journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35342687/considerations-of-racism-and-data-equity-among-asian-americans-native-hawaiians-and-pacific-islanders-in-the-context-of-covid-19
#21
REVIEW
Gilbert C Gee, Brittany N Morey, Adrian M Bacong, Tran T Doan, Corina S Penaia
Purpose of Review: The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed the importance of considering social determinants of health, including factors such as structural racism. This review discusses some of the evidence that triangulates on this issue, including data from hate crime statistics, social media analysis, and survey-based research. It also examines the data needs for Asian Americans, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (NHPI) communities. Recent Findings: The available data provides evidence that the pandemic has contributed to an increase in anti-Asian sentiment and discriminatory incidents...
March 18, 2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35287290/interventions-on-socioeconomic-and-racial-inequities-in-respiratory-pandemics-a-rapid-systematic-review
#22
REVIEW
Audrey Renson, Alexis C Dennis, Grace Noppert, Elizabeth S McClure, Allison E Aiello
Purpose of Review: Racial and socioeconomic inequities in respiratory pandemics have been consistently documented, but little official guidance exists on effective action to prevent these. We systematically reviewed quantitative evaluations of (real or simulated) interventions targeting racial and socioeconomic inequities in respiratory pandemic outcomes. Recent Findings: Our systematic search returned 10,208 records, of which 5 met inclusion criteria, including observational ( n  = 1), randomized trial ( n  = 1), and simulation ( n  = 3) studies...
March 10, 2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35223371/coordinating-centers-as-a-strategy-for-accelerating-cancer-epidemiology-consortia-best-practices
#23
REVIEW
Amy Trentham-Dietz, Jennifer E Bird, Ronald E Gangnon, Sara M Lindberg, Tena Madison, Kristen M C Malecki, James D Shull, Claudia Vredeveld, Betsy Rolland
Purposeof Review: This review highlights six "best practices" for cancer epidemiology coordinating centers to facilitate the success of a research consortium. Recent Findings: Evidence from emerging literature regarding the Science of Team Science suggests that coordinating centers can more effectively foster collaborative cancer epidemiology research in consortia by (1) establishing collaboration as a shared goal at the start, (2) providing scientific expertise complementary to the research sites that adapts over the course of the project, (3) enacting anti-racist and inclusive approaches in all consortium decisions and activities, (4) fostering early-stage investigator career development, (5) engaging stakeholders including cancer survivors as peers, and (6) delivering reliable logistical support and technology tools with planned process evaluation so that researchers can collaboratively focus on the science...
February 21, 2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37961046/place-based-interventions-and-the-epidemiology-of-violence-prevention
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ariana N Gobaud, Ahuva L Jacobowitz, Christina A Mehranbod, Nadav L Sprague, Charles C Branas, Christopher N Morrison
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Violence is a leading cause of death, disability, and health inequity in the United States. This review summarizes the scientific literature on place-based interventions and violence, describes study design challenges, and suggests future directions for this group of interventions. RECENT FINDINGS: Violence prevention strategies commonly target high-risk individuals, but recent research has found that place-based interventions are practical, sustainable, and high-impact opportunities that benefit communities at large...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36003089/the-utility-of-multistate-models-a-flexible-framework-for-time-to-event-data
#25
REVIEW
Jennifer G Le-Rademacher, Terry M Therneau, Fang-Shu Ou
Purpose of Review: Survival analyses are common and essential in medical research. Most readers are familiar with Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox models; however, very few are familiar with multistate models. Although multistate models were introduced in 1965, they only recently receive more attention in the medical research community. The current review introduces common terminologies and quantities that can be estimated from multistate models. Examples from published literature are used to illustrate the utility of multistate models...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36003088/community-based-participatory-research-to-improve-cardiovascular-health-among-us-racial-and-ethnic-minority-groups
#26
REVIEW
Norrisa Haynes, Amanpreet Kaur, JaBaris Swain, Joshua J Joseph, LaPrincess C Brewer
Purpose of Review: This review aims to assess the contemporary community-based participatory research (CBPR) literature seeking to improve the cardiovascular health of racial and ethnic minority groups in the USA with a higher burden of cardiovascular risk factors and social determinants of health. It summarizes recent CBPR studies based on the American Heart Association Life's Simple 7 (LS7) framework, delineating seven modifiable health behaviors and clinical factors to promote cardiovascular health...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35874623/synthetic-control-methodology-for-examining-firearm-policy
#27
REVIEW
Michelle Degli Esposti, Douglas Wiebe, Elinore Kaufman, Carl Bonander
