Last data update: Jan 21, 2025. (Total: 48615 publications since 2009)
Records 1-19 (of 19 Records) |
Query Trace: Judge AS[original query] |
---|
Neighborhood social deprivation and healthcare utilization, disability, and comorbidities among young adults with congenital heart defects: Congenital heart survey to recognize outcomes, needs, and well-being 2016-2019
Judge A , Kramer M , Downing KF , Andrews J , Oster ME , Benavides A , Nembhard WN , Farr SL . Birth Defects Res 2023 115 (17) 1608-1618 BACKGROUND: Research on the association between neighborhood social deprivation and health among adults with congenital heart defects (CHD) is sparse. METHODS: We evaluated the associations between neighborhood social deprivation and health care utilization, disability, and comorbidities using the population-based 2016-2019 Congenital Heart Survey To Recognize Outcomes, Needs, and well-beinG (CH STRONG) of young adults. Participants were identified from active birth defect surveillance systems in three U.S. sites and born with CHD between 1980 and 1997. We linked census tract-level 2017 American Community Survey information on median household income, percent of ≥25-year-old with greater than a high school degree, percent of ≥16-year-olds who are unemployed, and percent of families with children <18 years old living in poverty to survey data and used these variables to calculate a summary neighborhood social deprivation z-score, divided into tertiles. Adjusted prevalence ratios (aPR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) derived from a log-linear regression model with a Poisson distribution estimated the association between tertile of neighborhood social deprivation and healthcare utilization in previous year (no encounters, 1 and ≥2 emergency room [ER] visits, and hospital admission), ≥1 disability, and ≥1 comorbidities. We accounted for age, place of birth, sex at birth, presence of chromosomal anomalies, and CHD severity in all models, and, additionally educational attainment and work status in all models except disability. RESULTS: Of the 1435 adults with CHD, 43.8% were 19-24 years old, 54.4% were female, 69.8% were non-Hispanic White, and 33.7% had a severe CHD. Compared to the least deprived tertile, respondents in the most deprived tertile were more likely to have no healthcare visit (aPR: 1.5 [95% CI: 1.1, 2.1]), ≥2 ER visits (1.6 [1.1, 2.3]), or hospitalization (1.6 [1.1, 2.3]) in the previous 12 months, a disability (1.2 [1.0, 1.5]), and ≥1 cardiac comorbidities (1.8 [1.2, 2.7]). CONCLUSIONS: Neighborhood social deprivation may be a useful metric to identify patients needing additional resources and referrals. |
Reproductive health counseling and concerns among women with congenital heart defects with and without disabilities
Farr SL , Galindo M , Downing KF , Nembhard WN , Klewer SE , Judge AS , Bolin EH , Benavides A , Oster ME . J Womens Health (Larchmt) 2023 32 (7) 740-746 Background: Women with disabilities are less likely to receive reproductive health counseling than women without disabilities. Yet, little is known about reproductive health counseling and concerns among women with congenital heart defects (CHD) and disabilities. Methods: We used population-based survey data from 778 women aged 19 to 38 years with CHD to examine contraceptive and pregnancy counseling and pregnancy concerns and experiences by disability status, based on six validated questions on vision, hearing, mobility, cognition, self-care, and living independently. Multivariable Poisson regression was used to examine adjusted prevalence ratios between disability status and each outcome, adjusted for CHD severity, age, race/ethnicity, place of birth (Arkansas, Arizona, Georgia), and insurance type. Results: Women with disabilities (n = 323) were 1.4 and 2.3 times more likely than women without disabilities (n = 455) to receive clinician counseling on safe contraceptive methods and avoiding pregnancy because of their CHD. Women with CHD and disabilities, compared to those without disabilities, were more likely to be concerned about their ability to have children (aPR = 1.2) and to have delayed or avoided pregnancy (aPR = 2.2); they were less likely to have ever been pregnant (aPR = 0.7). Associations differed slightly across specific disability types. All associations remained after excluding 71 women with chromosomal anomalies. Conclusion: Among women with CHD, reproductive counseling, concerns, and experiences differ by disability status. |
