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105


The impact of race, education, and employment status on cost-coping strategies and patient reported benefit from interventions to mitigate financial toxicity [Meeting Abstract]

Braxton, Kenya; Thom, Bridgette; Brown, Carol L.; Gany, Francesca; Chino, Fumiko; Aviki, Emeline Mariam
ISI:000707130200090
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 5522202

Predictors of Health Insurance, Life Insurance, and Retirement Savings Among NYC's Immigrant Taxi and For-Hire Vehicle Drivers

Gany, Francesca; Mirpuri, Sheena; Kim, Soo Young; Narang, Bharat; Ramirez, Julia; Roberts-Eversley, Nicole; Ocampo, Alex; Aragones, Abraham; Leng, Jennifer
Taxi and for-hire vehicle (FHV) drivers are a predominantly immigrant population facing a range of occupational stressors, including lack of workplace benefits and increasing financial strain from tumultuous industry changes and now COVID-19's devastating impact. Bilingual research staff surveyed 422 New York City taxi/FHV drivers using a stratified sampling approach in driver-frequented locations to examine drivers' health and financial planning behaviors for the first time. Drivers lacked health insurance at double the NYC rate (20% vs. 10%). Life insurance and retirement savings rates were lower than U.S. averages (20% vs. 60%, 25% vs. 58%, respectively). Vehicle ownership was a significant predictor of health insurance, life insurance, and retirement savings. Compared to South Asian drivers, Sub-Saharan African drivers were significantly less likely to have health insurance and North African, and Middle Eastern drivers were significantly less likely to have retirement savings. Although most drivers indicated the importance of insurance and benefits, < 50% understood how to use them. Drivers felt primary care coverage to be most important followed by other health-related coverage, retirement benefits, and life insurance. Results reveal compelling addressable gaps in insurance and benefits coverage and the need to implement accessible financial literacy with navigation and advising services and programs.
PMCID:7429200
PMID: 32803621
ISSN: 1573-3610
CID: 4627452

Prenatal Exposure to Gutkha, a Globally Relevant Smokeless Tobacco Product, Induces Hepatic Changes in Adult Mice

Doherty Lyons, Shannon; Blum, Jason L; Hoffman-Budde, Carol; Tijerina, Pamela B; Fiel, M Isabel; J Conklin, Daniel; Gany, Francesca; Odin, Joseph A; Zelikoff, Judith T
Maternal exposures during pregnancy affect the onset and progression of adult diseases in the offspring. A prior mouse study indicated that maternal tobacco smoke exposure affects hepatic fibrosis in adult offspring. Gutkha, a broadly used smokeless tobacco (ST) product, is widely used by pregnant woman in many countries. The objective of this murine study was to evaluate whether oral maternal exposure to gutkha during pregnancy alters non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) in adult offspring: risk factors for the progression of NAFLD to cirrhosis in adults remain elusive. Buccal cavity 'painting' of pregnant mice with gutkha began on gestational days (GD) 2-4 and continued until parturition. Beginning at 12 weeks of age, a subset of offspring were transitioned to a high-fat diet (HFD). Results demonstrated that prenatal exposure to gutkha followed by an HFD in adulthood significantly increased the histologic evidence of fatty liver disease only in adult male offspring. Changes in hepatic fibrosis-related cytokines (interleukin (IL)-1b and IL-6) and in hepatic collagen mRNA expression were observed when comparing adult male offspring exposed to gutkha in utero to those not exposed. These findings indicate that maternal use of gutkha during pregnancy affects NAFLD in adult offspring in a sex-dependent manner.
PMID: 33126512
ISSN: 1660-4601
CID: 4655782

[S.l.] : Core IM, 2020

Shen, Michael; Schwartz, Mark D; Gany, Francesca M; Ravenell, Joseph E; Jay, Melanie R; Trivedi, Shreya P
(Website)
CID: 5442772

Food Purchasing Behavior of Food Insecure Cancer Patients Receiving Supplemental Food Vouchers

Paolantonio, Luke; Kim, Soo Young; Ramirez, Julia; Roberts-Eversley, Nicole; Li, Yuelin; Melnic, Irina; Wu, Minlun; Jutagir, Devika R; Smith, Julia; Oladele, Modupe; Gany, Francesca
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Food insecure cancer patients experience worse health outcomes and poorer quality of life than food secure patients. There has been little research in programs to alleviate food insecurity in cancer patients. The objective of this paper is to report on the food purchasing behaviors of cancer patients enrolled in a supplemental food voucher program. METHODS:This paper utilized data from a three-arm randomized controlled trial investigating the impact of food interventions on alleviating food insecurity in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy. In one arm, patients received a monthly $230 voucher with which to purchase food. Receipts were collected for items purchased with the voucher and were coded to analyze purchasing behaviors. RESULTS:Thirty-three patients provided receipts for more than 11,000 individual items. Patients spent 50% of voucher funds on animal protein, fruits, and vegetables. Patients spent, on average, 77% of voucher funds on items categorized as "healthy." CONCLUSIONS:Patients who received a food voucher purchased more fruits and vegetables than national averages would suggest. They also spent less on sweetened beverages than national samples. Patients who were born outside of the United States or who were limited English proficient purchased significantly more healthy foods than English-speaking and American-born study patients. Supplemental food vouchers for food insecure cancer patients resulted in the purchase of healthy food items.
PMID: 31828492
ISSN: 1433-7339
CID: 4485762

