keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38655068/differences-in-outcomes-by-race-ethnicity-after-thoracic-surgery-in-a-large-integrated-health-system
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kian C Banks, Julia Wei, Leyda Marrero Morales, Zeuz A Islas, Nathan J Alcasid, Cynthia J Susai, Angela Sun, Katemanee Burapachaisri, Ashish R Patel, Simon K Ashiku, Jeffrey B Velotta
BACKGROUND: Disparities exist throughout surgery. We aimed to assess for racial/ethnic disparities among outcomes in a large thoracic surgery patient population. METHODS: We reviewed all thoracic surgery patients treated at our integrated health system from January 1, 2016-December 31, 2020. Post-operative outcomes including length of stay (LOS), 30-day return to the emergency department (30d-ED), 30-day readmission, 30- and 90-day outpatient appointments, and 30- and 90-day mortality were compared by race/ethnicity...
June 2024: Surgery open science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654504/awareness-and-attitudes-toward-health-education-and-promotion-among-physicians-and-nurses-implications-for-primary-health-care
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nawal A Alissa, Mohammed Alwargash
Health promotion and education are collaborative efforts involving patients, healthcare providers, and society, crucial for preventing and managing disease outbreaks. However, in Saudi Arabia, the actual or perceived endeavors of physicians and nurses in health education and promotion are not widely understood, which holds significant implications for those working in the field. This study aimed to evaluate the level of awareness and attitude toward health education and promotion among physicians and nurses in primary healthcare centers in Najran, Saudi Arabia...
2024: Inquiry: a Journal of Medical Care Organization, Provision and Financing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654386/arrhythmias-and-ion-channelopathies-causing-sudden-cardiac-death-in-hispanic-latino-and-indigenous-populations
#23
REVIEW
Sahil Zaveri, Mohamed Chahine, Mohamed Boutjdir
The limited literature and increasing interest in studies on cardiac electrophysiology, explicitly focusing on cardiac ion channelopathies and sudden cardiac death in diverse populations, has prompted a comprehensive examination of existing research. Our review specifically targets Hispanic/Latino and Indigenous populations, which are often underrepresented in healthcare studies. This review encompasses investigations into genetic variants, epidemiology, etiologies, and clinical risk factors associated with arrhythmias in these demographic groups...
April 23, 2024: Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654242/the-future-burden-of-type-2-diabetes-in-belgium-a-microsimulation-model
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elly Mertens, Junior Ocira, Diana Sagastume, Maria Salve Vasquez, Stefanie Vandevijvere, José L Peñalvo
OBJECTIVE: To forecast the annual burden of type 2 diabetes and related socio-demographic disparities in Belgium until 2030. METHODS: This study utilized a discrete-event transition microsimulation model. A synthetic population was created using 2018 national register data of the Belgian population aged 0-80 years, along with the national representative prevalence of diabetes risk factors obtained from the latest (2018) Belgian Health Interview and Examination Surveys using Multiple Imputation by Chained Equations (MICE) as inputs to the Simulation of Synthetic Complex Data (simPop) model...
April 23, 2024: Population Health Metrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654219/evaluation-of-respondent-driven-sampling-in-seven-studies-of-people-who-use-drugs-from-rural-populations-findings-from-the-rural-opioid-initiative
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abby E Rudolph, Robin M Nance, Georgiy Bobashev, Daniel Brook, Wajiha Akhtar, Ryan Cook, Hannah L Cooper, Peter D Friedmann, Simon D W Frost, Vivian F Go, Wiley D Jenkins, Philip T Korthuis, William C Miller, Mai T Pho, Stephanie A Ruderman, David W Seal, Thomas J Stopka, Ryan P Westergaard, April M Young, William A Zule, Judith I Tsui, Heidi M Crane, Bridget M Whitney, Joseph A C Delaney
BACKGROUND: Accurate prevalence estimates of drug use and its harms are important to characterize burden and develop interventions to reduce negative health outcomes and disparities. Lack of a sampling frame for marginalized/stigmatized populations, including persons who use drugs (PWUD) in rural settings, makes this challenging. Respondent-driven sampling (RDS) is frequently used to recruit PWUD. However, the validity of RDS-generated population-level prevalence estimates relies on assumptions that should be evaluated...
April 23, 2024: BMC Medical Research Methodology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38654168/the%C3%A2-regional-disparities-in-liver-disease-comorbidity-among-elderly-chinese-based-on-a-health-ecological-model-the-china-health-and-retirement-longitudinal-study
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wei Gong, Hong Lin, Xiuting Ma, Hongliang Ma, Yali Lan, Peng Sun, Jianjun Yang
PURPOSE: This study aimed to investigate the risk factors for liver disease comorbidity among older adults in eastern, central, and western China, and explored binary, ternary and quaternary co-morbid co-causal patterns of liver disease within a health ecological model. METHOD: Basic information from 9,763 older adults was analyzed using data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). LASSO regression was employed to identify significant predictors in eastern, central, and western China...
