32 results on '"Durfee MJ"'
Search Results
2. HIV Infection and Child Abuse
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Durfee Mj and Gellert Ga
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Child abuse ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,business.industry ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,Child Abuse, Sexual ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease_cause ,Family medicine ,Immunology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Child ,business - Published
- 1989
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3. Attitudes Toward COVID-19 Vaccines Among Pregnant and Recently Pregnant Individuals.
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Williams JTB, Kurlandsky K, Breslin K, Durfee MJ, Stein A, Hurley L, Shoup JA, Reifler LM, Daley MF, Lewin BJ, Goddard K, Henninger ML, Nelson JC, Vazquez-Benitez G, Hanson KE, Fuller CC, Weintraub ES, McNeil MM, and Hambidge SJ
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Infant, Pregnancy, Cross-Sectional Studies, Self Report, United States epidemiology, Hispanic or Latino, Black or African American, White, Vaccination statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 Vaccines, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
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Importance: Pregnant people and infants are at high risk of severe COVID-19 outcomes. Understanding changes in attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccines among pregnant and recently pregnant people is important for public health messaging., Objective: To assess attitudinal trends regarding COVID-19 vaccines by (1) vaccination status and (2) race, ethnicity, and language among samples of pregnant and recently pregnant Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) members from 2021 to 2023., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional surveye study included pregnant or recently pregnant members of the VSD, a collaboration of 13 health care systems and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Unvaccinated, non-Hispanic Black, and Spanish-speaking members were oversampled. Wave 1 took place from October 2021 to February 2022, and wave 2 took place from November 2022 to February 2023. Data were analyzed from May 2022 to September 2023., Exposures: Self-reported or electronic health record (EHR)-derived race, ethnicity, and preferred language., Main Outcomes and Measures: Self-reported vaccination status and attitudes toward monovalent (wave 1) or bivalent Omicron booster (wave 2) COVID-19 vaccines. Sample- and response-weighted analyses assessed attitudes by vaccination status and 3 race, ethnicity, and language groupings of interest., Results: There were 1227 respondents; all identified as female, the mean (SD) age was 31.7 (5.6) years, 356 (29.0%) identified as Black race, 555 (45.2%) identified as Hispanic ethnicity, and 445 (36.3%) preferred the Spanish language. Response rates were 43.5% for wave 1 (652 of 1500 individuals sampled) and 39.5% for wave 2 (575 of 1456 individuals sampled). Respondents were more likely than nonrespondents to be White, non-Hispanic, and vaccinated per EHR. Overall, 76.8% (95% CI, 71.5%-82.2%) reported 1 or more COVID-19 vaccinations; Spanish-speaking Hispanic respondents had the highest weighted proportion of respondents with 1 or more vaccination. Weighted estimates of somewhat or strongly agreeing that COVID-19 vaccines are safe decreased from wave 1 to 2 for respondents who reported 1 or more vaccinations (76% vs 50%; χ21 = 7.8; P < .001), non-Hispanic White respondents (72% vs 43%; χ21 = 5.4; P = .02), and Spanish-speaking Hispanic respondents (76% vs 53%; χ21 = 22.8; P = .002)., Conclusions and Relevance: Decreasing confidence in COVID-19 vaccine safety in a large, diverse pregnant and recently pregnant insured population is a public health concern.
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- 2024
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4. A virtual recruitment protocol promotes enrollment of underrepresented groups in a diabetes prevention trial.
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Ritchie ND, Turk MT, Holtrop JS, Durfee MJ, Dickinson LM, and Kaufmann PG
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Strategies are needed to ensure greater participation of underrepresented groups in diabetes research. We examined the impact of a remote study protocol on enrollment in diabetes research, specifically the Pre-NDPP clinical trial. Recruitment was conducted among 2807 diverse patients in a safety-net healthcare system. Results indicated three-fold greater odds of enrolling in remote versus in-person protocols (AOR 2.90; P < 0.001 [95% CI 2.29-3.67]). Priority populations with significantly higher enrollment included Latinx and Black individuals, Spanish speakers, and individuals who had Medicaid or were uninsured. A remote study design may promote overall recruitment into clinical trials, while effectively supporting enrollment of underrepresented groups., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (© The Author(s) 2024.)
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- 2024
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5. Sustainability of Interventions to Increase Guideline-Concordant Durations of Antibiotic Therapy for Children with Acute Otitis Media.
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Frost HM, Wittmer N, Keith A, Durfee MJ, and Jenkins TC
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- Child, Humans, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Guideline Adherence, Acute Disease, Practice Patterns, Physicians', Otitis Media drug therapy
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Two low-cost pragmatic interventions (change in the options in the electronic health record; change in the electronic health record plus education plus feedback comparing prescribing with peers) to improve prescribing of guideline-concordant short antibiotic durations for children 2 years and older with uncomplicated acute otitis media were highly effective and results were sustained 18 months after discontinuation of the active components of the interventions., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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6. Increasing access to family planning services among women receiving medications for opioid use disorder: A pilot randomized trial examining a peer-led navigation intervention.
