaviors, such as weapon access, which might explain the observed relationship., (Copyright © 2018 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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38. Self-reporting discrepancies of bullying victimization and perpetration measures.
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Jetelina KK, Reingle Gonzalez JM, Cuccaro PM, Peskin MF, Pompeii L, Atem F, Elliott MN, Earnshaw VA, Davies SL, and Schuster MA
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Bullying psychology, Child, Female, Humans, Incidence, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prevalence, Self Report, United States epidemiology, Bullying statistics & numerical data, Crime Victims statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the relationship between sociodemographics and the prevalence of bullying victimization and perpetration using single-item and multiple-item measures., Methods: Longitudinal survey data were obtained from 4297 children at fifth, seventh, and tenth grade in three U.S. cities. Bullying victimization and perpetration were measured in two ways: 1) a single-item recall measure; and 2) a separate multiple-item measure using specific behaviors indicating bullying victimization and perpetration. Multilevel logistic regression modeled the relationship between sociodemographics and bullying, stratified by measurement type., Results: In fifth grade, 4% of children were identified as victims using the single-item approach but not the multiple-item approach, 27% were identified as victims using the multiple-item approach but not the single-item approach, and 17% were identified as victims using both approaches. For perpetration, 3% were identified using the single-item approach but not the multiple-item approach, 18% were identified using the multiple-item and not the single-item approach, and 4% were identified using both approaches. The odds of victimization were significantly lower in seventh and tenth grades than in fifth grade using both approaches. The single-item odds of perpetration were significantly lower in tenth grade than fifth grade, but the multiple-item odds of perpetration significantly increased over time., Conclusions: Bullying prevalence rates are sensitive to the structure of measures. Future research should identify whether these differences reflect a lack of awareness of types of bullying and/or cognitive variability in answering sensitive survey questions., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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39. 21 st Century Realities: The Urgency of Diversifying the Dental Professional Field.
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Clyburn T and Davies SL
- Subjects
- Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Minority Health, United States, Cultural Diversity, Education, Dental statistics & numerical data, Schools, Dental statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This article asserts that U.S. demographic shifts make it imperative that academic dental institutions and, in turn, the dental profession must diversify to best meet the needs of the nation's quickly changing population. In particular, it argues that the severe underrepresentation of African American and Hispanic students in dental schools is a detriment to those students who are being excluded from a field critical to the well-being of the population, their prospective peers who are thus not afforded the benefits of compositional diversity in the classroom, and the millions of Americans who live in areas with little to no access to culturally competent oral health care. With such complex challenges facing the profession, dental schools must evolve to prepare students of all races, ethnicities, and socioeconomic backgrounds to provide adequate oral health care to the country's changing population.
- Published
- 2019
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40. Optimal healthcare delivery to care homes in the UK: a realist evaluation of what supports effective working to improve healthcare outcomes.
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Gordon AL, Goodman C, Davies SL, Dening T, Gage H, Meyer J, Schneider J, Bell B, Jordan J, Martin FC, Iliffe S, Bowman C, Gladman JRF, Victor C, Mayrhofer A, Handley M, and Zubair M
- Subjects
- Health Personnel psychology, Humans, Patient Care Team standards, Qualitative Research, State Medicine standards, United Kingdom, Attitude of Health Personnel, Delivery of Health Care, Integrated standards, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Health Personnel standards, Health Services for the Aged standards, Homes for the Aged standards, Nursing Homes standards, Quality Improvement standards, Quality Indicators, Health Care standards
- Abstract
Introduction: care home residents have high healthcare needs not fully met by prevailing healthcare models. This study explored how healthcare configuration influences resource use., Methods: a realist evaluation using qualitative and quantitative data from case studies of three UK health and social care economies selected for differing patterns of healthcare delivery to care homes. Four homes per area (12 in total) were recruited. A total of 239 residents were followed for 12 months to record resource-use. Overall, 181 participants completed 116 interviews and 13 focus groups including residents, relatives, care home staff, community nurses, allied health professionals and General Practitioners., Results: context-mechanism-outcome configurations were identified explaining what supported effective working between healthcare services and care home staff: (i) investment in care home-specific work that legitimises and values work with care homes; (ii) relational working which over time builds trust between practitioners; (iii) care which 'wraps around' care homes; and (iv) access to specialist care for older people with dementia. Resource use was similar between sites despite differing approaches to healthcare. There was greater utilisation of GP resource where this was specifically commissioned but no difference in costs between sites., Conclusion: activities generating opportunities and an interest in healthcare and care home staff working together are integral to optimal healthcare provision in care homes. Outcomes are likely to be better where: focus and activities legitimise ongoing contact between healthcare staff and care homes at an institutional level; link with a wider system of healthcare; and provide access to dementia-specific expertise., (© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society.)
