14 results on '"Cellini, J."'
Search Results
2. Community investment interventions as a means for decarceration: A scoping review
- Author
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Hawks, L, Lopoo, E, Puglisi, L, Cellini, J, Thompson, K, Halberstam, AA, Tolliver, D, Martinez-Hamilton, S, and Wang, EA
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. MASTREE+ : time-series of plant reproductive effort from six continents
- Author
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Hacket-Pain, Andrew, Foest, J.J., Pearse, I.S., LaMontagne, J.M., Koenig, W.D., Vacchiano, G., Bogdziewicz, M., Caignard, T., Celebias, P., van Dormolen, J., Fernández-Martínez, Marcos, Moris, J.V., Palaghianu, C., Pesendorfer, Mario, Satake, A., Schermer, E., Tanentzap, A.J., Thomas, P.A., Vecchio, D., Wion, A.P., Wohlgemuth, T., Xue, T., Abernethy, K., Aravena Acuña, M.C., Daniel Barrera, M., Barton, J.H., Boutin, S., Bush, E.R., Donoso Calderón, S., Carevic, F.S., de Castilho, C.V., Manuel Cellini, J., Chapman, C.A., Chapman, H., Chianucci, F., da Costa, P., Croisé, L., Cutini, A., Dantzer, B., Justin DeRose, R., Dikangadissi, J.T., Dimoto, E., da Fonseca, F.L., Gallo, L., Gratzer, G., Greene, D.F., Hadad, M.A., Herrera, A.H., Jeffery, K.J., Johnstone, J. F, Kalbitzer, U., Kantorowicz, W., Klimas, C.A., Lageard, J.G.A., Lane, J., Lapin, K., Ledwoń, M., Leeper, A.C., Vanessa Lencinas, M., Lira-Guedes, A.C., Lordon, M.C., Marchelli, P., Marino, S., Schmidt Van Marle, H., McAdam, A.G., Momont, L.R.W., Nicolas, M., de Oliveira Wadt, L.H., Panahi, P., Martínez Pastur, G., Patterson, T., Luis Peri, P., Piechnik, Ł., Pourhashemi, M., Espinoza Quezada, C., Roig, F.A., Peña Rojas, K., Micaela Rosas, Y., Schueler, S., Seget, B., Soler, R., Steele, M.A., Toro-Manríquez, M., Tutin, C.E.G., Ukizintambara, T., White, L., Yadok, B., Willis, J.L., Zolles, A., Żywiec, M., Ascoli, D., Hacket-Pain, Andrew, Foest, J.J., Pearse, I.S., LaMontagne, J.M., Koenig, W.D., Vacchiano, G., Bogdziewicz, M., Caignard, T., Celebias, P., van Dormolen, J., Fernández-Martínez, Marcos, Moris, J.V., Palaghianu, C., Pesendorfer, Mario, Satake, A., Schermer, E., Tanentzap, A.J., Thomas, P.A., Vecchio, D., Wion, A.P., Wohlgemuth, T., Xue, T., Abernethy, K., Aravena Acuña, M.C., Daniel Barrera, M., Barton, J.H., Boutin, S., Bush, E.R., Donoso Calderón, S., Carevic, F.S., de Castilho, C.V., Manuel Cellini, J., Chapman, C.A., Chapman, H., Chianucci, F., da Costa, P., Croisé, L., Cutini, A., Dantzer, B., Justin DeRose, R., Dikangadissi, J.T., Dimoto, E., da Fonseca, F.L., Gallo, L., Gratzer, G., Greene, D.F., Hadad, M.A., Herrera, A.H., Jeffery, K.J., Johnstone, J. F, Kalbitzer, U., Kantorowicz, W., Klimas, C.A., Lageard, J.G.A., Lane, J., Lapin, K., Ledwoń, M., Leeper, A.C., Vanessa Lencinas, M., Lira-Guedes, A.C., Lordon, M.C., Marchelli, P., Marino, S., Schmidt Van Marle, H., McAdam, A.G., Momont, L.R.W., Nicolas, M., de Oliveira Wadt, L.H., Panahi, P., Martínez Pastur, G., Patterson, T., Luis Peri, P., Piechnik, Ł., Pourhashemi, M., Espinoza Quezada, C., Roig, F.A., Peña Rojas, K., Micaela Rosas, Y., Schueler, S., Seget, B., Soler, R., Steele, M.A., Toro-Manríquez, M., Tutin, C.E.G., Ukizintambara, T., White, L., Yadok, B., Willis, J.L., Zolles, A., Żywiec, M., and Ascoli, D.
