885 results on '"Adams, Sally"'
Search Results
2. Interviewing for journalists.
- Author
-
Adams, Sally and Hicks, Wynford
- Subjects
Interviewing in journalism ,Journalism ,Mass media - Abstract
Summary: Interviewing for Journalists details the central journalistic skill of how to ask the right question in the right way. It is a practical and concise guide for all print and online journalists - professionals, students and trainees - whether writing news stories or features for newspapers and magazines, print and web. Interviewing for Journalists focuses on the many types of interviewing, from the routine street interview, vox pop and press conference to the interview used as the basis of an in-depth profile. Drawing on previously published material and featuring interviews with successful columnists such as Emma Brockes, who writes for the Guardian and the New York Times and Andrew Duncan of Radio Times. Interviewing for Journalists covers every stage of interviews including research, planning and preparation, structuring questions, the importance of body language, how to get a vivid quote, checking material and editing it into different formats.
- Published
- 2009
3. Hospital‐based higher calorie refeeding and mealtime distress in adolescents and young adults with anorexia nervosa or atypical anorexia nervosa
- Author
-
Accurso, Erin C, Cheng, Jing, Machen, Vanessa I, Buckelew, Sara, Kreiter, Anna, Adams, Sally, Le Grange, Daniel, Golden, Neville H, and Garber, Andrea K
- Subjects
Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Serious Mental Illness ,Eating Disorders ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric ,Nutrition ,Mental Illness ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Anorexia ,Women's Health ,Mental health ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Young Adult ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Hospitalization ,Energy Intake ,Hospitals ,Meals ,anorexia nervosa ,atypical anorexia nervosa ,food refusal ,high calorie ,mealtime distress ,medical stabilization ,negative affect ,positive affect ,refeeding ,treatment acceptability ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Clinical Psychology ,Nutrition and dietetics ,Public health - Abstract
ObjectiveThe StRONG study demonstrated that higher calorie refeeding (HCR) restored medical stability faster in patients hospitalized with anorexia nervosa (AN) and atypical AN (AAN), with no increased safety events compared with standard-of-care lower calorie refeeding (LCR). However, some clinicians have expressed concern about potential unintended consequences of HCR (e.g., greater mealtime distress). The purpose of this study was to examine patient treatment preference and compare mealtime distress, food refusal, and affective states between treatments.MethodParticipants (N = 111) in this multisite randomized clinical trial were ages 12-24 years, with AN or AAN, admitted to hospital with medical instability who received assigned study treatment (HCR or LCR). Treatment preference was assessed prior to randomization in the full sample. In a subset of participants (n = 45), linear mixed effect models were used to analyze momentary ratings of mealtime distress (pre, during, and post-meals) and daily affective state during the hospitalization.ResultsAbout half (55%) of participants reported a preference for LCR. Treatment assignment was not associated with food refusal, mealtime distress, or affective states in the subsample. Food refusal increased significantly over the course of refeeding (p = .018). Individuals with greater depression experienced more negative affect (p = .033), with worsening negative affect over time for individuals with higher eating disorder psychopathology (p = .023).DiscussionDespite understandable concerns about potential unintended consequences of HCR, we found no evidence that treatment acceptability for HCR differed from LCR for adolescents and young adults with AN and AAN.Public significanceThe efficacy and safety of higher calorie refeeding in hospitalized patients with anorexia nervosa has been demonstrated. However, it is not known whether higher calorie refeeding (HCR) increases meal-time distress. This study demonstrated that HCR was not associated with increased mealtime distress, food refusal, or affective states, as compared with lower calorie refeeding. These data support HCR treatment acceptability for adolescents/young adults with anorexia nervosa and atypical anorexia nervosa.
- Published
- 2023
4. Adolescents' Receipt of Care in a Medical Home: Results From a National Survey
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Park, M Jane, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Pediatric Research Initiative ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Disparities ,Medical home ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeDespite long-term emphasis on the medical home for children, little research focuses on adolescents. This study examines adolescent past-year attainment of medical home, its components, and subgroup differences among demographic and mental/physical health condition categories.MethodsUtilizing the 2020-21 National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH), ages 10-17 (N = 42,930), we determined medical home attainment and its 5 components and subgroup differences utilizing multivariable logistic regression: sex; race/ethnicity; income; caregiver education; insurance; language spoken at home; region; and health conditions: physical, mental, both, or none.ResultsForty-five percent had a medical home with lower rates among those who were as follows: not White non-Hispanic; lower income; uninsured; in non-English-speaking households; adolescents whose caregivers lacked a college degree; and adolescents with mental health conditions (p range = .01-