- Published
- 2018
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41. Unequal interactions: Examining the role of patient-centered care in reducing inequitable diffusion of a medical innovation, the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine.
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Fenton AT, Elliott MN, Schwebel DC, Berkowitz Z, Liddon NC, Tortolero SR, Cuccaro PM, Davies SL, and Schuster MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Black or African American psychology, Black or African American statistics & numerical data, Child, Female, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Parents psychology, Patient Acceptance of Health Care ethnology, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Vaccination psychology, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, White People psychology, White People statistics & numerical data, Diffusion of Innovation, Healthcare Disparities ethnology, Papillomavirus Infections prevention & control, Papillomavirus Vaccines administration & dosage, Patient-Centered Care, Physician-Patient Relations
- Abstract
Rationale: Studies of inequities in diffusion of medical innovations rarely consider the role of patient-centered care., Objective: We used uptake of the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine shortly after its licensing to explore the role of patient-centered care., Methods: Using a longitudinal multi-site survey of US parents and adolescents, we assessed whether patient-centered care ratings might shape racial/ethnic and socioeconomic gaps at two decision points in the HPV vaccination process: (1) Whether a medical provider recommends the vaccine and (2) whether a parent decides to vaccinate., Results: We did not find evidence that the association of patient-centeredness with vaccination varies by parent education. In contrast, parent ratings of providers' patient-centeredness were significantly associated with racial/ethnic disparities in parents' reports of receiving a HPV vaccine recommendation from a provider: Among parents who rate patient-centered care as low, white parents' odds of receiving such a recommendation are 2.6 times higher than black parents' odds, but the racial/ethnic gap nearly disappears when parents report high patient-centeredness. Moderated mediation analyses suggest that patient-centeredness is a major contributor underlying vaccination uptake disparities: Among parents who report low patient-centeredness, white parents' odds of vaccinating their child are 8.1 times higher than black parents' odds, while both groups are equally likely to vaccinate when patient-centeredness is high., Conclusion: The results indicate that patient-centered care, which has been a relatively understudied factor in the unequal diffusion of medical innovations, deserves more attention. Efforts to raise HPV vaccination rates should explore why certain patient groups may be less likely to receive recommendations and should support providers to consistently inform all patient groups about vaccination., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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42. Associations between participation in family activities and adolescent school problems.
