scholarly journals The Impact of COVID-19 on Risky Behaviors and Health Changes in African-American Smokers Who Are Eligible for LDCT Screening

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tung-Sung Tseng ◽  
Mirandy Li ◽  
Yu-Hsiang Kao ◽  
Lei-Shih Chen ◽  
Hui-Yi Lin

The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted much of day-to-day life in the US and around the world. Smokers have a higher risk of adverse outcomes due to COVID-19. This study investigated the impact of COVID-19 on risky behaviors and health changes in lower income African-American smokers eligible for Low dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening, who may be more adversely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 22 African-American daily smokers who were eligible for LDCT screening participated in this study. The mean age of participants was 61.2 years old (SD = 4.7), 77.3% of the smokers were female, all participants had an income below $20,000, and 63.6% were on Medicaid. Descriptive statistics were used to provide summary information on demographics, COVID-19, and health status. Results showed that participants increased cigarette smoking, spent more time on screens, increased sugary drink consumption, consumed more vegetables and fruits, and engaged in more gardening activities during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, participants also decreased physical activity time and slept less during the pandemic. In general, more than one-third of participants gained more body weight and reported increased stress and anxiety. Our results suggest that African-American smokers who qualify for LDCT screening should be encouraged to consider strategies not only for smoking cessation, but also risky behavior control and management.

Author(s):  
TAOPHEEQ MUSTAPHA ◽  
VARIJA BHOGIREDDY ◽  
HARTMAN MADU ◽  
ADU BOACHIE ◽  
ABDUL OSENI ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Heart failure (HF) and Chronic kidney disease (CKD) are major public health problems that often co-exist with a resultant high mortality and morbidity. Most of the studies evaluating their reciprocal prognostic impact have focused on mortality in majority populations. There is limited literature on the impact of CKD on HF morbidities in ethnic minorities. AIMS: Our study seeks to compare HF outcomes in patients with or without CKD in an African-American predominant cohort. METHODS: We obtained data from the NGH at Meharry Heart Failure Cohort; a comprehensive retrospective HF database comprised of patient care data (HF admissions, non-HF admissions, and emergency room visits) were assessed from January 2006 to December 2008. The study group consist of 306 subjects with a mean age of 65±15 years. 81% were African-American (AA), 19% Caucasian and 48.5% are females. Following the NKF KDOQI guidelines, 5 stages of CKD were outlined based on GFR. RESULTS: The overall prevalence of CKD in this population is 54.2%. CKD stage 1 was most prevalent with 45.8%, prevalence for stages 2-5 are 21.6%, 18.3%, 9.5% and 4.9% respectively. The comparison of the mean of ER visits, non HF hospitalizations and HF hospitalizations between normal and CKD patients was done using independent t-test and showed no significant difference in the mean number of ER visits (p=0.564), or HF hospitalizations(p=0.235). However, there is a statistically significant difference in the mean number of non -HF hospitalizations between normal and CKD patients (p=0.031). CONCLUSION: This study shows that the prevalence of CKD in this minority -predominant HF cohort is similar to prior studies in majority populations. However, only the non-HF hospitalizations were significantly increased in the CKD group. Future prospective studies will be needed to define the implications of this in the management of HF patients with CKD.


2011 ◽  
Vol 28 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
GERMAN BERNHART ◽  
STEPHAN HÖCHT ◽  
MICHAEL NEUGEBAUER ◽  
MICHAEL NEUMANN ◽  
RUDI ZAGST