Purpose of Review: Firearm policies have the potential to alleviate the public health burden of firearm violence, yet it is unclear which policies are effective. The current review aims to summarize studies that use synthetic control methods to overcome previous methodological limitations when examining the impacts of firearm policies. Recent Findings: Evidence from studies using synthetic control methods find compelling evidence that purchasing licensing laws for all individuals (e...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35789918/machine-learning-approaches-for-measuring-neighborhood-environments-in-epidemiologic-studies
#28
REVIEW
Andrew G Rundle, Michael D M Bader, Stephen J Mooney
Purpose of review: Innovations in information technology, initiatives by local governments to share administrative data, and growing inventories of data available from commercial data aggregators have immensely expanded the information available to describe neighborhood environments, supporting an approach to research we call Urban Health Informatics. This review evaluates the application of machine learning to this new wealth of data for studies of the effects of neighborhood environments on health...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35342686/from-cancer-epidemiology-to-policy-and-practice-the-role-of-a-comprehensive-cancer-center
#29
REVIEW
Robert A Hiatt, Amanda Sibley, Brinda Venkatesh, Joyce Cheng, Niharika Dixit, Rena Fox, Pamela Ling, Tung Nguyen, Debora Oh, Nynikka R Palmer, Rena J Pasick, Michael B Potter, Ma Somsouk, Roberto Ariel Vargas, Maya Vijayaraghavan, Alan Ashworth
Purpose of Review: Cancer incidence and mortality are decreasing, but inequities in outcomes persist. This paper describes the San Francisco Cancer Initiative (SF CAN) as a model for the systematic application of epidemiological evidence to reduce the cancer burden and associated inequities. Recent Findings: SF CAN is a multi-institutional implementation of existing evidence on the prevention and early detection of five common cancers (i.e., breast, prostate, colorectal, liver, and lung/tobacco-related cancers) accounting for 50% of cancer deaths in San Francisco...
2022: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34664023/the-impact-of-early-life-exposures-on-women-s-reproductive-health-in-adulthood
#30
REVIEW
Emily W Harville, Alexandra N Kruse, Qi Zhao
Purpose of Review: To review the effects of early-life, preconception, and prior-generation exposures on reproductive health in women. Recent Findings: Women's early-life factors can affect reproductive health by contributing to health status or exposure level on entering pregnancy. Alternately, they can have permanent effects, regardless of later-life experience. Nutrition, social class, parental smoking, other adverse childhood experiences, environmental pollutants, infectious agents, and racism and discrimination all affect reproductive health, even if experienced in childhood or in utero...
October 14, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35291208/endocrine-disrupting-chemical-exposures-in-pregnancy-a-sensitive-window-for-later-life-cardiometabolic-health-in-women
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily S Barrett, Susan W Groth, Emma V Preston, Carolyn Kinkade, Tamarra James-Todd
Purpose of Review: Pregnancy can be seen as a "stress test" with complications predicting later-life cardiovascular disease risk. Here, we review the growing epidemiological literature evaluating environmental endocrine-disrupting chemical (EDC) exposure in pregnancy in relation to two important cardiovascular disease risk factors, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy and maternal obesity. Recent Findings: Overall, evidence of EDC-maternal cardiometabolic associations was mixed...
September 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34722115/methodological-challenges-for-epidemiologic-studies-of-deprescribing-at-the-end-of-life
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer Tjia, Jennifer L Lund, Deborah S Mack, Attah Mbrah, Yiyang Yuan, Qiaoxi Chen, Seun Osundolire, Cara L McDermott
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To describe approaches to measuring deprescribing and associated outcomes in studies of patients approaching end of life (EOL). RECENT FINDINGS: We reviewed studies published through 2020 that evaluated deprescribing in patients with limited life expectancy and approaching EOL. Deprescribing includes reducing the number of medications, decreasing medication dose(s), and eliminating potentially inappropriate medications. Tools such as STOPPFrail, OncPal, and the Unnecessary Drug Use Measure can facilitate deprescribing...
September 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34532216/elimination-of-viral-hepatitis-in-low-and-middle-income-countries-epidemiological-research-gaps
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antoine Jaquet, Guy Muula, Didier K Ekouevi, Gilles Wandeler
Purpose of Review: The purpose of our review was to summarize current recommendations on testing strategies, antiviral therapy eligibility and monitoring, and prevention of mother-to-child transmission of chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections, and to highlight major research gaps in low and middle-income countries (LMIC), with a particular focus on sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Recent Findings: While data on the prevalence of HBV and HCV infections in LMIC are increasing, current knowledge on liver-related complications as well as on treatment outcomes remains limited...