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Goldfarb SS, Locher JL, Preskitt J, Becker D, Davies SL, and Sen B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Policy Making, Risk-Taking, Social Skills, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, United States epidemiology, Adolescent Behavior, Educational Measurement, Family Relations psychology, Problem Behavior, Social Environment, Social Participation psychology, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Adolescent risk outcomes related to school issues are widespread, with about 20% parents reporting poor school engagement amongst their youth. Previous literature suggests that adolescents who report strong bonds with their parents are often identified as being less likely to engage in risky behaviours, such as substance use. The current study sought to examine the association between the frequencies of selected family activities and school problems amongst adolescents after adjustments for family connectedness and other characteristics., Methods: Data were drawn from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997. Of the 8984 youth interviewed, 3855 also had a sibling interviewed who met the selection criteria. School problem outcomes measured were suspension occurrence, poor grades and highest grade completed low for age. Independent variables of interest were self-reported frequency of family dinner, fun and religious activities in a typical week. Multivariable logistic models were estimated for each outcome, and multivariable linear probability models were estimated adjusting for family fixed effects., Results: Adjusting for family connectedness, there were significant associations between certain family activities and adolescent school problem measures. However, these results did not remain significant in models with family fixed effects, suggesting that associations could be driven by family-level confounders., Discussion: This study did not find strong evidence of a protective relationship between family activities and school problems. Therefore, it suggested that programme and policymakers be cautious in overstating the importance of family activities in preventing adolescent risk outcomes until true causal relationships can be determined., (© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2017
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43. The Association Between Familial Homelessness, Aggression, and Victimization Among Children.
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Jetelina KK, Reingle Gonzalez JM, Cuccaro PM, Peskin MF, Elliott MN, Coker TR, Mrug S, Davies SL, and Schuster MA
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- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, Alabama, Caregivers psychology, Child, Female, Ill-Housed Persons statistics & numerical data, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Los Angeles, Male, Risk Factors, Self Report, Texas, United States, Aggression psychology, Crime Victims psychology, Ill-Housed Persons psychology
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the number of periods children were exposed to familial homelessness and childhood aggression and victimization., Methods: Survey data were obtained from 4,297 fifth-grade children and their caregivers in three U.S. cities. Children and primary caregivers were surveyed longitudinally in 7th and 10th grades. Family homelessness, measured at each wave as unstable housing, was self-reported by the caregiver. Children were categorized into four mutually exclusive groups: victim only, aggressor only, victim-aggressor, and neither victim nor aggressor at each time point using validated measures. Multinomial, multilevel mixed models were used to evaluate the relationship among periods of homelessness and longitudinal victimization, aggression, and victim aggression compared to children who were nonvictims and nonaggressors., Results: Results suggest that children who experienced family homelessness were more likely than domiciled children to report aggression and victim aggression but not victimization only. Multivariate analyses suggested that even brief periods of homelessness were positively associated with aggression and victim aggression (relative to neither) compared to children who were never homeless. Furthermore, childhood victimization and victim aggression significantly decreased from 5th grade to 10th grade while aggression significantly increased in 10th grade., Conclusions: Children who experienced family homelessness for brief periods of time were significantly more likely to be a victim-aggressor or aggressor compared to those who were never homeless. Prevention efforts should target housing security and other important factors that may reduce children's likelihood of aggression and associated victimization., (Copyright © 2016 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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44. Public involvement in research within care homes: benefits and challenges in the APPROACH study.
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Froggatt K, Goodman C, Morbey H, Davies SL, Masey H, Dickinson A, Martin W, and Victor C
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- Data Collection methods, England, Female, Humans, Male, Organizational Case Studies, Professional Role, Prospective Studies, Qualitative Research, Consumer Behavior, Nursing Homes, Research Design
- Abstract
Background: Public involvement in research (PIR) can improve research design and recruitment. Less is known about how PIR enhances the experience of participation and enriches the data collection process. In a study to evaluate how UK care homes and primary health-care services achieve integrated working to promote older people's health, PIR was integrated throughout the research processes., Objectives: This paper aims to present one way in which PIR has been integrated into the design and delivery of a multisite research study based in care homes., Design: A prospective case study design, with an embedded qualitative evaluation of PIR activity., Setting and Participants: Data collection was undertaken in six care homes in three sites in England. Six PIR members participated: all had prior personal or work experience in care homes., Data Collection: Qualitative data collection involved discussion groups, and site-specific meetings to review experiences of participation, benefits and challenges, and completion of structured fieldwork notes after each care home visit., Results: PIR members supported recruitment, resident and staff interviews and participated in data interpretation. Benefits of PIR work were resident engagement that minimized distress and made best use of limited research resources. Challenges concerned communication and scheduling. Researcher support for PIR involvement was resource intensive., Discussion and Conclusions: Clearly defined roles with identified training and support facilitated involvement in different aspects of the data collection process. This can also ensure that vulnerable older people who participate in research have a positive experience that reinforces the value of their views., (© 2015 The Authors Health Expectations Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
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45. Prospective Analysis of Behavioral Economic Predictors of Stable Moderation Drinking Among Problem Drinkers Attempting Natural Recovery.