- Published
- 2023
5. The Relationship Between Hispanic Ethnicity and Outcomes for Infants Born Extremely Preterm
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Laptook, Abbot R., Keszler, Martin, Hensman, Angelita M., Alksninis, Barbara, Bishop, Carmena, Burke, Robert T., Caskey, Melinda, Hoffman, Laurie, Johnson, Katharine, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Lamberson, Vita, Leach, Teresa M., Little, Emilee, Stephens, Bonnie E., Vieira, Elisa, St. Pierre, Lucille, Ventura, Suzy, Watson, Victoria E., Maria Hibbs, Anna, Walsh, Michele C., Newman, Nancy S., Bhola, Monika, Payne, Allison H., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Siner, Bonnie S., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Roth, Elizabeth, Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Scott, Allison, Parimi, Prabhu S., Gaetano, Lisa, Poindexter, Brenda B., Schibler, Kurt, Kallapur, Suhas G., Donovan, Edward F., Merhar, Stephanie, Grisby, Cathy, Yolton, Kimberly, Alexander, Barbara, Beiersdorfer, Traci, Bridges, Kate, Cahill, Tanya E., Dudley, Juanita, Fischer, Estelle E., Gratton, Teresa L., Hayes, Devan, Hessling, Jody, Jackson, Lenora D., Kirker, Kristin, Mincey, Holly L., Muthig, Greg, Stacey, Sara, Steichen, Jean J., Tepe, Stacey, Thompson, Julia, Wuertz, Sandra, Cotten, C. Michael, Goldberg, Ronald N., Goldstein, Ricki F., Malcolm, William F., Propst, Joanne, Ashley, Patricia L., Mago-Shah, Deesha, Warren, Mollie, Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Clark, Cindy, Talbert, Jennifer, Warner, Diane, Wereszczak, Janice, Trembath, Andrea, Martin, Holly, O'Shea, Michael, Kicklighter, Stephen D., Rhodes-Ryan, Ginger, White, Donna, Bentley, Alexandra, Edwards, Laura, Patel, Ravi M., Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne C., Blackwelder, Ann, Bottcher, Diane I., Carter, Sheena L., Kendrick-Allwood, Salathiel, Laursen, Judith, LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Mackie, Colleen, Sanders, Amy, Seabrook, Irma, Smikle, Gloria, Wineski, Lynn C., Higgins, Rosemary D., Bremer, Andrew A., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Dusick, Anna M., Papile, Lu Ann, Gunn, Susan, Hamer, Faithe, Harmon, Heidi M., Herron, Dianne E., Hines, Abbey C., Lytle, Carolyn, Miller, Lucy C., Minnich, Heike M., Richard, Leslie, Smiley, Lucy, Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Joyce, Jeffery, Tyson, Jon E., Rysavy, Matthew A., Kennedy, Kathleen A., Khan, Amir M., Stephens, Emily K., McDavid, Georgia E., Alaniz, Nora I., Allain, Elizabeth, Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Boricha, Fatima, Burson, Katrina, Dempsey, Allison G., Dieterich, Susan E., Eason, Elizabeth, Evans, Patricia W., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles, Hall, Donna, Harris, Beverly Foley, Jiminez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, M. Layne, Lis, Anna E., Major-Kincade, Terri, Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., Mason, Carrie M., McKee, Shannon, Morris, Brenda H., Reddy, Tina, Mosquera, Ricardo, Rennie, Kimberly, Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba Khan, Simmons, Maegan C., Sperry, Daniel, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Zanger, Dinorah, Sánchez, Pablo J., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Luzader, Patricia, Besner, Gail E., Clark, Erna, Fortney, Christine A., Gutentag, Julie, Maitre, Nathalie L., Park, Courtney, Parikh, Nehal A., Shadd, Julie, Sullivan, Margaret, Stein, Melanie, Das, Abhik, Gantz, Marie G., Gabrio, Jenna, Newman, Jamie E., Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Parlberg, Lindsay, Lewis, Amanda, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Chock, Valerie Y., Stevenson, David K., Hintz, Susan R., Adams, Marian M., Bahmani, Dona, Ball, M. Bethany, Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth, Davis, Alexis S., Elena DeAnda, Maria, DeBattista, Anne M., Huffman, Lynne C., Ismael, Magdy, Kohn, Jean G., Krueger, Casey, Lowe, Janice, Lucash, Ryan E., Palmquist, Andrew W., Patel, Jessica, Proud, Melinda S., Reichert, Elizabeth N., Recine, Barbara P., Rutkowska, Lilia, St. John, Nicholas H., Sivakumar, Dharshi, Taylor, Heather L., Wager, Natalie, Williams, R. Jordan, Weiss, Hali, Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Furey, Anne, Nylen, Ellen, Church, Paige T., Sibley, Cecelia E., Brussa, Ana K., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Ladinsky, Morissa, Biasini, Fred J., Domnanovich, Kristy A., Rector, Richard V., Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Phillips, Vivien A., Whitley, Sally, McNair, Tara E., Chapman, Sheree York, Jno-Finn, Chantel J., Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Finer, Neil N., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Kaegi, David, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Arnell, Kathy, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Rich, Wade, Bouey, Nicolas J., Colaizy, Tarah T., Widness, John A., Acarregui, Michael J., Klein, Jonathan M., Dagle, John M., Johnson, Karen J., Eastman, Diane L., Goeke, Claire A., Schmelzel, Mendi L., Walker, Jacky R., Baack, Michelle L., Hogden, Laurie A., Broadbent, Megan, Elenkiwich, Chelsey, Henning, Megan M., Ellsbury, Dan