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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Prevalence Of Rural Intimate Partner Violence In 16 Us States, 2005, Matthew J. Breiding, Jessica S. Ziembroski, Michele C. Black Jul 2009

Prevalence Of Rural Intimate Partner Violence In 16 Us States, 2005, Matthew J. Breiding, Jessica S. Ziembroski, Michele C. Black

Public Health Resources

Context: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a public health problem that affects people across the entire social spectrum. However, no previous population-based public health studies have examined the prevalence of IPV in rural areas of the United States. Research on IPV in rural areas is especially important given that there are relatively fewer resources available in rural areas for the prevention of IPV.

Methods: In 2005, over 25,000 rural residents in 16 states completed the first-ever IPV module within the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). The BRFSS is a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-sponsored annual random-digit-dialed …


Clostridium Difficile In Retail Meat Products, Usa, 2007, J. Glenn Songer, Hien T. Trinh, George E. Killgore, Angela D. Thompson, L. Clifford Mcdonald, Brandi M. Limbago May 2009

Clostridium Difficile In Retail Meat Products, Usa, 2007, J. Glenn Songer, Hien T. Trinh, George E. Killgore, Angela D. Thompson, L. Clifford Mcdonald, Brandi M. Limbago

Public Health Resources

To determine the presence of Clostridium difficile, we sampled cooked and uncooked meat products sold in Tucson, Arizona. Forty-two percent contained toxigenic C. difficile strains (either ribotype 078/toxinotype V [73%] or 027/ toxinotype III [NAP1 or NAP1-related; 27%]). These findings indicate that food products may play a role in interspecies C. difficile transmission.


Modifying National Public Health Performance Standards For Local Public Health Department Accreditation, Jeffrey G. Kuhr Apr 2009

Modifying National Public Health Performance Standards For Local Public Health Department Accreditation, Jeffrey G. Kuhr

College of Education and Human Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

Public health officials throughout the United States are currently preparing for a national accreditation initiative for local and state public health agencies. As a voluntary program, the accreditation process will measure the degree to which state, local, tribal, and territorial public health departments meet nationally recognized standards and measures. Proponents of the initiative feel that evaluating public health agencies on their capacities to achieve certain standards will lead to improved service quality, consistency of public health roles nationally, and a greater understanding of those roles among the general population. However, in planning for agency accreditation some potential barriers must be …


Bacillus Anthracis In China And Its Relationship To Worldwide Lineages, Tatum S. Simonson, Richard T. Okinaka, Bingxiang Wang, W. Ryan Easterday, Lynn Huynh, Jana M. U'Ren, Meghan Dukerich, Shaylan R. Zanecki, Leo J. Kenefic, Jodi Beaudry, James M. Schupp, Talima Pearson, David M. Wagner, Alex Hoffmaster, Jacques Ravel, Paul Keim Apr 2009

Bacillus Anthracis In China And Its Relationship To Worldwide Lineages, Tatum S. Simonson, Richard T. Okinaka, Bingxiang Wang, W. Ryan Easterday, Lynn Huynh, Jana M. U'Ren, Meghan Dukerich, Shaylan R. Zanecki, Leo J. Kenefic, Jodi Beaudry, James M. Schupp, Talima Pearson, David M. Wagner, Alex Hoffmaster, Jacques Ravel, Paul Keim

Public Health Resources

Background: The global pattern of distribution of 1033 B. anthracis isolates has previously been defined by a set of 12 conserved canonical single nucleotide polymorphisms (canSNP). These studies reinforced the presence of three major lineages and 12 sub-lineages and sub-groups of this anthrax-causing pathogen. Isolates that form the A lineage (unlike the B and C lineages) have become widely dispersed throughout the world and form the basis for the geographical disposition of "modern" anthrax. An archival collection of 191 different B. anthracis isolates from China provides a glimpse into the possible role of Chinese trade and commerce in the spread …


Births: Final Data For 2006, Joyce A. Martin, Brady E. Hamilton, Paul D. Sutton, Stephanie J. Ventura, Fay Menacker, Sharon Kirmeyer, T.J. Mathews Jan 2009

Births: Final Data For 2006, Joyce A. Martin, Brady E. Hamilton, Paul D. Sutton, Stephanie J. Ventura, Fay Menacker, Sharon Kirmeyer, T.J. Mathews

Public Health Resources

Objectives—This report presents 2006 data on U.S. births according to a wide variety of characteristics. Data are presented for maternal demographic characteristics including age, live-birth order, race, Hispanic origin, marital status, and educational attainment; maternal lifestyle and health characteristics (medical risk factors, weight gain, and tobacco use); medical care utilization by pregnant women (prenatal care, obstetric procedures, characteristics of labor and/or delivery, attendant at birth, and method of delivery); and infant characteristics (period of gestation, birthweight, Apgar score, congenital anomalies, and multiple births). Also presented are birth and fertility rates by age, live-birth order, race, Hispanic origin, and marital …