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Tucker JA, Cheong J, Chandler SD, Lambert BH, Pietrzak B, Kwok H, and Davies SL
- Subjects
- Economics, Behavioral, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Recurrence, Self-Control, Temperance, Alcohol Drinking economics
- Abstract
Background: As interventions have expanded beyond clinical treatment to include brief interventions for persons with less severe alcohol problems, predicting who can achieve stable moderation drinking has gained importance. Recent behavioral economic (BE) research on natural recovery has shown that active problem drinkers who allocate their monetary expenditures on alcohol and saving for the future over longer time horizons tend to have better subsequent recovery outcomes, including maintenance of stable moderation drinking. This study compared the predictive utility of this money-based "Alcohol-Savings Discretionary Expenditure" (ASDE) index with multiple BE analogue measures of behavioral impulsivity and self-control, which have seldom been investigated together, to predict outcomes of natural recovery attempts., Methods: Community-dwelling problem drinkers, enrolled shortly after stopping abusive drinking without treatment, were followed prospectively for up to a year (N = 175 [75.4% male], M age = 50.65 years). They completed baseline assessments of preresolution drinking practices and problems, analogue behavioral choice tasks (Delay Discounting, Melioration-Maximization, and Alcohol Purchase Tasks), and a Timeline Followback interview including expenditures on alcohol compared to voluntary savings (ASDE index) during the preresolution year., Results: Multinomial logistic regression models showed that, among the BE measures, only the ASDE index predicted stable moderation drinking compared to stable abstinence or unstable resolutions involving relapse. As hypothesized, stable moderation was associated with more balanced preresolution allocations to drinking and savings (odds ratio = 1.77, 95% confidence interval = 1.02 to 3.08, p < 0.05), suggesting it is associated with longer-term behavior regulation processes than abstinence., Conclusions: The ASDE's unique predictive utility may rest on its comprehensive representation of contextual elements to support this patterning of behavioral allocation. Stable low-risk drinking, but not abstinence, requires such regulatory processes., (Copyright © 2016 by the Research Society on Alcoholism.)
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- 2016
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46. Relationship Between Adolescent Report of Patient-Centered Care and of Quality of Primary Care.
- Author
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Toomey SL, Elliott MN, Schwebel DC, Tortolero SR, Cuccaro PM, Davies SL, Kampalath V, and Schuster MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Black or African American, Asian, Communication, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Behavior, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Logistic Models, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Multivariate Analysis, Needs Assessment, Odds Ratio, White People, Adolescent Health Services standards, Confidentiality, Health Services Accessibility, Patient-Centered Care, Physician-Patient Relations, Primary Health Care standards, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Objective: Few studies have examined adolescent self-report of patient-centered care (PCC). We investigated whether adolescent self-report of PCC varied by patient characteristics and whether receipt of PCC is associated with measures of adolescent primary care quality., Methods: We analyzed cross-sectional data from Healthy Passages, a population-based survey of 4105 10th graders and their parents. Adolescent report of PCC was derived from 4 items. Adolescent primary care quality was assessed by measuring access to confidential care, screening for important adolescent health topics, unmet need, and overall rating of health care. We conducted weighted bivariate analyses and multivariate logistic regression models of the association of PCC with adolescent characteristics and primary care quality., Results: Forty-seven percent of adolescents reported that they received PCC. Report of receiving PCC was associated with high quality for other measures, such as having a private conversation with a clinician (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.2; 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.9, 2.6]) and having talked about health behaviors (aOR 1.6; 95% CI 1.4, 1.8); it was also associated with lower likelihood for self-reported unmet need for care (aOR 0.8; 95% CI 0.7, 0.9) and having a serious untreated health problem (aOR 0.4; 95% CI 0.3, 0.5)., Conclusions: Many adolescents do not report receiving PCC. Adolescent-reported PCC positively correlates with measures of high-quality adolescent primary care. Our study provides support for using adolescent-report of PCC as a measure of adolescent primary care quality., Competing Interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2016 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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47. Racial and Ethnic Disparities in ADHD Diagnosis and Treatment.
