111 results on '"Mitchell Turner"'
Search Results
2. Associations between Sleep Quality and Serum Levels of Neurofilament Light in Individuals with Premanifest Huntington Disease
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Mitchell Turner, Danielle Bartlett, Govinda Poudel, Pauline Zaenker, Simon Laws, Johnny Lo, Mel Ziman, and Travis Cruickshank
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sleep quality ,Huntington disease ,neurofilament proteins ,Psychology ,BF1-990 ,Consciousness. Cognition ,BF309-499 - Abstract
Objectives To evaluate the associations between sleep quality and serum levels of neurofilament light (NfL) protein in individuals with premanifest Huntington disease (HD).
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- 2024
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3. Sleep health of Australian community tennis players during the COVID-19 lockdown
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Philipp Beranek, Travis Cruickshank, Olivier Girard, Kazunori Nosaka, Danielle Bartlett, and Mitchell Turner
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Racket sport ,Public health ,Sleep satisfaction ,Exercise ,Lifestyle factor ,Medicine ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Background Poorer sleep health outcomes have been documented in the general population during the COVID-19 outbreak. However, the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on sleep health outcomes in specific population groups, including the sporting community, has not been extensively investigated. This study evaluated sleep health outcomes and their relationship with lifestyle behaviours during the initial COVID-19 lockdown period in Australian community tennis players. Methods This cross-sectional study evaluated sleep health outcomes and lifestyle behaviours using an online survey. The survey was disseminated online between the 24th of April and the 6th of June 2020 and comprised the Sleep Health Index, Sleep Satisfaction Tool and questions regarding weekly hours of tennis play, general physical activity, training location and alcohol consumption. Two-hundred and eighty-five individuals completed the survey. Results Compared to normative data, respondents displayed positive sleep health values during the initial COVID-19 lockdown period, with median values (IQR) of 85.3 (73.4, 91.7) and 64.8 (54.4, 73.4) for the Sleep Health Index and Sleep Satisfaction Tool, respectively. Sleep health outcomes were not significantly correlated (p > 0.05) with tennis play (Tb = 0.054–0.077), physical activity (Tb = −0.008 to 0.036), training location (Tb = −0.012 to −0.005) or alcohol consumption (Tb = −0.079 to −0.018). Conclusion Positive sleep health values were observed in Australian community-level tennis players during the initial COVID-19 pandemic. Sleep health values were not associated with lifestyle behaviours. Other unexplored factors may have influenced sleep health outcomes, including personal finances and socialisation, however these factors need to be investigated in future studies.
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- 2022
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4. Influence of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Mood and Training in Australian Community Tennis Players
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Mitchell Turner, Philipp Beranek, Shane L. Rogers, Kazunori Nosaka, Olivier Girard, and Travis Cruickshank
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mental health ,mood ,training ,tennis ,community ,Sports ,GV557-1198.995 - Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak has led to the implementation of strict restrictions in Australia, which have severely impacted sporting activities. Tennis is played by 6.2% of the population within the Oceania region, and is a valuable sport for maintaining social, mental, and physical health. Current literature indicates the COVID-19 pandemic has negatively affected the mental health of Australian residents. The aim of this study was to investigate changes in training and match play due to the outbreak, and its effects on emotional well-being of Australian senior tennis players. Additionally, explore any differences between middle aged (41–60 years) and senior (61 years and over) Australian tennis players. An online survey was used to assess training and match play habits, as well as ascertain the emotional well-being of tennis players. The survey was active from 24th April 2020 until 6th June 2020. Participants were adult (41+ years) tennis players from Australia. Wilcoxon signed rank tests were performed to check for differences in training hours and tennis matches played. Mann–Whitney U tests were used to assess the difference in Brief Emotional Experience Scale (BEES) scores, employment status as well as the training hours and tennis matches played between the two age groups. A Kendall's Tau B correlation test was performed to assess the associations of training, match play and demographic characteristics with BEES scores. Kruskal–Wallis tests assessed differences in BEES scores between participants of differing match play formats, tennis experience and cessation of tennis training time periods. There were 245 respondents who met our inclusion criteria. Tennis training hours along with the tennis matches played significantly decreased during COVID-19 compared to pre-COVID-19, 85.09 and 88.48%, respectively. No significant (p > 0.05) differences were observed between age groups for any of the training modality hours, nor was there any significant difference in number of tennis matches played. The participants average BEES score was 0.99 ± 1.27, indicating that respondents had a positive emotional well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic. The emotional well-being of the senior group was significantly (P = 0.002) higher than the middle aged group. Together, our results show that training and tennis match play decreased during the COVID-19 pandemic, however the emotional well-being of senior tennis players in Australia appeared to not be negatively affected.
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- 2021
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5. A Survey to Evaluate the Association of COVID-19 Restrictions on Perceived Mood and Coping in Australian Community Level Athletes
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Caitlin Fox-Harding, Sarah Ann Harris, Shane L. Rogers, Shayne Vial, Philipp Beranek, Mitchell Turner, and Travis Cruickshank
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2019-nCoV (2019 novel coronavirus) ,Australia ,athlete ,survey ,coping ,Sports ,GV557-1198.995 - Abstract
Highlights:No differences in coping or well-being in Australian community athletes based on the level of support received during COVID-19 restrictions.Community level athletes had better coping when a training program was provided.No difference between individual or team community athletes for well-being or coping scores. Australian community level athletes faced unprecedented changes to their training and competition options as the global COVID-19 pandemic took a stronghold. This disruption was predicted to have a negative impact on emotional well-being as communities braced through periods of social isolation and physical distancing requirements. This study provides an Australian perspective on the emotional well-being of community level athletes and the extent to which they coped during the COVID-19 pandemic. Emotional well-being and coping were measured using the Brief Emotional Experience Scale and the 28-item Brief Cope Scale. Both instruments were administered along with other questions pertaining to participant demographics and training status via an online survey between April and June 2020. The survey was disseminated to community athletes through word-of-mouth and social media platforms. No significant differences in emotional well-being were observed between athlete groups as a result of COVID-19 and its associated restrictions. Coping scores also appeared to be preserved in Australian community athletes, which contrasts the impact expected as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. While tentative, the observed preservation in coping may have buffered potential declines in emotional well-being, which has been documented in professional and semi-professional athletes and the general population. These unexpected findings and tentative suppositions warrant further investigation and highlight the importance of conducting a country- or region-specific approach to examining the impact of COVID-19 on community athletes, as responses to COVID-19 are undoubtedly not consistent throughout the world.
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- 2021
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6. The role of emotion in persuasion
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Mitchell Turner, Monique, primary and Jin-Hee Heo, Ruth, additional
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- 2021
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7. Overlooking the Obvious: Communication of Efficacy by the Mass Media During the Ebola Crisis in Liberia
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Mitchell Turner, Monique, Kamlem, Tamah, N. Rimal, Rajiv, Shaikh, Hina, and Ume, Nwanneamaka
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- 2021
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8. Too stringent or too Lenient: Antecedents and consequences of perceived stringency of COVID-19 policies in the United States
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Sanguk Lee, Tai-Quan Peng, Maria Knight Lapinski, Monique Mitchell Turner, Youjin Jang, and Andrea Schaaf
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COVID-19 ,COVID-19 policy ,Policy stringency ,Mask wearing ,Social distancing ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
In the United States, federal and local governments have attempted to contain the spread of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) by implementing a variety of policies such as stay-at-home orders and mask mandates. Perceptions can influence behaviors; therefore, it is important to understand how people perceive the stringency of COVID-19 policies, what factors shape perceived policy stringency, and whether and how policy perceptions impact the practice of prevention behaviors. With rolling-cross sectional survey data collected in the US from June to October 2020 and other external sources of data, the study examines the impact of objective risk of the pandemic, information seeking, and political ideology at the individual and the state levels on perceived policy stringency, and the impact of perceived policy stringency on prevention behaviors such as mask wearing and social distancing. The findings reveal that objective risk and political ideology are significantly associated with perceived policy stringency. The perceived policy stringency has negative associations with prevention behaviors. The findings provide important implications for the development process of compulsory public health policies during the pandemic.
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- 2021
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9. Does fatigue influence joint‐specific work and ground force production during the first steps of maximal acceleration?
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Mitchell Turner, Shayne Vial, Mark Scanlan, Jodie Cochrane Wilkie, and Anthony Blazevich
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Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2023
10. Rumour spread and control during the West African Ebola epidemic in Liberia
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Monique Mitchell, Turner, Skylar, Lisse, Rajiv, Rimal, Tamah, Kamlem, Hina, Shaikh, and Nilakshi, Biswas
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General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,General Social Sciences - Abstract
The severity of the 2014-2015 West African Ebola epidemic in Liberia was coupled with widespread misunderstanding about Ebola among Liberian citizens and the proliferation of rumors. Rumor control during outbreaks is imperative to reduce the public's fears about a disease. In Liberia, a rumor tracker system was developed to detect rumors as quickly as possible through SMS text messaging. The focus of this study was to assess rumor circulation in newspapers and radio and rumor control over time. The review relied on a content analysis of SMS messages, print and audio communications collected from Liberian newspapers, SMS messages from the "DeySay" tracker, and radio programs, during the time frame January 2014 to March 2015. Findings showed more rumors appeared in newspapers but were more likely to be overtly identified and characterized as rumors on radio. The "DeySay" rumor tracker accurately predicted rumors before they appeared in radio programs and newspaper articles, making the case for its usefulness and feasibility in future health epidemics.