Children’S Exposure To Violence: A Comprehensive National Survey, David Finkelhor, Heather Turner, Richard Ormrod, Sherry Hamby, Kristen Kracke Jan 2009

Children’S Exposure To Violence: A Comprehensive National Survey, David Finkelhor, Heather Turner, Richard Ormrod, Sherry Hamby, Kristen Kracke

Public Health Resources

This Bulletin discusses the National Survey of Children’s Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV), the most comprehensive nationwide survey of the incidence and prevalence of children’s exposure to violence to date, sponsored by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) and supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Conducted between January and May 2008, it measured the past-year and lifetime exposure to violence for children age 17 and younger across several major categories: conventional crime, child maltreatment, victimization by peers and siblings, sexual victimization, witnessing and indirect victimization (including exposure to community violence and family violence), school …


Comparison Of Video Laryngoscopy Technologies, C. Chiesa, N. Miljkovic, N. Schulte, J. B. Callahan, Jr., D. J. Miller, B. H. Boedeker Jan 2009

Comparison Of Video Laryngoscopy Technologies, C. Chiesa, N. Miljkovic, N. Schulte, J. B. Callahan, Jr., D. J. Miller, B. H. Boedeker

Public Health Resources

Indirect laryngoscopy allows practitioners to “see around the corner” of a patient’s airway during intubation. Inadequate airway management is a major contributor to patient injury, morbidity and mortality. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the video quality of commercially available video laryngoscopy systems. A team of four investigators at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and the Peter Kiewit Institute performed intubation simulations using a number of video laryngoscopy systems. Testing was done with a Laerdal Difficult Airway Manikin (Laerdal Medical Corp., Wappingers Falls, NY) in a setting that simulated difficult airways, adverse lighting conditions and various …


Children's Behavioral Traits And Risk Of Injury: Analyses From A Case-Control Study Of Agricultural Households, Kathleen F. Carlson, Susan G. Gerberich, Bruce H. Alexander, Ann S. Masten, Timothy R. Church, John M. Shutske, Andrew D. Ryan, Colleen M. Renier Jan 2009

Children's Behavioral Traits And Risk Of Injury: Analyses From A Case-Control Study Of Agricultural Households, Kathleen F. Carlson, Susan G. Gerberich, Bruce H. Alexander, Ann S. Masten, Timothy R. Church, John M. Shutske, Andrew D. Ryan, Colleen M. Renier

Public Health Resources

Problem: Children on family agricultural operations have high risk of injury. The association between children's behavioral traits and their risk of injury is not well understood. Method: Data from the Regional Rural Injury Study-II were used to assess behavioral risk factors for injury to children ages six to <20 years. A total of 379 injury events (cases) and 1,562 randomly selected controls were identified. Adjusted odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), calculated using logistic regression, were used to estimate injury risk in reference to behavioral traits. Results: Injury risks were greater for children with high levels of depressive symptoms (OR=1.9, CI=1.0-3.7) and aggression (OR=1.6, CI=0.9-2.7), and low levels of careful/cautious behavior (OR=1.8, CI=1.1-2.9). Children with low levels of self-regulation had reduced risks (OR=0.4, CI=0.2-0.8). Discussion: Results suggest that children's behaviors affect their risk of agricultural injury. Additional research …


Attenuation Of Doxorubicin-Induced Cardiac Injury By Mitochondrial Glutaredoxin 2, Nicole M. Diotte, Ye Xiong, Jinping Gao, Balvin H.L. Chua, Ye-Shih Ho Jan 2009

Attenuation Of Doxorubicin-Induced Cardiac Injury By Mitochondrial Glutaredoxin 2, Nicole M. Diotte, Ye Xiong, Jinping Gao, Balvin H.L. Chua, Ye-Shih Ho

Public Health Resources

While the cardiotoxicity of doxorubicin (DOX) is known to be partly mediated through the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), the biochemical mechanisms by which ROS damage cardiomyocytes remain to be determined. This study investigates whether S-glutathionylation of mitochondrial proteins plays a role in DOX-induced myocardial injury using a line of transgenic mice expressing the human mitochondrial glutaredoxin 2 (Glrx2), a thiotransferase catalyzing the reduction as well as formation of protein–glutathione mixed disulfides, in cardiomyocytes. The total glutaredoxin (Glrx) activity was increased by 76% and 53 fold in homogenates of whole heart and isolated heart mitochondria of Glrx2 transgenic mice, …


Carbon Tetrachloride-Induced Liver Damage In Asialoglycoprotein Receptor-Deficient Mice, Shana R. Dalton, Serene M.L. Lee, Rachel N. King, Amin A. Nanji, Kusum K. Kharbanda, Carol A. Casey, Benita L. Mcvicker Jan 2009

