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Role Of Environment And Sex Differences In The Development Of Autoimmune Diseases: A Roundtable Meeting Project, Monica P. Mallampalli, Erika Davies, Debra Wood, Hillary Robinson, Federica Polato, Christine L. Carter 2013 Society for Women's Health Research, Washington, DC

Role Of Environment And Sex Differences In The Development Of Autoimmune Diseases: A Roundtable Meeting Project, Monica P. Mallampalli, Erika Davies, Debra Wood, Hillary Robinson, Federica Polato, Christine L. Carter

Prevention and Community Health Faculty Publications

Autoimmune diseases (ADs) impose substantial health and financial burdens in the United States and in many parts of the world. Women are disproportionately affected by many of these disorders, which often contribute to lifelong disabilities. While the number of patients with some ADs appears to be rising, the complexities of conducting epidemiological studies prevent a thorough understanding of the prevalence and incidence of these various conditions. Research on environmental influences of these illnesses is limited, although they are generally hypothesized to result from the interaction of environmental agents in genetically susceptible individuals. Further, there is little known regarding the role …


Chhs July E-Newsletter, Dr. John Bonaguro, Dean, VaShon S. Wells, editor, College of Health & Human Services, Western Kentucky University 2013 College of Health & Human Services, WKU

Chhs July E-Newsletter, Dr. John Bonaguro, Dean, Vashon S. Wells, Editor, College Of Health & Human Services, Western Kentucky University

College of Health & Human Services Publications

No abstract provided.


Assessing The Effectiveness Of Nutrition And Physical Activity Self-Assessment For Child Care (Nap Sacc) For Changes In Physical Activity Behavior, Policy, And Environment In Nebraska Family Child Care Homes, Katie K. Bolte 2013 University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Assessing The Effectiveness Of Nutrition And Physical Activity Self-Assessment For Child Care (Nap Sacc) For Changes In Physical Activity Behavior, Policy, And Environment In Nebraska Family Child Care Homes, Katie K. Bolte

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

Nebraska is the first state to utilize NAP SACC and to modify the evidence-based program for family child care homes (FCCHs). The purpose of this study was to conduct a secondary data analysis to assess the effectiveness of a modified version of the NAP SACC approach in achieving changes in physical activity behavior, policy, and environment in Nebraska FCCHs caring for children ages 2-5 years. Results from this study will be used to improve the NAP SACC physical activity components for FCCHs and will help to inform trainers and the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, Nutrition and Activity …


Health Profile Of Brazilian Mothers In Massachusetts In The Twenty First Century, Carlos Eduardo Siqueira, Teresa Roberts, Fernanda Lucchese 2013 University of Massachusetts Boston

Health Profile Of Brazilian Mothers In Massachusetts In The Twenty First Century, Carlos Eduardo Siqueira, Teresa Roberts, Fernanda Lucchese

C. Eduardo Siqueira

This paper describes the health profile of Brazilian mothers in Massachusetts according to data collected through Massachusetts Standard Certificate of Live Births (1989 revision) filed with the Massachusetts Registry of Vital Records and Statistics during 1999 and 2009. To our knowledge this is the first time that such information is reviewed with a focus on Brazilian immigrants. The findings of this article suggests that Brazilian mothers who gave birth in Massachusetts between 1999 and 2009 fared better than all mothers in Massachusetts in most obstetric health indicators considered.


The Relevance Of Social Contexts And Social Action In Reducing Substance Use And Victimization Among Women Participating In An Hiv Prevention Intervention In Cape Town, South Africa, Elizabeth Reed, Andrea N. Emanuel, Bronwyn Myers, Kim Johnson, Wendee M. Wechsberg 2013 George Washington University

The Relevance Of Social Contexts And Social Action In Reducing Substance Use And Victimization Among Women Participating In An Hiv Prevention Intervention In Cape Town, South Africa, Elizabeth Reed, Andrea N. Emanuel, Bronwyn Myers, Kim Johnson, Wendee M. Wechsberg

Prevention and Community Health Faculty Publications

Objectives: To examine qualitatively how women's social context and community mobilization (eg, mobilizing women to take social action and engaging their community in social change) influence substance use abstinence and victimization among women participating in a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) intervention in Cape Town, South Africa.
Methods: Thirty women who had participated in a randomized controlled trial of a group-delivered intervention to address substance use, gender-based violence, and associated risk for HIV (The Women's Health CoOp) were selected to participate in semi-structured interviews about their perceived impact of the intervention on their substance use and exposure to victimization. The Women's …