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- 2022
11. The madness of misperceptions: evaluating the ways anger contributes to misinformed beliefs
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Dustin Carnahan, Suhwoo Ahn, and Monique Mitchell Turner
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Linguistics and Language ,Communication ,Language and Linguistics - Abstract
Drawing from established theoretical traditions in cognitive consistency, motivated reasoning, heuristic–systematic processing, and the anger-activism model, we extend existing work linking anger with misperceptions by specifying three distinct ways anger might contribute to the formation of misperceptions: Increasing reliance on partisan heuristics, influencing political information-seeking behavior, and moderating the influence of partisan media exposure. Analyzing data from an original survey administered nationally via Qualtrics Panels during the first impeachment trial of President Donald Trump in January 2020, results indicate that high-anger partisans were more likely to express belief in claims supportive of their party and critical of the other party, regardless of the veracity of those claims. Further, anger was also linked with greater use of pro-attitudinal information sources and avoidance of counterattitudinal sources, with these differences in partisan media consumption subsequently influencing factual beliefs. However, we found no evidence that anger moderated the relationship between partisan media exposure and factual beliefs. We explore the implications of these findings in a political era defined increasingly by the experience of anger.
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- 2022
12. Weight: Stigma
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Monique Mitchell Turner
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- 2022
13. The Impact of Sleep-Wake Behaviour on Tennis Match Performance in Junior State Grade Tennis Players
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Mitchell Turner, Philipp Beranek, Ian C. Dunican, and Travis Cruickshank
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Physiology ,Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation - Abstract
Purpose To date, no study has investigated the extent to which sleep-wake behaviour (SWB) influences match performance in junior tennis players. This study aimed to assess the influence of SWB for the week and night before on match performance, particularly match analytics and activity. Methods This study recruited 10 junior state grade tennis players who wore an actigraphy device and completed a sleep diary for the week before their match on two separate occasions throughout their competition season. Players wore a global positioning system device to track their movement during matches, and an experienced tennis coach recorded players' match analytics. Results This study showed that the sleep fragmentation index was significantly lower the week before matches in females who had won than those who had lost. Additionally, the sleep fragmentation index was significantly lower the night before a given match than the week before. Only sleep fragmentation index and sleep latency significantly influenced match performance in junior tennis players. The percentage of second serves points won differed between match wins and losses for male players, while winners and forced errors differed for female players. Conclusion These findings provide a detailed profile of tennis match play in junior state grade players. Despite individual differences, reduced restlessness the night before a match coincides with increased match performance.
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- 2022
14. Improving African American women's engagement in clinical research: A systematic review of barriers to participation in clinical trials
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Daisy Le, Hanna Ozbeki, Stefanie Salazar, Madison Berl, Monique Mitchell Turner, and Olga Acosta Price
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Black or African American ,Research Design ,Patient Selection ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Female ,General Medicine ,Minority Groups ,Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite multiple efforts, African American women continue to be inadequately represented in clinical research while being overrepresented in disease, producing research results with limited generalizability to this specific population. Our understanding of the barriers to participation in clinical trials among racial/ethnic minority patients in general has evolved, but few studies have examined the reasoning behind African American women’s decision to not participate in clinical trials. OBJECTIVE: The primary aim was to conduct a systematic review to identify the barriers reported by African American women regarding participation in clinical research to help explain the low levels of enrollment. We also suggest strategies that can be implemented by the research community to lessen the effect of those barriers. METHODS: Searches were conducted through MEDLINE, SCOPUS, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. Following a set of eligibility criteria, a total of 18 peer-reviewed journal articles were selected and analyzed to render categories and themes. RESULTS: Across studies aimed at examining their unique perspective, the reasons mentioned by African American women for not participating in clinical research were grouped in three broad categories: 1) weak relationship with the medical and research community, 2) high cost to participation, and 3) personal and “out-of-reach” circumstances. Reasons pertaining to participants’ relationship with physicians/researchers were most salient. DISCUSSION: A targeted and comprehensive understanding of the barriers impacting African American women’s decision to participate in clinical research informs population-specific recruitment and research strategies for future studies. Additional studies assessing barriers to clinical trial research participation that intentionally report on disaggregated data by not only race/ethnicity but also sex are essential to improving the risk/benefit profile for a wide range of prevention and treatment efforts. This improved understanding of the differences between subgroups within minority populations has implications for bolstering culturally sensitive messages to enhance the engagement of minority communities in clinical trial research.
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- 2022
15. <scp>FIGHT‐PD</scp> : A feasibility study of periodised boxing training for Parkinson disease
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David J. Blacker, Raimondo Fazio, Claire Tucak, Phillip Beranek, Connor Pollard, Tegan Shelley, Sanathraj Rajandran, Georgina Holbeche, Mitchell Turner, and Travis Cruickshank
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Neurology ,Rehabilitation ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Neurology (clinical) - Published
- 2023
16. The effects of moral norms and anticipated guilt on COVID19 prevention behaviors
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Youjin Jang, Rachel Wade, Ruth Jinhee Heo, Qijia Ye, Larry A. Hembroff, and Jong In Lim
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General Psychology - Published
- 2023
17. Effect of physical activity during COVID-19 on the sleep health of community-level athletes in Australia
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Andrew Walsh, Sarah Harris, Philipp Beranek, Shayne Vial, Travis Cruickshank, and Mitchell Turner
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Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Abstract
The COVID-19 outbreak presents a serious health challenges, with Australia enforcing tight restrictions, impacting sporting activities and sleep health of many Australians. Routine lifestyle patterns (physical activity and employment) are important to maintaining overall sleep health. Current literature indicates COVID-19 pandemic negatively affected the employment status and sport engagement. The aim of this study was to explore the effect of physical activity during COVID-19 on sleep health, and its association with employment and sport engagement of community-level athletes throughout Australia. Participants self-reported sleep health prior to COVID-19 (pre-sleep) and over the month prior to data collection (during-sleep) using the validated 5-item Satisfaction Alertness Timing Efficiency and Duration questionnaire (SATED). Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test assessed the difference in pre- and during perceived sleep health scores. A generalized linear model was used to assess the impact of sporting and demographic factors on a community athlete’s change in perceived sleep health score. A total of 139 community-level Australian athletes responded. The majority of participants were aged 18–30 and engaged in full-time employment prior to COVID-19 (n = 82, 54%). Eight percent of participants were unemployed prior to the COVID-19 pandemic (n = 12, 8%). Our findings show that sleep health values were higher during COVID-19, with 91.4% of respondents able to maintain some form of physical activity during the pandemic. Together, our results show better sleep health scores reported by the respondents who maintained or lost employment and maintained sporting engagements during the pandemic.
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- 2022
18. Looking back to the future: Unpacking the first nine months of the novel COVID-19 infodemic on Twitter with a content analysis (Preprint)
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Ichhya Pant, David André Broniatowski, Michael Long, Sharad Duwal, Jyoti Polackal, Shikha Chandarana, and Monique Mitchell Turner
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UNSTRUCTURED This study analyzed 25,018,086 tweets posted during the initial nine months of the COVID-19 pandemic between March to November 2020. Using a mixed method of automated (i.e., LDA topic model) and manual content analyses, results from this study point to debatable information as the most prevalent and diffused information category followed by credible information, general disinformation, trolling, biased or one-sided and conspiratorial disinformation. Contrary to mainstream understanding, the prevalence of credible information was double that of disinformation. Overall, General Users were the most prolific category of users (53.0%) involved in the spread of COVID-19 related disinformation. News media organizations (16.50%); Writers, Podcasters, Journalists or Media Personalities (9.93%), and Organizations such as Non-Profits, Pharmaceutical Manufacturers, Medical groups, and Businesses (6.64%); Researchers, Scholars, Scientists or Healthcare Professionals (6.09%) were among the top five categories of users tweeting COVID-19 disinformation on Twitter. Politicization of public health was an inherent trait within topics and targets associated with disinformation narratives. Debatable information also warrants further attention, resources, and remediation as the most diffused form of information during the initial nine months of the COVID-19 pandemic on Twitter. Considering the shaping and diffusion of disinformation narratives involved a participatory process, so too must the strategies that respond to this issue. Relevant stakeholders must adopt a whole-of-society lens when devising measures to ensure a healthy information ecosystem on Twitter and other similar social media platforms. They must also address politicization of public health, acknowledge, and clearly communicate scientific and situational uncertainty associated with novel or recurring infectious disease crises and emergencies such as the the COVID-19 pandemic.