In this article, the dependence structure of the asset classes stocks, government bonds, and corporate bonds in different market environments and its implications on asset management are investigated for the US, European, and Asian market. Asset returns are modelled by a Markov-switching model which allows for two market regimes with completely different risk-return structures. Using major stock indices from all three regions, calm and turbulent market periods are identified for the time period between 1987 and 2009 and the correlation structures in the respective periods are compared. It turns out that the correlations between as well as within the asset classes under investigation are far from being stable and vary significantly between calm and turbulent market periods as well as in time. It also turns out that the US and European markets are much more integrated than the Asian and US/European ones. Moreover, the Asian market features more and longer turbulence phases. Finally, the impact of these findings is examined in a portfolio optimization context. To accomplish this, a case study using the mean-variance and the mean-conditional-value-at-risk framework as well as two levels of risk aversion is conducted. The results show that an explicit consideration of different market conditions in the modelling framework yields better portfolio performance as well as lower portfolio risk compared to standard approaches. These findings hold true for all investigated optimization frameworks and risk-aversion levels.


2016 ◽  
Vol 31 (6) ◽  
pp. 465-475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaurav Dave ◽  
Tiarney Ritchwood ◽  
Tiffany L. Young ◽  
Malika Roman Isler ◽  
Adina Black ◽  
...  

Purpose: Parents and caregivers play an important role in sexual socialization of youth, often serving as the primary source of information about sex. For African American rural youth who experience disparate rates of HIV/sexually transmitted infection, improving caregiver–youth communication about sexual topics may help to reduce risky behaviors. This study assessed the impact of an intervention to improve sexual topic communication. Design: A Preintervention–postintervention, quasi-experimental, controlled, and community-based trial. Setting: Intervention was in 2 rural North Carolina counties with comparison group in 3 adjacent counties. Subjects: Participants (n = 249) were parents, caregivers, or parental figures for African American youth aged 10 to 14. Intervention: Twelve-session curriculum for participating dyads. Measures: Audio computer-assisted self-interview to assess changes at 9 months from baseline in communication about general and sensitive sex topics and overall communication about sex. Analysis: Multivariable models were used to examine the differences between the changes in mean of scores for intervention and comparison groups. Results: Statistically significant differences in changes in mean scores for communication about general sex topics ( P < .0001), communication about sensitive sex topics ( P < .0001), and overall communication about sex ( P < .0001) existed. Differences in change in mean scores remained significant after adjusting baseline scores and other variables in the multivariate models. Conclusions: In Teach One Reach One intervention, adult participants reported improved communication about sex, an important element to support risk reduction among youth in high-prevalence areas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 1241-1241
Author(s):  
Katherine Rancaño ◽  
Misha Eliasziw ◽  
Rebecca Puhl ◽  
Margie Skeer ◽  
Aviva Must

Abstract Objectives Frequent exposure to negative familial weight talk (NFWT), such as teasing or critical comments about weight from family members, may contribute to weight bias internalization (WBI) in children. WBI entails applying negative weight-based stereotypes to oneself and results in self-devaluation. Higher levels of WBI are linked to adverse outcomes, such as low self-esteem and disordered eating. We examined the association between NFWT exposure and WBI in a diverse sample of children from the Greater Boston Area. Methods Baseline data on 137 parent-child dyads were analyzed. Children, 9–14yo, completed six items measuring NFWT frequency on a 6-point Likert scale (“never” to “almost every day”) from parents, siblings, and other household family members. Responses were converted to times in the past 3 months, summed, and dichotomized as &lt; 9 times vs. ≥9 times. Children completed the WBI Scale–Modified indicating their agreement with applying negative weight-based statements to themselves on a 6-point Likert scale (“strongly disagree” to “strongly agree”). Responses were averaged and the mean WBI score was dichotomized as “low” (&lt;3.0) versus “moderate-high” (≥3.0). Results Over half (52%) of the children were girls and 30% had overweight/obesity (BMI &gt; 85th percentile). Half of the parents were non-Hispanic white. The mean child WBI score was 2.1 (SD = 0.9) and 15% had moderate-high levels of WBI. The median NFWT frequency was 0 (IQR = 6.0) and 25% reported NFWT ≥ 9 times. Children exposed to NFWT ≥ 9 times were 8.2 times more likely to have moderate-high levels of WBI than children exposed to NFWT &lt; 9 times in the past 3 months (prevalence ratio = 8.2, 95%CI = 3.4 to 20.0, P &lt; 0.001, by log binomial regression adjusted for child weight and parent race/ethnicity). Conclusions Family members appear to be a salient source of weight stigma in children. Exposure to NFWT as little as 3 times per month was significantly associated with moderate-high levels of WBI in this diverse sample of children. More research is needed to understand the impact of NFWT on child WBI, such as differences across racial/ethnic groups, by source (i.e., parents versus siblings), and across the lifespan. Funding Sources National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and the National Institute of Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (20) ◽  
pp. 10093-10109 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. D. Parrish ◽  
K. C. Aikin ◽  
S. J. Oltmans ◽  
B. J. Johnson ◽  
M. Ives ◽  
...  