Carbon Tetrachloride-Induced Liver Damage In Asialoglycoprotein Receptor-Deficient Mice, Shana R. Dalton, Serene M.L. Lee, Rachel N. King, Amin A. Nanji, Kusum K. Kharbanda, Carol A. Casey, Benita L. Mcvicker

Public Health Resources

The asialoglycoprotein (ASGP) receptor is an abundant hepatocyte-specific receptor involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis. This receptor’s abundance and function is decreased by chronic ethanol administration prior to the appearance of pathology such as necrosis or inflammation. Hence, this study aimed to determine if ASGP receptor function is required to protect against liver injury by utilizing a knockout mouse model lacking functional ASGP receptor in the setting of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) hepatotoxicity. Briefly, ASGP receptor-deficient (RD) mice and wild-type (WT) mice were injected with 1 ml/kg body weight of CCl4. In the subsequent week, mice were monitored for …


Nitric Oxide Inhibits Insulin-Degrading Enzyme Activity And Function Through S-Nitrosylation, Crystal M. Cordes, Robert G. Bennett, Gerri L. Siford, Frederick G. Hamel Jan 2009

Nitric Oxide Inhibits Insulin-Degrading Enzyme Activity And Function Through S-Nitrosylation, Crystal M. Cordes, Robert G. Bennett, Gerri L. Siford, Frederick G. Hamel

Public Health Resources

Insulin-degrading enzyme (IDE) is responsible for the degradation of a number of hormones and peptides, including insulin and amyloid β (Aβ). Genetic studies have linked IDE to both type 2 diabetes and Alzheimer’s disease. Despite its potential importance in these diseases, relatively little is known about the factors that regulate the activity and function of IDE. Protein S-nitrosylation is now recognized as a redox-dependent, cGMP-independent signaling component that mediates a variety of actions of nitric oxide (NO). Here we describe a mechanism of inactivation of IDE by NO. NO donors decreased both insulin and Aβ degrading activities of IDE. Insulin-degrading …


Proteomics Reveal A Concerted Upregulation Of Methionine Metabolic Pathway Enzymes, And Downregulation Of Carbonic Anhydrase-Iii, In Betaine Supplemented Ethanol-Fed Rats, Kusum K. Kharbanda, Vasanthy Vigneswara, Benita L. Mcvicker, Anna U. Newlaczyl, Kevin Bailey, Dean Tuma, David E. Ray, Wayne G. Carter Jan 2009

Proteomics Reveal A Concerted Upregulation Of Methionine Metabolic Pathway Enzymes, And Downregulation Of Carbonic Anhydrase-Iii, In Betaine Supplemented Ethanol-Fed Rats, Kusum K. Kharbanda, Vasanthy Vigneswara, Benita L. Mcvicker, Anna U. Newlaczyl, Kevin Bailey, Dean Tuma, David E. Ray, Wayne G. Carter

Public Health Resources

We employed a proteomic profiling strategy to examine the effects of ethanol and betaine diet supplementation on major liver protein level changes. Male Wistar rats were fed control, ethanol or betaine supplemented diets for 4 weeks. Livers were removed and liver cytosolic proteins resolved by onedimensional and two-dimensional separation techniques. Significant upregulation of betaine homocysteine methyltransferase-1, methionine adenosyl transferase-1, and glycine N-methyltransferase were the most visually prominent protein changes observed in livers of rats fed the betaine supplemented ethanol diet. We hypothesise that this concerted upregulation of these methionine metabolic pathway enzymes is the protective mechanism by which betaine restores …


Identification Of Francisella Tularensis Subsp. Tularensis A1 And A2 Infections By Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Claudia R. Molins, Jennifer K. Carlson, Jana Coombs, Jeannine M. Petersen Jan 2009

Identification Of Francisella Tularensis Subsp. Tularensis A1 And A2 Infections By Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Claudia R. Molins, Jennifer K. Carlson, Jana Coombs, Jeannine M. Petersen

Public Health Resources

Francisella tularensis subsp. tularensis (type A) is subdivided into clades A1 and A2. Human tularemia infections caused by A1 and A2 differ with respect to clinical outcome; A1 infections are associated with a higher case fatality rate. In this study, we develop and evaluate TaqMan polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays for identification of A1 and A2. Both assays were shown to be specific to either A1 or A2, with sensitivities of 10 genomic equivalents. Real-time PCR results for identification of A1 and A2 were in complete agreement with results obtained by pulsed field gel electrophoresis analysis or conventional PCR when …


Pharmacists’ And Pharmacy Students’ Ability To Identify Drug-Related Problems Using Timer (Tool To Improve Medications In The Elderly Via Review), Sarah Snyder Lee, Ann K. Schwemm, Jeffrey Reist, Matthew Cantrell, Michael Andreski, William R. Doucette, Elizabeth A. Chrischilles, Karen B. Farris Jan 2009