Variables To Predict Risk Of Hospital Readmission, Julie I. Carroll 2013 University of Southern Maine, Muskie School of Public Service

Variables To Predict Risk Of Hospital Readmission, Julie I. Carroll

Muskie School Capstones and Dissertations

As the healthcare industry transitions toward accountable care and payment reform, creative approaches to healthcare is imperative. Poorly coordinated care and shorter hospital stays have resulted in higher rates of readmissions. This has large implications for hospitals and health systems.


Cms's Proposed Rule Implementing The Aca-Mandated Medicaid Dsh Reductions, Kathryn Linehan 2013 George Washington University

Cms's Proposed Rule Implementing The Aca-Mandated Medicaid Dsh Reductions, Kathryn Linehan

National Health Policy Forum

State Medicaid programs make Medicaid disproportionate share hospital (DSH) payments to hospitals to help offset costs of uncompensated care for Medicaid and uninsured patients. Unlike most Medicaid spending, annual DSH allotments for each state are capped. Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (ACA), DSH payments will decrease starting in fiscal year (FY) 2014 and continuing through FY 2020. This paper describes the proposed rule for reducing these federal allotments, which was released on May 15, 2013, by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). Comments on the proposed rule are due July 12, 2013.

2014 …


Empowerment-Based Positive Youth Development: A New Understanding Of Healthy Development For African American Youth, Raphael Travis Jr., Tamara Leech 2013 Texas State University - San Marcos

Empowerment-Based Positive Youth Development: A New Understanding Of Healthy Development For African American Youth, Raphael Travis Jr., Tamara Leech

Department of Public Health Scholarship and Creative Works

A shift occurred in research about adolescents in the general population. Research is moving away from deficits toward a resilience paradigm and understanding trajectories of positive youth development. This shift has been less consistent in research and practice with African American youth. A gap also exists in understanding whether individual youth development dimensions generate potential in other dimensions. This study presents an empowerment-based positive youth development model. It builds upon existing research to present a new vision of healthy development for African American youth that is strengths-based, developmental, culture-bound, and action-oriented. It emphasizes the relationship between person and environment, the …


Access To Primary Care: Comparing Driving Distance From Health Professional Shortage Area (Hpsa) Counties Versus Non-Hpsa Counties, Molly Cashion, Stephanie Jilcott-Pitts, Doyle Cummings, Christopher Duffrin, John Jones, Qiang Wu 2013 East Carolina University

Access To Primary Care: Comparing Driving Distance From Health Professional Shortage Area (Hpsa) Counties Versus Non-Hpsa Counties, Molly Cashion, Stephanie Jilcott-Pitts, Doyle Cummings, Christopher Duffrin, John Jones, Qiang Wu

Frontiers in Public Health Services and Systems Research

The criteria used to identify Health Professional Shortage Areas dates back to the 1970’s and very little has changed since then. This study examined driving distance from patient address to provider address as one component of a geographical HPSA. Primary care-related services located in adjacent areas to whole-county HPSAs are considered excessively distant when travel time exceeds 30 minutes or the equivalent of 20 miles in this study. We found similarities in travel distance to primary care-related services from patients living in HPSA counties compared to those living in non-HPSA counties. This could indicate the need to re-examine HPSA definitions …


Same Sex Marriage And The Perceived Assault On Opposite Sex Marriage, Alexis Dinno, Chelsea Whitney 2013 Portland State University

Same Sex Marriage And The Perceived Assault On Opposite Sex Marriage, Alexis Dinno, Chelsea Whitney

Community Health Faculty Publications and Presentations

Background: Marriage benefits both individuals and societies, and is a fundamental determinant of health. Until recently same sex couples have been excluded from legally recognized marriage in the United States. Recent debate around legalization of same sex marriage has highlighted for anti-same sex marriage advocates and policy makers a concern that allowing same sex couples to marry will lead to a decrease in opposite sex marriages. Our objective is to model state trends in opposite sex marriage rates by implementation of same sex marriages and other same sex unions.

