Last data update: Apr 29, 2024. (Total: 46658 publications since 2009)
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Query Trace: Pepin D[original query] |
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A narrative review of literature examining studies researching the impact of law on health and economic outcomes
Pepin DA , St Clair Sims R , Khushalani J , Tonti L , Kelly MA , Song S , Arifkhanova A , Hulkower R , Calhoun BH , Puddy RW , Kaminski JW . J Public Health Manag Pract 2023 30 (1) 12-35 CONTEXT: Public health policy can play an important role in improving public health outcomes. Accordingly, there has been an increasing emphasis by policy makers on identifying and implementing evidence-informed public health policy interventions. PROGRAM OR POLICY: Growth and refinement of the field of research assessing the impact of legal interventions on health outcomes, known as legal epidemiology, prompted this review of studies on the relationship between laws and health or economic outcomes. IMPLEMENTATION: Authors systematically searched 8 major literature databases for all English language journal articles that assessed the effect of a law on health and economic outcomes published between January 1, 2009, and September 18, 2019. This search generated 12 570 unique articles 177 of which met inclusion criteria. The team conducting the systematic review was a multidisciplinary team that included health economists and public health policy researchers, as well as public health lawyers with expertise in legal epidemiological research methods. The authors identified and assessed the types of methods used to measure the laws' health impact. EVALUATION: In this review, the authors examine how legal epidemiological research methods have been described in the literature as well as trends among the studies. Overall, 3 major themes emerged from this study: (1) limited variability in the sources of the health data across the studies, (2) limited differences in the methodological approaches used to connect law to health outcomes, and (3) lack of transparency surrounding the source and quality of the legal data relied upon. DISCUSSION: Through highlighting public health law research methodologies, this systematic review may inform researchers, practitioners, and lawmakers on how to better examine and understand the impacts of legal interventions on health and economic outcomes. Findings may serve as a source of suggested practices in conducting legal epidemiological outcomes research and identifying conceptual and method-related gaps in the literature. |
Comparative genomics of the major parasitic worms (preprint)
International Helminth Genomes Consortium , Coghlan Avril , Tyagi Rahul , Cotton James A , Holroyd Nancy , Rosa Bruce A , Tsai Isheng Jason , Laetsch Dominik R , Beech Robin N , Day Tim A , Hallsworth-Pepin Kymberlie , Ke Huei-Mien , Kuo Tzu-Hao , Lee Tracy J , Martin John , Maizels Rick M , Mutowo Prudence , Ozersky Philip , Parkinson John , Reid Adam J , Rawlings Neil D , Ribeiro Diogo M , Seshadri Swapna Lakshmipuram , Stanley Eleanor , Taylor David W , Wheeler Nicolas J , Zamanian Mostafa , Zhang Xu , Allan Fiona , Allen Judith E , Asano Kazuhito , Babayan Simon A , Bah Germanus , Beasley Helen , Bennett Hayley M , Bisset Stewart A , Castillo Estela , Cook Joseph , Cooper Philip J , Cruz-Bustos Teresa , Cuéllar Carmen , Devaney Eileen , Doyle Stephen R , Eberhard Mark L , Emery Aidan , Eom Keeseon S , Gilleard John S , Gordon Daria , Harcus Yvonne , Harsha Bhavana , Hawdon John M , Hill Dolores E , Hodgkinson Jane , Horák Petr , Howe Kevin L , Huckvale Thomas , Kalbe Martin , Kaur Gaganjot , Kikuchi Taisei , Koutsovoulos Georgios , Kumar Sujai , Leach Andrew R , Lomax Jane , Makepeace Benjamin , Matthews Jacqueline B , Muro Antonio , O’Boyle Noel Michael , Olson Peter D , Osuna Antonio , Partono Felix , Pfarr Kenneth , Rinaldi Gabriel , Foronda Pilar , Rollinson David , Gomez Samblas Mercedes , Sato Hiroshi , Schnyder Manuela , Scholz Tomáš , Shafie Myriam , Tanya Vincent N , Toledo Rafael , Tracey Alan , Urban Joseph F , Wang Lian-Chen , Zarlenga Dante , Blaxter Mark L , Mitreva Makedonka , Berriman Matthew . bioRxiv 2017 236539 Parasitic nematodes (roundworms) and platyhelminths (flatworms) cause debilitating chronic infections of humans and animals, decimate crop production and are a major impediment to socioeconomic development. Here we compare the genomes of 81 nematode and platyhelminth species, including those of 76 parasites. From 1.4 million genes, we identify gene family births and hundreds of large expanded gene families at key nodes in the phylogeny that are relevant to parasitism. Examples include gene families that modulate host immune responses, enable parasite migration though host tissues or allow the parasite to feed. We use a wide-ranging in silico screen to identify and prioritise new potential drug targets and compounds for testing. We also uncover lineage-specific differences in core metabolism and in protein families historically targeted for drug development. This is the broadest comparative study to date of the genomes of parasitic and non-parasitic worms. It provides a transformative new resource for the research community to understand and combat the diseases that parasitic worms cause. |
Comparative genomics of the major parasitic worms
International Helminth Genomes Consortium , Coghlan Avril , Tyagi Rahul , Cotton James A , Holroyd Nancy , Rosa Bruce A , Tsai Isheng Jason , Laetsch Dominik R , Beech Robin N , Day Tim A , Hallsworth-Pepin Kymberlie , Ke Huei-Mien , Kuo Tzu-Hao , Lee Tracy J , Martin John , Maizels Rick M , Mutowo Prudence , Ozersky Philip , Parkinson John , Reid Adam J , Rawlings Neil D , Ribeiro Diogo M , Seshadri Swapna Lakshmipuram , Stanley Eleanor , Taylor David W , Wheeler Nicolas J , Zamanian Mostafa , Zhang Xu , Allan Fiona , Allen Judith E , Asano Kazuhito , Babayan Simon A , Bah Germanus , Beasley Helen , Bennett Hayley M , Bisset Stewart A , Castillo Estela , Cook Joseph , Cooper Philip J , Cruz-Bustos Teresa , Cuéllar Carmen , Devaney Eileen , Doyle Stephen R , Eberhard Mark L , Emery Aidan , Eom Keeseon S , Gilleard John S , Gordon Daria , Harcus Yvonne , Harsha Bhavana , Hawdon John M , Hill Dolores E , Hodgkinson Jane , Horák Petr , Howe Kevin L , Huckvale Thomas , Kalbe Martin , Kaur Gaganjot , Kikuchi Taisei , Koutsovoulos Georgios , Kumar Sujai , Leach Andrew R , Lomax Jane , Makepeace Benjamin , Matthews Jacqueline B , Muro Antonio , O’Boyle Noel Michael , Olson Peter D , Osuna Antonio , Partono Felix , Pfarr Kenneth , Rinaldi Gabriel , Foronda Pilar , Rollinson David , Gomez Samblas Mercedes , Sato Hiroshi , Schnyder Manuela , Scholz Tomáš , Shafie Myriam , Tanya Vincent N , Toledo Rafael , Tracey Alan , Urban Joseph F , Wang Lian-Chen , Zarlenga Dante , Blaxter Mark L , Mitreva Makedonka , Berriman Matthew . Nat Genet 2019 51 (1) 163-174 Parasitic nematodes (roundworms) and platyhelminths (flatworms) cause debilitating chronic infections of humans and animals, decimate crop production and are a major impediment to socioeconomic development. Here we report a broad comparative study of 81 genomes of parasitic and non-parasitic worms. We have identified gene family births and hundreds of expanded gene families at key nodes in the phylogeny that are relevant to parasitism. Examples include gene families that modulate host immune responses, enable parasite migration though host tissues or allow the parasite to feed. We reveal extensive lineage-specific differences in core metabolism and protein families historically targeted for drug development. From an in silico screen, we have identified and prioritized new potential drug targets and compounds for testing. This comparative genomics resource provides a much-needed boost for the research community to understand and combat parasitic worms. |
Accuracy of Case-Based Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 Antibodies in Maricopa County, Arizona.