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Coker TR, Elliott MN, Toomey SL, Schwebel DC, Cuccaro P, Tortolero Emery S, Davies SL, Visser SN, and Schuster MA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cohort Studies, Drug Utilization statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, United States epidemiology, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity diagnosis, Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity drug therapy, Health Services Misuse statistics & numerical data, Healthcare Disparities, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: We examined racial/ethnic disparities in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) diagnosis and medication use and determined whether medication disparities were more likely due to underdiagnosis or undertreatment of African-American and Latino children, or overdiagnosis or overtreatment of white children., Methods: We used a population-based, multisite sample of 4297 children and parents surveyed over 3 waves (fifth, seventh, and 10th grades). Multivariate logistic regression examined disparities in parent-reported ADHD diagnosis and medication use in the following analyses: (1) using the total sample; (2) limited to children with an ADHD diagnosis or symptoms; and (3) limited to children without a diagnosis or symptoms., Results: Across all waves, African-American and Latino children, compared with white children, had lower odds of having an ADHD diagnosis and of taking ADHD medication, controlling for sociodemographics, ADHD symptoms, and other potential comorbid mental health symptoms. Among children with an ADHD diagnosis or symptoms, African-American children had lower odds of medication use at fifth, seventh, and 10th grades, and Latino children had lower odds at fifth and 10th grades. Among children who had neither ADHD symptoms nor ADHD diagnosis by fifth grade (and thus would not likely meet ADHD diagnostic criteria at any age), medication use did not vary by race/ethnicity in adjusted analysis., Conclusions: Racial/ethnic disparities in parent-reported medication use for ADHD are robust, persisting from fifth grade to 10th grade. These findings suggest that disparities may be more likely related to underdiagnosis and undertreatment of African-American and Latino children as opposed to overdiagnosis or overtreatment of white children., (Copyright © 2016 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.)
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- 2016
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48. Effective health care for older people living and dying in care homes: a realist review.
- Author
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Goodman C, Dening T, Gordon AL, Davies SL, Meyer J, Martin FC, Gladman JR, Bowman C, Victor C, Handley M, Gage H, Iliffe S, and Zubair M
- Subjects
- Aged, England, Geriatric Nursing, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, National Health Programs, Patient Care Planning, Homes for the Aged, Quality of Health Care, Terminal Care
- Abstract
Background: Care home residents in England have variable access to health care services. There is currently no coherent policy or consensus about the best arrangements to meet these needs. The purpose of this review was to explore the evidence for how different service delivery models for care home residents support and/or improve wellbeing and health-related outcomes in older people living and dying in care homes., Methods: We conceptualised models of health care provision to care homes as complex interventions. We used a realist review approach to develop a preliminary understanding of what supported good health care provision to care homes. We completed a scoping of the literature and interviewed National Health Service and Local Authority commissioners, providers of services to care homes, representatives from the Regulator, care home managers, residents and their families. We used these data to develop theoretical propositions to be tested in the literature to explain why an intervention may be effective in some situations and not others. We searched electronic databases and related grey literature. Finally the findings were reviewed with an external advisory group., Results: Strategies that support and sustain relational working between care home staff and visiting health care professionals explained the observed differences in how health care interventions were accepted and embedded into care home practice. Actions that encouraged visiting health care professionals and care home staff jointly to identify, plan and implement care home appropriate protocols for care, when supported by ongoing facilitation from visiting clinicians, were important. Contextual factors such as financial incentives or sanctions, agreed protocols, clinical expertise and structured approaches to assessment and care planning could support relational working to occur, but of themselves appeared insufficient to achieve change., Conclusion: How relational working is structured between health and care home staff is key to whether health service interventions achieve health related outcomes for residents and their respective organisations. The belief that either paying clinicians to do more in care homes and/or investing in training of care home staff is sufficient for better outcomes was not supported.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Provision of NHS generalist and specialist services to care homes in England: review of surveys.