- Abstract
Significant gaps remain in understanding the response of plant reproduction to environmental change. This is partly because measuring reproduction in long-lived plants requires direct observation over many years and such datasets have rarely been made publicly available. Here we introduce MASTREE+, a data set that collates reproductive time-series data from across the globe and makes these data freely available to the community. MASTREE+ includes 73,828 georeferenced observations of annual reproduction (e.g. seed and fruit counts) in perennial plant populations worldwide. These observations consist of 5971 population-level time-series from 974 species in 66 countries. The mean and median time-series length is 12.4 and 10 years respectively, and the data set includes 1122 series that extend over at least two decades (≥20 years of observations). For a subset of well-studied species, MASTREE+ includes extensive replication of time-series across geographical and climatic gradients. Here we describe the open-access data set, available as a.csv file, and we introduce an associated web-based app for data exploration. MASTREE+ will provide the basis for improved understanding of the response of long-lived plant reproduction to environmental change. Additionally, MASTREE+ will enable investigation of the ecology and evolution of reproductive strategies in perennial plants, and the role of plant reproduction as a driver of ecosystem dynamics.
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- 2022
4. The Psychosocial Consequences of Sexual Violence Stigma: A Scoping Review.
- Author
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Mellen EJ, Kim DY, Edenbaum ER, and Cellini J
- Abstract
Over the past decade, scholars have explored whether the stigma associated with sexual violence (SV) represents a risk factor for psychopathology and related comorbidities following SV. We conducted a scoping review to summarize and evaluate the state of this burgeoning literature. We included studies from Pubmed, APA PsychInfo, Embase, CINAHL Plus, Social Science Premium, and Web of Science that quantified stigma related to SV. Studies were screened and abstracted in accordance with the PRISMA-SCR guidelines for scoping reviews. Our final sample contained 62 studies. We address two key questions about SV stigma. First, is SV a stigmatized status? Articles ( n = 14) provided evidence for SV stigma among potential stigmatizers (e.g., individuals who may perpetuate stigma) across a range of methods (e.g., vignettes) and outcomes (e.g., desire for social distance). Additional work ( n = 20) corroborates perceptions of SV stigma among targets (i.e., SV survivors). Second, what are the psychosocial consequences of SV stigma? We reviewed studies ( n = 28) demonstrating that SV stigma is correlated with a range of adverse psychosocial outcomes-including anxiety, depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, problematic drinking, and somatic symptoms-among individuals experiencing multiple types of SV (e.g., childhood sexual abuse and sexual assault). Thus, emerging evidence suggests that SV stigma may be a critical determinant of risk and recovery following SV exposure. However, a number of limitations were observed, including that SV stigma has not been consistently measured and that the literature has not fully incorporated stigma constructs, such as concealment and structural stigma. We offer several recommendations to advance this line of work., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Universal coverage for oral health care in 27 low-income countries: a scoping review.
- Author
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Luan Y, Sardana D, Jivraj A, Liu D, Abeyweera N, Zhao Y, Cellini J, Bass M, Wang J, Lu X, Cao Z, and Lu C
- Subjects
- Humans, Universal Health Insurance statistics & numerical data, Health Policy, Dental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Dental Health Services economics, Developing Countries statistics & numerical data, Oral Health statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Low-income countries bear a growing and disproportionate burden of oral diseases. With the World Health Organization targeting universal oral health coverage by 2030, assessing the state of oral health coverage in these resource-limited nations becomes crucial. This research seeks to examine the political and resource commitments to oral health, along with the utilization rate of oral health services, across 27 low-income countries., Methods: We investigated five aspects of oral health coverage in low-income countries, including the integration of oral health in national health policies, covered oral health services, utilization rates, expenditures, and the number of oral health professionals. A comprehensive search was conducted across seven bibliographic databases, three grey literature databases, and national governments' and international organizations' websites up to May 2023, with no linguistic restrictions. Countries were categorized into "full integration", "partial integration", or "no integration" based on the presence of dedicated oral health policies and the frequency of oral health mentions. Covered oral health services, utilization rates, expenditure trends, and the density of oral health professionals were analyzed using evidence from reviews and data from World Health Organization databases., Results: A total of 4242 peer-reviewed and 3345 grey literature texts were screened, yielding 12 and 84 files respectively to be included in the final review. Nine countries belong to "full integration" and thirteen countries belong to "partial integration", while five countries belong to "no integration". Twelve countries collectively covered 26 types of oral health care services, with tooth extraction being the most prevalent service. Preventive and public health-based oral health interventions were scarce. Utilization rates remained low, with the primary motivation for seeking care being dental pain relief. Expenditures on oral health were minimal, predominantly relying on domestic private sources. On average, the 27 low-income countries had 0.51 dentists per 10,000 population, contrasting with 2.83 and 7.62 in middle-income and high-income countries., Conclusions: Oral health care received little political and resource commitment toward achieving universal health coverage in low-income countries. Urgent action is needed to mobilize financial and human resources, and integrate preventive and public health-based interventions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
- Full Text
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6. Surgical capacity is disaster preparedness: A scoping review of how surgery and anesthesiology departments responded to COVID-19.
