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Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Hospital Ships Adrift? Part 2: The Role Of U.S. Navy Hospital Ship Humanitarian Assistance Missions In Building Partnerships, Derek J. Licina, Sangeeta Mookherji, Gene Migliaccio, Cheryl Ringer
Hospital Ships Adrift? Part 2: The Role Of U.S. Navy Hospital Ship Humanitarian Assistance Missions In Building Partnerships, Derek J. Licina, Sangeeta Mookherji, Gene Migliaccio, Cheryl Ringer
Global Health Faculty Publications
Introduction US Navy hospital ships are used as a foreign policy instrument to achieve various objectives that include building partnerships. Despite substantial resource investment by the Department of Defense (DoD) in these missions, their impact is unclear. The purpose of this study was to understand how and why hospital ship missions influence partnerships among the different participants.
Methods An embedded case study was used and included the hospital ship Mercy's mission to Timor-Leste in 2008 and 2010 with four units of analysis: the US government, partner nation, host nation, and nongovernmental organizations. Key stakeholders representing each unit were interviewed using …
Global Mortality Estimates For The 2009 Influenza Pandemic From The Glamor Project: A Modeling Study, Lone Simonsen, Peter Spreeuwenberg, Roger Lustig, Robert J. Taylor, Douglas M. Fleming, Madelon Kroneman, Maria D. Van Kerkhove, Anthony D. Mounts, W. John Paget
Global Mortality Estimates For The 2009 Influenza Pandemic From The Glamor Project: A Modeling Study, Lone Simonsen, Peter Spreeuwenberg, Roger Lustig, Robert J. Taylor, Douglas M. Fleming, Madelon Kroneman, Maria D. Van Kerkhove, Anthony D. Mounts, W. John Paget
Global Health Faculty Publications
Background
Assessing the mortality impact of the 2009 influenza A H1N1 virus (H1N1pdm09) is essential for optimizing public health responses to future pandemics. The World Health Organization reported 18,631 laboratory-confirmed pandemic deaths, but the total pandemic mortality burden was substantially higher. We estimated the 2009 pandemic mortality burden through statistical modeling of mortality data from multiple countries.
Methods and Findings
We obtained weekly virology and underlying cause-of-death mortality time series for 2005–2009 for 20 countries covering ~35% of the world population. We applied a multivariate linear regression model to estimate pandemic respiratory mortality in each collaborating country. We then used …
Reassessing Google Flu Trends Data For Detection Of Seasonal And Pandemic Influenza: A Comparative Epidemiological Study At Three Geographic Scales, Donald R. Olson, Kevin J. Konty, Marc Paladini, Cecile G. Viboud, Lone Simonsen
Reassessing Google Flu Trends Data For Detection Of Seasonal And Pandemic Influenza: A Comparative Epidemiological Study At Three Geographic Scales, Donald R. Olson, Kevin J. Konty, Marc Paladini, Cecile G. Viboud, Lone Simonsen
Global Health Faculty Publications
The goal of influenza-like illness (ILI) surveillance is to determine the timing, location and magnitude of outbreaks by monitoring the frequency and progression of clinical case incidence. Advances in computational and information technology have allowed for automated collection of higher volumes of electronic data and more timely analyses than previously possible. Novel surveillance systems, including those based on internet search query data like Google Flu Trends (GFT), are being used as surrogates for clinically-based reporting of influenza-like-illness (ILI). We investigated the reliability of GFT during the last decade (2003 to 2013), and compared weekly public health surveillance with search query …
Does Comorbidity Increase The Risk Of Mortality Among Children Under 3 Years Of Age?, Christa L. Fischer Walker, Jamie Perin, Jodi L. Liu, Joanne Katz, James M. Tielsch, Robert Black
Does Comorbidity Increase The Risk Of Mortality Among Children Under 3 Years Of Age?, Christa L. Fischer Walker, Jamie Perin, Jodi L. Liu, Joanne Katz, James M. Tielsch, Robert Black
Global Health Faculty Publications
Objectives Diarrhoea and pneumonia remain leading causes of morbidity and mortality in children under 5 years of age. Little data is available to quantify the burden of comorbidity and the relationship between comorbid diarrhoea and pneumonia infections and mortality. We sought to quantify the relationship between comorbidity and risk of mortality among young children in two community-based studies conducted among South Asian children.
Design Secondary data analysis of two cohort studies.
Participants We identified two cohort studies of children under 3 years of age with prospective morbidity at least once every 2 weeks and ongoing mortality surveillance.