Sexual Violence in Sport: American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Position Statement
AMSSM Sexual Violence in Sport Task Force , Koontz JS , Mountjoy M , Abbott KE , Aron CM , Basile KC , Carlson CT , Chang CJ , Diamond AB , Dugan SA , Hainline B , Herring SA , Hopkins BE , Joy EA , Judge JP , LaBotz M , Matuszak J , McDavis CJ , Myers RA , Nattiv A , Tanji JL , Wagner J , Roberts WO . Sports Health 2020 12 (4) 352-354 The American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) convened a group of experts to develop a position statement addressing the problem of sexual violence in sport. The AMSSM Sexual Violence in Sport Task Force held a series of meetings over 7 months, beginning in July 2019. Following a literature review, the task force used an iterative process and expert consensus to finalize the position statement. The objective of this position statement is to raise awareness of this critical issue among sports medicine physicians and to declare a commitment to engage in collaborative, multidisciplinary solutions to reduce sexual violence in sport. |
Shaping Future Generations of Public Health Researchers: Preventing Chronic Disease's Student Research Paper Contest
Jack L Jr . Prev Chronic Dis 2017 14 E96 Preventing Chronic Disease (PCD) is committed to providing opportunities for future generations of researchers to contribute to public health and develop critical writing and reviewing skills. Since its introduction in 2011, PCD’s Student Research Paper Contest has been a success; each year the journal receives manuscripts prepared by students from around the world, and the number of entries continues to increase. This year, PCD set a record of 72 student submissions. With so many entries, we decided that the only fair way to judge the submissions would be to establish 4 winning categories by level of education: high school, undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral. This year’s submissions addressed a range of topics related to the screening, surveillance, and use of population-based approaches to prevent and control chronic diseases and focused on such health conditions as arthritis, asthma, cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular health, obesity, depression, and others. |
Racial and ethnic disparities in socio-economic status, access to care, and healthcare utilisation among children with heart conditions, National Survey of Children's Health 2016-2019
Judge AS , Downing KF , Nembhard WN , Oster ME , Farr SL . Cardiol Young 2023 33 (12) 1-9 Among children with and without heart conditions of different race/ethnicities, upstream social determinants of health, such as socio-economic status, access to care, and healthcare utilisation, may vary. Using caregiver-reported data from the 2016-19 National Survey of Children's Health, we calculated the prevalence of caregiver employment and education, child's health insurance, usual place of medical care in the past 12 months, problems paying for child's care, ≥2 emergency room visits, and unmet healthcare needs by heart condition status and race/ethnicity (Hispanic, non-Hispanic Black, and non-Hispanic White). For each outcome, we used multivariable logistic regression to generate adjusted prevalence ratios controlling for child's age and sex. Of 2632 children with heart conditions and 104,841 without, 65.4% and 58.0% were non-Hispanic White and 52.0% and 51.1% were male, respectively. Children with heart conditions, compared to those without, were 1.7-2.6 times more likely to have problems paying for healthcare, have ≥2 emergency room visits, and have unmet healthcare needs. Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black children with heart conditions, compared to non-Hispanic White, were 1.5-3.2 times as likely to have caregivers employed <50 weeks in the past year and caregivers with ≤ high school education, public or no health insurance, no usual place of care, and ≥2 emergency room visits. Children with heart conditions, compared to those without, may have greater healthcare needs that more commonly go unmet. Among children with heart conditions, Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black children may experience lower socio-economic status and greater barriers to healthcare than non-Hispanic White children. |
HIV infection in Eastern and Southern Africa: Highest burden, largest challenges, greatest potential
