Last data update: Jan 13, 2025. (Total: 48570 publications since 2009)
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Query Trace: Jackson W[original query] |
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Convenience sampling for pandemic surveillance of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 in children in Jackson, Mississippi
Inagaki K , Penny A , Gwyn S , Malloch L , Martin L , Hankins E , Ray C , Byers P , Harrison A , Handali S , Martin D , Hobbs CV . Pediatr Infect Dis J 2024 We assessed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 seroprevalence on residual blood samples for pediatric COVID-19 surveillance: 2263 samples were collected during routine outpatient visits (<18 years, April 2020-August 2021). Seroprevalence increased over time, coinciding with or preceding virus circulation in the community and with or preceding pediatric severe COVID-19 hospitalization peaks. Residual blood sample seroprevalence may be a useful surveillance tool in future outbreaks. |
Assessing non-oral PrEP alternatives among young Black women in the southern USA
Denson DJ , Tesfaye CL , Glusberg D , Schoua-Glusberg A , Betley V , Gale B , Cardo J , Frew PM , McLellan-Lemal E , O'Connor SM , McNicholl JM . J Racial Ethn Health Disparities 2025 Young Black women in the southern US face a high HIV burden. While daily oral HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can effectively prevent HIV, its use is low among Black women. The acceptability of and perceived intention to use emerging PrEP products among young Black women in the southern US are not well understood. Non-oral PrEP alternatives could address challenges to PrEP uptake and reduce health disparities. We conducted virtual semi-structured interviews with Black women aged 18-34 in Atlanta, GA; Baton Rouge, LA; and Jackson, MS, to explore their perspectives on three emerging PrEP products: a long-acting injection, a subdermal implant, and a dual-purpose contraception and HIV prevention intravaginal ring. Seventy-five interviews were conducted from January to October 2021 and analyzed using inductive thematic analysis with NVivo software. Most participants were open to using medication to prevent HIV. The intravaginal ring was the most preferred, primarily due to its dual-purpose function, although it was also frequently rejected. The long-acting injection was the second most preferred and least rejected, perceived as the least invasive. The skin implant was the least preferred and most rejected, viewed as the most invasive. Our findings highlight the need for multiple PrEP options to meet individual preferences. Detailed descriptions, instructions, and experiential learning methods are crucial for choosing non-oral PrEP modalities. Practitioners should address questions and offer peer-based learning opportunities. Designing and promoting PrEP strategies for young Black women should involve close consultation with these consumers. |
Anti-neuraminidase and anti-hemagglutinin stalk responses to different influenza a(H7N9) vaccine regimens
El Sahly HM , Anderson EJ , Jackson LA , Neuzil KM , Atmar RL , Bernstein DI , Chen WH , Creech CB , Frey SE , Goepfert P , Meier J , Phadke V , Rouphael N , Rupp R , Stapleton JT , Spearman P , Walter EB , Winokur PL , Yildirim I , Williams TL , Oshinsky J , Coughlan L , Nijhuis H , Pasetti MF , Krammer F , Stadlbauer D , Nachbagauer R , Tsong R , Wegel A , Roberts PC . Vaccine 2025 47 126689 INTRODUCTION: Pandemic influenza vaccine development focuses on the hemagglutinin (HA) antigen for potency and immunogenicity. Antibody responses targeting the neuraminidase (NA) antigen, or the HA stalk domain have been implicated in protection against influenza. Responses to the NA and HA-stalk domain following pandemic inactivated influenza are not well characterized in humans. MATERIAL AND METHODS: In a series of clinical trials, we determine the vaccines' NA content and demonstrate that NA inhibition (NAI) antibody responses increase in a dose-dependent manner following a 2-dose priming series with AS03-adjuvanted influenza A(H7N9) inactivated vaccine (A(H7N9) IIV). NAI antibody responses also increase with interval extension of the 2-dose priming series or following a 5-year delayed boost with a heterologous adjuvanted A(H7N9) IIV. Neither concomitant seasonal influenza vaccination given simultaneously or sequentially, nor use of heterologous A(H7N9) IIVs in the 2-dose priming series had an appreciable effect on NAI antibody responses. Anti-HA stalk antibody responses were minimal and not durable. CONCLUSIONS: We provide evidence for strategies to improve anti-neuraminidase responses which can be further standardized for pandemic preparedness. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRY NUMBERS: NCT03312231, NCT03318315, NCT03589807, NCT03738241. |
SmartChart Suite: a Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources-based framework for longitudinal syphilis surveillance using structured and unstructured data
Stevens A , Karki S , Shivers E , Pérez A , Choi M , Berro A , Riley M , Yang J , Tassev P , Jackson DA , Kim I , Duke JD . JAMIA Open 2025 8 (1) ooae145 OBJECTIVE: The resurgence of syphilis in the United States presents a significant public health challenge. Much of the information needed for syphilis surveillance resides in electronic health records (EHRs). In this manuscript, we describe a surveillance platform for automating the extraction of EHR data, known as SmartChart Suite, and the results from a pilot. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The SmartChart Suite framework has been developed in compliance with the HHS Health IT Alignment Policy. The platform's major functionalities are (1) data retrieval; (2) logical evaluation; (3) standardized data storage; and (4) results display. The SmartChart Suite was deployed in September 2023 at the Grady Health System in Atlanta, Georgia. We established a cohort of likely syphilis patients, randomly selected 50 medical records for manual and automated chart review, and analyzed the results. RESULTS: The SmartChart Suite was successfully deployed and integrated with the Epic EHR system at Grady. The overall performance results were precision of 97.6%, recall of 100.0%, and F-Score of 98.8. DISCUSSION: Automated abstraction of EHR data has significant potential to improve public health surveillance and case investigation processes while reducing the resource burden on health departments and reporters. The SmartChart Suite comprises a flexible open-source solution for registry development and maintenance across a wide spectrum of conditions and use cases. CONCLUSION: SmartChart Suite demonstrates the potential of automated chart abstraction to support disease surveillance. HHS-compliant open-source tools such as SmartChart Suite can support more efficient human review by providing accurate and relevant data for critical public health activities. |
Trends in syphilis case rates among women of reproductive age - United States, 2013-2022
Anand P , Quilter LAS , Learner ER , Barbee LA , Jackson DA . Sex Transm Dis 2024 We analyzed syphilis case notifications in reproductive age women during 2013-2022. Late/unknown duration syphilis grew faster after 2020 (45.8% versus 17.9% annual growth pre-2020). Increased screening, inaccurate staging, delayed diagnosis, or increased incidence following clinical and partner services gaps during 2020 may contribute to rises in late/unknown duration cases. |
Hospital-level variation in cardiac rehabilitation metrics
