Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Population Health
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for COVID-19 patients with respiratory distress: treated cases versus propensity-matched controls
Gorenstein, Scott A; Castellano, Michael L; Slone, Eric S; Gillette, Brian; Liu, Helen; Alsamarraie, Cindy; Jacobson, Alan M; Wall, Stephen P; Adhikari, Samrachana; Swartz, Jordan L; McMullen, Jenica J S; Osorio, Marcela; Koziatek, Christian A; Lee, David C
Objective/UNASSIGNED:Given the high mortality and prolonged duration of mechanical ventilation of COVID-19 patients, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of hyperbaric oxygen for COVID-19 patients with respiratory distress. Methods/UNASSIGNED:This is a single-center clinical trial of COVID-19 patients at NYU Winthrop Hospital from March 31 to April 28, 2020. Patients in this trial received hyperbaric oxygen therapy at 2.0 atmospheres of pressure in monoplace hyperbaric chambers for 90 minutes daily for a maximum of five total treatments. Controls were identified using propensity score matching among COVID-19 patients admitted during the same time period. Using competing-risks survival regression, we analyzed our primary outcome of inpatient mortality and secondary outcome of mechanical ventilation. Results/UNASSIGNED:We treated 20 COVID-19 patients with hyperbaric oxygen. Ages ranged from 30 to 79 years with an oxygen requirement ranging from 2 to 15 liters on hospital days 0 to 14. Of these 20 patients, two (10%) were intubated and died, and none remain hospitalized. Among 60 propensity-matched controls based on age, sex, body mass index, coronary artery disease, troponin, D-dimer, hospital day, and oxygen requirement, 18 (30%) were intubated, 13 (22%) have died, and three (5%) remain hospitalized (with one still requiring mechanical ventilation). Assuming no further deaths among controls, we estimate that the adjusted subdistribution hazard ratios were 0.37 for inpatient mortality (p=0.14) and 0.26 for mechanical ventilation (p=0.046). Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:Though limited by its study design, our results demonstrate the safety of hyperbaric oxygen among COVID-19 patients and strongly suggests the need for a well-designed, multicenter randomized control trial.
PMID: 32931666
ISSN: 1066-2936
CID: 4591182
Burden of HIV-Related Stigma and Post-Partum Depression: A Cross-Sectional Study of Patients Attending Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Clinic at Kenyatta National Hospital in Nairobi
Yator, Obadia; Mathai, Muthoni; Albert, Tele; Kumar, Manasi
PMCID:7947326
PMID: 33716799
ISSN: 1664-0640
CID: 5831192
Cardiovascular Health Benefits of Optimism are Socially Patterned: A 15-year Prospective Study [Meeting Abstract]
Qureshi, Farah; Soo, Jackie; Chen, Ying; Roy, Brita; Lloyd-Jones, Donald M.; Kubzansky, Laura D.; Boehm, Julia K.
ISI:000589965800493
ISSN: 0009-7322
CID: 5324882
Evaluating the U.S. Air Quality Index as a risk communication tool: Comparing associations of index values with respiratory morbidity among adults in California
Cromar, Kevin R; Ghazipura, Marya; Gladson, Laura A; Perlmutt, Lars
BACKGROUND:The Air Quality Index (AQI) in the United States is widely used to communicate daily air quality information to the public. While use of the AQI has led to reported changes in individual behaviors, such behavior modifications will only mitigate adverse health effects if AQI values are indicative of public health risks. Few studies have assessed the capability of the AQI to accurately predict respiratory morbidity risks. METHODS AND FINDINGS/RESULTS:In three major regions of California, Poisson generalized linear models were used to assess seasonal associations between 1,373,165 respiratory emergency department visits and short-term exposure to multiple metrics between 2012-2014, including: daily concentrations of NO2, O3, and PM2.5; the daily reported AQI; and a newly constructed health-based air quality index. AQI values were positively associated (average risk ratio = 1.03, 95% CI 1.02-1.04) during the cooler months of the year (November-February) in all three regions when the AQI was very highly correlated with PM2.5 (R2 ≥ 0.89). During the warm season (March-October) in the San Joaquin Valley region, neither AQI values nor the individual underlying air pollutants were associated with respiratory morbidity. Additionally, AQI values were not positively associated with respiratory morbidity in the Southern California region during the warm season, despite strong associations of the individual underlying air pollutants with respiratory morbidity; in contrast, health-based index values were observed to be significantly associated with respiratory morbidity as part of an applied policy analysis in this region, with a combined risk ratio of 1.02 (95% CI: 1.01-1.03). CONCLUSIONS:In regions where individual air pollutants are associated with respiratory morbidity, and during seasons with relatively simple air mixtures, the AQI can effectively serve as a risk communication tool for respiratory health risks. However, the predictive ability of the AQI and any other index is contingent upon the monitored values being representative of actual population exposures. Other approaches, such as health-based indices, may be needed in order to effectively communicate health risks of air pollution in regions and seasons with more complex air mixtures.