September 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34458070/insights-into-epidemiologic-assessments-of-the-microbiome-and-challenges-in-identifying-microbiome-relationships-with-adverse-pregnancy-outcomes
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Freida Blostein, Betsy Foxman
Purpose of review: We describe different methods for microbiome assessment and analysis and highlight some of the challenges of using omics data in epidemiologic studies of adverse pregnancy outcomes. Recent findings: Human microbiomes are dynamic and vary by ancestry and geography. The composition and dynamics of the vaginal microbiome has been associated with risk of preterm birth. Summary: There are several different methods for characterizing the microbiome...
September 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34367877/impacts-of-ecology-parasite-antigenic-variation-and-human-genetics-on-rts-s-as01e-malaria-vaccine-efficacy
#35
REVIEW
Griffin J Bell, Selidji Todagbe Agnandji, Kwaku Poku Asante, Anita Ghansah, Portia Kamthunzi, Michael Emch, Jeffrey A Bailey
Purpose of Review: Global malaria elimination has little chance of success without an effective vaccine. The first malaria vaccine, RTS,S/AS01e, demonstrated moderate efficacy against clinical malaria in phase III trials and is undergoing large-scale effectiveness trials in Africa. Importantly, the vaccine did not perform equally well between phase III study sites. Though reasons for the moderate efficacy and this variation are unclear, various mechanisms have been suggested. This review summarizes the recent literature on such mechanisms, with a focus on those involving landscape ecology, parasite antigenic variation, and human host genetic differences...
July 30, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34306966/an-update-on-medication-use-in-older-adults-a-narrative-review
#36
REVIEW
Heather E Barry, Carmel M Hughes
Purpose of Review: The global phenomenon of population aging is impacting the health and care needs of society. The use of medications by older adults is acknowledged to be the most common form of medical intervention for many acute and chronic conditions and prescribing in this population continues to increase. In this narrative review, we summarise the age-related factors that should be considered when prescribing for older adults, address some of the perennial challenges related to medicine use in older people, and highlight important emerging research in this area...
July 20, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33842192/new-developments-and-insights-in-the-improvement-of-mycobacterium-tuberculosis-vaccines-and-diagnostics-within-the-end-tb-strategy
#37
REVIEW
Juan Ignacio García, Anna Allué-Guardia, Radhika P Tampi, Blanca I Restrepo, Jordi B Torrelles
Purpose of review: The alignment of sustainable development goals (SDGs) with the End Tuberculosis (TB) strategy provides an integrated roadmap to implement key approaches towards TB elimination. This review summarizes current social challenges for TB control, and yet, recent developments in TB diagnosis and vaccines in the context of the End TB strategy and SDGs to transform global health. Recent findings: Advances in non-sputum based TB biomarkers and whole genome sequencing technologies could revolutionize TB diagnostics...
April 7, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33747713/aging-and-covid-19-in-minority-populations-a-perfect-storm
#38
REVIEW
Tubanji Walubita, Ariel Beccia, Esther Boama-Nyarko, Melissa Goulding, Carly Herbert, Jessica Kloppenburg, Guadalupe Mabry, Grace Masters, Asli McCullers, Sarah Forrester
Purpose of Review: COVID-19 is a major concern for the health and wellbeing of individuals worldwide. As COVID-19 cases and deaths continue to increase in the USA, aging Black and Hispanic populations have emerged as especially at-risk for increased exposure to COVID-19 and susceptibility to severe health outcomes. The current review discusses the weathering hypothesis and the influence of social inequality on the identified health disparities. Recent Findings: Aging minoritized populations have endured structural and social inequality over the lifecourse...
March 16, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33747712/antimalarial-drug-resistance-and-implications-for-the-who-global-technical-strategy
#39
REVIEW
Matthew M Ippolito, Kara A Moser, Jean-Bertin Bukasa Kabuya, Clark Cunningham, Jonathan J Juliano
Purpose of Review: Five years have passed since the World Health Organization released its Global Technical Strategy for Malaria (GTS). In that time, progress against malaria has plateaued. This review focuses on the implications of antimalarial drug resistance for the GTS and how interim progress in parasite genomics and antimalarial pharmacology offer a bulwark against it. Recent Findings: For the first time, drug resistance-conferring genes have been identified and validated before their global expansion in malaria parasite populations...
March 14, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33728256/hiv-and-aging-double-stigma
#40
REVIEW
Monique J Brown, Oluwafemi Adeagbo
Purpose of Review: HIV and ageism continue to be key public health challenges in the USA and globally. Older people living with HIV may experience intersectional stigma resulting from HIV and ageism. The current review summarizes the scientific literature and focuses on social isolation and lack of social support as key factors in experiencing HIV-related and aging-related stigma. Recent Findings: Social isolation and social support are key social determinants of health, which may have a bidirectional relationship with HIV-related stigma and ageism...
March 12, 2021: Current Epidemiology Reports
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