Pollack LM , Chang A , Thompson MP , Keteyian SJ , Stolp H , Wall HK , Sperling LS , Jackson SL . Am Heart J 2024 BACKGROUND: To inform the delivery of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) care nationwide at the hospital level, we described hospital-level variation in CR metrics, overall and stratified by the hospital's tier of cardiac care provided. METHODS: This retrospective cohort analysis used Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) data (2018-2020), Parts A and B, and American Hospital Association (AHA) data (2018). We included beneficiaries with an acute myocardial infarction (AMI), percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) in 2018, aged ≥65 years, and continuously enrolled in a FFS plan. We calculated hospital-level metrics for hospitals with ≥20 CR-qualifying events, which were identified using diagnostic/procedure codes. Claims for CR were identified by Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) codes. We used multi-level models to examine patient- and hospital-level factors associated with CR metrics. Hospitals were stratified by tier of cardiac care provided (comprehensive, AMI/PCI, AMI-only care). RESULTS: Across the US, 2,212 hospitals treated individuals aged ≥65 years with a CR-qualifying event in 2018. By tier of cardiac care, 44.4% of hospitals provided comprehensive care, 31.2% provided AMI/PCI care, and 24.4% provided AMI-only care. Across all hospitals, there was substantial variation in CR enrollment (median 19.6%, interquartile range [IQR]=7.0%, 32.8%). Among hospitals with enrollment (n=1,866), median time to enrollment was 55.0 days (IQR=41.0, 71.0), median number of CR sessions was 26.0 (IQR=23.0, 29.0), and median percent completion was 26.0% (IQR=10.5%, 41.2%). There was also substantial variation in CR performance metrics among hospitals within each tier of cardiac care (e.g., median percent CR enrollment was 30.7% [IQR=20.7%-41.3%] among comprehensive care hospitals, 18.6% [IQR=9.5%-27.7%] among AMI/PCI hospitals, and 0.0% [IQR=0.0%-7.7%] among AMI-only hospitals). In adjusted analyses, characteristics associated with lower odds of CR enrollment included patient-level factors (older age, female sex, non-White race or ethnicity), and hospital-level factors (for-profit ownership, regions other than the Midwest, rural location, medium/large hospital size). CONCLUSIONS: This is the first national, hospital-level analysis of CR metrics among Medicare beneficiaries. Substantial variation across hospitals, including peer hospitals within the same tier of cardiac care, indicates opportunities for hospital-level quality improvement strategies to improve CR referral and participation metrics. |
County-level hypertension prevalence and control in the United States: A zip3-county crosswalk using electronic health record data
Weng X , Vaughan AS , He S , Thompson-Paul AM , Woodruff RC , Jackson SL . Prev Chronic Dis 2024 21 E95 |
Inferring the proportion of undetected cholera infections from serological and clinical surveillance in an immunologically naive population
Finger F , Lemaitre J , Juin S , Jackson B , Funk S , Lessler J , Mintz E , Dely P , Boncy J , Azman AS . Epidemiol Infect 2024 152 e149 Most infections with pandemic Vibrio cholerae are thought to result in subclinical disease and are not captured by surveillance. Previous estimates of the ratio of infections to clinical cases have varied widely (2 to 100 infections per case). Understanding cholera epidemiology and immunity relies on the ability to translate between numbers of clinical cases and the underlying number of infections in the population. We estimated the infection incidence during the first months of an outbreak in a cholera-naive population using a Bayesian vibriocidal antibody titer decay model combining measurements from a representative serosurvey and clinical surveillance data. 3,880 suspected cases were reported in Grande Saline, Haiti, between 20 October 2010 and 6 April 2011 (clinical attack rate 18.4%). We found that more than 52.6% (95% Credible Interval (CrI) 49.4-55.7) of the population ≥2 years showed serologic evidence of infection, with a lower infection rate among children aged 2-4 years (35.5%; 95%CrI 24.2-51.6) compared with people ≥5 years (53.1%; 95%CrI 49.4-56.4). This estimated infection rate, nearly three times the clinical attack rate, with underdetection mainly seen in those ≥5 years, has likely impacted subsequent outbreak dynamics. Our findings show how seroincidence estimates improve understanding of links between cholera burden, transmission dynamics and immunity. |
An investigation of Salmonella Senftenberg illnesses in the United States linked to peanut butter-2022
Whitney BM , Palacios A , Warren B , Kautter D , Grant EA , Crosby A , Seelman S , Walerstein L , Mangia J , Pightling A , Hunter A , Harris-Garner K , Wagoner V , Jackson T , Gollarza L , Leeper M , Gieraltowski L , Viazis S . Foodborne Pathog Dis 2024 In 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and state partners conducted a sample-initiated investigation of a multistate outbreak of Salmonella Senftenberg illnesses linked to peanut butter. Twenty-one illnesses and four hospitalizations were reported in 17 states, with a significant epidemiological signal for peanut butter from Firm A. Whole genome sequence (WGS) data from a Salmonella-positive environmental swab sample collected at Firm A in 2010 yielded the outbreak strain that was a match to the WGS data from the 2022 clinical isolates. Lot code information collected from patients indicated Firm A's facility in Kentucky as a common manufacturing source, and FDA and state partners initiated an inspection. In 2021, Firm A installed two new roasters with at least one of the cooling air supply vents leaking, allowing unfiltered air and rainwater to enter the cooling section after the roasting process. Investigators noted the limitations of Firm A's finished product testing program to identify contamination. Investigative partners from five states collected and analyzed 14 product samples, and FDA collected 205 environmental swabs, and all were negative. Although the exact source and route of the contamination were not determined, epidemiological and traceback evidence confirmed peanut butter consumed by patients was produced by Firm A. Firm A voluntarily recalled all implicated products and provided a plan for corrective actions and restart to FDA. This was the first major domestic investigation of a multistate-foodborne illness outbreak linked to peanut butter since 2012. This investigation demonstrates the importance of caution with reliance on finished product testing, taking appropriate corrective actions when detection occurs, and potential benefits for industry to incorporate WGS as a tool in their environmental monitoring program. |
A bi-national sample-initiated retrospective outbreak investigation of Listeria monocytogenes infections in the United States and Canada linked to enoki mushrooms imported from China 2022-2023
Kirchner M , Palacios A , Cataldo N , Allen KL , Wellman A , Madad A , Jemaneh T , Jackson T , Ingram DT , Wagoner V , Hatch R , Baugher J , Burall L , Nieves K , Low M , Pederson G , DiPrete L , Sepcic V , Thomas D , Lozinak K , Urban S , Shannon K , Kafka E , Lackey A , Edwards L , Rosen HE , Bond C , Needham M , Locas A , Markell A , Chau K , Kong A , Hamel M , Kearney A , Salter M , Gieraltowski L , Bazaco MC , Viazis S , Conrad A . J Food Prot 2024 100413 In 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), U.S. state and local partners, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC), and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), conducted a bi-national sample-initiated retrospective outbreak investigation (SIROI) of Listeria monocytogenes illnesses linked to enoki mushrooms. The FDA and CDC investigated the first known L. monocytogenes outbreak linked to enoki mushrooms from 2016-2020, making the 2022 outbreak the second time this pathogen-commodity pair was investigated by FDA and CDC. The 2022 outbreak included six ill people, all of whom were hospitalized. Epidemiologic, laboratory, and traceback evidence led to multiple public health actions, including voluntary recalls by firms, public communications about the outbreak, and FDA's country-wide Import Alert for enoki mushrooms from China. This SIROI illustrates the importance of surveillance sampling, national and international coordination of efforts, and rapid information sharing to identify and stop foodborne outbreaks on a global scale. To reduce the risk of listeriosis illnesses linked to contaminated enoki mushrooms, public health and regulatory agencies in the United States and Canada remain committed to conducting comprehensive surveillance for Listeria in foods and in people, efficiently investigating identified outbreaks, and implementing control measures to potentially minimize the impact of future outbreaks. |