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Rinehart DJ, Stowell M, Collings A, Durfee MJ, Thomas-Gale T, Jones HE, and Binswanger I
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- Adult, Contraception, Family Planning Services, Female, Humans, Pilot Projects, Pregnancy, Buprenorphine, Opioid-Related Disorders drug therapy
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Objective: High rates of unintended pregnancy occur among women with opioid use disorder (OUD). OUD treatment settings may provide an ideal opportunity to address the family planning needs of patients. However, few studies have rigorously evaluated interventions designed to address family planning needs in the OUD treatment setting. This study assessed the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of a peer-led navigation intervention designed to educate and link women receiving medications for OUD to family planning services., Methods: The study recruited women from four OUD treatment programs in Denver, Colorado, to participate in a pilot randomized controlled trial from March 2018 to February 2019. Eligible participants were English-speaking adult females who were neither pregnant nor desiring a pregnancy and who were not using a long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) method. Participants completed a baseline survey, and the study randomized them to receive a two-session, peer-led family planning navigation intervention or usual care. The study assessed feasibility by participant engagement in the intervention. The study used follow-up self-report surveys and electronic health record data to assess intervention acceptability and intervention efficacy for the primary outcomes of a family planning visit and use of a LARC method., Results: The study enrolled 119 women who were randomized to the Sexual Health Initiative for Navigation and Empowerment (SHINE) peer-led navigation intervention (n = 56) or usual care (n = 63). The average age was 32 (SD = 6.4); 76% were receiving methadone, 24% were receiving buprenorphine and 19% reported a treatment provider had ever discussed family planning with them. Most had a previous pregnancy (82%) and of these, 93% reported an unplanned pregnancy. Among intervention participants, 93% completed the first navigation session, 90% felt that intervention topics were important, 76% indicated that the information was new, and 82% found working with a peer helpful. At six months postbaseline, significantly more (p = 0.01) intervention participants (36%) received a family planning visit compared to control participants (14%). There was no between-group difference on use of LARC methods., Conclusions: A peer-led family planning navigation intervention was feasible to implement, acceptable to participants, and showed evidence of preliminary efficacy. This model may be an effective and potentially sustainable approach to support the family planning needs of women in treatment for OUD., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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7. Supplemental Text Message Support With the National Diabetes Prevention Program: Pragmatic Comparative Effectiveness Trial.
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Ritchie ND, Gutiérrez-Raghunath S, Durfee MJ, and Fischer H
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- Female, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Weight Loss, Diabetes Mellitus, Text Messaging
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Background: The evidence-based National Diabetes Prevention Program (NDPP) is now widely disseminated, yet strategies to increase its effectiveness are needed, especially for underserved populations. The yearlong program promotes lifestyle changes for weight loss and can be offered in-person, online, via distance learning, or a combination of modalities. Less is known about which delivery features are optimal and may help address disparities in outcomes for subgroups. We previously demonstrated the efficacy of a stand-alone text messaging intervention based on the NDPP (SMS4PreDM) in a randomized controlled trial in a safety net health care system. Upon broader dissemination, we then showed that SMS4PreDM demonstrated high retention and modest weight loss at a relatively low cost, suggesting the potential to improve in-person NDPP delivery., Objective: In this study, we aim to compare the effectiveness of in-person NDPP classes with and without supplementary SMS4PreDM on attendance and weight loss outcomes to determine whether text messaging can enhance in-person NDPP delivery for a safety net patient population., Methods: From 2015 to 2017, patients with diabetes risks were identified primarily from provider referrals and enrolled in NDPP classes, SMS4PreDM, or both per their preference and availability. Participants naturally formed three groups: in-person NDPP with SMS4PreDM (n=236), in-person NDPP alone (n=252), and SMS4PreDM alone (n=285). This analysis compares the first two groups to evaluate whether supplemental text messaging may improve in-person NDPP outcomes. Outcomes for SMS4PreDM-only participants were previously reported. NDPP classes followed standard delivery guidelines, including weekly-to-monthly classes over a year. SMS4PreDM delivery included messages promoting lifestyle change and modest weight loss, sent 6 days per week for 12 months. Differences in characteristics between intervention groups were assessed using chi-square and t tests. Differences in NDPP attendance and weight loss outcomes were analyzed with multivariable linear and logistic regressions., Results: The mean age was 50.4 years (SD 13.9). Out of a total of 488 participants, 76.2% (n=372) were female and 59.0% (n=288) were Hispanic. An additional 17.2% (n=84) were non-Hispanic white and 12.9% (n=63) were non-Hispanic black. A total of 48.4% (n=236) of participants elected to receive supplemental text message support in addition to NDPP classes. Participants who chose supplemental text message support were on average 5.7 (SD 1.2) years younger (P<.001) than the 252 participants who preferred in-person classes alone. Relatively more women and Hispanic individuals enrolled in the NDPP with supplemental text messages than in NDPP classes alone, 83.9% (n=198) vs 69.0% (n=174, P<.001) and 68.6% (n=162) vs 50.0% (n=126, P=.001), respectively. Attendance and weight loss outcomes were comparable between groups., Conclusions: Despite its appeal among priority populations, supplemental text messaging did not significantly increase attendance and weight loss for the in-person NDPP. Further research is needed to identify optimal strategies to improve the effectiveness of the NDPP., (©Natalie D Ritchie, Silvia Gutiérrez-Raghunath, Michael Josh Durfee, Henry Fischer. Originally published in JMIR mHealth and uHealth (http://mhealth.jmir.org), 18.06.2020.)
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- 2020
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8. Enhanced Enrollment in the National Diabetes Prevention Program to Increase Engagement and Weight Loss for the Underserved: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial.
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Ritchie ND, Holtrop JS, Gritz RM, Sauder KA, Durfee MJ, Dickinson LM, and Kaufmann PG
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Background: Type 2 diabetes affects 9.4% of US adults with higher rates among racial and ethnic minorities and individuals of low socioeconomic status. The National Diabetes Prevention Program (NDPP) is an evidence-based and widely disseminated behavioral intervention to reduce diabetes incidence through modest weight loss. However, retention in the yearlong NDPP is problematic and leads to suboptimal weight loss, especially among diverse, underserved populations. Strategies to improve NDPP engagement and weight loss are needed urgently. Pilot results of the pre-NDPP, a novel enhancement to enrollment in the NDPP based on the Health Belief Model, were highly successful in a nonrandomized cohort study among 1140 racially diverse, predominately low-income participants. A total of 75 presession participants had doubled attendance and weight loss as compared with earlier participants who did not receive presessions. On the basis of these promising results, we are conducting a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to determine whether pre-NDPP reliably improves NDPP outcomes, as reported on ClinicalTrials.gov., Objective: This study aims to (1) conduct an RCT comparing NDPP attendance and weight loss outcomes between participants who receive pre-NDPP versus direct enrollment into the NDPP (usual care), (2) examine potential effect mediators (perceived risk for developing diabetes and self-efficacy and readiness for weight control) and moderators (race and ethnicity; income level), and (3) evaluate implementation factors, including cost and projected return on investment., Methods: This two-arm RCT will compare outcomes among diverse, predominately low-income participants who receive pre-NDPP versus direct enrollment into the NDPP (usual care). This is a type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation design to determine clinical effectiveness through an RCT, while assessing factors that may impact future pre-NDPP dissemination and implementation, including cost. Our primary research question is whether pre-NDPP improves NDPP attendance and weight loss compared with standard NDPP delivery., Results: This project was funded in April 2019. Recruitment is underway as of July 2019. Initial participants began the intervention in October 2019. Data analysis and results reporting are expected to be completed in 2024., Conclusions: This RCT of pre-NDPP may lead to future dissemination of a scalable, evidence-based strategy to improve success of the NDPP, reduce disparities in NDPP effectiveness, and help prevent type 2 diabetes across the country., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04022499; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04022499., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): PRR1-10.2196/15499., (©Natalie D Ritchie, Jodi Summers Holtrop, R Mark Gritz, Katherine Ann Sauder, Michael Josh Durfee, L Miriam Dickinson, Peter G Kaufmann. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 01.06.2020.)