The Nutrition Benefits Participation Gap: Barriers to Uptake of SNAP and WIC Among Latinx American Immigrant Families

Pelto, Debra J; Ocampo, Alex; Garduño-Ortega, Olga; Barraza López, Claudia Teresa; Macaluso, Francesca; Ramirez, Julia; González, Javier; Gany, Francesca
To examine nutrition benefit under-enrollment in Latinx American immigrant families, we administered a survey to 100 adults attending a NY Latinx American community serving organization. We used a logistic regression approach to analyze misinformation impact on enrollment, and examined non-enrollment explanations, among participants in whose families a child or pregnant or breastfeeding woman appeared SNAP- or WIC-eligible. Among households (N = 51) with ≥ 1 SNAP-eligible child, 49% had no child enrolled. Reasons included repercussion fears (e.g. payback obligation, military conscription, college aid ineligibility, child removal, non-citizen family member penalties), and logistical barriers. In multivariable regression models, having heard the rumor that SNAP/WIC participation makes unauthorized status family members vulnerable to being reported to the government was associated with an 85% lower enrollment rate (OR 0.15, CI 0.03, 0.94). Misinformation impedes nutrition benefit participation. A multi-level intervention is necessary to inform potential applicants and providers regarding eligibility criteria and erroneous rumors, along with an informed discussion of the risks versus benefits of using resources, especially as public charge criteria change.
PMID: 31630308
ISSN: 1573-3610
CID: 4175602

Lurking in plain sight: Hypertension awareness and treatment among New York City taxi/for-hire vehicle drivers

Narang, Bharat; Mirpuri, Sheena; Kim, Soo Young; Jutagir, Devika R; Gany, Francesca
Hypertension is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, which is the leading cause of death in the United States. Taxi and for-hire vehicle (FHV) drivers, a largely male, immigrant and medically underserved population, are at increased risk of cardiovascular disease, in part due to the nature of their work. This study examined demographic and lifestyle predictors of hypertension diagnosis awareness, objectively measured blood pressure (hypertensive-range vs non-hypertensive-range readings), medication use, and hypertension control. A cross-sectional assessment was conducted with 983 male taxi/FHV drivers who attended health fairs in New York City from 2010 to 2017. Twenty-three percent self-reported a hypertension history and 46% had hypertensive-range BP readings. Approximately, half the drivers lacked health insurance (47%) and a usual care source (46%). Thirty percent did not self-report hypertension and had hypertensive-range BP readings. Medication use was reported by 69% of hypertension-aware drivers, and being older and having health care access (insurance, a usual care source, and seeing a doctor in the past year) was significantly associated with medication use. Hypertension-unaware drivers with hypertensive-range BP readings were less likely to have a usual care source. Over 60% of drivers who were hypertension-aware and on medication had hypertensive-range readings. There is a need for community-based and workplace driver and provider interventions to address BP awareness and management and to provide health care navigation for vulnerable populations such as taxi/FHV vehicle drivers.
PMID: 32436644
ISSN: 1751-7176
CID: 4486182

Social Networks Are Associated with Healthcare Utilization Among Taxi and For-Hire Vehicle Drivers: a Latent Class Analysis [Letter]

Jutagir, Devika R; Mujawar, Imran; Kim, Soo Young; Rasmussen, Andrew; Narang, Bharat; Gany, Francesca
PMCID:7210347
PMID: 31705469
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 4485652

Development of a Medically Tailored Hospital-based Food Pantry System

Gany, Francesca M; Pan, Sabrina; Ramirez, Julia; Paolantonio, Luke
Fifty-six percent of high-needs NYC cancer patients are food insecure, at times choosing between medical treatment and food. We describe FOOD (Food to Overcome Outcome Disparities), an innovative intervention, which has established eleven medically tailored food pantries in NYC cancer centers and distributed the equivalent of 307,080 meals since 2011.
PMID: 33410795
ISSN: 1548-6869
CID: 4739152

Patient-reported benefit from proposed interventions to reduce financial hardship during cancer treatment. [Meeting Abstract]

Aviki, Emeline; Chino, Fumiko; Ramirez, Julia; Blinder, Victoria Susana; Mueller, Jennifer Jean; Leitao, Mario M.; Abu-Rustum, Nadeem; Gany, Francesca
ISI:000560368303157
ISSN: 0732-183x
CID: 5522132