Searched for: Department/Unit:Population Health
A PILOT STUDY EXAMINING HEALTH LITERACY PROMOTION PRACTICES AMONG HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS [Meeting Abstract]
Squires, Allison; Yin, Shonna; Greenberg, Sherry A; Giuliante, Maryanne M; McDonald, Margaret V; Altshuler, Lisa; Cortes, Tara
ISI:000358386900099
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 1730262
A TALE OF TWO CONSTITUENCIES: PATIENT AND CLINICIAN ENGAGEMENT IN RESEARCH [Meeting Abstract]
Goytia, Crispin N; Shelley, Donna; Kaushal, Rainu; Kastenbaum, Isaac; Horowitz, Carol R
ISI:000358386900111
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 1730272
QUALITY OF TOBACCO TREATMENT IN HOSPITALS-SYSTEM-LEVEL AND PATIENT-LEVEL PREDICTORS OF GAPS IN CARE [Meeting Abstract]
Grossman, Ellie; Chen, Jenny; Link, Alissa R; Wang, Binhuan; Sherman, Scott
ISI:000358386901051
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 1730302
CONFIDENCE IN SMOKING CESSATION: SOCIAL SUPPORT TRUMPS HOUSEHOLD ENVIRONMENT [Meeting Abstract]
Wells, Cassia; Albanese, Natalie; Cohen, Jesse; Tang, Alice; Fang, Yixin; Grossman, Ellie
ISI:000358386900188
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 1730372
PREDICTORS OF ADHERENCE TO TELEPHONE COUNSELING FOR SMOKING CESSATION AMONGST VETERANS PRESENTING TO VA MENTAL HEALTH CLINICS [Meeting Abstract]
Augustine, Matthew R; Strauss, Helene; Levine, David M; Chugh, Priyanka; Wang, Binhuan; Grossman, Ellie; Rogers, Erin; Sherman, Scott
ISI:000358386901035
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 1730402
Euthanasia in Belgium and the Netherlands: On a Slippery Slope?
Lerner, Barron H; Caplan, Arthur L
PMID: 26259038
ISSN: 2168-6114
CID: 1721622
Concordance with DASH diet and blood pressure change: results from the Framingham Offspring Study (1991-2008)
Jiang, Jieying; Liu, Mengling; Troy, Lisa M; Bangalore, Sripal; Hayes, Richard B; Parekh, Niyati
BACKGROUND: Concordance with the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet has been shown to reduce blood pressure (BP) in short-term intervention studies, but long-term effects are unclear. We evaluated the association of DASH diet concordance with BP trajectories and incidence of hypertension, in 2187 men and women (mean age 52.5 years at baseline) participating in the Framingham Offspring cohort. METHOD: Diet and BP were assessed from 1991 to 2008, with a median follow-up time of 13.4 years. DASH scores (ranging from 0 for worst to 10 for best concordance with DASH diet) were calculated by summing 10 food components that comprise the DASH diet pattern, including fruits and vegetables, low-fat dairy products, lean meat, and plant-based protein. Mixed-effect and Cox regression models were applied, to assess the association of DASH diet concordance with BP longitudinal change and with incidence of hypertension, respectively. All analyses were adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, history of diabetes, BMI, and physical activity. RESULT: Overall, SBP increased by 0.34 mmHg and DBP by 0.10 mmHg annually, in the Framingham Offspring cohort. Every unit increase in the DASH score resulted in a modest increase in SBP of 0.054 mmHg/year (P = 0.028). No associations were observed between DASH diet concordance and DBP or incidence of hypertension. CONCLUSION: Long-term concordance with the DASH diet was not associated with a decreasing BP trajectory over time, or with decreased incidence of hypertension, in this population of middle-aged adults.