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- 2020
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9. Acceptability and Efficacy of a Sexual Health Texting Intervention Designed to Support Adolescent Females.
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Rinehart DJ, Leslie S, Durfee MJ, Stowell M, Cox-Martin M, Thomas-Gale T, Shlay JC, and Havranek EP
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- Adolescent, Contraception, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Pregnancy, Sexual Behavior, Sexual Health, Sexually Transmitted Diseases prevention & control, Text Messaging
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Objective: To evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of a pilot texting intervention ("t4she") in primary care designed to increase sexual health knowledge and promote dual protection strategies to reduce unintended pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections among adolescent females., Methods: Participants were recruited from 2 federally qualified health centers. Eligibility included: being 13 to 18 years of age; assigned female at birth; English-speaking; not currently pregnant and/or intending to become pregnant; and having texting capabilities. A randomized controlled trial assessed between-group differences at 3 and 6 months on knowledge, Health Belief Model constructs, and sexual behaviors. Input on intervention acceptability was obtained at 3 months., Results: Among 244 participants enrolled and randomized, the average age was 16 (±1.6), 80% were Hispanic/Latina, 53% had ever had vaginal sex, and 50% had used prescription birth control with 24% currently using a long-acting reversible method. Among those sexually active, 29% reported consistent condom use and 24% reported engaging in dual protection behaviors at last sex. Among participants with all follow-up data (N = 136), intervention participants had significant increases in sexual health knowledge and reported more prescription birth control use at follow-up than control participants. No significant outcome differences were found for condom use or dual protection behaviors. Intervention participants reported receiving messages, being introduced to new information, and reading and sharing the messages., Conclusions: The pilot t4she sexual health intervention significantly improved knowledge and use of short-acting prescription birth control among young females in primary care and was acceptable by youth and feasible to implement., (Copyright © 2019 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2020
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10. Short Message Service Text Message Support for Weight Loss in Patients With Prediabetes: Pragmatic Trial.
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Fischer HH, Durfee MJ, Raghunath SG, and Ritchie ND
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Background: To reach all 84.1 million US adults estimated to have prediabetes warrants need for low-cost and less burdensome alternatives to the National Diabetes Prevention Program (NDPP). In a previous randomized controlled trial, we demonstrated the efficacy of a 12-month short message service text message support program called SMS4PreDM amongst individuals with prediabetes., Objective: The study aimed to evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of SMS4PreDM in a pragmatic study following dissemination in a safety net health care system., Methods: English- and Spanish-speaking patients at risk for diabetes (eg, glycated hemoglobin 5.7-6.4) were referred by their providers and offered either NDPP classes, SMS4PreDM, or both. This analysis focuses on weight change among 285 SMS4PreDM-only participants who began the year-long intervention between October 2015 and April 2017 with accompanying pre- and postweights, as compared with 1233 usual-care control patients at risk for diabetes, who were identified from electronic health records during this time but not referred. Weight outcomes included time-related mean weight change and frequency of either ≥3% weight loss or gain. Mixed linear models adjusted for age, gender, race, ethnicity, preferred language, and baseline weight. A secondary analysis was stratified by language. We also assessed implementation factors, including retention and cost., Results: SMS4PreDM participants had high retention (259 of 285 patients or 91.0% completion at 12-months, ) and a time-related mean weight loss of 1.3 pounds (SE 0.74), compared with the control group's slight mean weight gain of 0.25 pounds (SE 0.59; P=.004). Spanish-speaking SMS4PreDM participants (n=130) had a time-related mean weight loss of 1.11 pounds (SE 1.22) compared with weight gain of 0.96 pounds (SE 1.14) in Spanish-speaking controls (n=382, P<.001). English-speaking intervention participants (n=155) had a comparable time-related mean weight change (-0.89 pounds; SE 0.93) as English-speaking controls (n=828; 0.31 pounds gained; SE 0.62, P=.14). Overall, frequency of achieving ≥3% weight loss was comparable between groups (54 of 285 or 19.0% of SMS4PreDM participants [95% CI 14.8-23.9] vs 266 of 1233 or 21.6% of controls [95% CI 19.3-24.0]; P=.33). Nonetheless, more controls had ≥3% weight gain compared with intervention participants (337 of 1233 or 27.3% of controls [95% CI 24.9-29.9] vs 57 of 285 or 20.0% of SMS4PreDM participants [95% CI 16.8-25.1]; P=.01). SMS4PreDM delivery costs were US $100.92 per participant., Conclusions: Although SMS4PreDM was relatively low cost to deliver and demonstrated high retention, weight loss outcomes may not be sufficient to serve as a population health strategy., (©Henry H Fischer, Michael J Durfee, Silvia G Raghunath, Natalie D Ritchie. Originally published in JMIR Diabetes (http://diabetes.jmir.org), 15.04.2019.)