Parker E , Judge MA , Macete E , Nhampossa T , Dorward J , Langa DC , de Schacht C , Couto A , Vaz P , Vitoria M , Molfino L , Idowu RT , Bhatt N , Naniche D , Le Souëf PN . South Afr J HIV Med 2021 22 (1) 1237 Background: The burden of HIV is especially concerning for Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA), as despite expansion of test-and-treat programmes, this region continues to experience significant challenges resulting from high rates of morbidity, mortality and new infections. Hard-won lessons from programmes on the ground in ESA should be shared. Objectives: This report summarises relevant evidence and regional experts’ recommendations regarding challenges specific to ESA. Method: This commentary includes an in-depth review of relevant literature, progress against global goals and consensus opinion from experts. Results: Recommendations include priorities for essential research (surveillance data collection, key and vulnerable population education and testing, in-country testing trials and evidence-based support services to improve retention in care) as well as research that can accelerate progress towards the prevention of new infections and achieving ambitious global goals in ESA. Conclusion: The elimination of HIV in ESA will require continued investment, commitment to evidence-based programmes and persistence. Local research is critical to ensuring that responses in ESA are targeted, efficient and evaluated. © 2021. The Authors. Licensee: AOSIS. |
Sexual violence in sport: American Medical Society for Sports Medicine Position Statement
Koontz JS , Mountjoy M , Abbott KE , Aron CM , Basile KC , Carlson CT , Chang CJ , Diamond AB , Dugan SA , Hainline B , Herring SA , Hopkins E , Joy EA , Judge JP , LaBotz M , Matuszak J , McDavis CJ , Myers RA , Nattiv A , Tanji JL , Wagner J , Roberts WO . Clin J Sport Med 2020 30 (4) 291-292 The American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) convened a group of experts to develop a Position Statement addressing the problem of sexual violence in sport. The AMSSM Sexual Violence in Sport Task Force held a series of meetings over 7 months, beginning in July 2019. Following a literature review, the task force used an iterative process and expert consensus to finalize the Position Statement. The objective of this Position Statement is to raise awareness of this critical issue among sports medicine physicians and to declare a commitment to engage in collaborative, multidisciplinary solutions to reduce sexual violence in sport. |
Potential utility of pharmacy data to measure antibiotic use in nursing homes
Kabbani S , Palms DL , Bartoces M , Marek J , Stone ND , Hicks LA , Jump RLP . Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2019 40 (7) 1-2 Antibiotics are among the most commonly prescribed medications in nursing homes,Reference Gurwitz, Field, Judge, Rochon, Harrold and Cadoret1 and they are frequently prescribed inappropriately.Reference Lim, Kong and Stuart2, Reference Nicolle, Bentley, Garibaldi, Neuhaus and Smith3 The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services requires that all nursing homes have an antibiotic stewardship program and a system for monitoring antibiotic use.4 Antibiotic use can be monitored using different measures to identify potential targets for practice improvement and to track the impact of antibiotic stewardship interventions.Reference Mylotte5 The 2 most commonly used antibiotic use measures in nursing homes are antibiotic days of therapy and antibiotic starts.Reference Mylotte5, 6 |
Reporting the methods used in public health research and practice
Stroup DF , Smith CK , Truman BI . J Public Health Emerg 2017 1 The methods section of a scientific article often receives the most scrutiny from journal editors, peer reviewers, and skeptical readers because it allows them to judge the validity of the results. The methods section also facilitates critical interpretation of study activities, explains how the study avoided or corrected for bias, details how the data support the answer to the study question, justifies generalizing the findings to other populations, and facilitates comparison with past or future studies. In 2006, the Enhancing the QUAlity and Transparency Of health Research (EQUATOR) Programme began collecting and disseminating guidelines for reporting health research studies. In addition, guidelines for reporting public health investigations not classified as research have also been developed. However, regardless of the type of study or scientific report, the methods section should describe certain core elements: the study design; how participants were selected; the study setting; the period of interest; the variables and their definitions used for analysis; the procedures or instruments used to measure exposures, outcomes, and their association; and the analyses. Specific requirements for each study type should be consulted during the project planning phase and again when writing begins. We present requirements for reporting methods for public health activities, including outbreak investigations, public health surveillance programs, prevention and intervention program evaluations, research, surveys, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses. |