Associations between health-related social needs and cardiovascular health among US adults
Zhang Z , Jackson SL , Thompson-Paul AM , Yin X , Merritt RK , Coronado F . J Am Heart Assoc 2024 e035863 BACKGROUND: Unfavorable health-related social needs (HRSNs) have the potential to worsen health and well-being and drive health disparities. Its associations with cardiovascular health (CVH), assessed by Life's Essential 8, have not been comprehensively examined among US adults. METHODS AND RESULTS: We used the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2011 to March 2020 data for adults aged ≥20 years. We grouped Life's Essential 8 scores as low (0-49), moderate (50-79), and high (80-100) CVH. We identified 8 unfavorable HRSNs and assigned a value of 1 for the unfavorable status of each. The number of unfavorable HRSNs was summed and ranged from 0 to 8, with higher numbers indicating more unfavorable HRSNs. We used multivariable linear and multinomial logistic regression to examine the association between HRSNs and CVH. A total of 14 947 participants were included (n=7340 male [49.3%]; mean [SE] age, 46.4 [0.35] years). A higher number of unfavorable HRSNs were associated with worse CVH: comparing adults with unfavorable HRSNs of 1-2, 3-4, and ≥5 to those with none, the fully adjusted prevalence ratios (95% CI) for low CVH were 1.42 (1.17-1.73), 2.11 (1.69-2.63), and 2.42 (1.90-3.08), respectively. The corresponding prevalence ratios (95% CI) for high CVH were 0.77 (0.68-0.87), 0.58 (0.49-0.67), and 0.46 (0.38-0.55). The associations were consistent across subgroups and in sensitivity analyses. CONCLUSIONS: There was a graded association between unfavorable HRSNs and a higher prevalence of low CVH or lower prevalence of high CVH. Public health interventions targeting HRSNs might reduce health disparities and promote CVH. |
PrEP initiation and adherence among Black cisgender women in Mississippi: The role of HIV and PrEP stigma and social support
Knight D , Monger M , Phillips K , Antar A , Baral S , Stockman JK , Nunn A , Chan P , Mayer K , Mena L , Kershaw T , Willie TC . Womens Health (Lond) 2024 20 17455057241296905 BACKGROUND: Stigma and lack of social support are barriers to HIV prevention, especially among cisgender Black women in the United States. While HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can decrease HIV transmission, PrEP initiation and adherence remains low among Black women, especially in the U.S. South. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to characterize experiences with stigma and social support among PrEP-naïve and PrEP-experienced Black cisgender women in Mississippi. DESIGN: Qualitative study in which semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted. METHODS: We purposively recruited PrEP-naïve cisgender Black women who met PrEP indications to participate in focus groups and all PrEP-experienced cisgender Black women at a sexual health clinic in Jackson, Mississippi to participate in one-on-one semi-structured interviews. Inductive thematic analysis was used to analyze focus group and interview transcripts. RESULTS: A total of 37 PrEP-naïve Black cisgender women participated across 6 focus groups and 8 PrEP-experienced cisgender Black women completed semi-structured interviews. Four themes were identified: (1) the intersection of gendered racism, discrimination, and HIV stigma, (2) enacted and anticipated PrEP stigma, (3) stigma mitigation strategies and PrEP adherence, and (4) social support's role in PrEP initiation and adherence. PrEP-naïve and -experienced Black women discussed the negative consequence that sexual stigmatization and gendered racism has on HIV testing. PrEP-naïve Black women discussed how HIV stigma decreases PrEP initiation. Conversely, PrEP-experienced Black women were able to identify strategies they utilized to mitigate stigma. PrEP-experienced Black women discussed how differing levels of social support impact their PrEP use. CONCLUSION: Improving social support and stigma mitigation strategies could help improve PrEP initiation and adherence among cisgender Black women at-risk of acquiring HIV in the U.S. South. Educating communities on PrEP, and training providers on stigma-mitigating strategies when serving Black women in the U.S. South who are seeking HIV prevention is paramount. | PrEP initiation and adherence among Black cisgender women in Mississippi: The role of HIV and PrEP stigma and social supportWhy was the study done?Stigma and lack of social support have been demonstrated as barriers to HIV prevention, especially among cisgender Black women in the United States (U.S.). While HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), a HIV prevention medication, has the ability to decrease HIV transmission, rates of starting PrEP remain low among Black women, especially in the U.S. South. Improving PrEP programs for US Black women calls for understanding how stigma and social support impact PrEP use among Black women.What did the researchers do?We recruited cisgender Black women who was eligible for PrEP but have never taken PrEP (PrEP-naïve) to participate in focus groups and cisgender Black women who have taken PrEP (PrEP-experienced) to participate in one-on-one in-depth interviews from healthcare clinics in Jackson, Mississippi. Inductive thematic analysis was used to analyze focus group and interview transcripts.What did the researchers find?A total of 37 Black cisgender women across six groups participated in focus groups and eight cisgender Black women were interviewed. PrEP-naïve women reported: · HIV stigma in the community, which can lead to anticipated PrEP stigma · Experiencing sex-based sexual stigmatization at provider’s offices when seeking HIV testing PrEP-experienced Black women reported: Experiencing stigma when disclosing their PrEP use, such as their family and friends thinking that the woman and/or her partner is living with HIV. PrEP-experienced Black women who were in serodifferent partnership and had others in their network who knew about PrEP received support to take PrEP.What do the findings mean?Improving social support and stigma mitigation strategies could help improve PrEP initiation and adherence among cisgender Black women at-risk of acquiring HIV in the U.S. South. This includes educating communities on HIV and PrEP, and training providers on stigma-mitigating strategies when serving Black women in the U.S. South. | eng |
JYNNEOS vaccine safety surveillance in the vaccine safety datalink during the 2022 mpox outbreak in the United States