PMID: 26259122
ISSN: 1473-5598
CID: 1721632
Drawing the Curtain Back on Injured Commercial Bicyclists
Heyer, Jessica H; Sethi, Monica; Wall, Stephen P; Ayoung-Chee, Patricia; Slaughter, Dekeya; Jacko, Sally; DiMaggio, Charles J; Frangos, Spiros G
OBJECTIVES: We determined the demographic characteristics, behaviors, injuries, and outcomes of commercial bicyclists who were injured while navigating New York City's (NYC's) central business district. METHODS: Our study involved a secondary analysis of prospectively collected data from a level 1 regional trauma center in 2008 to 2014 of bicyclists struck by motor vehicles. We performed univariable and multivariable logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: Of 819 injured bicyclists, 284 (34.7%) were working. Commercial bicyclists included 24.4% to 45.1% of injured bicyclists annually. Injured commercial bicyclists were more likely Latino (56.7%; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 50.7, 62.8 vs 22.7%; 95% CI = 19.2, 26.5). Commercial bicyclists were less likely to be distracted by electronic devices (5.0%; 95% CI = 2.7, 8.2 vs 12.7%; 95% CI = 9.9, 15.9) or to have consumed alcohol (0.7%; 95% CI = 0.9, 2.5 vs 9.5%; 95% CI = 7.2, 12.3). Commercial and noncommercial bicyclists did not differ in helmet use (38.4%; 95% CI = 32.7, 44.4 vs 30.8%; 95% CI = 26.9, 34.9). Injury severity scores were less severe in commercial bicyclists (odds ratio = 0.412; 95% CI = 0.235, 0.723). CONCLUSIONS: Commercial bicyclists represent a unique cohort of vulnerable roadway users. In NYC, minorities, especially Latinos, should be targeted for safety education programs. (Am J Public Health. Published online ahead of print August 13, 2015: e1-e6. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2015.302738).
PMCID:4566558
PMID: 26270281
ISSN: 1541-0048
CID: 1721792
Home Reading Environment and Brain Activation in Preschool Children Listening to Stories
Hutton, John S; Horowitz-Kraus, Tzipi; Mendelsohn, Alan L; DeWitt, Tom; Holland, Scott K
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Parent-child reading is widely advocated to promote cognitive development, including in recommendations from the American Academy of Pediatrics to begin this practice at birth. Although parent-child reading has been shown in behavioral studies to improve oral language and print concepts, quantifiable effects on the brain have not been previously studied. Our study used blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the relationship between home reading environment and brain activity during a story listening task in a sample of preschool-age children. We hypothesized that while listening to stories, children with greater home reading exposure would exhibit higher activation of left-sided brain regions involved with semantic processing (extraction of meaning). METHODS: Nineteen 3- to 5-year-old children were selected from a longitudinal study of normal brain development. All completed blood oxygen level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging using an age-appropriate story listening task, where narrative alternated with tones. We performed a series of whole-brain regression analyses applying composite, subscale, and individual reading-related items from the validated StimQ-P measure of home cognitive environment as explanatory variables for neural activation. RESULTS: Higher reading exposure (StimQ-P Reading subscale score) was positively correlated (P < .05, corrected) with neural activation in the left-sided parietal-temporal-occipital association cortex, a "hub" region supporting semantic language processing, controlling for household income. CONCLUSIONS: In preschool children listening to stories, greater home reading exposure is positively associated with activation of brain areas supporting mental imagery and narrative comprehension, controlling for household income. These neural biomarkers may help inform eco-bio-developmental models of emergent literacy.
PMID: 26260716
ISSN: 1098-4275
CID: 1721672
Genotyping of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in DNA Isolated from Serum Using Sequenom MassARRAY Technology
Clendenen, Tess V; Rendleman, Justin; Ge, Wenzhen; Koenig, Karen L; Wirgin, Isaac; Currie, Diane; Shore, Roy E; Kirchhoff, Tomas; Zeleniuch-Jacquotte, Anne
BACKGROUND: Large epidemiologic studies have the potential to make valuable contributions to the assessment of gene-environment interactions because they prospectively collected detailed exposure data. Some of these studies, however, have only serum or plasma samples as a low quantity source of DNA. METHODS: We examined whether DNA isolated from serum can be used to reliably and accurately genotype single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) using Sequenom multiplex SNP genotyping technology. We genotyped 81 SNPs using samples from 158 participants in the NYU Women's Health Study. Each participant had DNA from serum and at least one paired DNA sample isolated from a high quality source of DNA, i.e. clots and/or cell precipitates, for comparison. RESULTS: We observed that 60 of the 81 SNPs (74%) had high call frequencies (>/=95%) using DNA from serum, only slightly lower than the 85% of SNPs with high call frequencies in DNA from clots or cell precipitates. Of the 57 SNPs with high call frequencies for serum, clot, and cell precipitate DNA, 54 (95%) had highly concordant (>98%) genotype calls across all three sample types. High purity was not a critical factor to successful genotyping. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that this multiplex SNP genotyping method can be used reliably on DNA from serum in large-scale epidemiologic studies.
PMCID:4537187
PMID: 26274499
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 1721892