Large-scale implementation of disease control programmes: a cost-effectiveness analysis of long-lasting insecticide-treated bed net distribution channels in a malaria-endemic area of western Kenya-a study protocol
Gama E , Were V , Ouma P , Desai M , Niessen L , Buff AM , Kariuki S . BMJ Open 2016 6 (11) e012776 INTRODUCTION: Historically, Kenya has used various distribution models for long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets (LLINs) with variable results in population coverage. The models presently vary widely in scale, target population and strategy. There is limited information to determine the best combination of distribution models, which will lead to sustained high coverage and are operationally efficient and cost-effective. Standardised cost information is needed in combination with programme effectiveness estimates to judge the efficiency of LLIN distribution models and options for improvement in implementing malaria control programmes. The study aims to address the information gap, estimating distribution cost and the effectiveness of different LLIN distribution models, and comparing them in an economic evaluation. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Evaluation of cost and coverage will be determined for 5 different distribution models in Busia County, an area of perennial malaria transmission in western Kenya. Cost data will be collected retrospectively from health facilities, the Ministry of Health, donors and distributors. Programme-effectiveness data, defined as the number of people with access to an LLIN per 1000 population, will be collected through triangulation of data from a nationally representative, cross-sectional malaria survey, a cross-sectional survey administered to a subsample of beneficiaries in Busia County and LLIN distributors' records. Descriptive statistics and regression analysis will be used for the evaluation. A cost-effectiveness analysis will be performed from a health-systems perspective, and cost-effectiveness ratios will be calculated using bootstrapping techniques. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has been evaluated and approved by Kenya Medical Research Institute, Scientific and Ethical Review Unit (SERU number 2997). All participants will provide written informed consent. The findings of this economic evaluation will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications. |
Clinical evaluation of the BD FACSPresto Near-Patient CD4 Counter in Kenya
Angira F , Akoth B , Omolo P , Opollo V , Bornheimer S , Judge K , Tilahun H , Lu B , Omana-Zapata I , Zeh C . PLoS One 2016 11 (8) e0157939 BACKGROUND: The BD FACSPresto Near-Patient CD4 Counter was developed to expand HIV/AIDS management in resource-limited settings. It measures absolute CD4 counts (AbsCD4), percent CD4 (%CD4), and hemoglobin (Hb) from a single drop of capillary or venous blood in approximately 23 minutes, with throughput of 10 samples per hour. We assessed the performance of the BD FACSPresto system, evaluating accuracy, stability, linearity, precision, and reference intervals using capillary and venous blood at KEMRI/CDC HIV-research laboratory, Kisumu, Kenya, and precision and linearity at BD Biosciences, California, USA. METHODS: For accuracy, venous samples were tested using the BD FACSCalibur instrument with BD Tritest CD3/CD4/CD45 reagent, BD Trucount tubes, and BD Multiset software for AbsCD4 and %CD4, and the Sysmex KX-21N for Hb. Stability studies evaluated duration of staining (18-120-minute incubation), and effects of venous blood storage <6-24 hours post-draw. A normal cohort was tested for reference intervals. Precision covered multiple days, operators, and instruments. Linearity required mixing two pools of samples, to obtain evenly spaced concentrations for AbsCD4, total lymphocytes, and Hb. RESULTS: AbsCD4 and %CD4 venous/capillary (N = 189/ N = 162) accuracy results gave Deming regression slopes within 0.97-1.03 and R2 ≥0.96. For Hb, Deming regression results were R2 ≥0.94 and slope ≥0.94 for both venous and capillary samples. Stability varied within 10% 2 hours after staining and for venous blood stored less than 24 hours. Reference intervals results showed that gender-but not age-differences were statistically significant (p<0.05). Precision results had <3.5% coefficient of variation for AbsCD4, %CD4, and Hb, except for low AbsCD4 samples (<6.8%). Linearity was 42-4,897 cells/muL for AbsCD4, 182-11,704 cells/muL for total lymphocytes, and 2-24 g/dL for Hb. CONCLUSIONS: The BD FACSPresto system provides accurate, precise clinical results for capillary or venous blood samples and is suitable for near-patient CD4 testing. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02396355. |
World Health Organization estimates of the relative contributions of food to the burden of disease due to selected foodborne hazards: a structured expert elicitation
Hald T , Aspinall W , Devleesschauwer B , Cooke R , Corrigan T , Havelaar AH , Gibb HJ , Torgerson PR , Kirk MD , Angulo FJ , Lake RJ , Speybroeck N , Hoffmann S . PLoS One 2016 11 (1) e0145839 BACKGROUND: The Foodborne Disease Burden Epidemiology Reference Group (FERG) was established in 2007 by the World Health Organization (WHO) to estimate the global burden of foodborne diseases (FBDs). This estimation is complicated because most of the hazards causing FBD are not transmitted solely by food; most have several potential exposure routes consisting of transmission from animals, by humans, and via environmental routes including water. This paper describes an expert elicitation study conducted by the FERG Source Attribution Task Force to estimate the relative contribution of food to the global burden of diseases commonly transmitted through the consumption of food. METHODS AND FINDINGS: We applied structured expert judgment using Cooke's Classical Model to obtain estimates for 14 subregions for the relative contributions of different transmission pathways for eleven diarrheal diseases, seven other infectious diseases and one chemical (lead). Experts were identified through international networks followed by social network sampling. Final selection of experts was based on their experience including international working experience. Enrolled experts were scored on their ability to judge uncertainty accurately and informatively using a series of subject-matter specific 'seed' questions whose answers are unknown to the experts at the time they are interviewed. Trained facilitators elicited the 5th, and 50th and 95th percentile responses to seed questions through telephone interviews. Cooke's Classical Model uses responses to the seed questions to weigh and aggregate expert responses. After this interview, the experts were asked to provide 5th, 50th, and 95th percentile estimates for the 'target' questions regarding disease transmission routes. A total of 72 experts were enrolled in the study. Ten panels were global, meaning that the experts should provide estimates for all 14 subregions, whereas the nine panels were subregional, with experts providing estimates for one or more subregions, depending on their experience in the region. The size of the 19 hazard-specific panels ranged from 6 to 15 persons with several experts serving on more than one panel. Pathogens with animal reservoirs (e.g. non-typhoidal Salmonella spp. and Toxoplasma gondii) were in general assessed by the experts to have a higher proportion of illnesses attributable to food than pathogens with mainly a human reservoir, where human-to-human transmission (e.g. Shigella spp. and Norovirus) or waterborne transmission (e.g. Salmonella Typhi and Vibrio cholerae) were judged to dominate. For many pathogens, the foodborne route was assessed relatively more important in developed subregions than in developing subregions. The main exposure routes for lead varied across subregions, with the foodborne route being assessed most important only in two subregions of the European region. CONCLUSIONS: For the first time, we present worldwide estimates of the proportion of specific diseases attributable to food and other major transmission routes. These findings are essential for global burden of FBD estimates. While gaps exist, we believe the estimates presented here are the best current source of guidance to support decision makers when allocating resources for control and intervention, and for future research initiatives. |
Epidemiologic Investigation of a Cluster of Neuroinvasive Bacillus cereus Infections in 5 Patients With Acute Myelogenous Leukemia.