L., Campbell, Donia B., Tud, Tracy L., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Fajardo-Hiriart, Sylvia, Rigaud, Arielle, Calejo, Maria, Frade Eguaras, Silvia M., Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Garcia, Andrea, Pierre, Helina, Stoerger, Alexandra, Watterberg, Kristi L., Fuller, Janell, Ohls, Robin K., Beauman, Sandra Sundquist, Backstrom Lacy, Conra, Duncan, Andrea F., Hanson, Mary, Hartenberger, Carol, Kuan, Elizabeth, Lowe, Jean R., Thomson, Rebecca A., DeMauro, Sara B., Eichenwald, Eric C., Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Catts, Christine, Cook, Noah, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Ghavam, Sarvin, Hurt, Hallam, Snyder, Jonathan, Vangala, Saritha, Ziolkowski, Kristina, D'Angio, Carl T., Phelps, Dale L., Guillet, Ronnie, Myers, Gary J., Andrews-Hartley, Michelle, Johnson, Julie Babish, Binion, Kyle, Bowman, Melissa, Burnell, Erica, Fallone, Cait, Farooq, Osman, Hunn, Julianne, Hust, Diane, Jensen, Rosemary L., Kushner, Emily, Maffett, Deanna, Merzbach, Joan, Orme, Constance, Prinzing, Diane, Reubens, Linda J., Rochez, Daisy, Rowan, Mary, Sabaratnam, Premini, Scorsone, Ann Marie, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Yost, Kelley, Zwetsch, Lauren, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Sacilowski, Michael G., Guilford, Stephanie, Williams, Ashley, Zorn, William A., Kent, Alison, Jones, Rachel, Boylin, Elizabeth, Moreland, Melissa, Li, Emily, Donato, Jennifer, Voelker, Kelsey, McKee, Kimberly, Coleman, Kelly, Cavanaugh, Brenna, Wyckoff, Myra H., Brion, Luc P., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Salhab, Walid A., Heyne, Roy J., Vasil, Diana M., Adams, Sally S., Chen, Lijun, De Leon, Maria M., Eubanks, Francis, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Lee, Lizette E., Leps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., McDougald, E. Rebecca, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Pavageau, Lara, Puentez, Anna, Sepulveda, Pollieanna, Tolentino-Plata, Kristine, Boatman, Cathy Twell, Vera, Azucena, Waterbury, Jillian, Yoder, Bradley A., Baserga, Mariana, Faix, Roger G., Winter, Sarah, Minton, Stephen D., Sheffield, Mark J., Rau, Carrie A., Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Christensen, Susan, Cole-Bledsoe, Laura, Davis, Brandy, Elmont, Jennifer O., Jensen, Jennifer J., Loertscher, Manndi C., Jamie Jordan, Marchant, Trisha, Maxson, Earl, McGrath, Kandace M., Parry, D. Melody, Reich, Brixen A., Schaefer, Susan T., Spencer, Cynthia, Steffen, Michael, Tice, Katherine, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Woodbury, Kathryn D., Zanetti, Karen, Gerday, Erick B., Osborne, Karen, Cunningham, Sean, Hall, Becky, Jensen, Erika R., Mickelsen, Hena G., Morshedzadeh, Galina, Stout, Kelly, Stuart, Ashley L., O'Shea, T. Michael, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Jackson, Barbara G., Peters, Nancy, Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Shankaran, Seetha, Sood, Beena G., Pappas, Athina, Natarajan, Girija, Abramczyk, Katherine, Agarwal, Prashant, Bajaj, Monika, Bara, Rebecca, Billian, Elizabeth, Chawla, Sanjay, Childs, Kirsten, De Jesus, Lilia C., Driscoll, Debra, February, Melissa, Goldston, Laura A., Johnson, Mary E., Muran, Geraldine, Panaitescu, Bogdan, Prentiss, Jeannette E., White, Diane, Woldt, Eunice, Barks, John, Wiggins, Stephanie A., Christensen, Mary K., Carlson, Martha D., Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Williams, Joanne, Romano, Elaine, Brumbaugh, Jane E., Bann, Carla M., Bell, Edward F., Travers, Colm P., Vohr, Betty R., and Carlo, Waldemar A.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Young Adult Anxiety or Depressive Symptoms and Mental Health Service Utilization During the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Schaub, Jason P, Nagata, Jason M, Park, M Jane, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Prevention ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Depression ,Health Services ,Mind and Body ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Management of diseases and conditions ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Anxiety ,Anxiety Disorders ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Mental Health Services ,Pandemics ,Young Adult ,Behavioral health ,Healthcare ,Unmet need ,Utilization ,Young adults ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeYoung adult anxiety/depression (mental health) symptoms have increased from prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. This study assessed young adult (aged 18-25 years) anxiety/depressive symptoms, mental health care utilization (prescription drug use, counseling, and/or either), and unmet counseling/therapy needs utilizing the national Household Pulse Survey data from June to July 2021.MethodsYoung adult (n = 2,809) rates and subgroup differences in mental health symptoms (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-2 and/or Patient Health Questionnaire-2) were assessed, as were mental health care utilization and unmet counseling/therapy needs.ResultsIn total, 48% of young adults had mental health symptoms. Among those, 39% received treatment and 36% reported unmet mental health counseling/therapy needs.DiscussionThese findings highlight young adults' ongoing mental health needs and low services receipt. Interventions and further research to reduce barriers to seeking and utilizing mental health care and to increase the capacity of providers to deliver culturally appropriate mental health care are needed.