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- 2019
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11. Monitoring Depression Rates in an Urban Community: Use of Electronic Health Records.
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Davidson AJ, Xu S, Oronce CIA, Durfee MJ, McCormick EV, Steiner JF, Havranek E, and Beck A
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- Adult, Colorado, Depression epidemiology, Electronic Health Records instrumentation, Ethnicity psychology, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Female, Geographic Mapping, Humans, Male, Population Surveillance methods, Prevalence, Racial Groups psychology, Racial Groups statistics & numerical data, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depression diagnosis, Electronic Health Records statistics & numerical data, Urban Population statistics & numerical data
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Objectives: Depression is the most common mental health disorder and mediates outcomes for many chronic diseases. Ability to accurately identify and monitor this condition, at the local level, is often limited to estimates from national surveys. This study sought to compare and validate electronic health record (EHR)-based depression surveillance with multiple data sources for more granular demographic subgroup and subcounty measurements., Design/setting: A survey compared data sources for the ability to provide subcounty (eg, census tract [CT]) depression prevalence estimates. Using 2011-2012 EHR data from 2 large health care providers, and American Community Survey data, depression rates were estimated by CT for Denver County, Colorado. Sociodemographic and geographic (residence) attributes were analyzed and described. Spatial analysis assessed for clusters of higher or lower depression prevalence., Main Outcome Measure(s): Depression prevalence estimates by CT., Results: National and local survey-based depression prevalence estimates ranged from 7% to 17% but were limited to county level. Electronic health record data provided subcounty depression prevalence estimates by sociodemographic and geographic groups (CT range: 5%-20%). Overall depression prevalence was 13%; rates were higher for women (16% vs men 9%), whites (16%), and increased with age and homeless patients (18%). Areas of higher and lower EHR-based, depression prevalence were identified., Conclusions: Electronic health record-based depression prevalence varied by CT, gender, race/ethnicity, age, and living status. Electronic health record-based surveillance complements traditional methods with greater timeliness and granularity. Validation through subcounty-level qualitative or survey approaches should assess accuracy and address concerns about EHR selection bias. Public health agencies should consider the opportunity and evaluate EHR system data as a surveillance tool to estimate subcounty chronic disease prevalence.
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- 2018
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12. Identifying Subgroups of Adult Superutilizers in an Urban Safety-Net System Using Latent Class Analysis: Implications for Clinical Practice.
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Rinehart DJ, Oronce C, Durfee MJ, Ranby KW, Batal HA, Hanratty R, Vogel J, and Johnson TL
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- Adult, Colorado, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, Urban statistics & numerical data, Medical Overuse statistics & numerical data, Models, Statistical, Safety-net Providers statistics & numerical data
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Background: Patients with repeated hospitalizations represent a group with potentially avoidable utilization. Recent publications have begun to highlight the heterogeneity of this group. Latent class analysis provides a novel methodological approach to utilizing administrative data to identify clinically meaningful subgroups of patients to inform tailored intervention efforts., Objective: The objective of the study was to identify clinically distinct subgroups of adult superutilizers., Research Design: Retrospective cohort analysis., Subjects: Adult patients who had an admission at an urban safety-net hospital in 2014 and 2 or more admissions within the preceding 12 months., Measures: Patient-level medical, mental health (MH) and substance use diagnoses, social characteristics, demographics, utilization and charges were obtained from administrative data. Latent class analyses were used to determine the number and characteristics of latent subgroups that best represented these data., Results: In this cohort (N=1515), a 5-class model was preferred based on model fit indices, clinical interpretability and class size: class 1 (16%) characterized by alcohol use disorder and homelessness; class 2 (14%) characterized by medical conditions, MH/substance use disorders and homelessness; class 3 (25%) characterized primarily by medical conditions; class 4 (13%) characterized by more serious MH disorders, drug use disorder and homelessness; and class 5 (32%) characterized by medical conditions with some MH and substance use. Patient demographics, utilization, charges and mortality also varied by class., Conclusions: The overall cohort had high rates of multiple chronic medical conditions, MH, substance use disorders, and homelessness. However, the patterns of these conditions were different between subgroups, providing important information for tailoring interventions.
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- 2018
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13. Response to Comment on Fischer et al. Text Message Support for Weight Loss in Patients With Prediabetes: A Randomized Clinical Trial. Diabetes Care 2016;39:1364-1370.
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Fischer HH, Pereira RI, Moore SL, Durfee MJ, Rozwadowski JM, and Havranek EP
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- Cell Phone, Humans, Weight Loss, Prediabetic State, Text Messaging
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- 2016
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14. Text Message Support for Weight Loss in Patients With Prediabetes: A Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Fischer HH, Fischer IP, Pereira RI, Furniss AL, Rozwadowski JM, Moore SL, Durfee MJ, Raghunath SG, Tsai AG, and Havranek EP
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- Adult, Body Mass Index, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Glycated Hemoglobin metabolism, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prediabetic State psychology, Sensitivity and Specificity, Treatment Outcome, Prediabetic State therapy, Text Messaging, Weight Loss
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Objective: Although the benefits of in-person Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) classes for diabetes prevention have been demonstrated in trials, effectiveness in clinical practice is limited by low participation rates. This study explores whether text message support enhances weight loss in patients offered DPP classes., Research Design and Methods: English- and Spanish-speaking patients with prediabetes (n = 163) were randomized to the control group, which only received an invitation to DPP classes as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or to the text message-augmented intervention group, which also received text messages adapted from the DPP curriculum for 12 months., Results: Mean weight decreased 0.6 pounds (95% CI -2.7 to 1.6) in the control group and 2.6 pounds (95% CI -5.5 to 0.2) in the intervention group (P value 0.05). Three percent weight loss was achieved by 21.5% of participants in the control group (95% CI 12.5-30.6), compared with 38.5% in the intervention group (95% CI 27.7-49.3) (absolute difference 17.0%; P value 0.02). Mean glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) increased by 0.19% or 2.1 mmol/mol (95% CI -0.1 to 0.5%) and decreased by 0.09% or 1.0 mmol/mol (95% CI -0.2 to 0.0%) in the control group and intervention participants, respectively (absolute difference 0.28%; P value 0.07). Stratification by language demonstrated a significant treatment effect in Spanish speakers but not in English speakers., Conclusions: Text message support can lead to clinically significant weight loss in patients with prediabetes. Further study assessing effect by primary language and in an operational setting is warranted., (© 2016 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered.)