Outcome measures We …
Is Health Diplomacy Keeping Pace With Global Health Developments? Implications For Access To Medicines Strategies In The Post-2015 Mdg Framework, Samantha Ski, Rachel Kiddell-Monroe, James M. Sherry
Is Health Diplomacy Keeping Pace With Global Health Developments? Implications For Access To Medicines Strategies In The Post-2015 Mdg Framework, Samantha Ski, Rachel Kiddell-Monroe, James M. Sherry
Global Health Faculty Publications
As the 2015 deadline to achieve the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) draws near, efforts to ensure access to essential medicines face new challenges in light of new resource constraints. To help assess those challenges, a summary analysis of published data was undertaken to examine the increasing discontinuity between the geographic focus of donor-country programs on low-income countries (LICs) and the geographic location of the increasing majority of the poor and the global burden of preventable disease within middle-income countries (MICs). This disconnect has put new pressure on both donor and government resources for essential medicines, prompting greater consideration of strategies …
Smoking Behaviours And Cessation Services Among Male Physicians In China: Evidence From A Structural Equation Model, Cheng Huang, Chaoran Gao, Shaohua Yu, Yan Feng, Julia Song, Michael Erikson, Pam Redmon, Jeffrey Koplan
Smoking Behaviours And Cessation Services Among Male Physicians In China: Evidence From A Structural Equation Model, Cheng Huang, Chaoran Gao, Shaohua Yu, Yan Feng, Julia Song, Michael Erikson, Pam Redmon, Jeffrey Koplan
Global Health Faculty Publications
Objective To investigate smoking prevalence and cessation services provided by male physicians in hospitals in three Chinese cities.
Methods Data were collected from a survey of male physicians employed at 33 hospitals in Changsha, Qingdao and Wuxi City (n=720). Exploratory factor analysis was performed to identify latent variables, and confirmatory structural equation modelling analysis was performed to test the relationships between predictor variables and smoking in male physicians, and their provision of cessation services.
Results Of the sampled male physicians, 25.7% were current smokers, and 54.0% provided cessation services by counselling (18.8%), distributing self-help materials (17.1%), and providing traditional remedies …
National And Regional Estimates Of Term And Preterm Babies Born Small For Gestational Age In 138 Low-Income And Middle-Income Countries In 2010, Anne C.C. Lee, Joanne D. Katz, Hannah Blencowe, Simon Cousens, Naoko Kozuki, James M. Tielsch, +30 Additional Authors
National And Regional Estimates Of Term And Preterm Babies Born Small For Gestational Age In 138 Low-Income And Middle-Income Countries In 2010, Anne C.C. Lee, Joanne D. Katz, Hannah Blencowe, Simon Cousens, Naoko Kozuki, James M. Tielsch, +30 Additional Authors
Global Health Faculty Publications
Background
National estimates for the numbers of babies born small for gestational age and the comorbidity with preterm birth are unavailable. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of term and preterm babies born small for gestational age (term-SGA and preterm-SGA), and the relation to low birthweight (<2500 >g), in 138 countries of low and middle income in 2010.
Methods
Small for gestational age was defined as lower than the 10th centile for fetal growth from the 1991 US national reference population. Data from 22 birth cohort studies (14 low-income and middle-income countries) and from the WHO Global Survey on Maternal …
2500>School-Centered Approaches To Improve Community Health: Lessons From School-Based Health Centers, Olga Acosta Price
School-Centered Approaches To Improve Community Health: Lessons From School-Based Health Centers, Olga Acosta Price
Center for Health and Health Care in Schools
No abstract provided.
Hospital Ships Adrift? Part 1: A Systematic Literature Review Characterizing Us Navy Hospital Ship Humanitarian And Disaster Response, 2004-2012., Derek J. Licina
Hospital Ships Adrift? Part 1: A Systematic Literature Review Characterizing Us Navy Hospital Ship Humanitarian And Disaster Response, 2004-2012., Derek J. Licina
Global Health Faculty Publications
Background: United States foreign policy is tied extensively to health initiatives, many related to the use of military assets. Despite substantial resource investment by the US Department of Defense (DoD) in hospital ship humanitarian assistance and disaster response missions, the impact of this investment is unclear.
Methods: A systematic literature review of both peer-reviewed and grey literature using eight databases representing the international community and multiple sectors was conducted. Data on the characteristics of missions directly related to US Navy hospital ship humanitarian assistance and disaster response from 2004-2012 were extracted and documented.