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- 2023
19. Mediational Effects on Motivation to Quit Smoking After Exposure to a Cigarette Pictorial Warning Label Among Young Adults
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Samuel J. Simmens, Darren Mays, W. Douglas Evans, Monique Mitchell Turner, Andrew A. Strasser, and Andrea C Johnson
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Adult ,Mediation (statistics) ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Smoking Prevention ,Product Labeling ,Anger ,Affect (psychology) ,law.invention ,Young Adult ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Perception ,Humans ,Young adult ,education ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Motivation ,education.field_of_study ,Smoking ,Tobacco control ,Special Section: Approaches to Understanding and Increasing Physical Activity ,Tobacco Products ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Smoking Cessation ,Warning label ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Background Young adults are vulnerable to cigarette package marketing. Pictorial warning labels are recommended for tobacco control. Research should address questions raised in legal challenges including causal mechanisms. Evidence is mixed and understudied among young adults (e.g., discrete emotions and risk perceptions). Purpose This study investigated mediators of pictorial warning label effects on motivation to quit smoking among young adult smokers. Methods This study analyzed data from a randomized trial with a 4 week exposure to a cigarette pictorial warning among young adult smokers (N = 229) aged 18–30 with assessments at baseline, immediately post-intervention, and 3 months. Mediation analyses used latent change scores to test the effects post-intervention on fear, anger, and risk perceptions. We also examined whether post-intervention measures predicted change in motivation to quit smoking at 3 months. The first model assessed aggregate risk perceptions and the second model assessed discrete risk perceptions (deliberative, affective). Results Pictorial warning label exposure led to increases in fear which led to increased motivation to quit smoking for the first (B = 0.12, 95% CI = 0.04, 0.26) and second (B = 0.12, 95% CI = 0.03, 0.25) model. Exposure modestly increased motivation to quit by way of fear and affective risk perceptions (B = 0.01, 95% CI = 0.00, 0.04). Exposure had a direct relationship on increased motivation to quit as well. Conclusions Findings demonstrate factors contributing to change in motivation to quit smoking among young adult smokers after pictorial warning label exposure. Affective processes are mediators of pictorial warning label effects.
- Published
- 2021
20. A new approach to audience segmentation for vaccination messaging: applying the anger activism model
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Youjin Jang, Ruth Jin-Hee Heo, and Rachel Barry
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Marketing ,Vaccination ,Information seeking ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Advertising ,Anti vaccination ,Audience segmentation ,Anger ,Psychology ,Social marketing ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose This study aims to use the anger activism model as an audience segmentation tool in the context of the anti-vaccination movement. Design/methodology/approach A cross-sectional survey was conducted with a national purposive sample (N = 438). Findings The group with high anger, strong efficacy (i.e. “activists”) was found to be more likely to engage in information seeking and was more accurate and defense-motivated when examining information about anti-vaxxers compared to other groups. Importantly, activists were more likely to engage in both low and high commitment behaviors to change vaccine policy. Originality/value As anti-vaxxers have proven to be difficult to change attitudinally, future campaigns are more likely to succeed if they leverage pro-vaccine audiences to fight for change. However, the understanding of the various segments within the pro-vaccination audience is limited. The data are discussed regarding leveraging high anger, strong efficacy audiences as change agents in future persuasive campaigns.
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- 2021
21. Predicting Breastfeeding Intentions: A Test and Extension of the Theory of Normative Social Behavior with African American Social Identity
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E. Whitney G. Moore, Monique Mitchell Turner, Maria Knight Lapinski, Shawnika J. Hull, Aubrey Van Kirk Villalobos, Sahira Long, and Jichuan Wang
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African american ,030505 public health ,Health (social science) ,Social Identification ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Breastfeeding ,Mothers ,050801 communication & media studies ,Intention ,Test (assessment) ,Black or African American ,03 medical and health sciences ,Breast Feeding ,0508 media and communications ,Extension (metaphysics) ,Humans ,Normative ,Female ,Social Behavior ,0305 other medical science ,Social identity theory ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Breastfeeding is a health promoting social behavior but statistics suggest a persistent disparity of lower rates among African American mothers. The Theory of Normative Social Behavior (TNSB) explains when and how norms influence behaviors, but has produced inconsistent results with respect to proposed moderators group identity and injunctive norms (IN), limiting its predictive value in diverse cultural groups. Cultural norms are one of many influences on breastfeeding behaviors, yet little is known about their mechanisms of influence. The TNSB has not been tested in the breastfeeding context or within an exclusively African American cultural group. Given this knowledge gap, a survey of 528 African American mothers in the Washington, D.C. area was conducted to test the moderating effects of IN and subjective norms (SN) and social identity on the descriptive norms (DN) to intentions relationship as predicted by the TNSB. Structural equation modeling was used to show that when controlling for education and breastfeeding history, norms significantly predicted 26.4% of the variance in breastfeeding intentions. SN and DN interacted negatively to enhance breastfeeding intentions. Latent profile analysis using ethnic pride, collectivism, and religiosity scales detected four profiles of African American social identity. Social identity profile membership was a significant moderator on the DN to intentions pathway in the structural equation model. Profiles with the highest ethnic pride were significantly influenced by DN to intend to breastfeed. Implications from this study for public health intervention and communication messaging are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
22. Guilt Appeals in Persuasive Communication: A Meta-Analytic Review
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Monique Mitchell Turner and Stephen A. Rains
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Persuasion ,Persuasive communication ,Appeal to emotion ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Appeal ,Anger ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Research examining the effects of guilt appeals on attitudes and behavioral intentions has been inconsistent. Some scholars have found that guilt appeal intensity has a curvilinear relationship wit...
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- 2022
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23. Profiling Social Cognition in Premanifest Huntington's Disease
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Julie C. Stout, Travis Cruickshank, Julie D. Henry, Mel Ziman, Danielle M. Bartlett, Catarina C. Kordsachia, Sarah A. Grainger, Nellie Georgiou-Karistianis, Mitchell Turner, Kate Turner, Alvaro Reyes, and Clare M. Eddy
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Social Cognition ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Theory of Mind ,Empathy ,Neuropsychological Tests ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Huntington's disease ,Social cognition ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,media_common ,Social perception ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Huntington Disease ,Mood ,Cohort ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychology ,Neurocognitive ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Social cognitive theory ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Objective:Discrepancies exist in reports of social cognition deficits in individuals with premanifest Huntington’s disease (HD); however, the reason for this variability has not been investigated. The aims of this study were to (1) evaluate group- and individual-level social cognitive performance and (2) examine intra-individual variability (dispersion) across social cognitive domains in individuals with premanifest HD.Method:Theory of mind (ToM), social perception, empathy, and social connectedness were evaluated in 35 individuals with premanifest HD and 29 healthy controls. Cut-off values beneath the median and 1.5 × the interquartile range below the 25th percentile (P25 – 1.5 × IQR) of healthy controls for each variable were established for a profiling method. Dispersion between social cognitive domains was also calculated.Results:Compared to healthy controls, individuals with premanifest HD performed worse on all social cognitive domains except empathy. Application of the profiling method revealed a large proportion of people with premanifest HD fell below healthy control median values across ToM (>80%), social perception (>57%), empathy (>54%), and social behaviour (>40%), with a percentage of these individuals displaying more pronounced impairments in empathy (20%) and ToM (22%). Social cognition dispersion did not differ between groups. No significant correlations were found between social cognitive domains and mood, sleep, and neurocognitive outcomes.Conclusions:Significant group-level social cognition deficits were observed in the premanifest HD cohort. However, our profiling method showed that only a small percentage of these individuals experienced marked difficulties in social cognition, indicating the importance of individual-level assessments, particularly regarding future personalised treatments.
- Published
- 2021
24. Speaking of Values: Value-Expressive Communication and Exercise Intentions
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Jenn Anderson, Ralf Schmälzle, Monique Mitchell Turner, Tai-Quan Peng, and Maria Knight Lapinski
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030505 public health ,Health (social science) ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050801 communication & media studies ,Sample (statistics) ,Intention ,Variance (accounting) ,Faith ,03 medical and health sciences ,0508 media and communications ,Attitude ,Humans ,Expressive communication ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Exercise ,Value (mathematics) ,Social psychology ,Health communication ,media_common - Abstract
This study introduces the concept of value-expressive communication and examines its relationship with behavioral intent. Value-expressive communication is conceptualized as the verbal output of a value-expressive attitude. Value-expressive communication about exercise is examined in relationship to strength of religious faith, exercise attitudes, communication frequency, and intentions to exercise among a sample of self-identified Christians. The data indicate a significant interaction between value-expressive communication and communication frequency explains significant variance in exercise intentions. Interact to and exercise attitudes is significantly associated with intentions to exercise. Suggestions for using value-expressive communication in health communication research and practice are discussed.
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- 2021
25. Does fatigue influence joint-specific work and ground force production during the first steps of maximal accelerative running?