Duffy J , Yih WK , Walton K , DeSilva MB , Glanz JM , Hambidge SJ , Jackson LA , Klein NP , Lewin BJ , Naleway AL , Sundaram ME , Maro JC , Weintraub E . Infection 2024 BACKGROUND: The JYNNEOS vaccine (two doses given 28 days apart) was recommended in the United States for people at high risk of exposure to monkeypox virus during the 2022 mpox outbreak. Our objective was to assess the safety of JYNNEOS using two complementary epidemiologic methods. METHODS: This observational cohort included patients of eight large integrated healthcare organizations who received JYNNEOS. Adverse events were identified using ICD-10 coded diagnoses assigned to medical visits. The first analysis used standardized incidence ratios (SIR) to compare the observed incidence of ten prespecified adverse events of special interest (AESI) during the 28 days after receipt of each dose of JYNNEOS to the expected incidence adjusted for several risk factors. The second analysis used tree-based data mining to identify temporal clustering of cases for more than 60,000 diagnoses and diagnosis groups within 70-days after JYNNEOS dose 1 administration. RESULTS: The SIR analysis included 53,583 adults who received JYNNEOS dose 1 and 38,206 who received dose 2. Males received 92% of the doses. There were no statistically significant elevated SIRs for any of the ten AESI. The tree-based data mining analysis included 36,912 vaccinees. Analysis of diagnoses in inpatient, emergency department, and outpatient settings identified statistically significant clusters of visits for rash and unspecified adverse effects. CONCLUSIONS: No new or unexpected safety concerns were identified. AESI did not occur more frequently than expected by chance alone. Non-serious medically attended adverse events, such as rash, have been previously reported and occurred infrequently. |
Transgender Latinas' perspectives on HIV PrEP uptake, condom use, and medically supervised gender-affirming hormone therapy: Insights from ChiCAS Qualitative Interviews
Smart BD , Alonzo J , Mann-Jackson L , Aviles LR , Tanner AE , Galindo CA , Bessler PA , Courtenay-Quirk C , Garcia M , Aguilar-Palma SK , Reboussin BA , Rhodes SD . AIDS Educ Prev 2024 36 (5) 369-386 There is a dearth of HIV prevention behavioral interventions for transgender Latinas, despite this population's HIV risk. ChiCAS (Chicas Creando Acceso a la Salud) is an intervention to increase PrEP, condom, and gender-affirming hormone therapy (GAHT) use among transgender Latinas. To inform future work, semistructured interviews were conducted postintervention with 28 ChiCAS participants. Thematic analysis with inductive coding was used. Six themes emerged: (1) health-related priorities include sexual health and avoiding discrimination; (2) safe and collaborative community is of high importance; (3) interactive education with time for sharing stories and discussion was valued; (4) PrEP uptake was facilitated through awareness and health care navigation; (5) accessing GAHT depends on cost, clinic location, and individual goals; (6) ChiCAS could be improved with more PrEP/GAHT details and social connection. Interventions with goals similar to those of ChiCAS should prioritize building community, PrEP and GAHT education tailored to participants' needs, and emphasize health care options available locally. |
Antihypertensive medication adherence and medical costs, health care use, and labor productivity among people with hypertension
Lee JS , Segura Escano R , Therrien NL , Kumar A , Bhatt A , Pollack LM , Jackson SL , Luo F . J Am Heart Assoc 2024 13 (21) e037357 BACKGROUND: Hypertension affects nearly half of US adults yet remains inadequately controlled in over three-quarters of these cases. This study aimed to assess the association between adherence to antihypertensive medications and total medical costs, health care use, and productivity-related outcomes. METHODS AND RESULTS: We conducted cross-sectional analyses using MarketScan databases, which included individuals aged 18 to 64 years with noncapitated health insurance plans in 2019. Adherence was defined as ≥80% medication possession ratio for prescribed antihypertensive medications. We used a generalized linear model to estimate total medical costs, a negative binomial model to estimate health care use (emergency department visits and inpatient admissions), an exponential hurdle model to estimate productivity-related outcomes (number of sick absences, short-term disability, long-term disability), and a 2-part model to estimate productivity-related costs in 2019 US dollars. All models were adjusted for age, sex, urbanicity, census region, and comorbidities. We reported average marginal effects for outcomes related to antihypertensive medication adherence. Among 379 503 individuals with hypertension in 2019, 54.4% adhered to antihypertensives. Per person, antihypertensive medication adherence was associated with $1441 lower total medical costs, $11 lower sick absence costs, $291 lower short-term disability costs, and $69 lower long-term disability costs. Per 1000 individuals, medication adherence was associated with lower health care use, including 200 fewer emergency department visits and 90 fewer inpatient admissions, and productivity-related outcomes, including 20 fewer sick absence days and 442 fewer short-term disability days. CONCLUSIONS: Adherence to antihypertensives was consistently associated with lower total medical costs, reduced health care use, and improved productivity-related outcomes. |
Genomic epidemiology of extrapulmonary nontuberculous mycobacteria isolates at emerging infections program sites - United States, 2019-2020
Masters TL , Toney NC , Ewing TO , McAllister G , Mathis MH , Grigg C , Magill SS , Jackson KA , Byram R , See I , Salfinger M , Barter D , Johnston H , Lynfield R , Vagnone PS , Tourdot L , Anderson BJ , Dumyati G , Pierce R , Lutgring JD , Gargis A , McKay S . J Infect Dis 2024 BACKGROUND: Nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) cause pulmonary and extrapulmonary infections. Although isolation of NTM from clinical specimens has increased nationally, few studies delineated the molecular characteristics of extrapulmonary NTM. METHODS: Extrapulmonary isolates were collected by four Emerging Infections Program sites from October 2019 to March 2020 and underwent laboratory characterization, including matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry, Sanger DNA sequencing, and whole genome sequencing. Bioinformatics analyses were employed to identify species, sequence types (STs), antimicrobial resistance (AR), and virulence genes; isolates were further characterized by phylogenetic analyses. RESULTS: Among 45 isolates, the predominant species were Mycobacterium avium (n=20, 44%), Mycobacterium chelonae (n=7, 16%), and Mycobacterium fortuitum (n=6, 13%). The collection represented 31 STs across 10 species; the most common ST was ST11 (M. avium, n=7). Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium abscessus isolates harbored multiple genes conferring resistance to aminoglycosides, beta-lactams, and macrolides. No known AR mutations were detected in rpoB, 16S, or 23S rRNAs. Slow-growing NTM species harbored multiple virulence genes including type-VII secretion components, adhesion factors, and phospholipase C. CONCLUSION: Continued active laboratory- and population-based surveillance will further inform the prevalence of NTM species and STs, monitor emerging clones, and allow AR characterization. |
Blood pressure cuff sizes for pregnant women in the United States: Findings from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
