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The things of the flesh -- 1040 -- They call me a pessimist -- Them and us -- Theft of Time [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016462
ISSN: 0273-303x
CID: 5417492

Parenting Practices and Adolescent Internalizing Symptoms in the United States, 1991-2019

Kreski, Noah T; Riehm, Kira E; Cerdá, Magdalena; Chen, Qixuan; Hasin, Deborah S; Martins, Silvia S; Mauro, Pia M; Olfson, Mark; Keyes, Katherine M
PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:Adolescent internalizing symptoms are increasing in the United States. Changes in parenting practices, including monitoring and communication, have been hypothesized to contribute to these increases. We aimed to estimate trends in parenting practices and understand whether shifts in such practices explain increases in internalizing symptoms. METHODS:Using 1991-2019 Monitoring the Future data (N = 933,645), we examined trends in five parental practices (i.e., knowledge [three combined indicators], monitoring [four combined indicators], communication, weekend curfew, social permission) with ordinal regressions. We tested associations between parental practices and indicators of being in the top decile of depressive affect, low self-esteem, and self-derogation using survey-weighted logistic regressions, adjusted for gender, race/ethnicity, grade, and parental education. RESULTS:The prevalences of parental practices have not changed over time, with the exception of increases in parental knowledge, specifically parents knowing where an adolescent is after school (1999-2019 mean increase: 4.34 to 4.61 out of 5) and knowing an adolescent's location (4.16-4.49) and company at night (4.26-4.51). Higher levels of each practice were associated with lower internalizing symptoms (e.g., adjusted odds ratio for a high depressive affect based on a one-unit increase in parental knowledge: 0.89, 95% confidence interval: 0.88, 0.90). Patterns were consistent across internalizing outcomes and decade. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS:Parental knowledge, monitoring, and other practices are stable protective factors for adolescent mental health. These factors are not changing in a manner that would plausibly underlie increases in internalizing symptoms. Future interventions should provide resources that support these parental practices which are tied to adolescent internalizing symptoms.
PMID: 36424334
ISSN: 1879-1972
CID: 5394232

Phylodynamics and migration data help describe HIV transmission dynamics in internally displaced people who inject drugs in Ukraine

Kovalenko, Ganna; Yakovleva, Anna; Smyrnov, Pavlo; Redlinger, Matthew; Tymets, Olga; Korobchuk, Anna; Kolodiazieva, Anna; Podolina, Anna; Cherniavska, Svitlana; Skaathun, Britt; Smith, Laramie R; Strathdee, Steffanie A; Wertheim, Joel O; Friedman, Samuel R; Bortz, Eric; Goodfellow, Ian; Meredith, Luke; Vasylyeva, Tetyana I
ORIGINAL:0016415
ISSN: 2752-6542
CID: 5411872

I Don't Believe a Person Has to Die When Trying to Get High: Overdose Prevention and Response Strategies in Rural Illinois

Walters, Suzan M; Felsher, Marisa; Frank, David; Jaiswal, Jessica; Townsend, Tarlise; Muncan, Brandon; Bennett, Alex S; Friedman, Samuel R; Jenkins, Wiley; Pho, Mai T; Fletcher, Scott; Ompad, Danielle C
BACKGROUND:Overdose is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among people who inject drugs. Illicitly manufactured fentanyl is now a major driver of opioid overdose deaths. METHODS:Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 23 participants (19 persons who inject drugs and 4 service providers) from rural southern Illinois. Data were analyzed using constant comparison and theoretical sampling methods. RESULTS:Participants were concerned about the growing presence of fentanyl in both opioids and stimulants, and many disclosed overdose experiences. Strategies participants reported using to lower overdose risk included purchasing drugs from trusted sellers and modifying drug use practices by partially injecting and/or changing the route of transmission. Approximately half of persons who inject drugs sampled had heard of fentanyl test strips, however fentanyl test strip use was low. To reverse overdoses, participants reported using cold water baths. Use of naloxone to reverse overdose was low. Barriers to naloxone access and use included fear of arrest and opioid withdrawal. CONCLUSIONS:People who inject drugs understood fentanyl to be a potential contaminant in their drug supply and actively engaged in harm reduction techniques to try to prevent overdose. Interventions to increase harm reduction education and information about and access to fentanyl test strips and naloxone would be beneficial.
PMCID:9864395
PMID: 36674402
ISSN: 1660-4601
CID: 5426462

How the rural risk environment underpins hepatitis C risk: Qualitative findings from rural southern Illinois, United States