- Author
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Hey MT, Carroll M, Steel LB, Bryce-Alberti M, Hamzah R, Wittenberg RE, Ehsan A, Abdi H, Stewart L, Parikh R, Rauf R, Cellini J, Winslow K, Alty IG, McClain CD, and Anderson GA
- Subjects
- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Surgery Department, Hospital organization & administration, Disaster Planning organization & administration, Anesthesia Department, Hospital organization & administration, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: This study evaluated how surgical and anesthesiology departments adapted their resources in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic., Design: This scoping review used the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews protocol, with Covidence as a screening tool. An initial search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Global Index Medicus, and Cochrane Systematic Reviews returned 6,131 results in October 2021. After exclusion of duplicates and abstract screening, 415 articles were included. After full-text screening, 108 articles remained., Results: Most commonly, studies were retrospective in nature (47.22 percent), with data from a single institution (60.19 percent). Nearly all studies occurred in high-income countries (HICs), 78.70 percent, with no articles from low-income countries. The reported responses to the COVID-19 pandemic involving surgical departments were grouped into seven categories, with multiple responses reported in some articles for a total of 192 responses. The most frequently reported responses were changes to surgical department staffing (29.17 percent) and task-shifting or task-sharing of personnel (25.52 percent)., Conclusion: Our review reflects the mechanisms by which hospital surgical systems responded to the initial stress of the COVID-19 pandemic and reinforced the many changes to hospital policy that occurred in the pandemic. Healthcare systems with robust surgical systems were better able to cope with the initial stress of the COVID-19 pandemic. The well-resourced health systems of HICs reported rapid and dynamic changes by providers to assist in and ultimately improve the care of patients during the pandemic. Surgical system strengthening will allow health systems to be more resilient and prepared for the next disaster.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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7. Racial Differences in Germline Genetic Testing for Prostate Cancer: A Systematic Review.
- Author
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Briggs LG, Steele GL, Qian ZJ, Subbana S, Alkhatib KY, Labban M, Langbein BJ, Nguyen DD, Cellini J, Kilbridge K, Kibel AS, Trinh QD, Rana HQ, and Cole AP
- Subjects
- Male, Humans, United States epidemiology, Race Factors, Ethnicity, Black or African American, Prostatic Neoplasms genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Testing for pathogenic variants can aid in oncologic risk stratification and identification of targeted therapies. Despite known disparities in access to prostate cancer (PCa) care, little has been written about access to germline genetic testing (GGT) for Black men and other historically marginalized populations. This systematic review sought to delineate racial/ethnic disparities in GGT for PCa., Methods: This systematic review identified articles published from January 1996 through May 2021 in PubMed, Web of Science, and Embase. We included studies that reported rates of GGT in men with PCa in the United States by race/ethnicity as reflective of routine clinical care or research. A narrative synthesis was performed., Results: Of 4,309 unique records, 91 studies examining 50 unique study populations met inclusion criteria. Of these, four populations included men who received GGT through routine clinical care, accounting for 4,415 men (72.6% White and 7.2% Black). The other 46 populations included men who received GGT as part of a research study, accounting for 30,824 men (64.3% White and 21.6% Black). Of these 46 research populations, 19 used targeted methods to increase recruitment from a specific demographic., Conclusion: Most studies that report GGT rates by race/ethnicity are in research settings. Many of these studies used targeted recruitment methods and subsequently have a greater proportion of Black men than clinical and US population-based studies. Other historically marginalized populations are not well represented. There remains a knowledge gap regarding the extent of racial disparities in the use of GGT, particularly in the clinical setting.
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- 2023
- Full Text
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8. A Literature Review of the Effects of Air Pollution on COVID-19 Health Outcomes Worldwide: Statistical Challenges and Data Visualization.