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- 2016
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15. Effect of a multi-modal intervention on immunization rates in obstetrics and gynecology clinics.
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Mazzoni SE, Brewer SE, Pyrzanowski JL, Durfee MJ, Dickinson LM, Barnard JG, Dempsey AF, and O'Leary ST
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- Adult, Ambulatory Care Facilities, Colorado, Diphtheria Toxoid, Evidence-Based Practice, Female, Gynecology, Humans, Influenza Vaccines, Obstetrics, Papillomavirus Vaccines, Pertussis Vaccine, Tetanus Toxoid, Young Adult, Health Promotion organization & administration, Vaccination statistics & numerical data
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Background: There is increasing attention on immunizations by obstetrician-gynecologists and a need to improve vaccination rates for all women., Objective: To evaluate the effect of a multimodal intervention on rates of immunization with tetanus, diphtheria, and acellular pertussis (Tdap); human papillomavirus (HPV); and influenza in outpatient obstetrics and gynecology clinics., Study Design: Immunization rates at 2 clinics were compared pre- and post-implementation of multiple interventions at a public integrated health-care system. Study interventions began on June 6, 2012 and concluded on May 31, 2014; the preimplementation time period used was June 6, 2010 to June 5, 2012. Interventions included stocking of immunizations in clinics, revision and expansion of standing orders, creation of a reminder/recall program, identification of an immunization champion to give direct provider feedback, expansion of a payment assistance program, and staff education. All women aged 15 and older who made a clinic visit during influenza season were included in the influenza cohort; women who delivered an infant during the study time period and had at least 1 prenatal visit within 9 months preceding delivery were included in the Tdap cohort; each clinic visit by a nonpregnant woman aged 15-26 years was assessed and included in the HPV analysis as an eligible visit if the patient was lacking any of the 3 HPV vaccines in the series. The primary outcome was receipt of influenza and Tdap vaccine per current American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists guidelines and receipt of HPV vaccine during eligible visits. Influenza and Tdap were assessed with overall coverage rates at the institutional level, and HPV was assessed at the visit level by captured opportunities. All analyses included generalized estimating equations and the primary outcome was assessed with time as a covariate in all models., Results: A total of 19,409 observations were included in the influenza cohort (10,231 pre- and 9178 post-intervention), 2741 in the Tdap cohort (1248 pre- and 1493 post-intervention), and 12,443 in the HPV cohort (7966 pre- and 4477 post-intervention). Our population was largely Hispanic, English-speaking, and publicly insured. The rate of influenza vaccination increased from 35.4% pre-intervention to 46.0% post-intervention (P < .001). The overall rate for Tdap vaccination increased from 87.6% pre-intervention to 94.5% post-intervention until the recommendation to vaccinate during each pregnancy was implemented (z = 4.58, P < .0001). The average Tdap up-to-date rate after that recommendation was 75.0% (z = -5.77, P < .0001). The overall rate of HPV vaccination with an eligible visit increased from 7.1% before to 23.7% after the intervention., Conclusion: Using evidence-based practices largely established in other settings, our intervention was associated with increased rates of influenza, Tdap, and HPV vaccination in outpatient underserved obstetrics and gynecology clinics. Integrating such evidence-based practices into routine obstetrics and gynecology care could positively impact preventive health for many women., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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16. Augmenting Predictive Modeling Tools with Clinical Insights for Care Coordination Program Design and Implementation.
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Johnson TL, Brewer D, Estacio R, Vlasimsky T, Durfee MJ, Thompson KR, Everhart RM, Rinehart DJ, and Batal H
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Context: The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI) awarded Denver Health's (DH) integrated, safety net health care system $19.8 million to implement a "population health" approach into the delivery of primary care. This major practice transformation builds on the Patient Centered Medical Home (PCMH) and Wagner's Chronic Care Model (CCM) to achieve the "Triple Aim": improved health for populations, care to individuals, and lower per capita costs., Case Description: This paper presents a case study of how DH integrated published predictive models and front-line clinical judgment to implement a clinically actionable, risk stratification of patients. This population segmentation approach was used to deploy enhanced care team staff resources and to tailor care-management services to patient need, especially for patients at high risk of avoidable hospitalization. Developing, implementing, and gaining clinical acceptance of the Health Information Technology (HIT) solution for patient risk stratification was a major grant objective., Findings: In addition to describing the Information Technology (IT) solution itself, we focus on the leadership and organizational processes that facilitated its multidisciplinary development and ongoing iterative refinement, including the following: team composition, target population definition, algorithm rule development, performance assessment, and clinical-workflow optimization. We provide examples of how dynamic business intelligence tools facilitated clinical accessibility for program design decisions by enabling real-time data views from a population perspective down to patient-specific variables., Conclusions: We conclude that population segmentation approaches that integrate clinical perspectives with predictive modeling results can better identify high opportunity patients amenable to medical home-based, enhanced care team interventions.
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- 2015
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17. Nurse-run, telephone-based outreach to improve lipids in people with diabetes.