- Published
- 2022
7. Improving contraceptive use among Latina adolescents: A cluster-randomized controlled trial evaluating an mHealth application, Health-E You/Salud iTu
- Author
-
Tebb, Kathleen P, Rodriguez, Felicia, Pollack, Lance M, Adams, Sally, Rico, Rosario, Renteria, Robert, Trieu, Sang Leng, Hwang, Loris, Brindis, Claire D, Ozer, Elizabeth, and Puffer, Maryjane
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Paediatrics ,Prevention ,Adolescent Sexual Activity ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Teenage Pregnancy ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Clinical Research ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Pediatric ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Contraception ,Contraceptive Agents ,Female ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy in Adolescence ,Telemedicine ,Adolescents ,Decision support tool ,mHealth ,Latinas ,Clinical Sciences ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine ,Clinical sciences ,Reproductive medicine ,Health services and systems - Abstract
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effectiveness of Health-E You/Salud iTu, a mobile health application (app), on increasing knowledge, self-efficacy and contraception use among Latina adolescents, its impact on visit quality, and app satisfaction.Study designThis study used cluster-randomized controlled trial (CRCT) of 18 school-based health centers (SBHCs). Prior to the visit, intervention participants received the patient-centered contraceptive decision-making support app and controls answered sexual health questions on iPads. Participants completed a previsit questionnaire and 3 follow-up surveys (48 hours, 3-, and 6-months) after the recruitment visit (where intervention participants completed the app). Differences in adolescents' contraceptive knowledge, self-efficacy, and use over the 6-month follow-up were assessed by generalized mixed effects regression models.ResultsA total of 1,360 Latina adolescents participated; 57.2% responded to the 48-hour survey, 50.1% to the 3-month, 49.7% to the 6-month, and 42.3% to both the 3- and 6-month surveys. Health-E You users' demonstrated significant increases in pre-post knowledge (p < 0.001). Intervention participants who completed the follow-up survey reported greater increases in mean self-efficacy from baseline (23.2 intervention vs. 22.5 controls) to 6 months (26.1 vs. 23.4; b = 1.58, 95% CI 0.38-2.77, p = 0.01), and greater increases in non-barrier contraceptive use from baseline (29% intervention vs. 30% controls) to 3 months (63% vs. 45%; OR = 3.29, 95% CI 1.04-10.36, p = 0.04) and 6 months (63% vs. 44%; OR = 5.54, 95% CI 1.70-18.06, p = 0.005). Providers and adolescents reported high app satisfaction and stated it improved visit quality.ConclusionsWhile data suggest that Health-E You improved outcomes, findings must be interpreted cautiously. Intervention participants had higher baseline sexual activity rates, more recruitment visits for pregnancy testing, emergency contraception or birth control, and lower completion rates of follow-up surveys than controls.ImplicationsDespite declines in adolescent pregnancy in the United States, Latinas continue to have disproportionately high rates compared to white females. The Health-E You app may be an effective support tool for both adolescents and providers in SBHCs, and possibly other clinical settings, across the country to increase contraceptive use and thereby decrease unintended pregnancies. It could potentially reduce disparities in adolescent pregnancies and create more efficient visit time spent between clients and their providers.
- Published
- 2021
8. Young Adult Perspectives on COVID-19 Vaccinations.
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Schaub, Jason P, Nagata, Jason M, Park, M Jane, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Humans ,Vaccination ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Young Adult ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,COVID-19 ,SARS-CoV-2 ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,COVID-19 vaccine ,COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy ,Vaccine ,Vaccine hesitancy ,Vaccine intention ,Young adult ,Prevention ,Pediatric ,Vaccine Related ,Immunization ,3.4 Vaccines ,Public Health ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
PurposeYoung adults have the highest cumulative incidence of COVID-19 infection in the country. Using March 2021 Household Pulse Survey data, an ongoing, cross-sectional nationally representative survey, we examined U.S. young adult intention to accept COVID-19 vaccines.MethodsYoung adult (ages 18-25 years) Household Pulse Survey participants were queried on intention to receive a COVID-19 vaccine and related perspectives (N = 5,082).ResultsMost unvaccinated respondents (76%) indicated an intention to become vaccinated. The most frequently cited reasons for potentially rejecting vaccination included desire to wait and see if the vaccine is safe (56%); concerns over side effects (53%); and believing others are in greater need of the vaccine (44%).ConclusionsWith 24% of young adults hesitant to accept a COVID-19 vaccine, public health interventions should target reasons for hesitancy, address concerns about safety and side effects, and underscore the importance of vaccinations for this population.
- Published
- 2021
9. Higher-Calorie Refeeding in Anorexia Nervosa: 1-Year Outcomes From a Randomized Controlled Trial
- Author
-
Golden, Neville H, Cheng, Jing, Kapphahn, Cynthia J, Buckelew, Sara M, Machen, Vanessa I, Kreiter, Anna, Accurso, Erin C, Adams, Sally H, Le Grange, Daniel, Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, Sy, Allyson F, Wilson, Leslie, and Garber, Andrea K
- Subjects
Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Mental Illness ,Serious Mental Illness ,Anorexia ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,Women's Health ,Eating Disorders ,Comparative Effectiveness Research ,Patient Safety ,Clinical Research ,Nutrition ,Mental Health ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Adolescent ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Energy Intake ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Readmission ,Recurrence ,Remission Induction ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Pediatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
Background and objectivesWe recently reported the short-term results of this trial revealing that higher-calorie refeeding (HCR) restored medical stability earlier, with no increase in safety events and significant savings associated with shorter length of stay, in comparison with lower-calorie refeeding (LCR) in hospitalized adolescents with anorexia nervosa. Here, we report the 1-year outcomes, including rates of clinical remission and rehospitalizations.MethodsIn this multicenter, randomized controlled trial, eligible patients admitted for medical instability to 2 tertiary care eating disorder programs were randomly assigned to HCR (2000 kcals per day, increasing by 200 kcals per day) or LCR (1400 kcals per day, increasing by 200 kcals every other day) within 24 hours of admission and followed-up at 10 days and 1, 3, 6, and 12 months post discharge. Clinical remission at 12 months post discharge was defined as weight restoration (≥95% median BMI) plus psychological recovery. With generalized linear mixed effect models, we examined differences in clinical remission over time.ResultsOf 120 enrollees, 111 were included in modified intent-to-treat analyses, 60 received HCR, and 51 received LCR. Clinical remission rates changed over time in both groups, with no evidence of significant group differences (P = .42). Medical rehospitalization rates within 1-year post discharge (32.8% [19 of 58] vs 35.4% [17 of 48], P = .84), number of rehospitalizations (2.4 [SD: 2.2] vs 2.0 [SD: 1.6]; P = .52), and total number of days rehospitalized (6.0 [SD: 14.8] vs 5.1 [SD: 10.3] days; P = .81) did not differ by HCR versus LCR.ConclusionsThe finding that clinical remission and medical rehospitalization did not differ over 1-year, in conjunction with the end-of-treatment outcomes, support the superior efficacy of HCR as compared with LCR.