Rhee C , Klompas M , Tamburini FB , Fremin BJ , Chea N , Epstein L , Halpin AL , Guh A , Gallen R , Coulliette A , Gee J , Hsieh C , Desjardins CA , Pedamullu CS , DeAngelo DJ , Manzo VE , Folkerth RD , Milner DA Jr , Pecora N , Osborne M , Chalifoux-Judge D , Bhatt AS , Yokoe DS . Open Forum Infect Dis 2015 2 (3) ofv096 BACKGROUND: Five neuroinvasive Bacillus cereus infections (4 fatal) occurred in hospitalized patients with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) during a 9-month period, prompting an investigation by infection control and public health officials. METHODS: Medical records of case-patients were reviewed and a matched case-control study was performed. Infection control practices were observed. Multiple environmental, food, and medication samples common to AML patients were cultured. Multilocus sequence typing was performed for case and environmental B cereus isolates. RESULTS: All 5 case-patients received chemotherapy and had early-onset neutropenic fevers that resolved with empiric antibiotics. Fever recurred at a median of 17 days (range, 9-20) with headaches and abrupt neurological deterioration. Case-patients had B cereus identified in central nervous system (CNS) samples by (1) polymerase chain reaction or culture or (2) bacilli seen on CNS pathology stains with high-grade B cereus bacteremia. Two case-patients also had colonic ulcers with abundant bacilli on autopsy. No infection control breaches were observed. On case-control analysis, bananas were the only significant exposure shared by all 5 case-patients (odds ratio, 9.3; P = .04). Five environmental or food isolates tested positive for B cereus, including a homogenized banana peel isolate and the shelf of a kitchen cart where bananas were stored. Multilocus sequence typing confirmed that all case and environmental strains were genetically distinct. Multilocus sequence typing-based phylogenetic analysis revealed that the organisms clustered in 2 separate clades. CONCLUSIONS: The investigation of this neuroinvasive B cereus cluster did not identify a single point source but was suggestive of a possible dietary exposure. Our experience underscores the potential virulence of B cereus in immunocompromised hosts. |
Obesity, diabetes, and the moving targets of healthy-years estimation
Gregg E . Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol 2014 3 (2) 93-4 Many studies have attempted to quantify the effect of obesity on death, fueling a sustained controversy about which levels of bodyweight can harm health.1 However, many investigators have argued that life expectancy does not capture the essence of the damage that obesity causes across a lifetime and that better long-term metrics are needed to convey risk, judge interventions, and motivate behaviour.2 In The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, Steven Grover and colleagues3 model the effect of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in people who are overweight or obese and show what is intuitively known, but not often quantified, about obesity—that its effect on the number of number of healthy-years lost is far greater than its effect on total years of life. | Constructing a model from cohort studies about the probability of transition to diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and death, Grover and colleagues'3 study used data for obesity, blood pressure, glucose concentrations, lipid concentrations, and other risk factors from 3992 non-Hispanic white participants from the US National Heath and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2003–10 to estimate the life years and healthy life-years lost associated with different levels of overweight and obesity. |
Unpredictable and difficult to control - the adolescence of West Nile virus
Petersen LR , Fischer M . N Engl J Med 2012 367 (14) 1281-4 Disturbingly unpredictable, disagreeable, and difficult to control - West Nile virus, first identified in the United States in 1999, has entered adolescence. In this year's tally, 3142 cases of West Nile virus disease in humans in 45 states had been reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as of September 18, 2012, including 1630 cases of resulting neuroinvasive disease (meningitis, encephalitis, acute flaccid paralysis) and 134 deaths. Almost 40% (1225) of all cases were reported in Texas, mostly in Dallas and surrounding counties (see maps). To judge from past reporting trends, these figures suggest that this year's West . . . |
Is operational research delivering the goods? The journey to success in low-income countries
Zachariah R , Ford N , Maher D , Bissell K , Van den Bergh R , van den Boogaard W , Reid T , Castro KG , Draguez B , von Schreeb J , Chakaya J , Atun R , Lienhardt C , Enarson DA , Harries AD . Lancet Infect Dis 2012 12 (5) 415-21 Operational research in low-income countries has a key role in filling the gap between what we know from research and what we do with that knowledge-the so-called know-do gap, or implementation gap. Planned research that does not tangibly affect policies and practices is ineffective and wasteful, especially in settings where resources are scarce and disease burden is high. Clear parameters are urgently needed to measure and judge the success of operational research. We define operational research and its relation with policy and practice, identify why operational research might fail to affect policy and practice, and offer possible solutions to address these shortcomings. We also propose measures of success for operational research. Adoption and use of these measures could help to ensure that operational research better changes policy and practice and improves health-care delivery and disease programmes. |