Shahi S , Streeter TE , Wall HK , Zhou W , Kuklina EV , Jackson SL . Am J Hypertens 2024 BACKGROUND: The use of correctly-sized blood pressure (BP) cuffs is important to ensure accurate measurement and effective management of hypertension. The goals of this study were to determine the proportions of pregnant women that would require small, adult, large, and extra-large (XL) cuff sizes, and to examine the demographic characteristics associated with need for a large or XL cuff. METHODS: This cross-sectional study analyzed 1,176 pregnant women (≥18 years) included in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2006 cycles. Recommended BP cuff sizes, based on American Heart Association recommendations, were categorized by mid-arm circumference: small adult (≤26 cm), adult (>26 to ≤34 cm), large (>34 to ≤44 cm), and extra-large (XL) (>44 cm). RESULTS: Among US pregnant women, recommended cuff sizes were: 17.9% small adult, 57.0% adult, and 25.1% for large or XL. About 38.5% of non-Hispanic Black, 21.6% of Mexican American and 21.0% of non-Hispanic White pregnant women required a large or XL cuff. About 81.8% of women in the highest quartile for BMI required large or XL cuffs, which was significantly higher than women in other quartiles. CONCLUSION: Roughly one out of every four pregnant women required large or XL BP cuffs. The requirement for large or XL cuffs was highest among non-Hispanic Black women and women with the highest BMI. For pregnant women, measuring the arm circumference and selecting an appropriately-sized cuff is important to facilitate accurate blood pressure monitoring and hypertension management. |
Rat-tail models for studying hand-arm vibration syndrome: A comparison between living and cadaver rat tails
Warren CM , Xu XS , Jackson M , McKinney WG , Wu JZ , Welcome DE , Waugh S , Chapman P , Sinsel EW , Service S , Krajnak K , Dong RG . Vib 2024 7 (3) 722-737 Over-exposure of the hand-arm system to intense vibration and force over time may cause degeneration of the vascular, neurological, and musculoskeletal systems in the fingers. A novel animal model using rat tails has been developed to understand the health effects on human fingers exposed to vibration and force when operating powered hand tools or workpieces. The biodynamic responses, such as vibration stress, strain, and power absorption density, of the rat tails can be used to help evaluate the health effects related to vibration and force and to establish a dose-effect relationship. While the biodynamic responses of cadaver rat tails have been investigated, the objective of the current study was to determine whether the biodynamic responses of living rat tails are different from those of cadaver rat tails, and whether the biodynamic responses of both living and cadaver tails change with exposure duration. To make direct comparisons, the responses of both cadaver and living rat tails were examined on four different testing stations. The transfer function of each tail under a given contact force (2 N) was measured at each frequency in the one-third octave bands from 20 to 1000 Hz, and used to calculate the mechanical system parameters of the tails. The transfer functions were also measured at different exposure durations to determine the time dependency of the response. Differences were observed in the vibration biodynamic responses between living and cadaver tails, but the general trends were similar. The biodynamic responses of both cadaver and living rat tails varied with exposure duration. © 2024 by the authors. |
Cardiovascular disease mortality trends, 2010-2022: An update with final data
Woodruff RC , Tong X , Loustalot F , Khan SS , Shah NS , Jackson SL , Vaughan AS . Am J Prev Med 2024 INTRODUCTION: Age-adjusted mortality rates (AAMR) for cardiovascular diseases (CVD) increased in 2020 and 2021, and provisional data indicated an increase in 2022, resulting in substantial excess CVD deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic. Updated estimates using final data for 2022 are needed. METHODS: The National Vital Statistics System's final Multiple Cause of Death files were analyzed in 2024 to calculate AAMR from 2010 to 2022 and excess deaths from 2020 to 2022 for US adults aged ≥35 years, with CVD as the underlying cause of death. RESULTS: The CVD AAMR among adults aged ≥35 years in 2022 was 434.6 deaths per 100,000 (95% CI: 433.8, 435.5), which was lower than in 2021 (451.8 deaths per 100,000; 95% CI: 450.9, 452.7). The most recent year with a similarly high CVD AAMR as in 2022 was 2012 (434.7 deaths per 100,000 population, 95% CI: 433.8, 435.7). The CVD AAMR for 2022 calculated using provisional data over-estimated the AAMR calculated using final data by 4.6% (95% CI: 4.3%, 4.9%) or 19.9 (95% CI: 18.6, 21.2) deaths per 100,000 population. From 2020 to 2022, an estimated 190,661 (95% CI: 158,139, 223,325) excess CVD deaths occurred. CONCLUSIONS: In 2022, the CVD AAMR among adults aged ≥35 years did not increase, but rather declined from a peak in 2021, signaling improvements in adverse mortality trends that began in 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the 2022 CVD AAMR remains higher than observed before the COVID-19 pandemic, indicating an ongoing need for cardiovascular disease prevention, detection, and management. |
Haemophilus influenzae type B vaccine immunogenicity in American Indian/Alaska Native infants
Jackson BD , Miernyk K , Steinberg J , Beaudry J , Christensen L , Chukwuma U , Clichee D , Damon S , Farrenkopf BA , Hurley C , Luna J , Simons B , Singleton R , Thomas M , VanDeRiet D , Weatherholtz R , Zeger S , Zylstra S , Keck J , Hammitt LL . Pediatrics 2024 OBJECTIVES: American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) infants historically experienced a disproportionate burden of invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) disease, especially early in life. PedvaxHIB vaccine is preferentially recommended for AI/AN infants because it elicits protective antibody levels postdose 1. Vaxelis, a hexavalent vaccine that contains the same Hib conjugate as PedvaxHIB but at lower concentration, is recommended for US children, but postdose 1 Hib immunogenicity data are needed to inform whether a preferential recommendation should be made for AI/AN infants. METHODS: We conducted a phase IV randomized, open-label, noninferiority trial comparing postdose 1 immunogenicity of Vaxelis to PedvaxHIB in AI/AN infants. Participants were randomized to receive a primary series of PedvaxHIB or Vaxelis. Serum samples collected 30 days postdose 1 were tested for anti-Hib immunoglobulin G antibody by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The anti-Hib immunoglobulin G geometric mean concentration (GMC) ratio (Vaxelis/PedvaxHIB) was estimated by constrained longitudinal data analysis. Noninferiority was defined a priori as the lower bound of the 95% confidence interval (CI) of the GMC ratio ≥0.67. RESULTS: A total of 327 of the 333 infants enrolled in the study were included in the per-protocol analysis. The postdose 1 anti-Hib GMC was 0.41 µg/mL (95% CI 0.33-0.52) in the Vaxelis group (n = 152) and 0.39 µg/mL (95% CI 0.31-0.50) in the PedvaxHIB group (n = 146). The constrained longitudinal data analysis GMC ratio was 1.03 (95% CI 0.76-1.39). CONCLUSIONS: Postdose 1 immunogenicity of Vaxelis was noninferior to PedvaxHIB. Our findings support the use of Vaxelis in AI/AN children, a population with elevated risk of Hib disease. |
Hypertension-associated expenditures among privately insured US adults in 2021