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Fischer HH, Eisert SL, Everhart RM, Durfee MJ, Moore SL, Soria S, Stell DI, Rice-Peterson C, MacKenzie TD, and Estacio RO
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- Adult, Case Management economics, Case Management standards, Colorado, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Diabetes Mellitus economics, Electronic Health Records statistics & numerical data, Humans, Medically Uninsured, Motivation, Patient Admission economics, Prospective Studies, Self Care methods, Telemedicine economics, Case Management organization & administration, Diabetes Mellitus blood, Lipoproteins, LDL blood, Nursing Care methods, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data, Telemedicine methods
- Abstract
Background: There is a need for randomized, prospective trials of case management interventions with resource utilization analyses., Objectives: To determine whether algorithm-driven telephone care by nurses improves lipid control in patients with diabetes., Design: Prospective, randomized, controlled trial., Participants: Adults with diabetes at a federally funded community health center were randomly assigned to intervention (n = 381) or usual-care (n = 381) groups., Interventions: Nurses independently initiated and titrated lipid therapy and promoted behavioral change through motivational interviewing and self-management techniques. Other parameters of diabetes care were addressed based on time constraints., Main Measures: The primary outcome was the proportion of patients with a low-density lipoprotein (LDL) less than 100 mg/dL. Secondary outcomes included the number of hospital admissions, total hospital charges per patient, and the proportion of patients meeting other lipid, glycemic, and blood pressure guidelines., Key Results: The percent of patients with an LDL < 100 mg/dL increased from 52.0% to 58.5% in the intervention group and decreased from 55.6% to 46.7% in the control group (P < .01). Average cost per patient to the healthcare system was less for the intervention group ($6600 vs $9033, P = .03). Intervention patients trended toward fewer hospital admissions (P = .06). The intervention did not affect glycemic and blood pressure outcomes., Conclusions: Nurses can improve lipid control in patients with diabetes in a primarily indigent population through telephone care using moderately complex algorithms, but a more targeted approach is warranted. Telephone-based outreach may decrease resource utilization, but more study is needed.
- Published
- 2012
18. Care by cell phone: text messaging for chronic disease management.
- Author
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Fischer HH, Moore SL, Ginosar D, Davidson AJ, Rice-Peterson CM, Durfee MJ, MacKenzie TD, Estacio RO, and Steele AW
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring, Colorado, Female, Focus Groups, Hispanic or Latino, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Pilot Projects, Poverty, Reminder Systems statistics & numerical data, Self Care statistics & numerical data, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Disease Management, Self Care methods, Text Messaging statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the feasibility of engaging adults with diabetes in self management behaviors between clinic visits by using cell phone text messaging to provide blood sugar measurement prompts and appointment reminders., Study Design: Quasi-experimental pilot among adult diabetic patients with cell phones who receive regular care at a federally qualified community health center in Denver, Colorado, which serves a population that is predominantly either uninsured (41%) or on Medicaid or Medicare (56%)., Methods: Patients (N = 47) received text message prompts over a 3-month period. Blood sugar readings were requested 3 times per week (Monday, Wednesday, and Friday). Reminders were sent 7, 3, and 1 day(s) before each scheduled appointment. Acknowledgments were returned for all patient-sent messages. Focus groups were conducted in English and Spanish with selected patients (n = 8)., Results: Patients of all ages were active participants. Correctly formatted responses were received for 67.3% of 1585 prompts. More than three-fourths (79%) of the cohort responded to more than 50% of their prompts. The appointment analysis was underpowered to detect significant changes in attendance. Participants reported increased social support, feelings that the program "made them accountable," and increased awareness of health information. Two-thirds (66%) of patients provided glucose readings when prompted during the study, compared with 12% at 2 preceding clinic visits., Conclusions: For certain patients, cell phone-based text messaging may enhance chronic disease management support and patient-provider communications beyond the clinic setting.
- Published
- 2012
19. Diabetes population management by telephone visits.
- Author
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Fischer HH, Villacres A, Durfee MJ, McCullen K, and Mackenzie TD
- Subjects
- Colorado, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Telephone, Treatment Outcome, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Remote Consultation trends, Telemedicine
- Abstract
Introduction: Little has been published on the impact of telephone visits on diabetes outcome performance., Research Design and Methods: An attending and resident physician prioritized telephone visits based on glycemic, blood pressure, and lipid performance. The resident and attending panel was compared with all other diabetic patients at the clinic for baseline and end-intervention performance., Results: The intervention patients had an absolute percentage of increase versus control patients of 14.9 (p<0.01), 13.9 (p<0.01), and 8.3 (p=0.01) for HbA1c <9%, low-density lipoprotein <100 mg/dL, and blood pressure <130/80 mm Hg, respectively., Conclusions: This pilot study suggests that provider-driven telephone visits may be a means for healthcare systems to improve chronic disease outcomes as they transition to new paradigms of chronic care delivery., Limitations: This study was neither randomized nor blinded, was susceptible to an interventionist effect, and did not analyze for differences in baseline medication use.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The impact of tailored diabetes registry report cards on measures of disease control: a nested randomized trial.
- Author
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Fischer HH, Eisert SL, Durfee MJ, Moore SL, Steele AW, McCullen K, Anderson K, Penny L, and Mackenzie TD
- Subjects
- Adult, Ambulatory Care standards, Delivery of Health Care, Diabetes Mellitus nursing, Humans, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital, Patient Education as Topic, Point-of-Care Systems, Self Care, Total Quality Management, Diabetes Mellitus therapy, Registries
- Abstract
Background: Most studies of diabetes self-management that show improved clinical outcome performance involve multiple, time-intensive educational sessions in a group format. Most provider performance feedback interventions do not improve intermediate outcomes, yet lack targeted, patient-level feedback., Methods: 5,457 low-income adults with diabetes at eight federally-qualified community health centers participated in this nested randomized trial. Half of the patients received report card mailings quarterly; patients at 4 of 8 clinics received report cards at every clinic visit; and providers at 4 of 8 clinics received quarterly performance feedback with targeted patient-level data. Expert-recommended glycemic, lipid, and blood pressure outcomes were assessed. Assessment of report card utility and patient and provider satisfaction was conducted through mailed patient surveys and mid- and post-intervention provider interviews., Results: Many providers and the majority of patients perceived the patient report card as being an effective tool. However, patient report card mailings did not improve process outcomes, nor did point-of-care distribution improve intermediate outcomes. Clinics with patient-level provider performance feedback achieved a greater absolute increase in the percentage of patients at target for glycemic control compared to control clinics (6.4% vs 3.8% respectively, Generalized estimating equations Standard Error 0.014, p < 0.001, CI -0.131 - -0.077). Provider reaction to performance feedback was mixed, with some citing frustration with the lack of both time and ancillary resources., Conclusions: Patient performance report cards were generally well received by patients and providers, but were not associated with improved outcomes. Targeted, patient-level feedback to providers improved glycemic performance. Provider frustration highlights the need to supplement provider outreach efforts., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00827710.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Changes in insurance status and access to care in an integrated safety net healthcare system.