Economic analysis of nutrition interventions for chronic disease prevention: methods, research, and policy
Wong JB , Coates PM , Russell RM , Dwyer JT , Schuttinga JA , Bowman BA , Peterson SA . Nutr Rev 2011 69 (9) 533-549 Increased interest in the potential societal benefit of incorporating health economics as a part of clinical translational science, particularly nutrition interventions, led the Office of Dietary Supplements at the National Institutes of Health to sponsor a conference to address key questions about the economic analysis of nutrition interventions to enhance communication among health economic methodologists, researchers, reimbursement policy makers, and regulators. Issues discussed included the state of the science, such as what health economic methods are currently used to judge the burden of illness, interventions, or healthcare policies, and what new research methodologies are available or needed to address knowledge and methodological gaps or barriers. Research applications included existing evidence-based health economic research activities in nutrition that are ongoing or planned at federal agencies. International and US regulatory, policy, and clinical practice perspectives included a discussion of how research results can help regulators and policy makers within government make nutrition policy decisions, and how economics affects clinical guideline development. |
Ignoring the group in group-level HIV/AIDS intervention trials: a review of reported design and analytic methods
Pals SL , Wiegand RE , Murray DM . AIDS 2011 25 (7) 989-96 OBJECTIVES: Studies evaluating the efficacy of HIV/AIDS interventions often involve the random assignment of groups of participants or the treatment of participants in groups. These studies require analytic methods that take within-group correlation into account. We reviewed published studies to determine the extent to which within-group correlation was dealt with properly. DESIGN: We reviewed group-randomized trials (GRTs) and individually randomized group treatment (IRGT) trials published in HIV/AIDS and general public health journals 2005-2009. METHODS: At least two of the authors reviewed each article, recording descriptive characteristics, sample size estimation methods, analytic methods, and judgments about whether the methods took intraclass correlation into account properly. RESULTS: Of those articles including sufficient information to judge whether analytic methods were correct, only 24% used only appropriate methods for dealing with the intraclass correlation. The percentages differed substantially for GRTs (41.7%) and IRGT trials (8.0%). Most of the articles (69.2%) also made no mention of a priori sample size estimation. CONCLUSION: A majority of the articles in our review reported analyses ignoring the intraclass correlation. This practice may result in underestimated variance, inappropriately small P values, and incorrect conclusions about the effectiveness of interventions. Previous trials that were analyzed incorrectly need to be re-analyzed, and future trials should be designed and analyzed with appropriate methods. Also, journal reviewers and editors need to be aware of the special requirements for design and analysis of GRTs and IRGT trials and judge the quality of articles reporting on such trials according to appropriate standards. |
Resources for clinicians. So many materials, so little time: a checklist to select printed patient education materials for clinical practice
Fraze J , Griffith J , Green D , McElroy L . J Midwifery Womens Health 2010 55 (1) 70-73 Clinicians value printed patient education materials for use in their busy practices because of their accessibility, convenience, and low cost.1 These materials can help broach important and sensitive topics, reinforce medical information verbally discussed with the patient in a cost-effective manner, and save time typically required to explain clinical topics.1–4 If a material can provide necessary information succinctly, then clinician–patient communication can be focused on other unmet patient education needs. | Most clinicians, including midwives and other women's health care providers, receive a number of printed health education materials offered for use in their practices. Just reviewing these materials can be time-consuming for clinicians, let alone selecting the materials that are most appropriate for their patients. Although others have researched how clinicians organize, display, and use printed patient education materials, few resources exist to help clinicians systematically judge the materials' quality for use in their specific practice.5–7 This article provides a checklist that helps clinicians assess the suitability of printed patient education materials within the context of their own practice.11 This article does not address the assessment of non-print media products for patient education, such as audio or video resources, which have different considerations.12 |
- Page last reviewed:Feb 1, 2024
- Page last updated:Jan 21, 2025
- Content source:
- Powered by CDC PHGKB Infrastructure