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Bhaskar A, Chandra J, Hashemi H, Butler K, Bennett L, Cellini J, Braun D, and Dominici F
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- Humans, Data Visualization, Particulate Matter adverse effects, Environmental Exposure adverse effects, Environmental Exposure analysis, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, COVID-19 epidemiology, Air Pollution adverse effects
- Abstract
Several peer-reviewed papers and reviews have examined the relationship between exposure to air pollution and COVID-19 spread and severity. However, many of the existing reviews on this topic do not extensively present the statistical challenges associated with this field, do not provide comprehensive guidelines for future researchers, and review only the results of a relatively small number of papers. We reviewed 139 papers, 127 of which reported a statistically significant positive association between air pollution and adverse COVID-19 health outcomes. Here, we summarize the evidence, describe the statistical challenges, and make recommendations for future research. To summarize the 139 papers with data from geographical locations around the world, we also present anopen-source data visualization tool that summarizes these studies and allows the research community to contribute evidence as new research papers are published.
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- 2023
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9. Length-of-Stay in the Emergency Department and In-Hospital Mortality: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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Lauque D, Khalemsky A, Boudi Z, Östlundh L, Xu C, Alsabri M, Onyeji C, Cellini J, Intas G, Soni KD, Junhasavasdikul D, Cabello JJT, Rathlev NK, Liu SW, Camargo CA Jr, Slagman A, Christ M, Singer AJ, Houze-Cerfon CH, Aburawi EH, Tazarourte K, Kurland L, Levy PD, Paxton JH, Tsilimingras D, Kumar VA, Schwartz DG, Lang E, Bates DW, Savioli G, Grossman SA, and Bellou A
- Abstract
The effect of emergency department (ED) length of stay (EDLOS) on in-hospital mortality (IHM) remains unclear. The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to determine the association between EDLOS and IHM. We searched the PubMed, Medline, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials, CINAHL, PsycInfo, and Scopus databases from their inception until 14−15 January 2022. We included studies reporting the association between EDLOS and IHM. A total of 11,337 references were identified, and 52 studies (total of 1,718,518 ED patients) were included in the systematic review and 33 in the meta-analysis. A statistically significant association between EDLOS and IHM was observed for EDLOS over 24 h in patients admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU) (OR = 1.396, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.147 to 1.701; p < 0.001, I2 = 0%) and for low EDLOS in non-ICU-admitted patients (OR = 0.583, 95% CI: 0.453 to 0.745; p < 0.001, I2 = 0%). No associations were detected for the other cut-offs. Our findings suggest that there is an association between IHM low EDLOS and EDLOS exceeding 24 h and IHM. Long stays in the ED should not be allowed and special attention should be given to patients admitted after a short stay in the ED.
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- 2022
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10. The effect of levocarnitine supplementation on dialysis-related hypotension: A systematic review, meta-analysis, and trial sequential analysis.
- Author
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Chewcharat A, Chewcharat P, Liu W, Cellini J, Phipps EA, Melendez Young JA, and Nigwekar SU
- Subjects
- Carnitine, Dietary Supplements, Humans, Muscle Cramp drug therapy, Muscle Cramp etiology, Hypotension drug therapy, Hypotension etiology, Hypotension prevention & control, Renal Dialysis adverse effects, Renal Dialysis methods
- Abstract
Background: Dialysis patients have been shown to have low serum carnitine due to poor nutrition, deprivation of endogenous synthesis from kidneys, and removal by hemodialysis. Carnitine deficiency leads to impaired cardiac function and dialysis-related hypotension which are associated with increased mortality. Supplementing with levocarnitine among hemodialysis patients may diminish incidence of intradialytic hypotension. Data on this topic, however, lacks consensus., Methods: We conducted electronic searches in PubMed, Embase and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials from January 1960 to 19th November 2021 to identify randomized controlled studies (RCTs), which examined the effects of oral or intravenous levocarnitine (L-carnitine) on dialysis-related hypotension among hemodialysis patients. The secondary outcome was muscle cramps. Study results were pooled and analyzed utilizing the random-effects model. Trial sequential analysis (TSA) was performed to assess the strength of current evidence., Results: Eight trials with 224 participants were included in our meta-analysis. Compared to control group, L-carnitine reduced the incidence of dialysis-related hypotension among hemodialysis patients (pooled OR = 0.26, 95% CI [0.10-0.72], p = 0.01, I2 = 76.0%). TSA demonstrated that the evidence was sufficient to conclude the finding. Five studies with 147 participants showed a reduction in the incidence of muscle cramps with L-carnitine group (pooled OR = 0.22, 95% CI [0.06-0.81], p = 0.02, I2 = 74.7%). However, TSA suggested that further high-quality studies were required. Subgroup analysis on the route of supplementation revealed that only oral but not intravenous L-carnitine significantly reduced dialysis-related hypotension. Regarding dose and duration of L-carnitine supplementation, the dose > 4,200 mg/week and duration of at least 12 weeks appeared to prevent dialysis-related hypotension., Conclusion: Supplementing oral L-carnitine for at least three months above 4,200 mg/week helps prevent dialysis-related hypotension. L-carnitine supplementation may ameliorate muscle cramps. Further well-powered studies are required to conclude this benefit., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. MASTREE+: Time-series of plant reproductive effort from six continents.