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Shayne Vial, Jodie Cochrane Wilkie, Mitchell Turner, Mark Scanlan, and Anthony J. Blazevich
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The rate of initial acceleration during the first steps of a maximal-effort (sprint) run often determines success or failure in prey capture and predator evasion, and is a vital factor of success in many modern sports. However, accelerative events are commonly performed after having already run considerable distances, and the associated fatigue should impair muscle force production and thus reduce acceleration rate. Despite this, the effects of running-induced fatigue on our ability to accelerate as well as the running technique used to achieve it has been incompletely studied. We recorded 3-D kinematics and ground reaction forces during the first three steps of the acceleration phase from a standing start before and after performing a high-speed, multi-directional, fatiguing run-walk protocol in well-trained running athletes who were habituated to accelerative sprinting. We found that the athletes were able to maintain their rate of initial acceleration despite changing running technique, which was associated with use of a more upright posture, longer ground contact time, increased vertical ground reaction impulse, decreased hip flexion and extension velocities, and a shift in peak joint moments, power, and positive work from the hip to the knee joint; no changes were detected in ankle joint function. Thus, a compensatory increase in knee joint function alleviated the reduction in hip flexor-extensor capacity. These acute adaptations may indicate that the hip extensors (gluteal and hamstring muscle groups) were more susceptible to fatigue than the ankle and knee musculature, and may thus be a primary target for interventions promoting fatigue resistance.
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- 2022
26. The Use of Stigmatizing Messaging in Anti-Obesity Communications Campaigns: Quantification of Obesity Stigmatization
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Maria Knight Lapinski, Victoria Somerville, Lindsay Ford, Donna Javellana, Kelsey Rothera Day, and Monique Mitchell Turner
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Linguistics and Language ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Communication ,education ,05 social sciences ,Stigma (botany) ,050801 communication & media studies ,050109 social psychology ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Language and Linguistics ,Social marketing ,Education ,0508 media and communications ,Anti obesity ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Psychiatry - Abstract
N = 182 posters) derived from 25 obesity-prevention campaigns shows 13.2% included stigmatizing elements. These stigmatizing advertisements were found in almost half (44%) of the 25 obesity-prevent...
- Published
- 2020
27. Investigating the role of age and maturation on the association between tennis experience and cognitive function in junior beginner to intermediate-level tennis players
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Mitchell Turner, Toru Ishihara, Philipp Beranek, Kate Turner, Job Fransen, Philipp Born, and Travis Cruickshank
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children ,executive function ,11 Medical and Health Sciences, 17 Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Attention ,intelligence ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,creativity - Abstract
Sport engagement, including tennis, and physical activity have been shown to have a positive influence on cognition in children. However, age has also been found to have a strong association with cognition in youth athletes. This study examines the threshold hypothesis by investigating the moderating role of age and maturation on the association between tennis experience and cognitive measures in Australian and German junior beginner to intermediate-level tennis players. The demographic information, which includes years of tennis experience, and anthropometrics (e.g. height and weight) was collected for 48 junior tennis players. A comprehensive cognitive testing battery was then completed to assess cognitive performance, with a principle component analysis used to determine an overall cognitive performance score. Multiple regression analyses were then performed to test the relationship between tennis experience and cognitive performance as well as the moderating effects of age and maturation. The results of this study indicate that the age and maturation rather than the exposure to tennis training are related to cognitive performance. Additionally, the positive relations of tennis experience to cognitive performance were stronger in younger participants, specifically those younger than 12 years old. Therefore, tennis may not provide a stimulus large enough for further cognitive improvement once players have developed a high level of cognitive performance. While age and biological maturity will largely dictate cognitive performance in adolescents, tennis experience may play some role in the cognitive performance of children (specifically
- Published
- 2022
28. Too stringent or too Lenient: Antecedents and consequences of perceived stringency of COVID-19 policies in the United States
- Author
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Tai-Quan Peng, Andrea Schaaf, Maria Knight Lapinski, Sanguk Lee, Youjin Jang, and Monique Mitchell Turner
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Public economics ,Social distancing ,Information seeking ,Social distance ,Public health ,media_common.quotation_subject ,COVID-19 ,Mask wearing ,COVID-19 policy ,Article ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Politics ,Political science ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Survey data collection ,Ideology ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Policy stringency ,media_common - Abstract
In the United States, federal and local governments have attempted to contain the spread of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) by implementing a variety of policies such as stay-at-home orders and mask mandates. Perceptions can influence behaviors; therefore, it is important to understand how people perceive the stringency of COVID-19 policies, what factors shape perceived policy stringency, and whether and how policy perceptions impact the practice of prevention behaviors. With rolling-cross sectional survey data collected in the US from June to October 2020 and other external sources of data, the study examines the impact of objective risk of the pandemic, information seeking, and political ideology at the individual and the state levels on perceived policy stringency, and the impact of perceived policy stringency on prevention behaviors such as mask wearing and social distancing. The findings reveal that objective risk and political ideology are significantly associated with perceived policy stringency. The perceived policy stringency has negative associations with prevention behaviors. The findings provide important implications for the development process of compulsory public health policies during the pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
29. The impact of sleep behaviours, chronotype and time of match on the internal and external outcomes of a tennis match
- Author
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Mitchell Turner, Philipp Beranek, Sofyan Sahrom, Johnny Lo, Alexander Ferrauti, Ian C Dunican, and Travis Cruickshank
- Subjects
Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Tennis match performance is often evaluated by a player's internal (heart rate) and external (match analytics) outcomes. Numerous factors could influence these outcomes, including the time of day, which may be advantageous or not depending on a player's chronotype. This study aimed to determine the influence time of day, chronotype and sleep–wake behaviour (SWB) had on internal and external outcomes of tennis matches. Twelve state-level male tennis players, with a mean age of 28 ± 7, stature of 183 ± 7 and body mass of 86.6 ± 17.4 wore an actigraph device and completed a sleep diary for the study duration. Based on rankings, players were paired against the same opponent and completed three tennis matches at 8:00 am, 2:00 pm and 8:00 pm, separated by a minimum of 48 h. Fatigue and chronotype, measured by the Fatigue Severity Scale, Morningness Eveningness Questionnaire and midsleep time, were assessed before matches; motivation, measured by the Intrinsic Motivation Inventory, was assessed after matches. During matches, players wore global positioning systems and heart rate monitors; the match analytics and players’ rate of perceived exertion were recorded. Increased unforced errors and decreased winners and forced errors were observed in the evening matches. Decreased total distance and rate of perceived exertion during the second set were found for the evening compared to morning and afternoon matches. Chronotype and sleep–wake behaviour had trivial to weak associations with internal and external outcomes. These results indicate that players and coaches should consider the match times when training for future tournaments.
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- 2022
30. The role of emotion in persuasion
- Author
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Ruth Jin-Hee Heo and Monique Mitchell Turner
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Persuasion ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Published
- 2021
31. Fatigue does not increase limb asymmetry or induce proximal joint power shift during sprinting in habitual, multi-speed runners
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Shayne Vial, Jodie Cochrane Wilkie, Mitchell Anthony, Mitchell Turner, and J. Blazevich
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Athletes ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Work (physics) ,Kinematics ,biology.organism_classification ,Asymmetry ,Power (physics) ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Sprint ,medicine ,Ground reaction force ,Ankle ,Psychology ,human activities ,media_common - Abstract
The ability to shift from walking and jogging to sprinting gaits, even when fatigued after prolonged effort, would have been as useful to our hunter-gatherer ancestors as it is to modern athletes. During prolonged jogging, joint moment and work decrease in the distal (ankle) joint but increase at proximal (hip/knee) joints as fatigue progresses, and such adaptations might be expected to occur in sprinting. Fatigue is also thought to increase inter-limb kinematic and force production asymmetries, which are speculated to influence injury risk. However, the effects of running-related fatigue on sprint running gait have been incompletely studied, so these hypotheses remain untested. We studied 3-D kinematics and ground reaction force production in dominant (DL) and non-dominant (NDL) legs during both non-fatigued and fatigued sprinting in habitual but uncoached running athletes. Contrary to the tested hypotheses, relative between-leg differences were greater in non-fatigued than fatigued sprinting. When not fatigued, DL produced greater propulsive impulse through both greater positive and negative work being done at the ankle, whilst NDL produced more vertical impulse, possibly resulting from the greater hip flexion observed prior to the downwards acceleration of the foot towards the ground. Whilst few changes were detected in DL once fatigued, NDL shifted towards greater horizontal force production, largely resulting from an increase in plantarflexion (distal-joint) moments and power. After fatiguing running, therefore, inter-limb asymmetry was reduced during sprinting and no distal-to-proximal shift in work/power was detected. Speculatively, these adaptations may help to attenuate decreases in running speed whilst minimising injury risk.SignificanceThe ability to attain fast running speeds may critically determine success in tasks such as prey chase- and-capture in hunter-gatherer societies as well as success in modern sports competitions. At times, sprint running may have to be performed whilst fatigued from previous, longer-distance running, when speeds are reduced, and injury risk may be higher. Previous work indicated that fatigue prompts a proximal shift in joint work and power production and an increase in inter-limb asymmetry. On the contrary, we show that relative ankle positive and negative joint work was maintained in the face of fatigue and that inter-limb asymmetry was reduced in a group of runners experienced, but not formally instructed, in both long-distance and sprint running.