Methods and Findings: Marriage data were obtained for all …


Harnessing The Power Of Public Health Systems For Injury Prevention & Control, Glen P. Mays 2013 University of Kentucky

Harnessing The Power Of Public Health Systems For Injury Prevention & Control, Glen P. Mays

Health Management and Policy Presentations

Efforts to improve population health hinge on a vast yet diffuse constellation of government agencies, health care providers, and community organizations that assume responsibilities in implementing prevention programs and policies across the U.S. Realizing the full health and economic benefits of injury prevention and control initiatives requires mobilizing and managing these complex and heterogeneous public health delivery systems. This session will explore the emerging science of public health delivery systems and what it tells us about improving injury prevention and control amid policy and economic change.


Harnessing The Power Of Public Health Systems For Injury Prevention And Control, Glen P. Mays 2013 University of Kentucky

Harnessing The Power Of Public Health Systems For Injury Prevention And Control, Glen P. Mays

Glen Mays

Efforts to improve population health hinge on a vast yet diffuse constellation of government agencies, health care providers, and community organizations that assume responsibilities in implementing prevention programs and policies across the U.S. Realizing the full health and economic benefits of injury prevention and control initiatives requires mobilizing and managing these complex and heterogeneous public health delivery systems. This session will explore the emerging science of public health delivery systems and what it tells us about improving injury prevention and control amid policy and economic change.


Screening Colonoscopy And Risk For Incident Late-Stage Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis In Average-Risk Adults: A Nested Case-Control Study, Chyke Doubeni, Sheila Weinmann, Kenneth Adams, Aruna Kamineni, Diana Buist, Arlene Ash, Carolyn Rutter, V. Paul Doria-Rose, Douglas Corley, Robert Greenlee, Jessica Chubak, Andrew Williams, Aimee Kroll-Desrosiers, Eric Johnson, Joseph Webster, Kathryn Richert-Boe, Theodore Levin, Robert Fletcher, Noel Weiss 2013 University of Massachusetts Medical School

Screening Colonoscopy And Risk For Incident Late-Stage Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis In Average-Risk Adults: A Nested Case-Control Study, Chyke Doubeni, Sheila Weinmann, Kenneth Adams, Aruna Kamineni, Diana Buist, Arlene Ash, Carolyn Rutter, V. Paul Doria-Rose, Douglas Corley, Robert Greenlee, Jessica Chubak, Andrew Williams, Aimee Kroll-Desrosiers, Eric Johnson, Joseph Webster, Kathryn Richert-Boe, Theodore Levin, Robert Fletcher, Noel Weiss

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of screening colonoscopy in average-risk adults is uncertain, particularly for right colon cancer. OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between screening colonoscopy and risk for incident late-stage colorectal cancer (CRC). DESIGN: Nested case-control study. SETTING: Four U.S. health plans. PATIENTS: 1039 average-risk adults enrolled for at least 5 years in one of the health plans. Case patients were aged 55 to 85 years on their diagnosis date (reference date) of stage IIB or higher (late-stage) CRC during 2006 to 2008. One or 2 control patients were selected for each case patient, matched on birth year, sex, health plan, …


The Role Of Issue Familiarity And Social Norms: Findings On New College Students' Alcohol Use Intentions, Rajiv N. Rimal, Saar Mollen 2013 George Washington University

The Role Of Issue Familiarity And Social Norms: Findings On New College Students' Alcohol Use Intentions, Rajiv N. Rimal, Saar Mollen

Prevention and Community Health Faculty Publications

Background. Scholars in a variety of disciplines are interested in understanding the conditions under which social norms affect human behavior. Following the distinction made between descriptive and injunctive norms by the focus theory of normative conduct, the theory of normative social behavior predicts that the influence of descriptive norms on behavior is moderated by injunctive norms, outcome expectations, and group identity. We extended the theory by testing the proposition that the influence of descriptive norms on behavior would be greater under conditions of greater issue familiarity, defined as the ease with which one can cognitively access the behavior or …


Quality Of Care In Community Health Centers And Factors Associated With Performance, Peter Shin, Jessica Sharac, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Julia Paradise 2013 George Washington University

Quality Of Care In Community Health Centers And Factors Associated With Performance, Peter Shin, Jessica Sharac, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Julia Paradise