PMCID:7671501
PMID: 33201930
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 4672602
IMPLEMENTATION OF A SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH SCREENING AND REFERRAL PROCESS AT A FEDERALLY QUALIFIED HEALTH CENTER [Meeting Abstract]
Norton, Jennifer; Sharif, Iman; Anderman, Judd H.; Dapkins, Isaac
ISI:000567143602148
ISSN: 0884-8734
CID: 4799302
Message Framing and the Willingness to Pursue Behavioral Therapy: A Study of People With Migraine
Jalloh, Adama; Begasse de Dhaem, Olivia; Seng, Elizabeth; Minen, Mia T
OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:Behavioral treatments for migraine prevention are safe and effective but underutilized in migraine management. Health message framing may be helpful in guiding patients with treatment decision making. The authors assessed associations between message framing and the willingness to seek migraine behavioral treatment among persons with a diagnosis of migraine headache. METHODS/UNASSIGNED:A total of 401 individuals (median age=34 years [interquartile range, 12 years]) who screened positive for migraine, as determined by the American Migraine Prevalence and Prevention questionnaire, were assessed. Participants were randomly assigned to receive one of four message frames using TurkPrime: specific loss framing (N=101), specific gain framing (N=98), nonspecific loss framing (N=102), and nonspecific gain framing (N=100). The message frames were initially piloted for 56 participants and then revised by a headache specialist, with input from a communications specialist, and randomly distributed to the larger sample. RESULTS/UNASSIGNED:More than two-thirds of participants (70.3%) were women. The median number of headache days per month was 5 (interquartile range, 5.3). Some of the participants (12.5%) had previously used evidence-based behavioral therapy for migraine. No significant differences in the willingness to pursue behavioral treatment for migraine between the four message framing groups were found. The median for all four types of message frames was 4 (interquartile range, 1; Kruskal-Wallis H, p=0.41). CONCLUSIONS/UNASSIGNED:Findings revealed that message framing was not associated with willingness to seek behavioral therapy for migraine.
PMID: 31394990
ISSN: 1545-7222
CID: 4560432
Neighborhood social environment and disability among Mexican older adults: a cohort-based analysis
Bonilla-Tinoco, Laura Juliana; Fernández-Niño, Julián Alfredo; Duncan, Dustin T
Considering that the world population is rapidly aging and disability is a very frequent event in older adults, there is an increasing interest in studying their determinants, such as the neighborhood characteristics. Thus, this study aimed to explore the association between the social environment of the neighborhood and disability in older adults. A cohort study was assembled using waves 1 and 2 from the Study of Global Ageing and Adults Health (SAGE) in Mexico, which included adults with 55+ years old. Neighborhood characteristics - such as social participation, trust and safety - and individual covariates were measured only in wave 1 (baseline), while disability was measured in both waves to adjust for the score of wave 1. Multilevel negative binomial models with random intercepts at the municipality level were constructed for the disability score in wave 2, using each of the social environment variables as the main exposure and adjusting for the sociodemographic and health-related variables. Finally, interaction terms with sex, age, and socioeconomic quintiles were tested. Results showed that neighborhoods with a medium (IRR: 0.68; 95%CI: 0.53-0.87) or high (IRR: 0.67; 95%CI: 0.52-0.86) safety level were associated with a significant reduction in the disability score of adults older than 75 years, although there was no association between other characteristics of the social environment and disability in the general sample. Consequently, actions to improve safety in the neighborhoods should be carried out to help reduce the disability score in vulnerable older adults, especially in a context where safety is a critical issue, as in Mexico.
PMID: 33237207
ISSN: 1678-4464
CID: 4722372
Organ Donation in New York State: Did the Implementation of the ACS Verification of Trauma Centers Improve Rates of Organ Donation [Meeting Abstract]
Shah, Noor; Warnack, Elizabeth; DiMaggio, Charles; Klein, Michael Joseph; Berry, Cherisse Danielle
ISI:000582798100566
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 4686642
Identifying OCT Parameters to Predict Glaucoma Visual Field Progression [Meeting Abstract]
Cobbs, Lucy; Ramos-Cadena, Maria de los Angeles; Wu, Mengfei; Liu, Mengling; Ishikawa, Hiroshi; Wollstein, Gadi; Schuman, Joel S.
ISI:000554495704047
ISSN: 0146-0404
CID: 5524302
PRENATAL DIET QUALITY AND CHILD EARLY SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS [Meeting Abstract]
Campana, Anna Maria; Trasande, Leonardo; Deierlein, Andrea L.; Long, Sara; Liu, Hongxiu; Ghassabian, Akhgar
ISI:000579844101262
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 4685542