Results: Of the 1445 sources reviewed, a …
Diarrhea As A Risk Factor For Acute Lower Respiratory Tract Infections Among Young Children In Low Income Settings, Christa L. Fischer Walker, Jamie Perin, Joanne D. Katz, James M. Tielsch, Robert Black
Diarrhea As A Risk Factor For Acute Lower Respiratory Tract Infections Among Young Children In Low Income Settings, Christa L. Fischer Walker, Jamie Perin, Joanne D. Katz, James M. Tielsch, Robert Black
Global Health Faculty Publications
Background
Diarrhea and acute lower respiratory tract infections (ALRI) are leading causes of morbidity and mortality among children under 5 years of age. We sought to quantify the correlation of diarrhea and respiratory infections within an individual child and to determine if infection with one illness increases the risk of infection with the other during the same time period.
Methods
We quantified the likelihood of an ALRI and a diarrhea episode occurring during the same week compared to the likelihood of each occurring independently in two cohorts of children under 3 years of age using a bivariate probit regression model. …
Improving Access To Children's Mental Health Care: Lessons From A Study Of Eleven States, Donna Behrens, Julia Graham Lear, Olga Acosta Price
Improving Access To Children's Mental Health Care: Lessons From A Study Of Eleven States, Donna Behrens, Julia Graham Lear, Olga Acosta Price
Center for Health and Health Care in Schools
Implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) is well underway, creating long-overdue opportunities for growing the capacity of child and adolescent mental health systems and meeting children’s pressing needs. The good news is that as of January 1, 2014, coverage of mental health conditions and substance use disorders will be required as part of the broad Essential Benefits package of services under the ACA. While states will determine specific benefits, it is widely accepted that mental health and substance abuse coverage will substantially increase, though the details remain to be determined.1 Additionally, as a result of this …
Latitudinal Variations In Seasonal Activity Of Influenza And Respiratory Syncytial Virus (Rsv): A Global Comparative Review, Kimberly Bloom-Feshbach, Wladimir J. Alonso, Vivek Charu, James Tamerius, Lone Simonsen, Mark A. Miller, Cecile Viboud
Latitudinal Variations In Seasonal Activity Of Influenza And Respiratory Syncytial Virus (Rsv): A Global Comparative Review, Kimberly Bloom-Feshbach, Wladimir J. Alonso, Vivek Charu, James Tamerius, Lone Simonsen, Mark A. Miller, Cecile Viboud
Global Health Faculty Publications
Background
There is limited information on influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) seasonal patterns in tropical areas, although there is renewed interest in understanding the seasonal drivers of respiratory viruses.
Methods
We review geographic variations in seasonality of laboratory-confirmed influenza and RSV epidemics in 137 global locations based on literature review and electronic sources. We assessed peak timing and epidemic duration and explored their association with geography and study settings. We fitted time series model to weekly national data available from the WHO influenza surveillance system (FluNet) to further characterize seasonal parameters.
Results
Influenza and RSV activity consistently peaked during …
Narcotics In Rheumatology, Mahsa Tehrani, Mathia Aguiar, James D. Katz
Narcotics In Rheumatology, Mahsa Tehrani, Mathia Aguiar, James D. Katz
Global Health Faculty Publications
Patients with rheumatic conditions often suffer from related chronic pain. When first-line traditional medications such as acetaminophen and anti-inflammatory medications do not suffice, then other options are needed. The traditional medications may ultimately not provide sufficient pain relief, or alternatively, they can pose as a contraindication due to underlying hypertension, renal, and/or hepatic disease. Therefore, narcotics are an alluring alternative, which if used in a multidisciplinary and systematic approach to the patient, can prove to be quite beneficial in the lives of these patients.
Smoking Experimentation Among Elementary School Students In China: Influences From Peers, Families, And The School Environment, Cheng Huang, Jeffrey Koplan, Shaohua Yu, Changwei Li, Chaoran Guo, Jing Liu, Hui Li, Michelle Kegler, Pam Redmon, Michael Eriksen
Smoking Experimentation Among Elementary School Students In China: Influences From Peers, Families, And The School Environment, Cheng Huang, Jeffrey Koplan, Shaohua Yu, Changwei Li, Chaoran Guo, Jing Liu, Hui Li, Michelle Kegler, Pam Redmon, Michael Eriksen
Global Health Faculty Publications
The aim of this study was to investigate experimentation with smoking among primary school students in China. Data were acquired from a recent survey of 4,073 students in grades 4 to 6 (ages 9–12) in 11 primary schools of Ningbo City. The questions were adapted from the Global Youth Tobacco Survey (GYTS). Results suggest that although the Chinese Ministry of Education (MOE) encourages smoke-free schools, experimentation with cigarettes remains a serious problem among primary school students in China. Peers, family members, and the school environment play important roles in influencing smoking experimentation among students. Having a friend who smoked, seeing …