Jehn M , Pandit U , Sabin S , Tompkins C , White J , Kaleta E , Dale AP , Ross HM , MacMcCullough J , Pepin S , Kenny K , Sanborn H , Heywood N , Schnall AH , Lant T , Sunenshine R . Am J Public Health 2022 112 (1) 38-42 We conducted a community seroprevalence survey in Arizona, from September 12 to October 1, 2020, to determine the presence of antibodies to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). We used the seroprevalence estimate to predict SARS-CoV-2 infections in the jurisdiction by applying the adjusted seroprevalence to the county's population. The estimated community seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infections was 4.3 times greater (95% confidence interval=2.2, 7.5) than the number of reported cases. Field surveys with representative sampling provide data that may help fill in gaps in traditional public health reporting. (Am J Public Health. 2022;112(1):38-42. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2021.306568). |
Differences in rapid increases in county-level COVID-19 incidence by implementation of statewide closures and mask mandates - United States, June 1-September 30, 2020.
Dasgupta S , Kassem AM , Sunshine G , Liu T , Rose C , Kang G , Silver R , Maddox BLP , Watson C , Howard-Williams M , Gakh M , McCord R , Weber R , Fletcher K , Musial T , Tynan MA , Hulkower R , Moreland A , Pepin D , Landsman L , Brown A , Gilchrist S , Clodfelter C , Williams M , Cramer R , Limeres A , Popoola A , Dugmeoglu S , Shelburne J , Jeong G , Rao CY . Ann Epidemiol 2021 57 46-53 BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Community mitigation strategies could help reduce COVID-19 incidence. In a national county-level analysis, we examined the probability of being identified as a county with rapidly increasing COVID-19 incidence (rapid riser identification) during the summer of 2020 by implementation of mitigation policies prior to the summer, overall and by urbanicity. METHODS: We analyzed county-level data on rapid riser identification during June 1-September 30, 2020 and statewide closures and statewide mask mandates starting March 19 (obtained from state government websites). Poisson regression models with robust standard error estimation were used to examine differences in the probability of rapid riser identification by implementation of mitigation policies (P-value<.05); associations were adjusted for county population size. RESULTS: Counties in states that closed for 0-59 days were more likely to become a rapid riser county than those that closed for >59 days, particularly in nonmetropolitan areas. The probability of becoming a rapid riser county was 43% lower among counties that had statewide mask mandates at reopening (adjusted prevalence ratio [aPR] = 0.57; 95% confidence intervals [CI] = 0.51-0.63); when stratified by urbanicity, associations were more pronounced in nonmetropolitan areas. CONCLUSIONS: These results underscore the potential value of community mitigation strategies in limiting the COVID-19 spread, especially in nonmetropolitan areas. |
Anti-poverty policy and health: Attributes and diffusion of state earned income tax credits across U.S. states from 1980 to 2020
Komro KA , Dunlap P , Sroczynski N , Livingston MD , Kelly MA , Pepin D , Markowitz S , Rentmeester S , Wagenaar AC . PLoS One 2020 15 (11) e0242514 PURPOSE: The U.S. federal Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) is often considered the most effective antipoverty program for families in the U.S., leading to a variety of improved outcomes such as educational attainment, work incentives, economic activity, income, and health benefits for mothers, infants and children. State EITC supplements to the federal credit can significantly enhance the magnitude of this intervention. In this paper we advance EITC and health research by: 1) describing the diffusion of state EITC policies over 40 years, 2) presenting patterns in important EITC policy dimensions across space and time, and 3) disseminating a robust data set to advance future research by policy analysts and scientists. METHODS: We used current public health law research methods to systematically collect, conduct textual legal analysis, and numerically code all EITC legislative changes from 1980 through 2020 in the 50 states and Washington, D.C. RESULTS: First, the pattern of diffusion across states and time shows initial introductions during the 1990s in the Midwest, then spreading to the Northeast, with more recent expansions in the West and South. Second, differences by state and time of important policy dimensions are evident, including size of credit and refundability. Third, state EITC benefits vary considerably by household structure. CONCLUSION: Continued research on health outcomes is warranted to capture the full range of potential beneficial effects of EITCs on family and child wellbeing. Lawyers and policy analysts can collaborate with epidemiologists and economists on other high-quality empirical studies to assess the many dimensions of policy and law that potentially affect the social determinants of health. |
