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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Harvest Health: Chronic Disease Self-Management Program For Older African-Americans, Nancy L. Chernett, Laura N. Gitlin Nov 2005

Harvest Health: Chronic Disease Self-Management Program For Older African-Americans, Nancy L. Chernett, Laura N. Gitlin

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract available.


The Personal Care Partnership Program, Christopher Minnick, Jennifer Campbell, Pearl Beth Graub, Ed Ratajczak, Carol A. Irvine Sep 2005

The Personal Care Partnership Program, Christopher Minnick, Jennifer Campbell, Pearl Beth Graub, Ed Ratajczak, Carol A. Irvine

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract available.


Assuring Individualized Pharmacotherapy For The Elderly, Richard G. Stefanacci Sep 2005

Assuring Individualized Pharmacotherapy For The Elderly, Richard G. Stefanacci

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract available.


Pharmaceutical Care For An Aging America, Jennifer B. Koenig Aug 2005

Pharmaceutical Care For An Aging America, Jennifer B. Koenig

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract available.


The Medication Safety Program: Medication-Food Risks And Behaviors Among The Pace Elderly, William E. Staas Jr. Aug 2005

The Medication Safety Program: Medication-Food Risks And Behaviors Among The Pace Elderly, William E. Staas Jr.

Population Health Matters (Formerly Health Policy Newsletter)

No abstract available.


A Pilot Randomized, Controlled Trial Of An In-Home Drinking Water Intervention Among Hiv + Persons, John M. Colford, Sona R. Saha, Timothy J. Wade, Catherine C. Wright, Mai Vu, Sandra Charles, Peter Jensen, Alan Hubbard, Deborah A. Levy, Joseph N. S. Eisenberg Jan 2005

A Pilot Randomized, Controlled Trial Of An In-Home Drinking Water Intervention Among Hiv + Persons, John M. Colford, Sona R. Saha, Timothy J. Wade, Catherine C. Wright, Mai Vu, Sandra Charles, Peter Jensen, Alan Hubbard, Deborah A. Levy, Joseph N. S. Eisenberg

Journal Articles: Epidemiology

Although immunocompromised persons may be at increased risk for gastrointestinal illnesses, no trials investigating drinking water treatment and gastrointestinal illness in such patients have been published. Earlier results from San Francisco suggested an association (OR 6.76) between tap water and cryptosporidiosis among HIV + persons. The authors conducted a randomized, triple-blinded intervention trial of home water treatment in San Francisco, California, from April 2000 to May 2001. Fifty HIV-positive patients were randomized to externally identical active (N = 24) or sham (N = 26) treatment devices. The active device contained a filter and UV light; the sham provided no treatment. …


A Randomized, Controlled Trial Of In-Home Drinking Water Intervention To Reduce Gastrointestinal Illness, John M. Colford, Timothy J. Wade, Sukhminder K. Sandhu, Catherine C. Wright, Sherline Lee, Susan Shaw, Kim Fox, Susan Burns, Anne Benker, M. Alan Brookhart, Mark Van Der Laan, Deborah A. Levy Jan 2005

A Randomized, Controlled Trial Of In-Home Drinking Water Intervention To Reduce Gastrointestinal Illness, John M. Colford, Timothy J. Wade, Sukhminder K. Sandhu, Catherine C. Wright, Sherline Lee, Susan Shaw, Kim Fox, Susan Burns, Anne Benker, M. Alan Brookhart, Mark Van Der Laan, Deborah A. Levy

Journal Articles: Epidemiology

Trials have provided conflicting estimates of the risk of gastrointestinal illness attributable to tap water. To estimate this risk in an Iowa community with a well-run water utility with microbiologically challenged source water, the authors of this 2000-2002 study randomly assigned blinded volunteers to use externally identical devices (active device: 227 households with 646 persons; sham device: 229 households with 650 persons) for 6 months (cycle A). Each group then switched to the opposite device for 6 months (cycle B). The active device contained a 1-microm absolute ceramic filter and used ultraviolet light. Episodes of "highly credible gastrointestinal illness," a …