- Author
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Iliffe S, Davies SL, Gordon AL, Schneider J, Dening T, Bowman C, Gage H, Martin FC, Gladman JR, Victor C, Meyer J, and Goodman C
- Subjects
- Aged, 80 and over, Female, Health Care Surveys, Health Services Accessibility, Humans, Male, United Kingdom, General Practitioners, Nursing Homes, Specialization, State Medicine
- Abstract
Background: The number of beds in care homes (with and without nurses) in the United Kingdom is three times greater than the number of beds in National Health Service (NHS) hospitals. Care homes are predominantly owned by a range of commercial, not-for-profit or charitable providers and their residents have high levels of disability, frailty and co-morbidity. NHS support for care home residents is very variable, and it is unclear what models of clinical support work and are cost-effective., Objectives: To critically evaluate how the NHS works with care homes., Methods: A review of surveys of NHS services provided to care homes that had been completed since 2008. It included published national surveys, local surveys commissioned by Primary Care organisations, studies from charities and academic centres, grey literature identified across the nine government regions, and information from care home, primary care and other research networks. Data extraction captured forms of NHS service provision for care homes in England in terms of frequency, location, focus and purpose., Results: Five surveys focused primarily on general practitioner services, and 10 on specialist services to care home. Working relationships between the NHS and care homes lack structure and purpose and have generally evolved locally. There are wide variations in provision of both generalist and specialist healthcare services to care homes. Larger care home chains may take a systematic approach to both organising access to NHS generalist and specialist services, and to supplementing gaps with in-house provision. Access to dental care for care home residents appears to be particularly deficient., Conclusions: Historical differences in innovation and provision of NHS services, the complexities of collaborating across different sectors (private and public, health and social care, general and mental health), and variable levels of organisation of care homes, all lead to persistent and embedded inequity in the distribution of NHS resources to this population. Clinical commissioners seeking to improve the quality of care of care home residents need to consider how best to provide fair access to health care for older people living in a care home, and to establish a specification for service delivery to this vulnerable population.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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50. The impact of calcium assay change on a local adjusted calcium equation.
- Author
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Davies SL, Hill C, Bailey LM, Davison AS, and Milan AM
- Subjects
- Homeostasis, Humans, Calcium analysis
- Abstract
Background: Deriving and validating local adjusted calcium equations is important for ensuring appropriate calcium status classification. We investigated the impact on our local adjusted calcium equation of a change in calcium method by the manufacturer from cresolphthalein complexone to NM-BAPTA., Methods: Calcium and albumin results from general practice requests were extracted from the Laboratory Information Management system for a three-month period. Results for which there was evidence of disturbance in calcium homeostasis were excluded leaving 13,482 sets of results for analysis. The adjusted calcium equation was derived following least squares regression analysis of total calcium on albumin and normalized to the mean calcium concentration of the data-set. The revised equation (NM-BAPTA calcium method) was compared with the previous equation (cresolphthalein complexone calcium method)., Results: The switch in calcium assay resulted in a small change in the adjusted calcium equation but was not considered to be clinically significant. The calcium reference interval differed from that proposed by Pathology Harmony in the UK., Conclusions: Local adjusted calcium equations should be re-assessed following changes in the calcium method. A locally derived reference interval may differ from the consensus harmonized reference interval., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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