The changing triad of plague in Uganda: invasive black rats (Rattus rattus), indigenous small mammals, and their fleas
Enscore RE , Babi N , Amatre G , Atiku L , Eisen RJ , Pepin KM , Vera-Tudela R , Sexton C , Gage KL . J Vector Ecol 2020 45 (2) 333-355 Rattus rattus was first reported from the West Nile Region of Uganda in 1961, an event that preceded the appearance of the first documented human plague outbreak in 1970. We investigated how invasive R. rattus and native small mammal populations, as well as their fleas, have changed in recent decades. Over an 18-month period, a total of 2,959 small mammals were captured, sampled, and examined for fleas, resulting in the identification of 20 small mammal taxa that were hosts to 5,109 fleas (nine species). Over three-fourths (75.8%) of captured mammals belonged to four taxa: R. rattus, which predominated inside huts, and Arvicanthis niloticus, Mastomys sp., and Crocidura sp., which were more common outside huts. These mammals were hosts for 85.8% of fleas collected, including the efficient plague vectors Xenopsylla cheopis and X. brasiliensis, as well as likely enzootic vectors, Dinopsyllus lypusus and Ctenophthalmus bacopus. Flea loads on small mammals were higher in certain environments in villages with a recent history of plague compared to those that lacked such a history. The significance of these results is discussed in relation to historical data, the initial spread of plague in the WNR and the continuing threat posed by the disease. |
Rabies surveillance identifies potential risk corridors and enables management evaluation
Davis AJ , Nelson KM , Kirby JD , Wallace R , Ma X , Pepin KM , Chipman RB , Gilbert AT . Viruses 2019 11 (11) Intensive efforts are being made to eliminate the raccoon variant of rabies virus (RABV) from the eastern United States and Canada. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Wildlife Services National Rabies Management Program has implemented enhanced rabies surveillance (ERS) to improve case detection across the extent of the raccoon oral rabies vaccination (ORV) management area. We evaluated ERS and public health surveillance data from 2006 to 2017 in three northeastern USA states using a dynamic occupancy modeling approach. Our objectives were to examine potential risk corridors for RABV incursion from the U.S. into Canada, evaluate the effectiveness of ORV management strategies, and identify surveillance gaps. ORV management has resulted in a decrease in RABV cases over time within vaccination zones (from occupancy ( psi ) of 0.60 standard error (SE) = 0.03 in the spring of 2006 to psi of 0.33 SE = 0.10 in the spring 2017). RABV cases also reduced in the enzootic area (from psi of 0.60 SE = 0.03 in the spring of 2006 to psi of 0.45 SE = 0.05 in the spring 2017). Although RABV occurrence was related to habitat type, greater impacts were associated with ORV and trap-vaccinate-release (TVR) campaigns, in addition to seasonal and yearly trends. Reductions in RABV occupancy were more pronounced in areas treated with Ontario Rabies Vaccine Bait (ONRAB) compared to RABORAL V-RG((R)). Our approach tracked changes in RABV occurrence across space and time, identified risk corridors for potential incursions into Canada, and highlighted surveillance gaps, while evaluating the impacts of management actions. Using this approach, we are able to provide guidance for future RABV management. |
Not all surveillance data are created equal - A multi-method dynamic occupancy approach to determine rabies elimination from wildlife
Davis AJ , Kirby JD , Chipman RB , Nelson KM , Xifara T , Webb CT , Wallace R , Gilbert AT , Pepin KM . J Appl Ecol 2019 56 (11) 2551-2561 A necessary component of elimination programmes for wildlife disease is effective surveillance. The ability to distinguish between disease freedom and non-detection can mean the difference between a successful elimination campaign and new epizootics. Understanding the contribution of different surveillance methods helps to optimize and better allocate effort and develop more effective surveillance programmes. We evaluated the probability of rabies virus elimination (disease freedom) in an enzootic area with active management using dynamic occupancy modelling of 10 years of raccoon rabies virus (RABV) surveillance data (2006–2015) collected from three states in the eastern United States. We estimated detection probability of RABV cases for each surveillance method (e.g. strange acting reports, roadkill, surveillance-trapped animals, nuisance animals and public health samples) used by the USDA National Rabies Management Program. Strange acting, found dead and public health animals were the most likely to detect RABV when it was present, and generally detectability was higher in fall–winter compared to spring–summer. Found dead animals in fall–winter had the highest detection at 0.33 (95% CI: 0.20, 0.48). Nuisance animals had the lowest detection probabilities (~0.02). Areas with oral rabies vaccination (ORV) management had reduced occurrence probability