- Author
-
Hacket-Pain A, Foest JJ, Pearse IS, LaMontagne JM, Koenig WD, Vacchiano G, Bogdziewicz M, Caignard T, Celebias P, van Dormolen J, Fernández-Martínez M, Moris JV, Palaghianu C, Pesendorfer M, Satake A, Schermer E, Tanentzap AJ, Thomas PA, Vecchio D, Wion AP, Wohlgemuth T, Xue T, Abernethy K, Aravena Acuña MC, Daniel Barrera M, Barton JH, Boutin S, Bush ER, Donoso Calderón S, Carevic FS, de Castilho CV, Manuel Cellini J, Chapman CA, Chapman H, Chianucci F, da Costa P, Croisé L, Cutini A, Dantzer B, Justin DeRose R, Dikangadissi JT, Dimoto E, da Fonseca FL, Gallo L, Gratzer G, Greene DF, Hadad MA, Herrera AH, Jeffery KJ, Johnstone JF, Kalbitzer U, Kantorowicz W, Klimas CA, Lageard JGA, Lane J, Lapin K, Ledwoń M, Leeper AC, Vanessa Lencinas M, Lira-Guedes AC, Lordon MC, Marchelli P, Marino S, Schmidt Van Marle H, McAdam AG, Momont LRW, Nicolas M, de Oliveira Wadt LH, Panahi P, Martínez Pastur G, Patterson T, Luis Peri P, Piechnik Ł, Pourhashemi M, Espinoza Quezada C, Roig FA, Peña Rojas K, Micaela Rosas Y, Schueler S, Seget B, Soler R, Steele MA, Toro-Manríquez M, Tutin CEG, Ukizintambara T, White L, Yadok B, Willis JL, Zolles A, Żywiec M, and Ascoli D
- Subjects
- Ecology, Plants, Seeds physiology, Ecosystem, Reproduction
- Abstract
Significant gaps remain in understanding the response of plant reproduction to environmental change. This is partly because measuring reproduction in long-lived plants requires direct observation over many years and such datasets have rarely been made publicly available. Here we introduce MASTREE+, a data set that collates reproductive time-series data from across the globe and makes these data freely available to the community. MASTREE+ includes 73,828 georeferenced observations of annual reproduction (e.g. seed and fruit counts) in perennial plant populations worldwide. These observations consist of 5971 population-level time-series from 974 species in 66 countries. The mean and median time-series length is 12.4 and 10 years respectively, and the data set includes 1122 series that extend over at least two decades (≥20 years of observations). For a subset of well-studied species, MASTREE+ includes extensive replication of time-series across geographical and climatic gradients. Here we describe the open-access data set, available as a.csv file, and we introduce an associated web-based app for data exploration. MASTREE+ will provide the basis for improved understanding of the response of long-lived plant reproduction to environmental change. Additionally, MASTREE+ will enable investigation of the ecology and evolution of reproductive strategies in perennial plants, and the role of plant reproduction as a driver of ecosystem dynamics., (© 2022 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Sources of bias in artificial intelligence that perpetuate healthcare disparities-A global review.