- Published
- 2021
10. Toward genetic modification of plant-parasitic nematodes: delivery of macromolecules to adults and expression of exogenous mRNA in second stage juveniles
- Author
-
Kranse, Olaf, Beasley, Helen, Adams, Sally, Pires-daSilva, Andre, Bell, Christopher, Lilley, Catherine J, Urwin, Peter E, Bird, David, Miska, Eric, Smant, Geert, Gheysen, Godelieve, Jones, John, Viney, Mark, Abad, Pierre, Maier, Thomas R, Baum, Thomas J, Siddique, Shahid, Williamson, Valerie, Akay, Alper, and Akker, Sebastian Eves-van den
- Subjects
Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Genetics ,Biological Sciences ,Biotechnology ,Animals ,Arabidopsis ,Male ,Plant Diseases ,RNA Interference ,RNA ,Messenger ,Tylenchoidea ,plant-parasitic nematodes ,transient expression ,genetic modification ,lipofection ,transformation ,germline ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Statistics - Abstract
Plant-parasitic nematodes are a continuing threat to food security, causing an estimated 100 billion USD in crop losses each year. The most problematic are the obligate sedentary endoparasites (primarily root knot nematodes and cyst nematodes). Progress in understanding their biology is held back by a lack of tools for functional genetics: forward genetics is largely restricted to studies of natural variation in populations and reverse genetics is entirely reliant on RNA interference. There is an expectation that the development of functional genetic tools would accelerate the progress of research on plant-parasitic nematodes, and hence the development of novel control solutions. Here, we develop some of the foundational biology required to deliver a functional genetic tool kit in plant-parasitic nematodes. We characterize the gonads of male Heterodera schachtii and Meloidogyne hapla in the context of spermatogenesis. We test and optimize various methods for the delivery, expression, and/or detection of exogenous nucleic acids in plant-parasitic nematodes. We demonstrate that delivery of macromolecules to cyst and root knot nematode male germlines is difficult, but possible. Similarly, we demonstrate the delivery of oligonucleotides to root knot nematode gametes. Finally, we develop a transient expression system in plant-parasitic nematodes by demonstrating the delivery and expression of exogenous mRNA encoding various reporter genes throughout the body of H. schachtii juveniles using lipofectamine-based transfection. We anticipate these developments to be independently useful, will expedite the development of genetic modification tools for plant-parasitic nematodes, and ultimately catalyze research on a group of nematodes that threaten global food security.
- Published
- 2021
11. Medical Vulnerability of Young Adults to Severe COVID-19 Illness—Data From the National Health Interview Survey
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Park, M Jane, Schaub, Jason P, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Brain Disorders ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,COVID-19 ,Coronavirus Infections ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Health Surveys ,Humans ,Male ,Pandemics ,Pneumonia ,Viral ,Severity of Illness Index ,Smoking ,Socioeconomic Factors ,United States ,Vulnerable Populations ,Young Adult ,Young adults ,Medical vulnerability for severe COVID-19 illness ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeCOVID-19 morbidity and mortality reports in the U.S. have not included findings specific to young adults. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention provides a list of conditions and associated behaviors, including smoking, conferring vulnerability to severe COVID-19 illness regardless of age. This study examines young adults' medical vulnerability to severe COVID-19 illness, focusing on smoking-related behavior.MethodsA young adult subsample (aged 18-25 years) was developed from the National Health Interview Survey, a nationally representative data set, pooling years 2016-2018. The medical vulnerability measure (yes vs. no) was developed, guided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention medical indicators. The estimates of medical vulnerability were developed for the full sample, the nonsmoking sample, and the individual risk indicators. Logistic regressions were conducted to examine differences by sex, race/ethnicity, income, and insurance.ResultsMedical vulnerability was 32% for the full sample and half that (16%) for the nonsmoking sample. Patterns and significance of some subgroup differences differed between the full and the nonsmoking sample. Male vulnerability was (33%) higher than female (30%; 95% CI: .7-.9) in the full sample, but lower in nonsmokers: male (14%) versus female (19%; 95% CI: 1.2-1.7). The white subgroup had higher vulnerability than Hispanic and Asian subgroups in both samples-full sample: white (31%) versus Hispanic (24%; 95% CI: .6-.9) and Asian (18%; 95% CI: .4-.5); nonsmokers: white (17%) versus Hispanic (13%; 95% CI: .06-.9) and Asian (10%; 95% CI: .3-.8).ConclusionsNotably, lower young adult medical vulnerability within nonsmokers versus the full sample underscores the importance of smoking prevention and mitigation.