compared to enzootic areas without ORV management. RABV occurrence was positively associated with deciduous and mixed forests and medium to high developed areas, which are also areas with higher raccoon (Procyon lotor) densities. By combining occupancy and detection estimates we can create a probability of elimination surface that can be updated seasonally to provide guidance on areas managed for wildlife disease. Synthesis and applications. Wildlife disease surveillance is often comprised of a combination of targeted and convenience-based methods. Using a multi-method analytical approach allows us to compare the relative strengths of these methods, providing guidance on resource allocation for surveillance actions. Applying this multi-method approach in conjunction with dynamic occupancy analyses better informs management decisions by understanding ecological drivers of disease occurrence. |
How are telehealth laws intersecting with laws addressing the opioid overdose epidemic
Pepin D , Hulkower R , McCord RF . J Public Health Manag Pract 2019 26 (3) 227-231 Opioid-involved drug overdose deaths have been a growing concern in the United States for several decades. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention identified several strategies to address the opioid overdose epidemic, including increased availability of and access to medication-assisted treatment and guidance on safer opioid prescribing practices. Telehealth offers the potential for increasing access and availability to these strategies, and laws governing telehealth have implications for their utilization. To understand how state telehealth laws intersect with the opioid overdose epidemic, we conducted a legal mapping study, a type of legal epidemiological assessment, of statutes and regulations that intersect at telehealth and opioids. This search yielded 28 laws from 17 states. These laws intersect both telehealth and the opioid overdose epidemic in different ways including prescribing limitations, opioid treatment through medication and counseling, patient plan review, and professional collaboration. Continued legal and policy surveillance is needed to be able to evaluate the impact of law in addressing opioid overdose outcomes. |
Broadband access as a public health issue: The role of law in expanding broadband access and connecting underserved communities for better health outcomes
Bauerly BC , McCord RF , Hulkower R , Pepin D . J Law Med Ethics 2019 47 39-42 Broadband internet access is a super-determinant of health that plays an important role in healthcare and public health outcomes. Laws and policies shape implementation and use of broadband for healthcare and public health. Connecting broadband and telehealth laws with their health impacts, through legal epidemiological research, enables states to make evidence-based decisions to improve health outcomes for underserved populations. |
Civil rights law and the determinants of health: How some states have utilized civil rights laws to increase protections against discrimination
Pepin D , Weber SB . J Law Med Ethics 2019 47 76-79 One fundamental barrier to eliminating health disparities, particularly with regard to the determinants of health, is the persistence of discrimination. Civil rights law is the primary legal mechanism used to address discrimination. Federal civil rights laws have been the subject of wider analyses as a determinant of health as well as a tool to address health disparities. The research on state civil rights laws, while more limited, is growing. This article will highlight a few examples of how some states are using civil rights laws to combat discrimination, particularly in more expansive ways and in the interest of new populations, presenting tools that can target determinants and address the goal of reducing health disparities. |
Association of state laws with influenza vaccination of hospital personnel
Lindley MC , Mu Y , Hoss A , Pepin D , Kalayil EJ , van Santen KL , Edwards JR , Pollock DA . Am J Prev Med 2019 56 (6) e177-e183 INTRODUCTION: Healthcare personnel influenza vaccination can reduce influenza illness and patient mortality. State laws are one tool promoting healthcare personnel influenza vaccination. METHODS: A 2016 legal assessment in 50 states and Washington DC identified (1) assessment laws: mandating hospitals assess healthcare personnel influenza vaccination status; (2) offer laws: mandating hospitals offer influenza vaccination to healthcare personnel; (3) ensure laws: mandating hospitals require healthcare personnel to demonstrate proof of influenza vaccination; and (4) surgical masking laws: mandating unvaccinated healthcare personnel to wear surgical masks during influenza season. Influenza vaccination was calculated using data reported in 2016 by short-stay acute care hospitals (n=4,370) to the National Healthcare Safety Network. Hierarchical linear modeling in 2018 examined associations between reported vaccination and assessment, offer, or ensure laws at the level of facilities nested within states, among employee and