Abstract. Ozone sondes launched from Trinidad Head, California provide a measure of background O3 transported ashore, and allow an evaluation of the impact of this transport on air quality in California's Northern Sacramento Valley. A strong summertime vertical O3 gradient and correlation analysis indicate that O3-rich air from above the marine boundary layer is transported to the surface. Surface O3 is found to increase proportionally to the transported background. At the surface site experiencing the highest O3 concentrations, the mean maximum daily 8-h average (MDA8) O3 on exceedance days (i.e. those days when MDA8 O3 exceeds 75 ppbv) is 20 ppbv higher than on non-exceedance days. The transported background O3, as measured 22 h earlier by the Trinidad Head sondes, accounts for more than half (11 ppbv) of this difference. This finding contrasts with conclusions from model calculations that indicate the US policy relevant O3 background is generally 15–35 ppbv, and that it is lower, rather than higher, during pollution episodes. The present work indicates that O3 transported on hemispheric scales substantially impacts air quality in some areas of the US.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 2891-2891 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rekha Chandran ◽  
Stuart Gardiner ◽  
Stephen D. Smith ◽  
Stephen E Spurgeon

Abstract Abstract 2891 Introduction: Hairy cell leukemia (HCL) is a rare B cell malignancy with a variable clinical course. Therapies have changed dramatically in the last 3 decades. Specifically, approval of recombinant alpha interferon (IFN-α) in 1984, followed by the development of purine nucleoside analogues (pentostatin in 1986 and cladribine in 1990), represent significant therapeutic advances, affording high response rates and (using the latter agents) disease control lasting years. Monoclonal antibodies including rituximab -first approved in 1999- have also shown promise, to date mainly in relapsed HCL. However, given the rarity of HCL, large population analyses of survival of affected patients, and survival trends over time, are lacking. Therefore, using the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER-17) database, we evaluated overall survival, and factors associated with mortality trends, in HCL patients in the general US population over the past 35 years. Methods: The SEER-17 database was interrogated for HCL patients presenting over the last 35 years, from 1973–2008. 3904 patients were identified; after excluding patients whose survival status was unavailable, 3480 were analyzed. Available demographic information, including age, gender, race, and year of diagnosis, were analyzed. Age was analyzed as a continuous variable. We utilized Cox proportional hazards models to assess prognostic factors. Additional models were formed to evaluate a possible step change in survival in the years following key therapeutic advances (1984, 1990, and 1999). Specifically, the population was separated into four cohorts (pre-1984, 1984–1990, 1991–1999, and 2000–2008) and the entire cohort was included as an additional predictor in the model. Kaplan Meier curves were constructed to estimate overall survival and statistically significant differences between the curves was estimated using the 2 tailed log rank test. The survival curves for the 3 groups post 1984 were plotted along with patients from 1973–1983 and are shown below in Figure 1. The three predictors associated with survival were identified as age, race and year of diagnosis. Results: The mean age was 56 years (95% CI 33–86) for the entire study population. There was no difference in the mean age before 1984 (56.5 yrs.) compared to the three cohorts after 1984 (mean ages 58 yrs., 57 yrs. and 57 years respectively). The risk of death increased by 5.8% (95% CI 5.14– 6.55) per year with older age at diagnosis. However, after adjusting for age, survival has improved over the study period, as the risk of death in an unselected patient of the same age with HCL in the US has decreased by 90.5%. African-American patients were noted to have a significantly higher mortality than Caucasians (OR 1.942, 95% CI 1.254–3.008). Survival of patients appears to have improved over the years with the risk of mortality decreasing by 6.5% per year (95% CI 5.6%-7.4%) with a later year of diagnosis. With additional models, the risk of death for an individual of a given age decreased by 5.3 % every year with a further reduction of 27.5% occurring in 1984 (p=0.04), consistent with a dramatic reduction in mortality after 1984. Models derived using other landmark years did not show any further step wise reduction in mortality (1990 p=0.441; 1999 p=0.535) at these specific time points. However, the reduction in mortality conferred by diagnosis at a later year has resulted in significantly improved survival being different for all groups before and after 1984 (Figure 1). Conclusions: Survival of modern cohorts of patients with HCL in the US has improved significantly. While the diagnosis of HCL has employed classic morphologic, cytochemical, and (more recently) immunohistologic features, effective antineoplastic therapy has evolved significantly in recent decades. Thus, modern therapies may have played a significant role in the survival improvements of modern HCL patients. African- American ethnicity is associated with higher mortality, a disparity requiring further analysis in the context of patient factors and an improving understanding of HCL pathobiology. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Deldar Morad Abdulah ◽  
Karwan Ali Perot ◽  
Eleanor Holroyd