April 23, 2024: BMC Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653943/sociocultural-responsive-frameworks-to-increase-engagement-in-service-systems-through-a-peer-to-peer-model
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ana Maria Meléndez Guevara, Sarah Lindstrom Johnson, Charlie Wall, Kristina Lopez
Service engagement is critical when working with children and families experiencing chronic adversities because of their socially marginalized status. Further, sociodemographic disparities exist in service engagement within service systems including Community-Based Behavioral Health; likely in part, a result of structural issues driving unresponsive service systems. Despite this knowledge, a large proportion of the family engagement literature continues to be approached through a deficit-based and family-centric lens leaving out important systemic considerations and furthering health inequities...
April 24, 2024: Prevention Science: the Official Journal of the Society for Prevention Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653897/racial-ethnic-disparities-discrimination-s-impact-on-health-related-quality-of-life-an-all-of-us-cancer-survivors-cross-sectional-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angel Arizpe, Carol Y Ochoa-Dominguez, Stephanie Navarro, Sue E Kim, Katelyn Queen, Trevor A Pickering, Albert J Farias
BACKGROUND: Discrimination is associated with worse mental and physical health outcomes. However, the associations among cancer survivors are limited. OBJECTIVE: We examined whether discrimination is associated with HRQoL and whether adjusting for it reduces racial/ethnic disparities in HRQoL among cancer survivors. METHODS: Cross-sectional data from adult cancer survivors who completed surveys on discrimination in the medical settings (DMS), everyday perceived discrimination (PD), and HRQoL in the "All of Us" Program from 2018 to 2022 were assessed...
April 23, 2024: Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653722/racial-ethnic-and-socio-economic-disparities-in-neonatal-icu-admissions-among-neonates-born-with-cyanotic-chd-in-the-united-states-2009-2018
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kriyana P Reddy, Avital B Ludomirsky, Andrea L Jones, Rachel J Shustak, Jennifer A Faerber, Maryam Y Naim, Keila N Lopez, Laura M Mercer-Rosa
INTRODUCTION: Disparities in CHD outcomes exist across the lifespan. However, less is known about disparities for patients with CHD admitted to neonatal ICU. We sought to identify sociodemographic disparities in neonatal ICU admissions among neonates born with cyanotic CHD. MATERIALS & METHODS: Annual natality files from the US National Center for Health Statistics for years 2009-2018 were obtained. For each neonate, we identified sex, birthweight, pre-term birth, presence of cyanotic CHD, and neonatal ICU admission at time of birth, as well as maternal age, race, ethnicity, comorbidities/risk factors, trimester at start of prenatal care, educational attainment, and two measures of socio-economic status (Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children [WIC] status and insurance type)...
April 24, 2024: Cardiology in the Young
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653710/disparities-in-the-treatment-of-primary-hyperparathyroidism-a-scoping-review-and-conceptual-model
#30
REVIEW
Alexander S Chiu, Markayle Schears, Mary Hitchcock, Rebecca Sippel, Amy Kind
BACKGROUND: Primary hyperparathyroidism is underdiagnosed and surgical treatment is underutilized and inequitably distributed. We present a review of the current literature on disparities in the treatment of hyperparathyroidism, with a focus on gaps in knowledge and paths forward. METHODS: We searched PubMed and Scopus for abstracts related to disparities in hyperparathyroidism. RESULTS: 16 articles (of 1541) met inclusion criteria. The most commonly examined disparity was race...
April 16, 2024: American Journal of Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653633/single-pill-combination-for-treatment-of-hypertension-just-a-matter-of-practicality-or-is-there-a-real-clinical-benefit
#31
REVIEW
A Coca, S P Whelton, M Camafort, J P López-López, E Yang
Elevated blood pressure (BP) is the largest contributor to the incident cardiovascular disease worldwide. Despite explicit guideline recommendations for the diagnosis and management of hypertension, a large proportion of patients remain undiagnosed, untreated, or treated but uncontrolled. Inadequate BP control is associated with many complex factors including patient preference, physician's inertia, health systems disparities, and poor adherence to prescribed antihypertensive drug treatment. The primary driver for reduced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality is lowering of BP ''per se'' and not class effects of specific pharmacotherapies...
April 22, 2024: European Journal of Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653614/evaluation-of-a-structured-review-process-for-emergency-department-return-visits-with-admission
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zoe Grabinski, Kar-Mun Woo, Olumide Akindutire, Cassidy Dahn, Lauren Nash, Inna Leybell, Yelan Wang, Danielle Bayer, Jordan Swartz, Catherine Jamin, Silas W Smith
BACKGROUND: Review of emergency department (ED) revisits with admission allows the identification of improvement opportunities. Applying a health equity lens to revisits may highlight potential disparities in care transitions. Universal definitions or practicable frameworks for these assessments are lacking. The authors aimed to develop a structured methodology for this quality assurance (QA) process, with a layered equity analysis. METHODS: The authors developed a classification instrument to identify potentially preventable 72-hour returns with admission (PPRA-72), accounting for directed, unrelated, unanticipated, or disease progression returns...