- Author
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Eisert SL, Durfee MJ, Welsh A, Moore SL, Mehler PS, and Gabow PA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care Facilities statistics & numerical data, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Insurance Coverage trends, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Medicaid, Medically Uninsured, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, United States, Young Adult, Delivery of Health Care, Health Services Accessibility, Insurance Coverage statistics & numerical data, Insurance, Health
- Abstract
This paper focuses on a cohort of uninsured patients that have accessed outpatient healthcare services in an urban safety net, evaluating the degree to which they switch insurance status and the impact this switching has on access to care. The results indicate that in an integrated safety net system, there is a high frequency of insurance status switching by the uninsured. Uninsured patients who switch to insured status were found to be more likely to visit specialty points of care and less likely to visit urgent points of care than the continuously uninsured. It is well documented that insurance coverage and continuity of care influence health status. Continuity of insurance coverage also has an impact on access to care for those receiving services within a safety net healthcare system.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Fatalities assessed by the Orange County child death review team, 1989 to 1991.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Maxwell RM, Durfee MJ, and Wagner GA
- Subjects
- California epidemiology, Child, Child Abuse legislation & jurisprudence, Child Abuse prevention & control, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Infanticide legislation & jurisprudence, Infanticide statistics & numerical data, Male, Patient Care Team legislation & jurisprudence, Cause of Death, Child Abuse mortality
- Abstract
Interagency child death review teams have emerged in response to the increasing awareness of severe violence perpetrated against children in the United States. Child death review involves a systematic, multidisciplinary, and multiagency process to coordinate data and resources from the coroner, law enforcement, the courts, child protective services, and health care providers. The Orange County, CA team reviews all coroner's cases (unattended death or questionable cause of death) for children 12 years old and younger. This paper describes the interagency review in Orange County and provides data on the demographics of cases reviewed by the team (N = 637) compared to unreviewed deaths (N = 1,463) for the period 1989 to 1991. Trends were analyzed to assess differences in: (1) age distribution; (2) gender; (3) ethnicity; (4) cause of death (non-SIDS natural; non-natural including traffic deaths, SIDS, other injuries; homicide; and undetermined); and (5) cause of death by age, gender, and ethnicity. Implications of the data for other jurisdictions with child death review teams are discussed.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Child sexual abuse in the Church: the ethics of throwing stones in glass houses.
- Author
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Gellert CA and Durfee MJ
- Subjects
- Catholicism, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual diagnosis, Ethics, Medical, Health Policy, Humans, Male, Sex Education, Child Abuse, Sexual prevention & control, Religion and Sex
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Testing the sexually abused child for the HIV antibody: issues for the social worker.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Berkowitz CD, Gellert MJ, and Durfee MJ
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual epidemiology, Decision Making, Family psychology, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections etiology, HIV Infections psychology, HIV Infections transmission, Humans, Incidence, Patient Education as Topic, Pedophilia prevention & control, AIDS Serodiagnosis, Child Abuse, Sexual complications, HIV Infections diagnosis, Social Work
- Abstract
The frequency of HIV transmission to children and adolescents through sexual abuse is unknown. Because the incidences of HIV infection and of reported sexual abuse are both increasing, the transmission of HIV to children through sexual abuse may also be increasing. Social workers may have expanding roles in the decision-making process for testing and subsequent management of children infected with HIV through sexual abuse. This article discusses the benefits of identifying children who have been infected with HIV through sexual abuse and reviews guidelines for testing. Social workers can contribute to test decision making in instances when perinatal HIV transmission is a possibility, when it may be possible to test the assailant, and when parents or legal guardians insist on testing the child. Other issues discussed include family education and coping, physical education and support, social casework and research with pedophiles, and service needs for care and follow-up of children found to be HIV infected as a result of sexual abuse.
- Published
- 1993
25. Twins and HIV.
- Author
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Glomb WB, Davidson SL, Lee SS, and Durfee MJ
- Subjects
- Female, HIV Infections transmission, Humans, Los Angeles, Male, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Complications, Infectious, Twins, Pregnancy, Multiple, Substance Abuse, Intravenous
- Published
- 1993
26. AIDS and child sexual abuse.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Durfee MJ, Berkowitz CD, Higgins KV, and Tubiolo VC
- Subjects
- AIDS Serodiagnosis, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Child Abuse, Sexual complications, HIV Infections transmission
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Situational and sociodemographic characteristics of children infected with human immunodeficiency virus from pediatric sexual abuse.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Durfee MJ, Berkowitz CD, Higgins KV, and Tubiolo VC
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Black or African American, Age Factors, Canada epidemiology, Child, Child Abuse, Sexual complications, Child, Preschool, Comorbidity, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Female, HIV Infections etiology, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Seroprevalence, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Male, Population Surveillance, Risk Factors, Sexually Transmitted Diseases complications, Sexually Transmitted Diseases epidemiology, Socioeconomic Factors, United States epidemiology, Child Abuse, Sexual epidemiology, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV-1
- Abstract
This study assessed the situational and sociodemographic characteristics of children infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) from pediatric sexual abuse. A letter of inquiry was sent to 2147 professionals across health and social service disciplines involved with child abuse assessment, treatment, and prevention. Respondents working in programs where HIV antibody testing of abuse victims occurs and who had identified HIV infection in one or more abused children were sent a survey to assess the demographics of victims, the family/living situation where abuse occurred, alternative risks for HIV infection, bases for diagnosis of sexual abuse and for HIV antibody testing, and profiles of the perpetrator and type of abuse. Of 5622 estimated HIV antibody tests conducted during 113,198 sex abuse assessments, 28 children were infected with HIV and lacked any alternative transmission route to that of sexual abuse. A total of 41 HIV-infected children with a history of sexual abuse were identified. Thirteen cases had alternative risk factors and were excluded from analysis. Sixty-four percent of the 28 victims with sexual abuse as the sole risk factor were female and 71% were African-American. The mean age was 9 years. Coinfection with another sexually transmitted disease (STD) occurred in 9 (33%) cases. Sexual abuse was diagnosed on the basis of a victim disclosure in 21 (75%) cases. The basis for HIV antibody testing was physical findings suggestive of HIV infection in 9 (32%) cases, HIV-seropositive or high-risk perpetrator in 6 (21%) and 2 (7%) cases, respectively, and the presence of another STD in the victim in 4 (14%) cases. Perpetrators were a child's parent in 10 (42%) cases and another relative in 6 (25%) cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