non-employee healthcare personnel and among employees only. RESULTS: Eighteen states had one or more healthcare personnel influenza vaccination-related laws. In the absence of any state laws, facility vaccination mandates were associated with an 11-12 percentage point increase in mean vaccination coverage (p<0.0001). Facility-level mandates were estimated to increase mean influenza vaccination coverage among all healthcare personnel by 4.2 percentage points in states with assessment laws, 6.6 percentage points in states with offer laws, and 3.1 percentage points in states with ensure laws. Results were similar in analyses restricted only to employees although percentage point increases were slightly larger. CONCLUSIONS: State laws moderate the effect of facility-level vaccination mandates and may help increase healthcare personnel influenza vaccination coverage in facilities with or without vaccination requirements. |
Evaluation of state-mandated reporting of neonatal abstinence syndrome - six states, 2013-2017
Jilani SM , Frey MT , Pepin D , Jewell T , Jordan M , Miller AM , Robinson M , St Mars T , Bryan M , Ko JY , Ailes EC , McCord RF , Gilchrist J , Foster S , Lind JN , Culp L , Penn MS , Reefhuis J . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2019 68 (1) 6-10 From 2004 to 2014, the incidence of neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) in the United States increased 433%, from 1.5 to 8.0 per 1,000 hospital births. The latest national data from 2014 indicate that one baby was born with signs of NAS every 15 minutes in the United States (1). NAS is a drug withdrawal syndrome that most commonly occurs among infants after in utero exposure to opioids, although other substances have also been associated with NAS. Prenatal opioid exposure has also been associated with poor fetal growth, preterm birth, stillbirth, and possible specific birth defects (2-5). NAS surveillance has often depended on hospital discharge data, which historically underestimate the incidence of NAS and are not available in real time, thus limiting states' ability to quickly direct public health resources (6,7). This evaluation focused on six states with state laws implementing required NAS case reporting for public health surveillance during 2013-2017 and reviews implementation of the laws, state officials' reports of data quality before and after laws were passed, and advantages and challenges of legally mandating NAS reporting for public health surveillance in the absence of a national case definition. Using standardized search terms in an online legal research database, laws in six states mandating reporting of NAS from medical facilities to state health departments (SHDs) or from SHDs to a state legislative body were identified. SHD officials in these six states completed a questionnaire followed by a semistructured telephone interview to clarify open-text responses from the questionnaire. Variability was found in the type and number of surveillance data elements reported and in how states used NAS surveillance data. Following implementation, five states with identified laws reported receiving NAS case reports within 30 days of diagnosis. Mandated NAS case reporting allowed SHDs to quantify the incidence of NAS in their states and to inform programs and services. This information might be useful to states considering implementing mandatory NAS surveillance. |
Transitioning from paper to digital: State statutory and regulatory frameworks for health information technology
Schmit C , Sunshine G , Pepin D , Ramanathan T , Menon A , Penn M . Public Health Rep 2017 132 (5) 33354917722994 OBJECTIVES: In all health system sectors, electronic health information (EHI) is created, used, released, and reused. We examined states' efforts to address EHI uses in law to provide an understanding of the EHI legal environment. METHODS: Attorney researchers used WestlawNext to search for EHI-related statutes and regulations of the US states, US territories, and the District of Columbia in effect as of January 2014. The researchers independently catalogued provisions by the EHI use described in the law. Researchers resolved discrepancies through peer review meetings and recorded the consensus codes for each law. RESULTS: This study identified 2364 EHI-related laws representing 49 EHI uses in 54 jurisdictions. A total of 18 EHI uses were regulated by ≥10 jurisdictions. More than 750 laws addressed 2 or more EHI uses. Jurisdictions varied by the number of EHI laws in effect, with a mean of 44 laws. Texas had the most EHI laws (n = 145). Hawaii and South Carolina had the fewest (n = 14 each). CONCLUSIONS: The EHI legal landscape is complex. The large quantity and diversity of laws complicate legal analysis, likely delay implementation of public health solutions, and might be detrimental to the development of emerging health information technology. Research is needed to understand the effect of EHI-related laws. |
Collaborating for health: Health in All Policies and the law