March 15, 2024: Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653545/disclosing-the-significance-of-their-competence-to-the-gillick-competent
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robert Wheeler
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 23, 2024: Archives of Disease in Childhood
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653522/ethnic-minorities-receive-markedly-worse-healthcare-in-every-us-state-finds-commonwealth-fund
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Owen Dyer
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 23, 2024: BMJ: British Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653413/assessing-the-impacts-and-contamination-potentials-of-landfill-leachate-on-adjacent-groundwater-systems
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhi Huang, Guijian Liu, Yifan Zhang, Ying Yuan, Beidou Xi, Wenbing Tan
Landfilling is a globally prevalent method for managing municipal solid waste disposal. Nonetheless, the potential for serious contamination and the significant regional disparities in the leachate produced pose varying degrees of risks to groundwater quality. Previous studies have focused on a single landfill or the same geo-climatic conditions, with a limited number of samples having resulted in a narrow distribution of landfill age and scale, which prevents the description of the pattern of change in landfill age and scale...
April 21, 2024: Science of the Total Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652937/racial-disparities-in-breast-cancer-risk-factors-and-risk-management
#36
REVIEW
Holly J Pederson, Zahraa Al-Hilli, Allison W Kurian
Racial disparities in breast cancer outcomes are well described across the spectrum of screening, diagnosis, treatment, and survivorship. Breast cancer mortality is markedly elevated for Non-Hispanic Black women compared with other racial and ethnic groups, with multifactorial causes. Here, we aim to reduce this burden by identifying disparities in breast cancer risk factors, risk assessment, and risk management before breast cancer is diagnosed. We describe a reproductive profile and modifiable risk factors specific to the development of triple-negative breast cancer...
February 29, 2024: Maturitas
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652692/mixed-methods-study-of-disability-self-management-in-mexican-americans-with-osteoarthritis
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tracie C Harrison, Shelley A Blozis, Janiece Taylor, Nandini Mukherjee, Lucia Caudillo Ortega, Nancy Blanco, Alexandra A Garcia, Sharon A Brown
BACKGROUND: Health disparities in osteoarthritis (OA) outcomes exist both in the occurrence and treatment of functional limitation and disability for Mexican Americans. Although the effect of self-management of chronic illness is well established, studies demonstrate little attention to self-management of function or disability, despite the strong potential effect on both and, consequently, on patients' lives. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study pilot was to develop and test key variable relationships for a measure of disability self-management among Mexican Americans...
May 2024: Nursing Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652506/disparities-in-the-quality-of-working-life-among-older-workers-housing-conditions-and-life-satisfaction-with-latent-class-analysis
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mi Sun Choi, Katherine E Marçal, Kathryn Showalter
Little empirical research informs understanding of the disparate active aging experiences among working older adults, especially in terms of the association with living circumstances and life satisfaction. To address this knowledge gap, this study used latent class analysis on data from the 2020 Health and Retirement Study (HRS) core interview and focused on 1,194 employed adults aged 50 and above. The results revealed four subtypes of the quality of working life in older workers. Notably, in contrast to the other identified classes, higher levels of housing satisfaction and feelings of neighborhood safety were significantly associated with an increased likelihood of being a member of the group of older adults with the highest work capacities and the healthy work-life balance...
April 23, 2024: Journal of Applied Gerontology: the Official Journal of the Southern Gerontological Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652459/telemedicine-in-geriatric-oncology-lessons-learned-from-the-covid-19-experience
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leana Cabrera Chien, Carolina Uranga, Vani Katheria
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Telemedicine quickly became integrated into healthcare caused by the Coronavirus 19 (COVID-19) pandemic. Rapid use of telemedicine into healthcare systems was supported by the World Health Organization and other prominent national organizations to reduce transmission of the virus while continuing to provide access to care. In this review, we explored the effect of this swift change in care and its impact on older adults with cancer. RECENT FINDINGS: Older adults are susceptible to the COVID-19 virus caused by various risk factors, such as comorbidity, frailty, decreased immunity, and cancer increases vulnerability to infection, hospitalization, and mortality...
April 23, 2024: Current Opinion in Supportive and Palliative Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652146/disparities-in-access-to-bariatric-surgery-in-north-carolina
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jan H Wong, Ashley E Burch, Eric J DeMaria, Walter J Pories, William D Irish
BACKGROUND: This study sought to identify factors that contribute to disparities in access to bariatric surgery in North Carolina (NC). METHODS: Using the rate of bariatric surgery in the county with the best health outcome as the reference, we calculated the Surgical Equity Index (SEI) in the remaining counties in NC. RESULTS: Approximately 2.95 million individuals (29%) were obese in NC. There were 992 (.5%) bariatric procedures performed on a population of 194 209 individuals with obesity in the Reference County (RC)...
April 23, 2024: American Surgeon
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