- Published
- 2021
32. Longitudinal Effects of Cigarette Pictorial Warning Labels Among Young Adults
- Author
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Andrew A. Strasser, W. Douglas Evans, Darren Mays, Andrea C Johnson, and Samuel J. Simmens
- Subjects
Latent growth modeling ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Addiction ,Tobacco control ,Smoking ,Smoking Prevention ,Tobacco Products ,Anger ,Product Labeling ,Article ,law.invention ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Health psychology ,Young Adult ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,behavior and behavior mechanisms ,Humans ,Smoking Cessation ,Young adult ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,media_common ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Young adults are influenced by cigarette package marketing. Pictorial warning labels are a recommended intervention. Evidence demonstrates pictorial warnings impact negative emotion, risk perceptions, and motivation to quit smoking, but there is limited research on their effects over time. METHODS: This study analyzes data from a randomized trial of young adult smokers (N=229) exposed to a pictorial or text-only cigarette warning. We assessed changes in fear, anger, risk perceptions, and motivation to quit smoking after 4 weeks using latent change score modeling and over 3 months using latent growth modeling. RESULTS: Latent change results showed exposure was associated with increases in fear, anger, and motivation to quit after 4 weeks. Latent growth showed exposure was associated with increases in motivation to quit smoking over 3 months, but not other outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest pictorial warning labels produce an emotional response and increase motivation to quit among young adult smokers.
- Published
- 2021
33. Does time of day and player chronotype impact tennis-specific skills and physical performance?
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Mitchell Turner, Philipp Beranek, Johnny Lo, Alexander Ferrauti, Ian C Dunican, and Travis Cruickshank
- Subjects
Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Tennis players’ success relies on tennis skills, such as groundstrokes and serves, and physical attributes, such as strength, speed and endurance. This study aimed to determine if players’ tennis skills and physical attributes are influenced by time of day, chronotype or sleep–wake behaviour (SWB). Twelve male tennis players (age (years): 28.17 ± 7.85) competing in state-level competitions wore a wrist-worn activity monitor (GT3X, Actigraph) and completed a modified version of the Consensus Sleep Diary to measure SWB. The Chalder Fatigue Scale and Morningness and Eveningness Questionnaire were used to measure players’ fatigue and preferred chronotype. Mid-sleep with a sleep correction was used to determine players’ current chronotype. After the baseline period, players were tested at 8:00 am, 2:00 pm and 8:00 pm, with the order of testing sessions randomised for each player. Testing sessions were separated by at least 48 hours. Players’ groundstrokes, serve speed, agility, overhead medicine ball throw and Hit and Turn Test performance were measured in each session. General linear modelling revealed that backhand consistency was less in the evening compared to the morning by 17% ( p = 0.020) and afternoon by 15% ( p = 0.040). Maximal service velocity was less in the evening compared to the afternoon by 10.5 km/h ( p = 0.041). Chronotype did not influence tennis skills or physical performance. Average and maximal backhand velocities were reduced for every hour that time at lights out, and sleep-onset time was postponed. Tennis skills, but not physical performance tests, were influenced by time of day and SWB.
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- 2022
34. Sleep health of Australian community tennis players during the COVID-19 lockdown
- Author
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Philipp Beranek, Travis Cruickshank, Olivier Girard, Kazunori Nosaka, Danielle Bartlett, and Mitchell Turner
- Subjects
General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology - Abstract
Background Poorer sleep health outcomes have been documented in the general population during the COVID-19 outbreak. However, the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on sleep health outcomes in specific population groups, including the sporting community, has not been extensively investigated. This study evaluated sleep health outcomes and their relationship with lifestyle behaviours during the initial COVID-19 lockdown period in Australian community tennis players. Methods This cross-sectional study evaluated sleep health outcomes and lifestyle behaviours using an online survey. The survey was disseminated online between the 24th of April and the 6th of June 2020 and comprised the Sleep Health Index, Sleep Satisfaction Tool and questions regarding weekly hours of tennis play, general physical activity, training location and alcohol consumption. Two-hundred and eighty-five individuals completed the survey. Results Compared to normative data, respondents displayed positive sleep health values during the initial COVID-19 lockdown period, with median values (IQR) of 85.3 (73.4, 91.7) and 64.8 (54.4, 73.4) for the Sleep Health Index and Sleep Satisfaction Tool, respectively. Sleep health outcomes were not significantly correlated (p > 0.05) with tennis play (Tb = 0.054–0.077), physical activity (Tb = −0.008 to 0.036), training location (Tb = −0.012 to −0.005) or alcohol consumption (Tb = −0.079 to −0.018). Conclusion Positive sleep health values were observed in Australian community-level tennis players during the initial COVID-19 pandemic. Sleep health values were not associated with lifestyle behaviours. Other unexplored factors may have influenced sleep health outcomes, including personal finances and socialisation, however these factors need to be investigated in future studies.
- Published
- 2021
35. Racism and Resistance: A Qualitative Study of Bias As a Barrier to Breastfeeding
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Maria Knight Lapinski, Aubrey Van Kirk Villalobos, Sahira Long, and Catasha Davis
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Critical race theory ,Breastfeeding ,Mothers ,Resistance (psychoanalysis) ,Pediatrics ,Racism ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Bias ,030225 pediatrics ,Original Research Articles ,Maternity and Midwifery ,Medicine ,Humans ,media_common ,030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicine ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Infant ,Black or African American ,Breast Feeding ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Background: Nearly 75% of Black non-Hispanic babies born in 2016 ever breastfed. However, Black mothers still experience barriers to breastfeeding, perpetuating disparities in exclusivity and duration. Subjects and Methods: Using data collected from five focus groups with Black mothers (N = 30) in Washington, District of Columbia during summer 2019, we critically examine the influence of institutionalized and personally mediated racism on breastfeeding. We also explore the counter-narratives Black women use to resist oppression and deal with these barriers. Results: Themes surrounding institutionalized racism included historic exploitation, institutions pushing formula, and lack of economic and employment supports. Themes regarding how personally mediated racism manifested included health care interactions and shaming/stigma while feeding in public. At each level examined, themes of resistance were also identified. Themes of resistance to institutionalized racism were economic empowerment and institutions protecting breastfeeding. Themes of resistance to personally mediated biases were rejecting health provider bias and building community. Conclusions: There are opportunities for health providers and systems to break down barriers to breastfeeding for Black women. These include changes in clinical training and practice as well as clinicians leveraging their position and lending their voices in advocacy efforts.
- Published
- 2021
36. The Effects of Anger Appeals on Systematic Processing and Intentions: The Moderating Role of Efficacy
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Adam S. Richards, Yoav Magid, Monique Mitchell Turner, and Elena Bessarabova
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Persuasion ,Communication ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Argument quality ,050801 communication & media studies ,050109 social psychology ,Anger ,Language and Linguistics ,Education ,Message processing ,0508 media and communications ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
The anger activism model proposes that efficacy moderates the effect of anger on message processing and persuasion. This study tested the model’s predictions using a 2 (efficacy) × 2 (anger) × 2 (a...
- Published
- 2019
37. Peripheral Immunotype Correlates with Minimal Residual Disease Status and Is Modulated by Immunomodulatory Drugs in Multiple Myeloma
- Author
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Manisha Bhutani, Nury Steuerwald, Adina S. Wynn, Reed Friend, Shebli Atrash, Myra M. Robinson, Fei Guo, Mitchell Turner, Daniel Slaughter, David M. Foureau, Edward A. Copelan, Belinda R. Avalos, Qing Zhang, Lawrence J. Druhan, Katherine Rigby, James T. Symanowski, Saad Z. Usmani, and Peter M. Voorhees
- Subjects
Male ,Neoplasm, Residual ,Cell Count ,Immunophenotyping ,Immunomodulation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Autologous stem-cell transplantation ,Receptors, KIR ,Maintenance therapy ,Humans ,Medicine ,Multiple myeloma ,Lenalidomide ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Hematology ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,medicine.disease ,Minimal residual disease ,Killer Cells, Natural ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,Female ,Bone marrow ,Multiple Myeloma ,business ,KIR3DL1 ,030215 immunology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Data indicate reversal of immune dysfunction with active treatment; however, the precise contribution of specific immune effector and immune suppressor components to achieve a minimal residual disease (MRD) state and immunomodulatory drug–mediated immunomodulatory effects in multiple myeloma (MM) patients remains poorly understood. In this prospective proof-of-principle study we sought to determine the dynamic alterations in natural killer (NK), NK-T, and T cells, including maturation and activating/inhibitory repertoire associated with MRDpos versus MRDneg status after autologous stem cell transplantation (ASCT) and during lenalidomide-based maintenance therapy. Of the 46MM patients enrolled, 36 had bone marrow MRD assessment 60+ days post-ASCT, 30 had longitudinal blood immunotyping during maintenance (pretherapy and after cycles 1, 3, and 6), and 20 had both MRD assessment and longitudinal immunotyping. Multicolor flow cytometry was used for MRD and immunotyping. Although the absolute number of NK cells was significantly lower in patients with MRDpos response, phenotypically NK cells in these patients displayed higher expression of activating receptors KIRDS4 and decreased expression of inhibitory molecules NKG2A compared with the MRDneg group. Furthermore, we observed significantly lower frequencies of T cells displaying KIR3DL1 in MRDpos versus MRDneg patients. Longitudinal immunotyping during lenalidomide maintenance showed loss of mature NK effector function, augmentation of NK-T effector function, and acquisition of PD1 independent anergic state. Our findings also suggest skewing of T cells toward an exhausted state during the maintenance phase in MRDpos patients. Put together, these observations provide a distinctive signature for MRDneg and MRDpos groups. These data support exploration of immune profiling in prospective clinical trials according to MRD-defined responses to identify patients that may benefit from maintenance intensification/modification or maintenance withdrawal.