Objective: The role of nurses’ shift-rotations in predicting adverse patient events has received little attention. The effect of fatigue on patient safety as a primary factor and the impact of shift-working on fatigue as a secondary factor in hospital-based nurses was investigated in the present study.Methods: In this cross-sectional study set in Iraqi Kurdistan in 2018, 71 nurses (Range: 20-44 years) were recruited purposively who worked in rotating shifts, in four multi-specialty hospitals.Results: The mean age of the nurses was 30.24 years (SD: 4.81; range: 20-44 years). The majority of nurses worked in the public sector (63.4%). The nurses worked in morning shift (26.8%) and shift-rotations (39.4%) for between 7.75 and 9.13 hours. In addition, 59.4% and 18.3% of nurses reported that they injured “sometimes” and “frequently” (respectively) patients in their care either directly or indirectly. Similarly, 19.7% of them reported that these were medication errors “sometimes” and “frequently.” Patient information was recorded incompletely or incorrectly sometimes by 18.3% and frequently by 35.2%. Also, 36.6% and 31.0% of them reported that they delayed care to patients frequently and sometimes, respectively. The mean values of physical and psychological fatigue were 8.77 of 21 and 3.42 of 12, respectively. The physical and psychological fatigue were escalated in case of lower total psychological well-being (p = .009 and p = .018, respectively). The study showed that single-shift working is a predictor of delayed patients care; 95.3% vs. 60.7%; p < .001).Conclusions: Hospital administrators must be aware that nurses are not able to work effectively on short roosters or extended shifts. Protocols for better nurse health surveillance and social support in respect to 24 hours shift work must be prioritized in order to avoid mental and physical significant impairment on nurses and adverse outcomes for their clients.