Kumar A , He S , Pollack LM , Lee JS , Imoisili O , Wang Y , Kompaniyets L , Luo F , Jackson SL . Hypertension 2024 BACKGROUND: There are no recent estimates for hypertension-associated medical expenditures. This study aims to estimate hypertension-associated incremental medical expenditures among privately insured US adults. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective cohort study using IQVIA's Ambulatory Electronic Medical Records-US data set linked with PharMetrics Plus claims data. Among privately insured adults aged 18 to 64 years, hypertension was identified as having ≥1 diagnosis code or ≥2 blood pressure measurements of ≥140/90 mm Hg, or ≥1 antihypertensive medication in 2021. Annual total expenditures (in 2021 $US) were estimated using a generalized linear model with gamma distribution and log-link function adjusting for demographic characteristics and cooccurring conditions. Out-of-pocket expenditures were estimated using a 2-part model that included logistic and generalized linear model regression. Overlap propensity score weights from logistic regression were used to obtain a balanced sample on hypertension status. RESULTS: Among the 393 018 adults, 156 556 (40%) were identified with hypertension. Compared with individuals without hypertension, those with hypertension had $2926 (95% CI, $2681-$3170) higher total expenditures and $328 (95% CI, $300-$355) higher out-of-pocket expenditures. Adults with hypertension had higher total inpatient ($3272 [95% CI, $1458-$5086]) and outpatient ($2189 [95% CI, $2009-$2369]) expenditures when compared with those without hypertension. Hypertension-associated incremental total expenditures were higher for women ($3242 [95% CI, $2915-$3569]) than for men ($2521 [95% CI, $2139-$2904]). CONCLUSIONS: Among privately insured US adults, hypertension was associated with higher medical expenditures, including higher inpatient and out-of-pocket expenditures. These findings may help assess the economic value of interventions effective in preventing hypertension. |
Alzheimer's disease and related dementia diagnoses among American Indian and Alaska Native adults aged ≥45 years, Indian Health Service System, 2016-2020
Apostolou A , Kennedy JL , Person MK , Jackson EMJ , Finke B , McGuire LC , Matthews KA . J Am Geriatr Soc 2024 BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease is the most common type of dementia and is responsible for up to 80% of dementia diagnoses and is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States. An estimated 38,000 American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) people aged ≥65 years were living with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) in 2020, a number expected to double by 2030 and quadruple by 2050. Administrative healthcare data from the Indian Health Service (IHS) were used to estimate ADRD among AI/AN populations. METHODS: Administrative IHS healthcare data from federal fiscal years 2016 to 2020 from the IHS National Data Warehouse were used to calculate the count and rate per 100,000 AI/AN adults aged ≥45 years with at least one ADRD diagnosis code on their medical record. RESULTS: This study identified 12,877 AI/AN adults aged ≥45 years with an ADRD diagnosis code, with an overall rate of 514 per 100,000. Of those, 1856 people were aged 45-64. Females were 1.2 times (95% confidence interval: 1.1-1.2) more likely than males to have a medical visit with an ADRD diagnosis code. CONCLUSIONS: Many AI/AN people with ADRD rely on IHS, tribal, and urban Indian health programs. The high burden of ADRD in AI/AN populations aged 45-64 utilizing IHS health services highlights the need for implementation of ADRD risk reduction strategies and assessment and diagnosis of ADRD in younger AI/AN populations. This study provides a baseline to assess future progress for efforts addressing ADRD in AI/AN communities. |
Impact of state telehealth parity laws for private payers on hypertension medication adherence before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
Zhang D , Lee JS , Popoola A , Lee S , Jackson SL , Pollack LM , Dong X , Therrien NL , Luo F . Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes 2024 e010739 BACKGROUND: Telehealth has emerged as an effective tool for managing common chronic conditions such as hypertension, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the impact of state telehealth payment and coverage parity laws on hypertension medication adherence remains uncertain. METHODS: Data from the 2016 to 2021 Merative MarketScan Commercial Claims and Encounters Database were used to construct the study cohort, which included nonpregnant individuals aged 25 to 64 years with hypertension. We coded telehealth parity laws related to hypertension management in all 50 US states and the District of Columbia, distinguishing between payment and coverage parity laws. The primary outcomes were measures of antihypertension medication adherence: the average medication possession ratio; medication adherence (medication possession ratio ≥80%); and average number of days of drug supply. We used a generalized difference-in-differences design to examine the impact of these laws. RESULTS: Among 353 220 individuals (mean [SD] age, 49.5 (7.1) years; female, 45.55%), states with payment parity laws were significantly linked to increased average medication possession ratio by 0.43 percentage point (95% CI, 0.07-0.79), and an increase of 0.46 percentage point (95% CI, 0.06-0.92) in the probability of medication adherence. Payment parity laws also led to an average increase of 2.14 days (95% CI, 0.11-4.17) in prescription supply, after controlling for state-fixed effects, year-fixed effects, individual sociodemographic characteristics and state time-varying covariates including unemployment rates, gross domestic product per capita, and poverty rates. In contrast, coverage parity laws were associated with a 2.13-day increase (95% CI, 0.19-4.07) in days of prescription supply but did not significantly increase the average medication possession ratio or probability of medication adherence. CONCLUSIONS: State telehealth payment parity laws were significantly associated with greater medication adherence, whereas coverage parity laws were not. With the increasing adoption of telehealth parity laws across states, these findings may support policymakers in understanding potential implications on management of hypertension. |
Systemic and immunotoxicity induced by topical application of perfluoroheptane sulfonic acid (PFHpS) or perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) in a murine model
Weatherly LM , Shane HL , Jackson LG , Lukomska E , Baur R , Cooper MP , Anderson SE . J Immunotoxicol 2024 21 (1) 2371868 Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are a large group of synthetic surfactants of over 12,000 compounds that are incorporated into numerous products for their chemical and physical properties. Studies have associated PFAS with adverse health effects. Although there is a high potential for dermal exposure, these studies are lacking. The present study evaluated the systemic and immunotoxicity of subchronic 28- or 10-days of dermal exposure, respectively, to PFHpS (0.3125-2.5% or 7.82-62.5 mg/kg/dose) or PFOS (0.5% or 12.5 mg/kg/dose) in a murine model. Elevated levels of PFHpS were detected in the serum and urine, suggesting that absorption is occurring through the dermal route. PFHpS induced significantly increased relative liver weight, significantly decreased relative spleen and thymus weight, altered serum chemistries, and altered histopathology. Additionally, PFHpS significantly reduced the humoral immune response and altered immune subsets in the spleen, suggesting immunosuppression. Gene expression changes were observed in the liver, skin, and spleen of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism, necrosis, and inflammation. Immune-cell phenotyping identified significant decreases in B-cells and CD11b(+) monocyte and/or macrophages in the spleen along with decreases in eosinophils and dendritic cells in the skin. These findings support PFHpS absorption through the skin leading to liver damage and immune suppression. |
Pediatric lipid screening prevalence using nationwide electronic medical records