Pepin D , Winig BD , Carr D , Jacobson PD . J Law Med Ethics 2017 45 60-64 This article introduces and defines the Health in All Policies (HiAP) concept and examines existing state legislation, with a focus on California. The article starts with an overview of HiAP and then analyzes the status of HiAP legislation, specifically addressing variations across states. Finally, the article describes California's HiAP approach and discusses how communities can apply a HiAP framework not only to improve health outcomes and advance health equity, but also to counteract existing laws and policies that contribute to health inequities. |
Legal authority for mosquito control and pesticide use in the United States
Pepin D , Penn M . Public Health Rep 2017 132 (3) 33354917704628 Mosquito-borne diseases are a threat globally and in the United States.1,2 For instance, in the United States, the West Nile virus first appeared in 1999 and has since spread throughout the country, causing >43 937 cases as of 2015.3 Recently, 2 other mosquito-borne diseases, dengue virus and chikungunya virus, were locally transmitted in the continental United States for the first time.4–7 Now, with the increase in Zika virus transmission—including 4752 travel-associated cases and 220 locally acquired cases in the United States as of February 7, 2017—public health officials face the challenge of instituting effective mosquito control programs and making decisions about pesticide use.8,9 | One question confronting public health officials is this: who has the legal authority for mosquito control in the United States, particularly for pesticide use and regulation? Is it the states or the federal government? The answer to this question is rooted in federalism, the scheme by which the legal authority is divided between the states and the federal government. By the earliest days of English colonial government in America, the colonies had inherited from the English King in Parliament their police powers, the natural plenary power of a sovereign state to regulate private interests for the public good, usually toward defending the health and welfare of their populations. When the Articles of Confederation were formed in 1781, the states were reluctant to give too many of these powers to a national government; thus, they retained individual authority to regulate all issues, except for a very few, including declaring war, trying pirates for crimes committed at sea, and conducting foreign policy and commerce. When the states met at the Constitutional Convention in 1787 to amend and improve the articles, they decided that a new national government was needed. The states ceded more authorities to the national government, and these authorities were expressly enumerated in article 1, section 8, of the US Constitution. These enumerated powers include, among others, the authority to raise taxes and regulate interstate commerce. The states retained all of the authority that they held prior to the US Constitution that was not expressly enumerated to the federal government. Later, in 1791, the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution recognized this reservation of authority: “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”10 |
State and territorial Ebola screening, monitoring, and movement policy statements - United States, August 31, 2015
Sunshine G , Pepin D , Cetron M , Penn M . MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2015 64 (40) 1145-6 The 2014–2015 Ebola virus disease (Ebola) outbreak in West Africa is the largest in history, and as of October 4, 2015, had claimed 11,297 lives in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone (1). On August 7, 2014, CDC first posted guidance on monitoring and movement of persons who might have been exposed to Ebola virus to prevent the spread of Ebola into the United States. Since that time, the Interim U.S. Guidance for Monitoring and Movement of Persons with Potential Ebola Virus Exposure (2) has been regularly updated based on the latest information available, most recently on May 13, 2015. On October 11, 2014, after the first case of Ebola was diagnosed in the United States, entry screening was implemented in five U.S. airports to identify travelers from countries with widespread Ebola transmission who might have been exposed to Ebola during the days before arrival or who had signs or symptoms of Ebola at the time of arrival (3). | On October 24, 2014, New York and New Jersey, both home to airports conducting entry screening, announced monitoring and movement policies for incoming travelers returning from Ebola-affected countries (4). The New York and New Jersey policies included mandatory quarantine for any person who had direct contact with a person with Ebola while in one of the Ebola-affected countries, including any medical personnel who had provided medical services for persons infected with Ebola, as well as active monitoring and possible quarantine for all persons with travel history to the affected countries, including those who had no direct contact with an infected person (4). |
Improving pandemic influenza risk assessment.