Pharmacists’ And Pharmacy Students’ Ability To Identify Drug-Related Problems Using Timer (Tool To Improve Medications In The Elderly Via Review), Sarah Snyder Lee, Ann K. Schwemm, Jeffrey Reist, Matthew Cantrell, Michael Andreski, William R. Doucette, Elizabeth A. Chrischilles, Karen B. Farris

Public Health Resources

Objective. Determine the effectiveness of TIMER (Tool to Improve Medications in the Elderly via Review) in helping pharmacists and pharmacy students identify drug-related problems during patient medication reviews.
Methods. In a randomized, controlled study design, geriatric patient cases were sent to 136 pharmacists and 108 third-year pharmacy students who were asked to identify drug related-problems (DRPs) with and without using TIMER.
Results. Pharmacists identified more tool-related DRPs using TIMER (p 5 0.027). Pharmacy students identified more tool-related DRPs using TIMER in the first case (p 5 0.02), but not in the second.
Conclusion. TIMER increased the number of DRPs identified …


Launching A Novel Preclinical Infrastructure: Comparative Oncology Trials Consortium Directed Therapeutic Targeting Of Tnfα To Cancer Vasculature, Melissa C. Paoloni, Anita Tandle, Christina Mazcko, Engy Hanna, Stefan Kachala, Amy Leblanc, Shelley Newman, David Vail, Carolyn Henry, Douglass Thamm, Karin Sorenmo, Amin Hajitou, Renata Pasqualini, Wadih Arap, Chand Khanna, Steven K. Libutti Jan 2009

Launching A Novel Preclinical Infrastructure: Comparative Oncology Trials Consortium Directed Therapeutic Targeting Of Tnfα To Cancer Vasculature, Melissa C. Paoloni, Anita Tandle, Christina Mazcko, Engy Hanna, Stefan Kachala, Amy Leblanc, Shelley Newman, David Vail, Carolyn Henry, Douglass Thamm, Karin Sorenmo, Amin Hajitou, Renata Pasqualini, Wadih Arap, Chand Khanna, Steven K. Libutti

Public Health Resources

Background: Under the direction and sponsorship of the National Cancer Institute, we report on the first pre-clinical trial of the Comparative Oncology Trials Consortium (COTC). The COTC is a novel infrastructure to integrate cancers that naturally develop in pet dogs into the development path of new human drugs. Trials are designed to address questions challenging in conventional preclinical models and early phase human trials. Large animal spontaneous cancer models can be a valuable addition to successful studies of cancer biology and novel therapeutic drug, imaging and device development.

Methodology/Principal Findings: Through this established infrastructure, the first trial of …


The Role Of Glutamate And Its Receptors In Mesocorticolimbic Dopaminergic Regions In Opioid Addiction, Yuan Guo, Hui-Ling Wang, Xiao-Hui Xiang, Yan Zhao Jan 2009

The Role Of Glutamate And Its Receptors In Mesocorticolimbic Dopaminergic Regions In Opioid Addiction, Yuan Guo, Hui-Ling Wang, Xiao-Hui Xiang, Yan Zhao

Public Health Resources

Accumulating evidence suggests that glutamate, as one of the most important excitatory neurotransmitters in the brain, plays a key role in drug addiction including opioid addiction. There is substantial evidence for glutamatergic projections into mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic neurons, which are associated with opioid psychological dependence and are also the key regions of enhancement effect. Glutamate may be involved in the process of opioid addiction not only by acting on its ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors that activate several signal transduction pathways, but also by interacting with other neurotransmitters or neuropeptides such as opioids, dopamine, y-aminobutyric acid and substance P in the …


Animal Helminths In Human Archaeological Remains: A Review Of Zoonoses In The Past, Luciana Sianto, Marcia Chame, Cassius S. P. Silva, Marcelo L. C. Gonçalves, Karl Reinhard, Martín Horacio Fugassa, Adauto Araújo Jan 2009

Animal Helminths In Human Archaeological Remains: A Review Of Zoonoses In The Past, Luciana Sianto, Marcia Chame, Cassius S. P. Silva, Marcelo L. C. Gonçalves, Karl Reinhard, Martín Horacio Fugassa, Adauto Araújo

Karl Reinhard Publications

The authors present a review of records of intestinal parasitic helminths from animals in human archaeological remains, reported since the emergence of paleopathological studies. The objective was to relate paleoparasitological findings to geographic, biotic, and abiotic factors from the environment in which the prehistoric populations lived, and understand some aspects related to the process of human dispersion and biological and cultural evolution. Modification of eating habits and the incorporation of new cultural practices are analyzed from the perspective of zoonoses from prehistory to the present day, especially in Brazilian indigenous populations. Three tables identifying the helminths, their natural hosts, dates, …