Geiger Gibson/RCHN Community Health Foundation Research Collaborative

Federally funded community health centers are a key source of comprehensive primary care for medically underserved communities, serving more than 20 million patients in 2011. The Affordable Care Act (ACA) expanded the health center program significantly to help meet the increased demand for health care that is expected as millions of the uninsured gain health coverage, beginning in 2014. Especially given health centers’ growing role, evidence of the quality of care they provide is of keen interest. Most research shows high performance by health centers relative to various standards, but some gaps have also been found, and suitable benchmarks for …


Childhood Obesity And Overweight: Causes And Implications In Preschool Children, Melissa L. Sittner 2013 California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo

Childhood Obesity And Overweight: Causes And Implications In Preschool Children, Melissa L. Sittner

Kinesiology and Public Health

The root causes of childhood obesity and overweight are currently hot topics of research. While many causes have been discovered, researchers are still weighing them against one another while taking the lifestyles of at-risk populations into account. Some of these causes include lack of physical activity, increase in screen time, and the implications of health disparities borne of a child’s socioeconomic status. These causes and more are reviewed further and applied to the population of interest: preschool aged children in the United States, and more specifically preschool aged children of San Luis Obispo County in California. The need for multi-level …


Inappropriate Boarding: Cost And Quality Issues Of Incapacitated Patients Requiring Guardianship, Margaret Kornuszko-Story MHA, Kari Jones PhD, Michelle D. Flores RN, Hannah D. Paxton RN, MPH, Jeffrey Etchason MD 2013 Lehigh Valley Health Network

Inappropriate Boarding: Cost And Quality Issues Of Incapacitated Patients Requiring Guardianship, Margaret Kornuszko-Story Mha, Kari Jones Phd, Michelle D. Flores Rn, Hannah D. Paxton Rn, Mph, Jeffrey Etchason Md

Department of Community Health and Health Studies

No abstract provided.


Maternal Smoking, Weight Status And Preecalmpsia And Eclampsia Risk Among Women Living In San Bernardino County, Fiona Bedelia Lewis 2013 Loma Linda University

Maternal Smoking, Weight Status And Preecalmpsia And Eclampsia Risk Among Women Living In San Bernardino County, Fiona Bedelia Lewis

Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects

Preeclampsia is defined as pregnancy-induced hypertension affecting between 2% and 8% of pregnancies and accounting for about 10-15% of maternal deaths worldwide. Eclampsia is defined as the occurrence of one or more episodes of seizures in a pregnant woman related only to a preeclampsia diagnosis. Preeclampsia, if poorly managed, can progress to eclampsia resulting in injury and death to both mother and infant. The etiology of preeclampsia is not completely understood. Oxidative stress leading to abnormal placenta development and endothelial dysfunction are thought to be key components in the biological mechanism of preeclampsia.

Modifiable risk factors include maternal body weight …


Associations Between Alcohol Consumption And Fasting Blood Glucose In Young Adults, Julie Ann Lucca 2013 California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo

Associations Between Alcohol Consumption And Fasting Blood Glucose In Young Adults, Julie Ann Lucca

Master's Theses

Current research shows moderate alcohol consumption is associated with decreased risk of diabetes and excessive consumption or binge drinking can cause insulin resistance and diabetes. In 2010, diabetes was the seventh leading cause of death in the United Statesand was responsible for significant health complications: blindness, kidney failure, and limb amputations, and is a large national economic burden. Fasting blood glucose (FBG) is a tool used to help diagnose diabetes. Abnormally high FBG, ≥100 mg/dl, is indicative of diabetes and pre-diabetes. Few studies have observed diabetic prevalence among young adults or college students. Studying young adults can help provide added …


Estimating The Effect Of A Community-Based Intervention With Two Communities, Mark van der Laan, Maya Petersen, Wenjing Zheng 2013 University of California, Berkeley

Estimating The Effect Of A Community-Based Intervention With Two Communities, Mark Van Der Laan, Maya Petersen, Wenjing Zheng

Wenjing Zheng

Due to the need to evaluate the effectiveness of community-based programs in practice, there is substantial interest in methods to estimate the causal effects of community-level treatments or exposures on individual level outcomes. The challenge one is confronted with is that different communities have different environmental factors affecting the individual outcomes, and all individuals in a community share the same environment and intervention. In practice, data are often available from only a small number of communities, making it difficult if not impossible to adjust for these environmental confounders. In this paper we consider an extreme version of this dilemma, in …


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