- Published
- 2019
38. 1411. Noninvasive Assessment of Intralesional Antimicrobial Concentration-Time Profiles in Pulmonary and Central Nervous System Tuberculosis using Dynamic 18F-Pretomanid Positron Emission Tomography
- Author
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Filipa Mota, Camilo Ruiz-Bedoya, Elizabeth Tucker, Patricia De Jesus, Kelly Flavahan, Mitchell Turner, Clara Erice, Melissa Bahr, John Kim, Farina Mahmud, Charles A Peloquin, Alvaro A Ordonez, and Sanjay K Jain
- Subjects
Infectious Diseases ,AcademicSubjects/MED00290 ,Oncology ,Poster Abstracts - Abstract
Background Pretomanid is used in combination with bedaquiline and linezolid (BPaL regimen) in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). However, the penetration of pretomanid in privileged sites remain unknown. Antimicrobial pharmacokinetic (PK) parameters are traditionally derived from clinical samples (blood and cerebrospinal fluid), which may not accurately represent the intralesional tissue PK, affected by drug properties, vascular supply, barrier permeability, and the microenvironment. Methods We developed 18F-pretomanid (chemically identical to pretomanid) for in vivo multi-compartment PK by positron emission tomography (PET). Dynamic 18F-pretomanid PET was used to obtain cross species pretomanid concentration-time profiles in animal models of TB (mice and rabbits) to quantify penetration into pulmonary and brain lesions. A subset of animals underwent PET/CT imaging with 18F-py-albumin and 18F-FDG to assess vascular supply and inflammation. Postmortem 18F-pretomanid autoradiography (high-resolution) and mass spectrometry were performed in infected tissues. A mouse model of TB meningitis was used to evaluate the bactericidal activity of the BPaL regimen (Figure 1). Figure 1. Experimental schematics. (A) A new synthetic approach was developed to obtain radiofluorinated pretomanid (18F-pretomanid), which is chemically identical to pretomanid and therefore undergoes identical PK and metabolism in vivo. Dynamic 18F-pretomanid PET/CT imaging was performed in validated preclinical models of tuberculosis following intravenous administration of 18F-pretomanid. (B) PET signal was quantified in multiple compartments to generate time activity curves (TACs) used to calculate area under the curve (AUC) over 0-60 minutes. A subset of animals also underwent PET/CT imaging of 18F-py-albumin to assess vascular supply to lung and brain lesions, and with 18F-FDG to confirm the presence of neuroinflammation in the mouse and rabbit models of TB meningitis. Tissue resection post-mortem was used to visualize the intralesional retention of 18F-pretomanid using high-resolution (10 µm) autoradiography. The efficacy of the BPaL regimen in TB meningitis was compared to that of standard treatment with rifampin, isoniazid, and pyrazinamide in the mouse model. Mass spectrometry was performed following oral administration of BPaL to determine brain drug levels. (C) These data provide multicompartment PK analysis, intralesional levels of pretomanid, and insights into the mechanism that govern pretomanid tissue distribution. Results 18F-Pretomanid PET provided detailed concentration-time profiles in infected tissues demonstrating excellent lung and brain tissue penetration (AUC ratio to plasma > 1) in both animal species, which was spatially compartmentalized, likely due to differential vascular supply (18F-py-albumin PET) (Figure 2). Brain lesions (identified by 18F-FDG PET) demonstrated localized leakiness on 18F-py-albumin PET. Autoradiography and mass spectrometry corroborated the imaging findings. The efficacy of the BPaL regimen in TB meningitis was substantially lower than standard TB treatment (Figure 3), likely due to restricted penetration of bedaquiline and linezolid into the brain parenchyma. Figure 2. Spatial heterogeneity of 18F-Pretomanid penetration and vascular supply to pulmonary TB lesions. (A) A novel synthetic was devised to obtain 18F-pretomanid, which is chemically identical to pretomanid. (B) Maximum intensity projection (MIP) of 18F-Pretomanid PET/CT in M.tb.-infected mice over 3 hrs shows hepatobiliary and renal excretion, high uptake into brown fat, brain, and lungs. (C) Resection of infected lungs 30 minutes post intravenous administration of 18F-pretomanid shows heterogenous distribution of 18F-pretomanid into the lungs visible by high resolution autoradiography. Areas of pneumonia are identifiable by hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining of the same tissue section used for autoradiography. (D) Time-activity curves of 18F-Pretomanid in infected mouse lung (0-3 hours) and derived area under the curve (AUC) ratios to plasma (E) in infected mouse lung. Representative MIP of 18F-pretomanid (F) and 18F-py-albumin (H) PET/CT in a rabbit with cavitary TB and quantification of the AUC ratios to plasma show reduced penetration into lung lesions and cavitary wall compared to areas of unaffected lung (G and I). Data are represented as median ± interquartile range, n=3-4 group. Figure 3. Exposure levels of 18/19F-pretomanid in models of TB meningitis. (A) Experimental timeline used to assess the penetration of pretomanid into infected mouse brain before and during treatment with antimicrobials bedaquiline (B), pretomanid (Pa), and linezolid (L), and corticosteroid dexamethasone (D). (B) Representative three-dimensional MIP of 18F-pretomanid PET/CT in the CNS-TB model, 10 min post-injection, and transverse section showing high and heterogeneous brain uptake. (C) High-resolution autoradiography was performed to confirm heterogeneous penetration of 18F-pretomanid into infected brain lesions in the mouse. (D). 8F-pretomanid AUC ratios of tissue to plasma in mouse brain before (day 0) and two weeks into treatment show a reduction in penetration at week 2. (E). Pretomanid concentrations (µg/mL) in mouse plasma and brain, at day 0 and two weeks into treatment, measured by mass spectrometry and derived concentration ratios of brain to plasma (F) suggest drug accumulation due to the long half-life. (G) While 18F-py-albumin and 18F-FDG PET/CT show vascular leakage and neuroinflammation in the rabbit model of TB meningitis, the penetration of 18F-pretomanid is heterogeneous and reduced at the lesion site (indicated by white arrow). (H) Quantification of the PET signal shows variability within the same animal. Data are represented as median ± interquartile range, n=3-5 group. Figure 4. Evaluation of a pretomanid-containing regimen in TB meningitis. (A) Mice with experimentally induced TB meningitis were treated with Bedaquiline (25 mg/day), Pretomanid (100 mg/day), Linezolid (100 mg/day), and Dexamethasone (2 mg/day) or Rifampin (10 mg/day), Isoniazid (10 mg/day), Pyrazinamide (150 mg/day) and Dexamethasone (2mg/day) for 8 weeks. Treatment efficacy was determined based on the brain bacterial burden after 2, 4, 6, and 8 weeks of treatment. (B) The penetration of 76Br-bedaquiline, 18F-linezolid, and 18F-pretomanid into the brain parenchyma was measured non-invasively by PET and revealed low penetration of 76Br-bedaquiline (AUC radio to plasma 0.15) and 18F-linezolid (AUC radio to plasma 0.3). (C) Mass spectrometry analysis was performed to confirm the brain penetration of bedaquiline, linezolid, and pretomanid following oral administration. Conclusion Dynamic 18F-pretomanid PET provided holistic data on pretomanid exposures showing excellent penetration into infected lung and brain tissues. The BPaL regimen was inferior to standard TB treatment for TB meningitis. Thus, new pretomanid-containing regimens need to be developed for the treatment of MDR-TB meningitis. Disclosures Charles A. Peloquin, Pharm.D., Nothing to disclose Alvaro A. Ordonez, MD, Cubresa (Consultant)Fujirebio Diagnostics (Research Grant or Support) Sanjay K. Jain, MD, Fujirebio Diagnostics, Inc., USA (Research Grant or Support)Novobiotic LLC, USA (Research Grant or Support)T3 Pharma, Switzerland (Research Grant or Support) Sanjay K. Jain, MD, Fujirebio Diagnostics, Inc., USA (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Research Grant or Support; Novobiotic LLC, USA (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Research Grant or Support; T3 Pharma, Switzerland (Individual(s) Involved: Self): Research Grant or Support
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- 2021
39. The association between junior tennis players’ physical and cognitive attributes and groundstroke performance
- Author
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Mitchell Turner, Alyce Russell, Kate Turner, Philipp Beranek, Christopher Joyce, Fleur McIntyre, and Travis Cruickshank
- Subjects
Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Improving groundstroke velocity and accuracy is critical for tennis success. However, there is limited research available on the physical and cognitive attributes required for groundstroke performance. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to investigate the physical and cognitive characteristics and their association with groundstroke performance in junior tennis players. Thirty-four competitive junior tennis players, aged 12.59 ± 2.44 years, participated in this cross-sectional study. Cognitive tests assessing processing speed, complex attention, cognitive flexibility and problem-solving capacity and physical tests assessing flexibility, speed, agility, power, strength and anaerobic and aerobic capacity were performed. Tennis groundstroke performance was evaluated using a novel tennis groundstroke assessment. Tennis groundstroke performance was associated ( p
- Published
- 2022
40. Breastfeeding in Context: African American Women's Normative Referents, Salient Identities, and Perceived Social Norms
- Author
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Sahira Long, Maria Knight Lapinski, Catasha Davis, Shawnika J. Hull, Monique Mitchell Turner, and Aubrey Van Kirk Villalobos
- Subjects