- Published
- 2020
12. Early-Life Outcomes in Relation to Social Determinants of Health for Children Born Extremely Preterm
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Laptook, Abbot R., Keszler, Martin, Hensman, Angelita M., Alksninis, Barbara, Bishop, Carmena, Burke, Robert T., Caskey, Melinda, Hoffman, Laurie, Johnson, Katharine, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Lamberson, Vita, Leach, Teresa M., Little, Emilee, McGowan, Elisabeth C., Stephens, Bonnie E., Vieira, Elisa, St. Pierre, Lucille, Ventura, Suzy, Watson, Victoria E., Hibbs, Anna Maria, Walsh, Michele C., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Newman, Nancy S., Bhola, Monika, Payne, Allison H., Siner, Bonnie S., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Scott, Allison, Parimi, Prabhu S., Gaetano, Lisa, Poindexter, Brenda B., Schibler, Kurt, Kallapur, Suhas G., Donovan, Edward F., Merhar, Stephanie, Grisby, Cathy, Yolton, Kimberly, Alexander, Barbara, Beiersdorfer, Traci, Bridges, Kate, Cahill, Tanya E., Dudley, Juanita, Fischer, Estelle E., Gratton, Teresa L., Hayes, Devan, Hessling, Jody, Jackson, Lenora D., Kirker, Kristin, Mincey, Holly L., Muthig, Greg, Stacey, Sara, Steichen, Jean J., Tepe, Stacey, Thompson, Julia, Wuertz, Sandra, Cotten, C. Michael, Goldberg, Ronald N., Goldstein, Ricki F., Malcolm, William F., Mago-Shah, Deesha, Ashley, Patricia L., Finkle, Joanne, Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Clark, Cindy, Talbert, Jennifer, Warner, Diane, Trembath, Andrea, O'Shea, T. Michael, Wereszczak, Janice, Kicklighter, Stephen D., Rhodes-Ryan, Ginger, White, Donna, Patel, Ravi M., Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne C., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Blackwelder, Ann, Bottcher, Diane I., Carter, Sheena L., Kendrick-Allwood, Salathiel, Laursen, Judith, LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Mackie, Colleen, Sanders, Amy, Seabrook, Irma, Smikle, Gloria, Wineski, Lynn C., Higgins, Rosemary D., Bremer, Andrew A., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Dusick, Anna M., Papile, Lu Ann, Gunn, Susan, Hamer, Faithe, Harmon, Heidi M., Herron, Dianne E., Hines, Abbey C., Lytle, Carolyn, Miller, Lucy C., Minnich, Heike M., Richard, Leslie, Smiley, Lucy, Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Tyson, Jon E., Kennedy, Kathleen A., Khan, Amir M., Duncan, Andrea, Mosquera, Ricardo, Stephens, Emily K., McDavid, Georgia E., Alaniz, Nora I., Allain, Elizabeth, Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Burson, Katrina, Dempsey, Allison G., Eason, Elizabeth, Evans, Patricia W., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles, Hall, Donna, Harris, Beverly Foley, Jiminez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, M. Layne, Lis, Anna E., Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., Mason, Carrie M., McKee, Shannon, Morris, Brenda H., Rennie, Kimberly, Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba Khan, Simmons, Maegan C., Sperry, Daniel, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Sánchez, Pablo J., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Slaughter, Jonathan L., Yeates, Keith O., Keim, Sarah, Maitre, Nathalie L., Timan, Christopher J., Luzader, Patricia, Clark, Erna, Fortney, Christine A., Gutentag, Julie, Park, Courtney, Shadd, Julie, Sullivan, Margaret, Stein, Melanie, Nelin, Mary Ann, Newton, Julia, Small, Kristi, Burkhardt, Stephanie, Purnell, Jessica, Pietruszewski, Lindsay, Levengood, Katelyn, Batterson, Nancy, Morehead, Pamela, Carey, Helen, Yoseff-Salameh, Lina, Sullivan, Rox Ann, Hague, Cole, Grothause, Jennifer, Fearns, Erin, Fowler, Aubrey, Notestine, Jennifer, Tonneman, Jill, Hay, Krystal, Chao, Michelle, Warnimont, Kyrstin, Marzec, Laura, Miller, Bethany, Beckford, Demi R., Baugher, Hallie, DeSantis, Brittany, Hanlon, Cory, McCool, Jacqueline, Das, Abhik, Gantz, Marie G., Bann, Carla M., Wallace, Dennis, Crawford, Margaret M., Gabrio, Jenna, Leblond, David, Newman, Jamie E., Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Poole, W. Kenneth, Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Van Meurs, Krisa P., Chock, Valerie Y., Stevenson, David K., Adams, Marian M., Ball, M. Bethany, Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth, Davis, Alexis S., Elena DeAnda, Maria, DeBattista, Anne M., Huffman, Lynne C., Ismael, Magdy, Kohn, Jean G., Krueger, Casey, Lowe, Janice, Lucash, Ryan E., Palmquist, Andrew W., Patel, Jessica, Proud, Melinda S., Reichert, Elizabeth N., John, Nicholas H. St., Sivakumar, Dharshi, Taylor, Heather L., Wager, Natalie, Williams, R. Jordan, Weiss, Hali, Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Furey, Anne, Nylen, Ellen, Church, Paige T., Sibley, Cecelia E., Brussa, Ana K., Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Nelson, Kathleen G., Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Chopko, Stephanie A., Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Johnston, Kristen C., Moses, Mary Beth, Patterson, Cryshelle S., Phillips, Vivien A., Preskitt, Julie, Rector, Richard V., Whitley, Sally, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Finer, Neil N., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Kaegi, David, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Arnell, Kathy, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Rich, Wade, Bell, Edward