Thompson-Paul AM , Kraus EM , Porter RM , Pierce SL , Kompaniyets L , Sekkarie A , Goodman AB , Jackson SL . JAMA Netw Open 2024 7 (7) e2421724 IMPORTANCE: Universal screening to identify unfavorable lipid levels is recommended for US children aged 9 to 11 years and adolescents aged 17 to 21 years (hereafter, young adults); however, screening benefits in these individuals have been questioned. Current use of lipid screening and prevalence of elevated lipid measurements among US youths is not well understood. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the prevalence of ambulatory pediatric lipid screening and elevated or abnormal lipid measurements among US screened youths by patient characteristic and test type. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cross-sectional study used data from the IQVIA Ambulatory Electronic Medical Record database and included youths aged 9 to 21 years with 1 or more valid measurement of height and weight during the observation period (2018-2021). Body mass index (BMI) was calculated and categorized using standard pediatric BMI percentiles (9-19 years) and adult BMI categories (≥20 years). The data were analyzed from October 6, 2022, to January 18, 2023. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Lipid measurements were defined as abnormal if 1 or more of the following test results was identified: total cholesterol (≥200 mg/dL), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (≥130 mg/dL), very low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (≥31 mg/dL), non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (≥145 mg/dL), and triglycerides (≥100 mg/dL for children aged 9 years or ≥130 mg/dL for patients aged 10-21 years). After adjustment for age group, sex, race and ethnicity, and BMI category, adjusted prevalence ratios (aPRs) and 95% CIs were calculated. RESULTS: Among 3 226 002 youths (23.9% aged 9-11 years, 34.8% aged 12-16 years, and 41.3% aged 17-21 years; 1 723 292 females [53.4%]; 60.0% White patients, 9.5% Black patients, and 2.4% Asian patients), 11.3% had 1 or more documented lipid screening tests. The frequency of lipid screening increased by age group (9-11 years, 9.0%; 12-16 years, 11.1%; 17-21 years, 12.9%) and BMI category (range, 9.2% [healthy weight] to 21.9% [severe obesity]). Among those screened, 30.2% had abnormal lipid levels. Compared with youths with a healthy weight, prevalence of an abnormal result was higher among those with overweight (aPR, 1.58; 95% CI, 1.56-1.61), moderate obesity (aPR, 2.16; 95% CI, 2.14-2.19), and severe obesity (aPR, 2.53; 95% CI, 2.50-2.57). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this cross-sectional study of prevalence of lipid screening among US youths aged 9 to 21 years, approximately 1 in 10 were screened. Among them, abnormal lipid levels were identified in 1 in 3 youths overall and 1 in 2 youths with severe obesity. Health care professionals should consider implementing lipid screening among children aged 9 to 11 years, young adults aged 17 to 21 years, and all youths at high cardiovascular risk. |
Preventive service usage and new chronic disease diagnoses: Using PCORnet data to identify emerging trends, United States, 2018-2022
Jackson SL , Lekiachvili A , Block JP , Richards TB , Nagavedu K , Draper CC , Koyama AK , Womack LS , Carton TW , Mayer KH , Rasmussen SA , Trick WE , Chrischilles EA , Weiner MG , Podila PSB , Boehmer TK , Wiltz JL . Prev Chronic Dis 2024 21 E49 BACKGROUND: Data modernization efforts to strengthen surveillance capacity could help assess trends in use of preventive services and diagnoses of new chronic disease during the COVID-19 pandemic, which broadly disrupted health care access. METHODS: This cross-sectional study examined electronic health record data from US adults aged 21 to 79 years in a large national research network (PCORnet), to describe use of 8 preventive health services (N = 30,783,825 patients) and new diagnoses of 9 chronic diseases (N = 31,588,222 patients) during 2018 through 2022. Joinpoint regression assessed significant trends, and health debt was calculated comparing 2020 through 2022 volume to prepandemic (2018 and 2019) levels. RESULTS: From 2018 to 2022, use of some preventive services increased (hemoglobin A(1c) and lung computed tomography, both P < .05), others remained consistent (lipid testing, wellness visits, mammograms, Papanicolaou tests or human papillomavirus tests, stool-based screening), and colonoscopies or sigmoidoscopies declined (P < .01). Annual new chronic disease diagnoses were mostly stable (6% hypertension; 4% to 5% cholesterol; 4% diabetes; 1% colonic adenoma; 0.1% colorectal cancer; among women, 0.5% breast cancer), although some declined (lung cancer, cervical intraepithelial neoplasia or carcinoma in situ, cervical cancer, all P < .05). The pandemic resulted in health debt, because use of most preventive services and new diagnoses of chronic disease were less than expected during 2020; these partially rebounded in subsequent years. Colorectal screening and colonic adenoma detection by age group aligned with screening recommendation age changes during this period. CONCLUSION: Among over 30 million patients receiving care during 2018 through 2022, use of preventive services and new diagnoses of chronic disease declined in 2020 and then rebounded, with some remaining health debt. These data highlight opportunities to augment traditional surveillance with EHR-based data. |
COVID-19 vaccination in the first trimester and major structural birth defects among live births
Kharbanda EO , DeSilva MB , Lipkind HS , Romitti PA , Zhu J , Vesco KK , Boyce TG , Daley MF , Fuller CC , Getahun D , Jackson LA , Williams JTB , Zerbo O , Weintraub ES , Vazquez-Benitez G . JAMA Pediatr 2024 IMPORTANCE: COVID-19 vaccination is recommended throughout pregnancy to prevent pregnancy complications and adverse birth outcomes associated with COVID-19 disease. To date, data on birth defects after first-trimester vaccination are limited. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the associated risks for selected major structural birth defects among live-born infants after first-trimester receipt of a messenger RNA (mRNA) COVID-19 vaccine. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a retrospective cohort study of singleton pregnancies with estimated last menstrual period (LMP) between September 13, 2020, and April 3, 2021, and ending in live birth from March 5, 2021, to January 25, 2022. Included were data from 8 health systems in California, Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Minnesota, and Wisconsin in the Vaccine Safety Datalink. EXPOSURES: Receipt of 1 or 2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine doses in the first trimester, as part of the primary series. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Selected major structural birth defects among live-born infants, identified from electronic health data using validated algorithms, with neural tube defects confirmed via medical record review. RESULTS: Among 42 156 eligible pregnancies (mean [SD] maternal age, 30.9 [5.0] years) 7632 (18.1%) received an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in the first trimester. Of 34 524 pregnancies without a first-trimester COVID-19 vaccination, 2045 (5.9%) were vaccinated before pregnancy, 13 494 (39.1%) during the second or third trimester, and 18 985 (55.0%) were unvaccinated before or during pregnancy. Compared with pregnant people unvaccinated in the first trimester, those vaccinated in the first trimester were older (mean [SD] age, 32.3 [4.5] years vs 30.6 [5.1] years) and differed by LMP date. After applying stabilized inverse probability weighting, differences in baseline characteristics between vaccinated and unvaccinated pregnant persons in the first trimester were negligible (standardized mean difference <0.20). Selected major structural birth defects occurred in 113 infants (1.48%) after first-trimester mRNA COVID-19 vaccination and in 488 infants (1.41%) without first-trimester vaccine exposure; the adjusted prevalence ratio was 1.02 (95% CI, 0.78-1.33). In secondary analyses, with major structural birth defect outcomes grouped by organ system, no significant differences between infants vaccinated or unvaccinated in the first trimester were identified. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this multisite cohort study, among live-born infants, first-trimester mRNA COVID-19 vaccine exposure was not associated with an increased risk for selected major structural birth defects. |