Walters, Suzan M; Frank, David; Felsher, Marisa; Jaiswal, Jessica; Fletcher, Scott; Bennett, Alex S; Friedman, Samuel R; Ouellet, Lawrence J; Ompad, Danielle C; Jenkins, Wiley; Pho, Mai T
BACKGROUND:Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection has increased among persons who inject drugs (PWID) in the United States with disproportionate burden in rural areas. We use the Risk Environment framework to explore potential economic, physical, social, and political determinants of hepatitis C in rural southern Illinois. METHODS:Nineteen in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted with PWID from August 2019 through February 2020 (i.e., pre-COVID-19 pandemic) and four with key informants who professionally worked with PWID. Interviews were recorded, professionally transcribed, and coded using qualitative software. We followed a grounded theory approach for coding and analyses. RESULTS:We identify economic, physical, policy, and social factors that may influence HCV transmission risk and serve as barriers to HCV care. Economic instability and lack of economic opportunities, a lack of physically available HCV prevention and treatment services, structural stigma such as policies that criminalize drug use, and social stigma emerged in interviews as potential risks for transmission and barriers to care. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The rural risk environment framework acknowledges the importance of community and structural factors that influence HCV infection and other disease transmission and care. We find that larger structural factors produce vulnerabilities and reduce access to resources, which negatively impact hepatitis C disease outcomes.
PMID: 36641816
ISSN: 1873-4758
CID: 5410612

Overall, Direct, Spillover, and Composite Effects of Components of a Peer-Driven Intervention Package on Injection Risk Behavior Among People Who Inject Drugs in the HPTN 037 Study

Hernández-Ramirez, Raul U.; Spiegelman, Donna; Lok, Judith J.; Forastiere, Laura; Friedman, Samuel R.; Latkin, Carl A.; Vermund, Sten H.; Buchanan, Ashley L.
We sought to disentangle effects of the components of a peer-education intervention on self-reported injection risk behaviors among people who inject drugs (n = 560) in Philadelphia, US. We examined 226 egocentric groups/networks randomized to receive (or not) the intervention. Peer-education training consisted of two components delivered to the intervention network index individual only: (1) an initial training and (2) "booster" training sessions during 6- and 12-month follow up visits. In this secondary data analysis, using inverse-probability-weighted log-binomial mixed effects models, we estimated the effects of the components of the network-level peer-education intervention upon subsequent risk behaviors. This included contrasting outcome rates if a participant is a network member [non-index] under the network exposure versus under the network control condition (i.e., spillover effects). We found that compared to control networks, among intervention networks, the overall rates of injection risk behaviors were lower in both those recently exposed (i.e., at the prior visit) to a booster (rate ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.61 [0.46"“0.82]) and those not recently exposed to it (0.81 [0.67"“0.98]). Only the boosters had statistically significant spillover effects (e.g., 0.59 [0.41"“0.86] for recent exposure). Thus, both intervention components reduced injection risk behaviors with evidence of spillover effects for the boosters. Spillover should be assessed for an intervention that has an observable behavioral measure. Efforts to fully understand the impact of peer education should include routine evaluation of spillover effects. To maximize impact, boosters can be provided along with strategies to recruit especially committed peer educators and to increase attendance at trainings. Clinical Trials Registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00038688 June 5, 2002.
SCOPUS:85176253768
ISSN: 1090-7165
CID: 5616112

On generating adequate counterfactuals for national policy evaluations. A response to Mundt et al [Letter]

Rivera-Aguirre, Ariadne; Castillo-Carniglia, Alvaro; Laqueur, Hannah S; Rudolph, Kara E; Martins, Silva S; Ramírez, Jessica; Queirolo, Rosario; Cerdá, Magdalena
PMID: 36239882
ISSN: 1360-0443
CID: 5361232

Human Suffering, Mutual Aid, Public Health, and Future Struggles in Ukraine

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016416
ISSN: 0739-4853
CID: 5412192

Nicotine Vaping and Co-occurring Substance Use Among Adolescents in the United States from 2017-2019

Kreski, Noah T; Ankrum, Hadley; Cerdá, Magdalena; Chen, Qixuan; Hasin, Deborah; Martins, Silvia S; Olfson, Mark; Keyes, Katherine M
PMID: 37198725
ISSN: 1532-2491
CID: 5508042

fluctuating tides [Poem]

Friedman, Sam
ORIGINAL:0016435
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5415192