F., Colaizy, Tarah T., Widness, John A., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Acarregui, Michael J., Johnson, Karen J., Eastman, Diane L., Goeke, Claire A., Schmelzel, Mendi L., Walker, Jacky R., Baack, Michelle L., Hogden, Laurie A., Broadbent, Megan, Elenkiwich, Chelsey, Henning, Megan M., Van Muyden, Sarah, Ellsbury, Dan L., Campbell, Donia B., Tud, Tracy L., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Fajardo-Hiriart, Sylvia, Rigaud, Arielle, Calejo, Maria, Frade Eguaras, Silvia M., Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Garcia, Andrea, Pierre, Helina, Stoerger, Alexandra, Watterberg, Kristi L., Fuller, Janell, Ohls, Robin K., Beauman, Sandra Sundquist, Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Duncan, Andrea F., Hanson, Mary, Hartenberger, Carol, Kuan, Elizabeth, Lowe, Jean R., Thomson, Rebecca A., DeMauro, Sara B., Eichenwald, Eric C., Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Catts, Christine, Cook, Noah, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Ghavam, Sarvin, Hurt, Hallam, Snyder, Jonathan, Vangala, Saritha, Ziolkowski, Kristina, D'Angio, Carl T., Phelps, Dale L., Guillet, Ronnie, Myers, Gary J., Andrews-Hartley, Michelle, Johnson, Julie Babish, Binion, Kyle, Bowman, Melissa, Boylin, Elizabeth, Burnell, Erica, Coleman, Kelly R., Fallone, Cait, Farooq, Osman, Hunn, Julianne, Hust, Diane, Jensen, Rosemary L., Jones, Rachel, Kachelmeyer, Jennifer, Kushner, Emily, Maffett, Deanna, McKee, Kimberly G., Merzbach, Joan, Orme, Constance, Prinzing, Diane, Reubens, Linda J., Rochez, Daisy, Rowan, Mary, Sabaratnam, Premini, Scorsone, Ann Marie, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Yost, Kelley, Zwetsch, Lauren, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Sacilowski, Michael G., Guilford, Stephanie, Li, Emily, Williams, Ashley, Zorn, William A., Wyckoff, Myra H., Brion, Luc P., Salhab, Walid A., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Heyne, Roy J., Vasil, Diana M., Adams, Sally S., Chen, Lijun, De Leon, Maria M., Eubanks, Francis, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Lee, Lizette E., Leps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., McDougald, E. Rebecca, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Pavageau, Lara, Sepulveda, Pollieanna, Tolentino-Plata, Kristine, Boatman, Cathy Twell, Vera, Azucena, Waterbury, Jillian, Yoder, Bradley A., Baserga, Mariana, Faix, Roger G., Winter, Sarah, Minton, Stephen D., Sheffield, Mark J., Rau, Carrie A., Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Christensen, Susan, Cole-Bledsoe, Laura, Davis, Brandy, Elmont, Jennifer O., Jensen, Jennifer J., Loertscher, Manndi C., Jordan, Jamie, Marchant, Trisha, Maxson, Earl, McGrath, Kandace M., Osborne, Karen A., Parry, D. Melody, Reich, Brixen A., Schaefer, Susan T., Spencer, Cynthia, Steffen, Michael, Tice, Katherine, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Woodbury, Kathryn D., Zanetti, Karen, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Jackson, Barbara G., Peters, Nancy, Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Shankaran, Seetha, Sood, Beena G., Natarajan, Girija, Pappas, Athina, Abramczyk, Katherine, Agarwal, Prashant, Bajaj, Monika, Bara, Rebecca, Billian, Elizabeth, Chawla, Sanjay, Childs, Kirsten, De Jesus, Lilia C., Driscoll, Debra, February, Melissa, Goldston, Laura A., Johnson, Mary E., Muran, Geraldine, Panaitescu, Bogdan, Prentiss, Jeannette E., White, Diane, Woldt, Eunice, Barks, John, Wiggins, Stephanie A., Christensen, Mary K., Carlson, Martha D., Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Williams, Joanne, Romano, Elaine, Vohr, Betty R., Travers, Colm P., and Hintz, Susan R.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. De novo Genome Assembly of Auanema melissensis, a Trioecious Free-Living Nematode
- Author
-
Tandonnet Sophie, Haq Maairah, Turner Anisa, Grana Theresa, Paganopoulou Panagiota, Adams Sally, Dhawan Sandhya, Kanzaki Natsumi, Nuez Isabelle, Félix Marie-Anne, and Pires-daSilva André
- Subjects
annotation ,assembly ,auanema melissensis ,genomics ,morphology ,nematode ,taxonomy ,trioecious ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Nematodes of the genus Auanema are interesting models for studying sex determination mechanisms because their populations consist of three sexual morphs (males, females, and hermaphrodites) and produce skewed sex ratios. Here, we introduce a new undescribed species of this genus, Auanema melissensis n. sp., together with its draft nuclear genome. This species is also trioecious and does not cross with the other described species A. rhodensis or A. freiburgensis. Similar to A. freiburgensis, A. melissensis’ maternal environment influences the hermaphrodite versus female sex determination of the offspring. The genome of A. melissensis is ~60 Mb, containing 11,040 protein-coding genes and 8.07% of repeat sequences. Using the estimated ancestral chromosomal gene content (Nigon elements), it was possible to identify putative X chromosome scaffolds.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Weight Loss and Illness Severity in Adolescents With Atypical Anorexia Nervosa.
