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Environmental Public Health Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Environmental Public Health

Exposure To Household Air Pollution From Biomass-Burning Cookstoves And Hba1c And Diabetic Status Among Honduran Women, S. Rajkumar, M. L. Clark, B. N. Young, Megan L. Benka-Coker, A. M. Bachand, R. D. Brook, T. L. Nelson, J. Volckens, S. J. Reynolds, C. L'Orange, N. Good, K. Koehler, S. Africano, A. B. Osorto Pinel, J. L. Peel Jun 2018

Exposure To Household Air Pollution From Biomass-Burning Cookstoves And Hba1c And Diabetic Status Among Honduran Women, S. Rajkumar, M. L. Clark, B. N. Young, Megan L. Benka-Coker, A. M. Bachand, R. D. Brook, T. L. Nelson, J. Volckens, S. J. Reynolds, C. L'Orange, N. Good, K. Koehler, S. Africano, A. B. Osorto Pinel, J. L. Peel

Health Sciences Faculty Publications

Household air pollution from biomass cookstoves is estimated to be responsible for more than two and a half million premature deaths annually, primarily in low and middle‐income countries where cardiometabolic disorders, such as Type II Diabetes, are increasing. Growing evidence supports a link between ambient air pollution and diabetes, but evidence for household air pollution is limited. This cross‐sectional study of 142 women (72 with traditional stoves and 70 with cleaner‐burning Justa stoves) in rural Honduras evaluated the association of exposure to household air pollution (stove type, 24‐hour average kitchen and personal fine particulate matter [PM2.5] mass and black carbon) …


Rush To Judgment: The Sti-Treatment Trials And Hiv In Sub-Saharan Africa, Eileen Stillwaggon, Larry Sawers May 2015

Rush To Judgment: The Sti-Treatment Trials And Hiv In Sub-Saharan Africa, Eileen Stillwaggon, Larry Sawers

Economics Faculty Publications

Introduction: The extraordinarily high incidence of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa led to the search for cofactor infections that could explain the high rates of transmission in the region. Genital inflammation and lesions caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) were a probable mechanism, and numerous observational studies indicated several STI cofactors. Nine out of the ten randomized controlled trials (RCTs), however, failed to demonstrate that treating STIs could lower HIV incidence. We evaluate all 10 trials to determine if their design permits the conclusion, widely believed, that STI treatment is ineffective in reducing HIV incidence.

Discussion: Examination of the …