Russell CA , Kasson PM , Donis RO , Riley S , Dunbar J , Rambaut A , Asher J , Burke S , Davis CT , Garten RJ , Gnanakaran S , Hay SI , Herfst S , Lewis NS , Lloyd-Smith JO , Macken CA , Maurer-Stroh S , Neuhaus E , Parrish CR , Pepin KM , Shepard SS , Smith DL , Suarez DL , Trock SC , Widdowson MA , George DB , Lipsitch M , Bloom JD . Elife 2014 3 e03883 Assessing the pandemic risk posed by specific non-human influenza A viruses is an important goal in public health research. As influenza virus genome sequencing becomes cheaper, faster, and more readily available, the ability to predict pandemic potential from sequence data could transform pandemic influenza risk assessment capabilities. However, the complexities of the relationships between virus genotype and phenotype make such predictions extremely difficult. The integration of experimental work, computational tool development, and analysis of evolutionary pathways, together with refinements to influenza surveillance, has the potential to transform our ability to assess the risks posed to humans by non-human influenza viruses and lead to improved pandemic preparedness and response. |
Geographic variation in the relationship between human lyme disease incidence and density of infected host-seeking Ixodes scapularis nymphs in the eastern United States
Pepin KM , Eisen RJ , Mead PS , Piesman J , Fish D , Hoen AG , Barbour AG , Hamer S , Diuk-Wasser MA . Am J Trop Med Hyg 2012 86 (6) 1062-1071 Prevention and control of Lyme disease is difficult because of the complex biology of the pathogen's (Borrelia burgdorferi) vector (Ixodes scapularis) and multiple reservoir hosts with varying degrees of competence. Cost-effective implementation of tick- and host-targeted control methods requires an understanding of the relationship between pathogen prevalence in nymphs, nymph abundance, and incidence of human cases of Lyme disease. We quantified the relationship between estimated acarological risk and human incidence using county-level human case data and nymphal prevalence data from field-derived estimates in 36 eastern states. The estimated density of infected nymphs (mDIN) was significantly correlated with human incidence (r = 0.69). The relationship was strongest in high-prevalence areas, but it varied by region and state, partly because of the distribution of B. burgdorferi genotypes. More information is needed in several high-prevalence states before DIN can be used for cost-effectiveness analyses. |
Clinical practice guidelines for Clostridium difficile infection in adults: 2010 update by the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) and the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)
Cohen SH , Gerding DN , Johnson S , Kelly CP , Loo VG , McDonald LC , Pepin J , Wilcox MH . Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2010 31 (5) 431-55 Since publication of the Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America position paper on Clostridium difficile infection in 1995, significant changes have occurred in the epidemiology and treatment of this infection. C. difficile remains the most important cause of healthcare-associated diarrhea and is increasingly important as a community pathogen. A more virulent strain of C. difficile has been identified and has been responsible for more-severe cases of disease worldwide. Data reporting the decreased effectiveness of metronidazole in the treatment of severe disease have been published. Despite the increasing quantity of data available, areas of controversy still exist. This guideline updates recommendations regarding epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and infection control and environmental management. |
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