Validation of Multi-state EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS) Data and implications for improving data quality and representativeness
Hohman KH , Klompas M , Zambarano B , Wall HK , Jackson SL , Kraus EM . Prev Chronic Dis 2024 21 E43 INTRODUCTION: Surveillance modernization efforts emphasize the potential use of electronic health record (EHR) data to inform public health surveillance and prevention. However, EHR data streams vary widely in their completeness, accuracy, and representativeness. METHODS: We developed a validation process for the Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS) pilot project to identify and resolve data quality issues that could affect chronic disease prevalence estimates. We examined MENDS validation processes from December 2020 through August 2023 across 5 data-contributing organizations and outlined steps to resolve data quality issues. RESULTS: We identified gaps in the EHR databases of data contributors and in the processes to extract, map, integrate, and analyze their EHR data. Examples of source-data problems included missing data on race and ethnicity and zip codes. Examples of data processing problems included duplicate or missing patient records, lower-than-expected volumes of data, use of multiple fields for a single data type, and implausible values. CONCLUSION: Validation protocols identified critical errors in both EHR source data and in the processes used to transform these data for analysis. Our experience highlights the value and importance of data validation to improve data quality and the accuracy of surveillance estimates that use EHR data. The validation process and lessons learned can be applied broadly to other EHR-based surveillance efforts. |
COVID-19 vaccination coverage and factors associated with vaccine uptake among people with HIV
Hechter RC , Qian L , Liu IA , Sy LS , Ryan DS , Xu S , Williams JTB , Klein NP , Kaiser RM , Liles EG , Glanz JM , Jackson LA , Sundaram ME , Weintraub ES , Tseng HF . JAMA Netw Open 2024 7 (6) e2415220 IMPORTANCE: People with HIV (PWH) may be at increased risk for severe outcomes with COVID-19 illness compared with people without HIV. Little is known about COVID-19 vaccination coverage and factors associated with primary series completion among PWH. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate COVID-19 vaccination coverage among PWH and examine sociodemographic, clinical, and community-level factors associated with completion of the primary series and an additional primary dose. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective cohort study used electronic health record data to assess COVID-19 vaccination information from December 14, 2020, through April 30, 2022, from 8 health care organizations of the Vaccine Safety Datalink project in the US. Participants were adults diagnosed with HIV on or before December 14, 2020, enrolled in a participating site. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The percentage of PWH with at least 1 dose of COVID-19 vaccine and PWH who completed the COVID-19 vaccine primary series by December 31, 2021, and an additional primary dose by April 30, 2022. Rate ratios (RR) and 95% CIs were estimated using Poisson regression models for factors associated with completing the COVID-19 vaccine primary series and receiving an additional primary dose. RESULTS: Among 22 058 adult PWH (mean [SD] age, 52.1 [13.3] years; 88.8% male), 90.5% completed the primary series by December 31, 2021. Among 18 374 eligible PWH who completed the primary series by August 12, 2021, 15 982 (87.0%) received an additional primary dose, and 4318 (23.5%) received a booster dose by April 30, 2022. Receipt of influenza vaccines in the last 2 years was associated with completion of the primary series (RR, 1.17; 95% CI, 1.15-1.20) and an additional primary dose (RR, 1.61; 95% CI, 1.54-1.69). PWH with uncontrolled viremia (HIV viral load ≥200 copies/mL) (eg, RR, 0.90 [95% CI, 0.85-0.95] for viral load 200-10 000 copies/mL vs undetected or <200 copies/mL for completing the primary series) and Medicaid insurance (eg, RR, 0.89 [95% CI, 0.87-0.90] for completing the primary series) were less likely to be fully vaccinated. By contrast, greater outpatient utilization (eg, RR, 1.07 [95% CI, 1.05-1.09] for ≥7 vs 0 visits for primary series completion) and residence in counties with higher COVID-19 vaccine coverage (eg, RR, 1.06 [95% CI, 1.03-1.08] for fourth vs first quartiles for primary series completion) were associated with primary series and additional dose completion (RRs ranging from 1.01 to 1.21). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Findings from this cohort study suggest that, while COVID-19 vaccination coverage was high among PWH, outreach efforts should focus on those who did not complete vaccine series and those who have uncontrolled viremia. |
MENDS-on-FHIR: leveraging the OMOP common data model and FHIR standards for national chronic disease surveillance
Essaid S , Andre J , Brooks IM , Hohman KH , Hull M , Jackson SL , Kahn MG , Kraus EM , Mandadi N , Martinez AK , Mui JY , Zambarano B , Soares A . JAMIA Open 2024 7 (2) ooae045 OBJECTIVES: The Multi-State EHR-Based Network for Disease Surveillance (MENDS) is a population-based chronic disease surveillance distributed data network that uses institution-specific extraction-transformation-load (ETL) routines. MENDS-on-FHIR examined using Health Language Seven's Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (HL7(®) FHIR(®)) and US Core Implementation Guide (US Core IG) compliant resources derived from the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership (OMOP) Common Data Model (CDM) to create a standards-based ETL pipeline. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The input data source was a research data warehouse containing clinical and administrative data in OMOP CDM Version 5.3 format. OMOP-to-FHIR transformations, using a unique JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)-to-JSON transformation language called Whistle, created FHIR R4 V4.0.1/US Core IG V4.0.0 conformant resources that were stored in a local FHIR server. A REST-based Bulk FHIR $export request extracted FHIR resources to populate a local MENDS database. RESULTS: Eleven OMOP tables were used to create 10 FHIR/US Core compliant resource types. A total of 1.13 trillion resources were extracted and inserted into the MENDS repository. A very low rate of non-compliant resources was observed. DISCUSSION: OMOP-to-FHIR transformation results passed validation with less than a 1% non-compliance rate. These standards-compliant FHIR resources provided standardized data elements required by the MENDS surveillance use case. The Bulk FHIR application programming interface (API) enabled population-level data exchange using interoperable FHIR resources. The OMOP-to-FHIR transformation pipeline creates a FHIR interface for accessing OMOP data. CONCLUSION: MENDS-on-FHIR successfully replaced custom ETL with standards-based interoperable FHIR resources using Bulk FHIR. The OMOP-to-FHIR transformations provide an alternative mechanism for sharing OMOP data. |
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