African american ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Breastfeeding ,Infant ,Mothers ,Context (language use) ,Focus group ,Black or African American ,Breast Feeding ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Salient ,Social Norms ,Normative ,Humans ,Female ,Psychology ,Social identity theory ,Child ,Infant feeding ,Social psychology ,Qualitative Research - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to describe social norms and salient social identities related to breastfeeding intentions among African American mothers in Washington, D.C. Five focus groups were held with 30 mothers who gave birth to a child between 2016 and 2019. Two coders conducted pragmatic thematic analysis. This study demonstrated that women hold different identities relevant to making infant feeding decisions, with mother being primary and race/ethnicity, age, and relationship status factoring into how they define themselves. Mothers drew their perceptions of what is common and accepted from family, friends, the “Black community,” and what they perceived visually in their geographic area and heard from their health care providers. Mothers believed breastfeeding to be increasing in popularity and acceptability in African American communities in Washington, D.C., but not yet the most common or accepted mode of feeding, with some variability by socioeconomic status group. Implications for public health communication and social marketing are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
41. Questioning the Yelp Effect: Mixed Methods Analysis of Web-Based Reviews of Urgent Cares (Preprint)
- Author
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Dian Hu, Cindy Meng-Hsin Liu, Rana Hamdy, Michael Cziner, Melody Fung, Samuel Dobbs, Laura Rogers, Monique Mitchell Turner, and David André Broniatowski
- Abstract
BACKGROUND Providers of on-demand care, such as those in urgent care centers, may prescribe antibiotics unnecessarily because they fear receiving negative reviews on web-based platforms from unsatisfied patients—the so-called Yelp effect. This effect is hypothesized to be a significant driver of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, which exacerbates antibiotic resistance. OBJECTIVE In this study, we aimed to determine the frequency with which patients left negative reviews on web-based platforms after they expected to receive antibiotics in an urgent care setting but did not. METHODS We obtained a list of 8662 urgent care facilities from the Yelp application programming interface. By using this list, we automatically collected 481,825 web-based reviews from Google Maps between January 21 and February 10, 2019. We used machine learning algorithms to summarize the contents of these reviews. Additionally, 200 randomly sampled reviews were analyzed by 4 annotators to verify the types of messages present and whether they were consistent with the Yelp effect. RESULTS We collected 481,825 reviews, of which 1696 (95% CI 1240-2152) exhibited the Yelp effect. Negative reviews primarily identified operations issues regarding wait times, rude staff, billing, and communication. CONCLUSIONS Urgent care patients rarely express expectations for antibiotics in negative web-based reviews. Thus, our findings do not support an association between a lack of antibiotic prescriptions and negative web-based reviews. Rather, patients’ dissatisfaction with urgent care was most strongly linked to operations issues that were not related to the clinical management plan.
- Published
- 2021
42. Reversing the Antibiotic Resistance 'Yelp Effect' Through the Use of Emotionally Framed Responses to Negative Reviews of Providers: Questionnaire Study (Preprint)
- Author
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Hyesun Choung, Quoc-Ha Hannah Mai Bui, Paige Beck, and Hera Ashraf
- Abstract
BACKGROUND The overuse of antibiotics has rapidly made antimicrobial resistance a global public health challenge. There is an emerging trend where providers who perceive that their patients expect antibiotics are more likely to prescribe antibiotics unprompted or upon request. Particularly, health care providers have expressed concern that dissatisfied patients will provide disparaging online reviews, therefore threatening the reputation of the practice. To better deal with the negative reviews and inform patients, some health care staff directly respond to patients’ online feedback. Engaging with patients’ online reviews gives providers an opportunity to prevent reputational damage and improve patients’ understanding of the antibiotic resistance problem. OBJECTIVE We aim to test the effectiveness of different response strategies to the negative patient online reviews on the readers’ perceptions of the health care provider and their perceptions related to antibiotics resistance. METHODS Two experiments were conducted to examine the impact of message tactics (apologizing, inducing fear or guilt) that can be employed by health care providers when responding to patients’ negative online feedback related to not receiving an antibiotic. RESULTS Overall, our results demonstrated positive impacts of responding to patients’ online reviews. In study 1, we found apologetic messaging and use of emotional appeals in the response were effective in making readers feel more favorable toward the message. Readers also expressed a greater credibility perception toward the provider and willingness to visit the clinic when emotional appeals were used. Findings from study 2 largely supported the effectiveness of a fear-based response in improving the readers’ credibility perceptions and willingness to visit the clinic. The fear-inducing information was particularly effective among parent readers. CONCLUSIONS This paper demonstrated that a strategic response to online patient complaints could prevent reputational damage and minimize the potential negative impacts of the review. The results also glean insight into the step toward developing a novel intervention—crafting a persuasive response to patients’ negative feedback that can help improve the understanding of antibiotic resistance problems.
- Published
- 2020
43. Reversing the Antibiotic Resistance 'Yelp Effect' Through the Use of Emotionally Framed Responses to Negative Reviews of Providers: Questionnaire Study
- Author
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Monique Mitchell Turner, Hyesun Choung, Quoc-Ha Hannah Mai Bui, Paige Beck, and Hera Ashraf
- Subjects
Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Health Informatics ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Background The overuse of antibiotics has rapidly made antimicrobial resistance a global public health challenge. There is an emerging trend where providers who perceive that their patients expect antibiotics are more likely to prescribe antibiotics unprompted or upon request. Particularly, health care providers have expressed concern that dissatisfied patients will provide disparaging online reviews, therefore threatening the reputation of the practice. To better deal with the negative reviews and inform patients, some health care staff directly respond to patients’ online feedback. Engaging with patients’ online reviews gives providers an opportunity to prevent reputational damage and improve patients’ understanding of the antibiotic resistance problem. Objective We aim to test the effectiveness of different response strategies to the negative patient online reviews on the readers’ perceptions of the health care provider and their perceptions related to antibiotics resistance. Methods Two experiments were conducted to examine the impact of message tactics (apologizing, inducing fear or guilt) that can be employed by health care providers when responding to patients’ negative online feedback related to not receiving an antibiotic. Results Overall, our results demonstrated positive impacts of responding to patients’ online reviews. In study 1, we found apologetic messaging and use of emotional appeals in the response were effective in making readers feel more favorable toward the message. Readers also expressed a greater credibility perception toward the provider and willingness to visit the clinic when emotional appeals were used. Findings from study 2 largely supported the effectiveness of a fear-based response in improving the readers’ credibility perceptions and willingness to visit the clinic. The fear-inducing information was particularly effective among parent readers. Conclusions This paper demonstrated that a strategic response to online patient complaints could prevent reputational damage and minimize the potential negative impacts of the review. The results also glean insight into the step toward developing a novel intervention—crafting a persuasive response to patients’ negative feedback that can help improve the understanding of antibiotic resistance problems.
- Published
- 2020
44. Overlooking the Obvious: Communication of Efficacy by the Mass Media During the Ebola Crisis in Liberia
- Author
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Tamah Kamlem, Nwanneamaka Ume, Monique Mitchell Turner, Hina Shaikh, and Rajiv N. Rimal
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Newspaper ,Disease Outbreaks ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Mass Media ,News media ,Mass media ,Self-efficacy ,030505 public health ,business.industry ,Public health ,Communication ,05 social sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola ,Liberia ,Virology ,Health psychology ,Infectious disease (medical specialty) ,Family medicine ,0305 other medical science ,business ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
The role of mass media during a public health crisis is an ineluctable part of providing the public with critical information rapidly, particularly messages about self- and response efficacy. However, little is known about the role local news media play in disseminating efficacy information during infectious disease outbreaks. Here, we use the 2014 Ebola outbreak in Liberia as a case to explore this question. We content analyzed newspaper and radio messages disseminated between March 2014 and March 2015, during the midst of the outbreak. Results show that both radio programs and newspaper articles mentioned over 21 prevention steps at some point, with noticeable differences within which disease prevention messages were communicated most frequently to the public. At least 1 mention of self-efficacy was identified in 31.5% of radio content (n = 127), 23.6% of radio programming (n = 55), and 10.6% of newspaper content (n = 745). Response efficacy, signifying effectiveness of preventive methods, was detected in 25.2% of radio (n = 127), 16.4% of radio programming (n = 55), and 15% of newspaper content (n = 745). This is important as efficacy reporting can impact public readiness to adopt preventative measures and affect beliefs about self- and response efficacy, ultimately decreasing chances of spreading the infection and poorer health outcomes.