2019 ◽  
Vol 40 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F Vincent ◽  
H Spillemaeker ◽  
M Kyheng ◽  
T Denimal ◽  
B Verdier ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Major vascular (VAC) and life-threatening or major bleeding (LT/MB) complications still represent one of the most frequent adverse outcomes of percutaneous transfemoral TAVR (TF-TAVR) and are associated with an increased risk of mortality. Ultrasound guidance technique allows to puncture in the non-calcified central and horizontal segment of common femoral artery. However the clinical impact of ultrasound (US)-guidance has never been studied in TF-TAVR in comparison of standard fluoroscopic guidance and could explain the lack of adoption of US guidance. We sought first to evaluate in our study the impact of US-guidance on the vascular and bleeding complications. Methods US-guidance for vascular access was implemented as the default approach in our institution in June 2013 for all TF-TAVR and was applied by all operators after a short training course. Thus, we defined three period and groups of consecutive patients according to the method of percutaneous puncture (fluoroscopic or US-guidance) and the generation of THV (2nd or 3rd gen.). US-guided-2nd gen. group: TF-TAVR with 2nd generation THV and performed via US-guidance. This group refers to the period patients from June 2013 to November 2014 (n=119). Fluo-guided-2nd gen. group: The last TF-TAVR with 2nd gen. THV and performed via fluoroscopic guidance (n=119). US-guided-3rd gen. group: Patients implanted with 3rd gen. THV (SAPIEN 3, Evolut R) from November 2014 to December 2018 while US-guidance was systematic for all TF-TAVR (n=308). Patients performed with US-guidance were 1:1 successfully matched with 95 patients performed with fluoroscopic guidance (fluo-guided group) with propensity-score (10 variables). We separately analyzed the consecutive patients of the US-guided-3rd gen. group. Results After propensity-matching, resulting in similar baseline characteristics, all the vascular and bleeding complications were reduced in the US-guided-2nd gen. group compared to Fluo-guided-2nd gen. group with respectively: VAC (6.3% vs 16.8%; OR=0.31; 95% CI: 0.12–0.85; p=0.023); LT/MB (22.1% vs 6.3%; OR=0.24, CI: 0.09–0.63; p=0.004); and VAC related to vascular access (12.6 vs 4.2%; OR=0.31; CI: 0.10–1.01; p=0.052). We also observed a reduction of the mean fluoroscopic time (1753±620 min vs 1228±405 min; p<0.001). No difference was observed between groups on survival (HR=0.68; CI: 0.42 to 1.10); p=0.125). In the US-guided-3rd gen. group (n=308), the US-guided puncture achieved a rate of VAC of 3.2% (CI: 1.6–5.9) and of LT/MB of 3.6% (CI: 1.8–6.3). In the overall population (n=546), we observed that LT/MB (p=0.02) was associated with a 1.7-fold increase of mortality risk. Conclusion The present study is the first and the largest to evaluate the impact of US-guidance in TF-TAVR. We demonstrated that US-guided cannulation is able to reduce the risk of vascular and bleeding complications. These data endorses US-guidance as the standard method of puncture for TAVR.


2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-99
Author(s):  
Dominique Cadinot

In 2005, historian David R. Roediger published the now-classic Working Toward Whiteness: How America’s Immigrants Became White in which he recounts how immigrant minorities in the early 20th century secured their place in the “white race” in order to qualify as fully American and be treated with fairness and respect. Muslim immigrants from the Middle-East were no exception to the process described. However, becoming white was a particularly long and arduous journey which eventually led to the 1978 Office of Management Budget directive officially categorizing Middle-Eastern immigrants as white. But the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 sparked new alliances between the various ethnic groups that make up the US Muslim community: Arabs, African-Americans or South-East Asians from all walks of life have joined forces in resisting discrimination and bigotry. Thus, the question arises whether common cultural heritage or faith should be the main force shaping a new collective and visible identity. Also, such process entails a questioning of hierarchies based on socioeconomic status; compared to their African-American coreligionists, American citizens of Arab descent fare much better in terms of education and wealth. The main purpose of this paper is to evaluate the impact of 9/11 on the way Arab-American Muslims and their community leaders re-define the boundaries of their collective identity and how they forge bonds of solidarity with indigenous Muslims. It seeks to address two related questions: How do Arab-American Muslims relate to the black-white dualist model or racial binary? What role does class identification play in structuring social relations between Arab and African-American Muslims? While I do not negate the fact that in the US race continues to play a fundamental role in structuring social relations, I argue that it is important to pay close attention to how socioeconomic status may condition the formulation of a group identity.


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