- Published
- 1993
28. Origins and clinical relevance of child death review teams.
- Author
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Durfee MJ, Gellert GA, and Tilton-Durfee D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Cause of Death, Child, Child Abuse legislation & jurisprudence, Child Abuse mortality, Humans, Infant, Interinstitutional Relations, United States epidemiology, Child Abuse prevention & control, Child Health Services organization & administration, Public Health Administration legislation & jurisprudence, Public Health Administration organization & administration
- Abstract
Interagency child death review teams have emerged in response to the increasing awareness of severe violence against children in the United States. Since 1978, when the first team originated in Los Angeles, Calif, child death review teams have been established across the nation. Approximately 100 million Americans or 40% of the nation's population now live in counties or states served by such teams; most have been formed since 1988. Multiagency child death review involves a systematic, multidisciplinary, and multiagency process to coordinate and integrate data and resources from coroners, law enforcement, courts, child protective services, and health care providers. This article provides an introduction to the unique factors and magnitude of suspicious child deaths, and to the concept and process of interagency child death review. Future expansion of this process should lead to more effective multiagency case management and prevention of future deaths and serious injuries to children from child abuse and neglect.
- Published
- 1992
29. Sudden infant death syndrome in infants of substance-abusing mothers.
- Author
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Ward SL, Bautista D, Chan L, Derry M, Lisbin A, Durfee MJ, Mills KS, and Keens TG
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Confounding Factors, Epidemiologic, Ethnicity, Female, Humans, Incidence, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Los Angeles epidemiology, Male, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Risk Factors, Seasons, Sex Factors, Sudden Infant Death etiology, Pregnancy Complications, Substance-Related Disorders complications, Sudden Infant Death epidemiology
- Abstract
A population-based study was performed to determine whether substance abuse during the perinatal period may be a risk factor for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). The incidence of SIDS was studied in 2143 infants of substance-abusing mothers (ISAM) born in Los Angeles County during 1986 and 1987 who were reported to the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services because of a history of drug exposure or positive urine test results in the mother, infant, or both. By comparing the ISAM birth reports with records of autopsy-proven SIDS in Los Angeles County, we found 19 SIDS cases in the population of 2143 ISAM, a SIDS rate of 8.87 cases per 1000 ISAM (95% confidence interval 5.3 to 13.8). This was significantly higher than the SIDS rate for the non-ISAM general population: 396 SIDS deaths among 325,372 live births, an incidence rate of 1.22 cases per 1000 births, p less than 0.00001. The age of ISAM at death was 99 +/- 63 (mean +/- SD) days compared with 91 +/- 52 days for the non-ISAM population (not significant). The incidence of SIDS was significantly greater in male infants, during the winter months, in black infants, and in non-Hispanic white infants in the non-ISAM population. Such differences were not observed in the ISAM group. A greater incidence of symptomatic apnea was reported before SIDS for the ISAM than for the non-ISAM population (22% vs 5.4%, p = 0.022). We conclude that ISAM have a higher incidence of SIDS than the non-ISAM general population. However, it was not possible to separate maternal substance abuse from other confounding variables that may also have had an impact on SIDS risk in the ISAM group.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Response to commentary by N. Fost on Ethical considerations in testing victims of sexual abuse for HIV infection.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Durfee MJ, and Berkowitz CD
- Subjects
- Child, HIV Infections prevention & control, Humans, Risk Factors, AIDS Serodiagnosis, Child Abuse, Sexual, Ethics, Medical, HIV Infections transmission
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Developing guidelines for HIV antibody testing among victims of pediatric sexual abuse.
- Author
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Gellert GA, Durfee MJ, and Berkowitz CD
- Subjects
- Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome etiology, Attitude of Health Personnel, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, United States, AIDS Serodiagnosis, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome diagnosis, Child Abuse, Sexual complications, HIV Antibodies analysis
- Abstract
The incidence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection acquired by children through sexual abuse is presently unknown. A telephone survey of 63 practitioners of pediatric sexual abuse (PSA) assessment in the five U.S. regions with highest prevalence of HIV infection was conducted to determine the present status of guidelines for HIV antibody testing of PSA victims. No formal protocol was used by any of those surveyed, and a literature review found no existing guidelines for HIV antibody testing of PSA victims. A standard set of clinical situations was presented to practitioners to assess whether a consensus exists of indications for HIV antibody testing of abused children. Seven clinical profiles with 12 criteria were presented including HIV antibody status, AIDS/ARC clinical profile, and behavioral profile of the assailant; clinical profile of the victim; pre-assault victim behavioral profile compatible with high risk of HIV infection (exclusively adolescents); parent/guardian anxiety/psychosocial profile; and profile of the assaultive act with respect to potential transmissibility of HIV. We found an 85% or greater consensus for 6 testing criteria, and based upon these propose an interim set of HIV antibody testing guidelines for PSA victims. There was no consensus about five testing criteria, but their frequent citation merits further consideration. Clinical application of interim guidelines and design of prospective studies to quantitatively evaluate them are reviewed.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. HIV infection and child abuse.
- Author
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Gellert GA and Durfee MJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome transmission, Child Abuse, Sexual
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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