- Published
- 2020
45. Patient-provider communication patterns among Asian American immigrant subgroups in New York City
- Author
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Chau Trinh-Shevrin, Laura C. Wyatt, Simona C. Kwon, Monique Mitchell Turner, and Serena Phillips
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Population ,Emigrants and Immigrants ,Southeast asian ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Language proficiency ,030212 general & internal medicine ,education ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,Descriptive statistics ,Asian ,030503 health policy & services ,Communication ,Communication Barriers ,General Medicine ,Comprehension ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Limited English proficiency ,New York City ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Cultural competence ,Demography - Abstract
Objectives Patient-provider communication is essential for patient-centered care, yet Asian American immigrant populations face barriers. We aim to describe: 1) patient-reported communication-related characteristics for 16 disaggregated Asian American subgroups; and 2) the association of patient comprehension of provider communication with socio-demographics, language proficiency and concordance, and perceived cultural sensitivity in this population. Methods Descriptive statistics are presented for 1269 Asian American immigrants responding to cross-sectional, venue-sampled surveys conducted in New York City. Logistic regression models examine predictors of low comprehension of provider communication. Results Approximately 11% of respondents reported low comprehension of provider communication: lowest among South Asians and highest among Southeast Asians. Eighty-four percent were language-concordant with their provider, 90.1% agreed that their provider understood their background and values, and 16.5% felt their provider looked down on them. Low comprehension of provider communication was significantly associated with Southeast Asian subgroup, less education, limited English proficiency, public health insurance, patient-provider language discordance, and perceived low cultural understanding. Conclusion Among our sample, language and cultural sensitivity are associated with comprehension of provider communication. Practice implications Strategies improving language access and cultural sensitivity may be important for Asian immigrant patients. These could include interpretation services, bilingual community-based providers, and cultural sensitivity training.
- Published
- 2020
46. Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention: Evaluation of the Be Yourself Program
- Author
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Amita Vyas, Megan Landry, Monique Mitchell Turner, Grace Kathryn Douglass, and Susan F. Wood
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Medicine ,business ,Pregnancy prevention - Published
- 2018
47. Barriers to Mental Health Treatment Utilization in Wards 7 and 8 in Washington, DC: A Qualitative Pilot Study
- Author
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Ollie Ganz, Paulette Jones, Monique Mitchell Turner, Laurel Curry, and Katherine H. Mead
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,mental health treatment utilization ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Interpersonal communication ,urban health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,media_common ,High prevalence ,Poverty ,Distrust ,lcsh:Public aspects of medicine ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,lcsh:RA1-1270 ,Mental illness ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Mental health treatment ,030227 psychiatry ,Family medicine ,Original Article ,Psychology ,mental health - Abstract
Purpose: There is a paucity of data on barriers to mental health treatment utilization among residents of Wards 7 and 8 in Washington, DC, despite exposure to many environmental factors that are associated with poor mental health outcomes and the high prevalence of mental health problems among residents. The objective of this study was to examine barriers to mental healthcare utilization among residents of Wards 7 and 8. Methods: This study included semi-structured, in-depth interviews with five key informants who lived or spent significant time in Wards 7 or 8 in Washington, DC, which are the wards served by Paving the Way MSI, a behavioral health clinic that served as a partner organization in the study. Results: Barriers to mental health treatment utilization existed at a variety of social-ecological levels, including the individual/interpersonal level, the provider/mental health system level, the community level, and the societal level. Major barriers included fear and trust/distrust in the medical system, lack of social support, the model of mental healthcare, lack of patient-centered care, limited access to mental health services, stigma of mental illness and mental health treatment, and poverty. Conclusion: This study highlights the need to address barriers to mental health treatment utilization at multiple social-ecological levels. Future studies should examine perspectives from residents with mental health problems in these wards to gain a more thorough understanding of the barriers to treatment. Funding is needed to support efforts to increase mental health treatment utilization among residents of Wards 7 and 8.
- Published
- 2018
48. Current Knowledge of Obesity Treatment Guidelines by Health Care Professionals
- Author
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William H. Dietz, Scott Kahan, Nichole Jannah, Christine Gallagher, and Monique Mitchell Turner
- Subjects
Counseling ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health Personnel ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,MEDLINE ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Pharmacotherapy ,Weight loss ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Preventive Health Services ,Weight Loss ,Health care ,Humans ,Medicine ,Obesity ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Psychiatry ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Guideline ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Nonsurgical treatment ,Family medicine ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Medicaid - Abstract
Objective The objective of this study was to assess health care professionals' knowledge of evidence-based guidelines for the nonsurgical treatment of obesity. Methods A nationally representative sample of internists, family practitioners, obstetricians/gynecologists, and nurse practitioners completed a web-based survey between June 9 and July 1, 2016 (n = 1,506). Results Only 16% of respondents indicated that obesity counseling should be provided approximately twice monthly in an individual or group setting for at least 6 months, in accordance with United States Preventive Services Task Force and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services guidelines. Only 15% of respondents identified BMI ≥ 27 kg/m2 with an obesity-associated comorbid condition as the appropriate indication to prescribe pharmacotherapy for patients. Two-thirds of respondents indicated that it is appropriate to continue long-term pharmacotherapy under conditions inconsistent with evidence-based guidelines, with nearly one-quarter indicating that obesity medications should never be prescribed beyond 3 months regardless of weight loss. Conclusions These findings suggest that provider understanding of appropriate clinical care for obesity is inconsistent with evidence-based recommendations. As coverage for behavioral counseling services and pharmacotherapy expands, it is imperative that health care professionals understand how to effectively leverage these treatment modalities to optimize health outcomes for patients with obesity.
- Published
- 2018
49. Designing Effective Tsunami Messages: Examining the Role of Short Messages and Fear in Warning Response
- Author
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Sarah C. Vos, Michele M. Wood, Monique Mitchell Turner, and Jeannette Sutton
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021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Computer science ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Mobile message ,02 engineering and technology ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,Emergency response ,Action (philosophy) ,computer ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Although tsunamis have the potential to be extremely destructive, relatively little research on tsunami messaging has taken place. Discovering whether tsunami warning messages can be written in a way that leads to increased protective response is crucial, particularly given the increased use of mobile message services and the role they play in notifying the public of imminent threats such as tsunami and other hazards. The purpose of this study was to examine the possibility of designing warning messages for tsunamis that improve upon message style and content used by public alerting agencies to date and to gain insight that can be applied to other hazards. This study tested the impact of tsunami messages that varied in length and content on six message outcomes—understanding, believing, personalizing, deciding, milling, and fear. Relative to the short message, revised messages resulted in significantly more understanding and deciding, known precursors to taking protective action under threat. The revised message also resulted in significantly more fear, which is believed to influence behavioral intentions. Findings suggest that shorter messages may not deliver enough content to inform message receivers about the threat they face and the protective actions they should perform. Longer messages delivered with more specific information about the location of impact, threat-associated risks, and recommended protective actions were associated with better message outcomes, including quicker intended response. Recommendations for future tsunami warnings are provided.
- Published
- 2017
50. Questioning the Yelp Effect: Mixed Methods Analysis of Web-Based Reviews of Urgent Cares
- Author
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Rana F Hamdy, Michael Cziner, Melody Fung, Monique Mitchell Turner, David A. Broniatowski, Cindy M. Liu, Samuel Dobbs, Dian Hu, and Laura Rogers
- Subjects
Original Paper ,review websites ,Internet ,business.industry ,Urgent Cares ,Communication ,doctor web-based review ,urgent care ,Health Informatics ,medicine.disease ,Ambulatory Care Facilities ,Mixed methods analysis ,doctor-patient communication ,Antibiotic prescribing ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Doctor patient communication ,Care setting ,Patient Satisfaction ,Ambulatory Care ,medicine ,Humans ,Web application ,Medical emergency ,Medical prescription ,business - Abstract
Background Providers of on-demand care, such as those in urgent care centers, may prescribe antibiotics unnecessarily because they fear receiving negative reviews on web-based platforms from unsatisfied patients—the so-called Yelp effect. This effect is hypothesized to be a significant driver of inappropriate antibiotic prescribing, which exacerbates antibiotic resistance. Objective In this study, we aimed to determine the frequency with which patients left negative reviews on web-based platforms after they expected to receive antibiotics in an urgent care setting but did not. Methods We obtained a list of 8662 urgent care facilities from the Yelp application programming interface. By using this list, we automatically collected 481,825 web-based reviews from Google Maps between January 21 and February 10, 2019. We used machine learning algorithms to summarize the contents of these reviews. Additionally, 200 randomly sampled reviews were analyzed by 4 annotators to verify the types of messages present and whether they were consistent with the Yelp effect. Results We collected 481,825 reviews, of which 1696 (95% CI 1240-2152) exhibited the Yelp effect. Negative reviews primarily identified operations issues regarding wait times, rude staff, billing, and communication. Conclusions Urgent care patients rarely express expectations for antibiotics in negative web-based reviews. Thus, our findings do not support an association between a lack of antibiotic prescriptions and negative web-based reviews. Rather, patients’ dissatisfaction with urgent care was most strongly linked to operations issues that were not related to the clinical management plan.
- Published
- 2021
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