Prevalence of cocaine use among residents of New York City who committed suicide during a one-year period

1992 ◽  
Vol 149 (3) ◽  
pp. 371-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larry Nuttbrock ◽  
Andrew Rosenblum ◽  
Stephen Magura ◽  
Hunter L. McQuistion ◽  
Herman Joseph

Circulation ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 137 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily M D'Agostino ◽  
Sophia E Day ◽  
Kevin J Konty ◽  
Michael Larkin ◽  
Subir Saha ◽  
...  

Introduction: One-fifth to one-third of students in high-poverty, urban school districts do not attend school regularly (missing ≥6 days per year). Health related fitness is shown to be associated with absenteeism, although this relationship may differ across poverty and gender subgroups. Hypothesis: We hypothesized that area poverty would be a stronger effect modifier on the association of fitness (cardiorespiratory, muscular endurance, and muscular strength fitness composite percentile scores) and subsequent absenteeism (one-year lagged days absent) in girls compared with boys. Methods: Six cohorts of New York City public school students were followed from grades 5-8 during 2006/7-2012/13 (n=349,381). Stratified three-level longitudinal generalized linear mixed models were used to test the modification of poverty on the association of fitness changes and one-year lagged child-specific days absent across gender. Results: The fitness-absenteeism association was not significant in boys attending schools in high/very high (p=0.075) or low/mid poverty (p=0.454) areas. In girls attending schools in high/very high poverty areas, greater improvements in fitness the prior year were associated with greater improvements in attendance (p=0.034). Relative to the reference group (>20% decrease in fitness composite percentile scores from the prior year), girls with a large increase in fitness (>20%) demonstrated 10.3% fewer days absent (IRR 95% CI: 0.834, 0.964), followed by those who had a 10-20% increase in fitness (9.2%, IRR 95% CI: 0.835, 0.987), no change (5.4%, IRR 95% CI: 0.887, 1.007) and a 10-20% decrease in fitness (3.8%, IRR 95% CI: 0.885, 1.045). In girls attending schools in low/mid poverty areas, the fitness-attendance relationship was also positive, but no clear trend emerged. Conclusions: Fitness improvements may be more important to attendance improvements in high/very high poverty girls compared with low/mid poverty girls, and both high/very high and low/mid poverty boys. In conclusion, expanding school-based physical activity programs for girls in high-poverty neighborhoods may increase student attendance.


JAMA ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 272 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Tardiff
Keyword(s):  
New York ◽  

2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 685-703
Author(s):  
Flávia Belmont ◽  
Amanda Álvares Ferreira

Abstract The riots against a New York City police raid at the Stonewall Inn bar in June, 1969, are often identified as having sparked the movement for LGBT rights, and the commemoration of the riots one year later in June, 1970, inaugurated a series of annual LGBT Pride events that continues to this day worldwide. In this two-part Forum, we reflect on the contradictory effects of Stonewall’s international legacy. In this second part of the Forum, Ferreira and Belmont investigate the ways in which ‘Stonewall’ has been appropriated specifically in Brazil, both during the civil-military dictatorship and in the current fraught political moment. Belmont locates current mismatches between LGBT and queer struggles in Brazil by juxtaposing more mainstream visions of LGBT politics with the margins they create, especially the marginalization of travestis. Belmont exposes the way that dominant LGBT discourse and practices reinforce the continuous violence over dissident bodies and proposes that we look at travestis’ experiences and arguments as necessary contributions to a more radical (queer) politics. In the final contribution, Ferreira recapitulates the political demands of NYC’s Stonewall events and contrast them to the revolutionary claims of what was called a ‘Brazilian Stonewall.’ Considering the protagonism of lesbian movements in such events in Brazil, her contribution analyzes, from a queer perspective, the embrace of a multiplicity of identifications in contemporary lesbian activism. She argues that this move creates potentialities for responding to structural violences, while also speaking to questions such as the judicialization and commercialization of LGBTTI causes and homonormativity.


1995 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 29-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martha M. Rumore ◽  
Stanley Feifer ◽  
Joseph S. Rumore
Keyword(s):  
New York ◽  

Author(s):  
Larry Nuttbrock ◽  
Andrew Rosenblum ◽  
Stephen Magura ◽  
Hunter L. McQuistion ◽  
Herman Joseph

1995 ◽  
Vol 332 (26) ◽  
pp. 1753-1757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter M. Marzuk ◽  
Kenneth Tardiff ◽  
Andrew C. Leon ◽  
Charles S. Hirsch ◽  
Marina Stajic ◽  
...  

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