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Celi LA, Cellini J, Charpignon ML, Dee EC, Dernoncourt F, Eber R, Mitchell WG, Moukheiber L, Schirmer J, Situ J, Paguio J, Park J, Wawira JG, and Yao S
- Abstract
Background: While artificial intelligence (AI) offers possibilities of advanced clinical prediction and decision-making in healthcare, models trained on relatively homogeneous datasets, and populations poorly-representative of underlying diversity, limits generalisability and risks biased AI-based decisions. Here, we describe the landscape of AI in clinical medicine to delineate population and data-source disparities., Methods: We performed a scoping review of clinical papers published in PubMed in 2019 using AI techniques. We assessed differences in dataset country source, clinical specialty, and author nationality, sex, and expertise. A manually tagged subsample of PubMed articles was used to train a model, leveraging transfer-learning techniques (building upon an existing BioBERT model) to predict eligibility for inclusion (original, human, clinical AI literature). Of all eligible articles, database country source and clinical specialty were manually labelled. A BioBERT-based model predicted first/last author expertise. Author nationality was determined using corresponding affiliated institution information using Entrez Direct. And first/last author sex was evaluated using the Gendarize.io API., Results: Our search yielded 30,576 articles, of which 7,314 (23.9%) were eligible for further analysis. Most databases came from the US (40.8%) and China (13.7%). Radiology was the most represented clinical specialty (40.4%), followed by pathology (9.1%). Authors were primarily from either China (24.0%) or the US (18.4%). First and last authors were predominately data experts (i.e., statisticians) (59.6% and 53.9% respectively) rather than clinicians. And the majority of first/last authors were male (74.1%)., Interpretation: U.S. and Chinese datasets and authors were disproportionately overrepresented in clinical AI, and almost all of the top 10 databases and author nationalities were from high income countries (HICs). AI techniques were most commonly employed for image-rich specialties, and authors were predominantly male, with non-clinical backgrounds. Development of technological infrastructure in data-poor regions, and diligence in external validation and model re-calibration prior to clinical implementation in the short-term, are crucial in ensuring clinical AI is meaningful for broader populations, and to avoid perpetuating global health inequity., Competing Interests: Leo Anthony Celi is the Editor-in Chief of PLOS Digital Health and Judy Gichoya Wawira is a Section Editor for PLOS Digital Health., (Copyright: © 2022 Celi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Community investment interventions as a means for decarceration: A scoping review.
- Author
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Hawks L, Lopoo E, Puglisi L, Cellini J, Thompson K, Halberstam AA, Tolliver D, Martinez-Hamilton S, and Wang EA
- Abstract
There is growing support to reverse mass incarceration in the United States, especially in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. Little is known about what types and scale of community investments are most effective to support mass decarceration. Using a public health prevention framework, we conducted a scoping review to examine community-based programs that reduced criminal legal involvement. We searched PubMed, Embase and three EBSCO databases from 1990 through September 2019 for all experimental or quasi-experimental studies testing interventions pertaining to education, housing, healthcare, employment, or social support services and how they affected an individual's criminal legal outcomes. Our review identified 53 studies that demonstrated the efficacy of early childhood educational interventions and nurse-family partnership programs, post-secondary education for incarcerated students, navigation programs linking incarcerated people to community resources, and peer support upon release to reduce criminal legal system exposure. In concert with legislative action to end mass incarceration, additional research is needed to test interventions designed to achieve mass decarceration which cross multiple domains, interrogate community-level impacts and ascertain long-term outcomes., Competing Interests: The authors have no competing interests to disclose., (© 2021 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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14. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation and defibrillation for cardiac arrest when patients are in the prone position: A systematic review.
- Author
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Hsu CH, Considine J, Pawar RD, Cellini J, Schexnayder SM, Soar J, Olasveengen TM, and Berg KM
- Abstract
Aim: To perform a systematic review of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and/or defibrillation in the prone position compared to turning the patient supine prior to starting CPR and/or defibrillation., Methods: The search included PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane, CINAHL Plus, and medRxiv on December 9, 2020. The population included adults and children in any setting with cardiac arrest while in the prone position. The outcomes included arterial blood pressure and end-tidal capnography during CPR, time to start CPR and defibrillation, return of spontaneous circulation, survival and survival with favorable neurologic outcome to discharge, 30 days or longer. ROBINS-I was performed to assess risk of bias for observational studies., Results: The systematic review identified 29 case reports (32 individual cases), two prospective observational studies, and two simulation studies. The observational studies enrolled 17 patients who were declared dead in the supine position and reported higher mean systolic blood pressure from CPR in prone position (72 mmHg vs 48 mmHg, p < 0.005; 79 ± 20 mmHg vs 55 ± 20 mmHg, p = 0.028). One simulation study reported a faster time to defibrillation in the prone position. Return of spontaneous circulation, survival to discharge or 30 days were reported in adult and paediatric case reports. Critical risk of bias limited our ability to perform pooled analyses., Conclusions: We identified a limited number of observational studies and case reports comparing prone versus supine CPR and/or defibrillation. Prone CPR may be a reasonable option if immediate supination is difficult or poses unacceptable risks to the patient., (© 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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