- Author
-
Adams, Sally, Buckelew, Sara, Kapphahn, Cynthia, Kreiter, Anna, Machen, Vanessa, Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, Saffran, Kristina, Sy, Allyson, Golden, Neville, Cheng, Jing, Le Grange, Daniel, Garber, Andrea, Accurso, Erin, and Wilson, Leslie
- Subjects
Adolescent ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Body Weight ,Child ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Severity of Illness Index ,Thinness ,Weight Loss ,Young Adult - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lower weight has historically been equated with more severe illness in anorexia nervosa (AN). Reliance on admission weight to guide clinical concern is challenged by the rise in patients with atypical anorexia nervosa (AAN) requiring hospitalization at normal weight. METHODS: We examined weight history and illness severity in 12- to 24-year-olds with AN (n = 66) and AAN (n = 50) in a randomized clinical trial, the Study of Refeeding to Optimize Inpatient Gains (www.clinicaltrials.gov; NCT02488109). Amount of weight loss was the difference between the highest historical percentage median BMI and admission; rate was the amount divided by duration (months). Unpaired t tests compared AAN and AN; multiple variable regressions examined associations between weight history variables and markers of illness severity at admission. Stepwise regression examined the explanatory value of weight and menstrual history on selected markers. RESULTS: Participants were 16.5 ± 2.6 years old, and 91% were of female sex. Groups did not differ by weight history or admission heart rate (HR). Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire global scores were higher in AAN (mean 3.80 [SD 1.66] vs mean 3.00 [SD 1.66]; P = .02). Independent of admission weight, lower HR (β = -0.492 [confidence interval (CI) -0.883 to -0.100]; P = .01) was associated with faster loss; lower serum phosphorus was associated with a greater amount (β = -0.005 [CI -0.010 to 0.000]; P = .04) and longer duration (β = -0.011 [CI -0.017 to 0.005]; P = .001). Weight and menstrual history explained 28% of the variance in HR and 36% of the variance in serum phosphorus. CONCLUSIONS: Weight history was independently associated with markers of malnutrition in inpatients with restrictive eating disorders across a range of body weights and should be considered when assessing illness severity on hospital admission.
- Published
- 2019
15. Weight Loss and Illness Severity in Adolescents With Atypical Anorexia Nervosa.
- Author
-
Garber, Andrea K, Cheng, Jing, Accurso, Erin C, Adams, Sally H, Buckelew, Sara M, Kapphahn, Cynthia J, Kreiter, Anna, Le Grange, Daniel, Machen, Vanessa I, Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, Saffran, Kristina, Sy, Allyson F, Wilson, Leslie, and Golden, Neville H
- Subjects
Humans ,Body Weight ,Weight Loss ,Thinness ,Severity of Illness Index ,Anorexia Nervosa ,Adolescent ,Child ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Pediatrics - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Lower weight has historically been equated with more severe illness in anorexia nervosa (AN). Reliance on admission weight to guide clinical concern is challenged by the rise in patients with atypical anorexia nervosa (AAN) requiring hospitalization at normal weight. METHODS:We examined weight history and illness severity in 12- to 24-year-olds with AN (n = 66) and AAN (n = 50) in a randomized clinical trial, the Study of Refeeding to Optimize Inpatient Gains (www.clinicaltrials.gov; NCT02488109). Amount of weight loss was the difference between the highest historical percentage median BMI and admission; rate was the amount divided by duration (months). Unpaired t tests compared AAN and AN; multiple variable regressions examined associations between weight history variables and markers of illness severity at admission. Stepwise regression examined the explanatory value of weight and menstrual history on selected markers. RESULTS:Participants were 16.5 ± 2.6 years old, and 91% were of female sex. Groups did not differ by weight history or admission heart rate (HR). Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire global scores were higher in AAN (mean 3.80 [SD 1.66] vs mean 3.00 [SD 1.66]; P = .02). Independent of admission weight, lower HR (β = -0.492 [confidence interval (CI) -0.883 to -0.100]; P = .01) was associated with faster loss; lower serum phosphorus was associated with a greater amount (β = -0.005 [CI -0.010 to 0.000]; P = .04) and longer duration (β = -0.011 [CI -0.017 to 0.005]; P = .001). Weight and menstrual history explained 28% of the variance in HR and 36% of the variance in serum phosphorus. CONCLUSIONS:Weight history was independently associated with markers of malnutrition in inpatients with restrictive eating disorders across a range of body weights and should be considered when assessing illness severity on hospital admission.
- Published
- 2019
16. Young Adult Preventive Healthcare: Changes in Receipt of Care Pre- to Post-Affordable Care Act
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Park, M Jane, Twietmeyer, Lauren, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Aging ,Health Services ,Vaccine Related ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Blood Pressure ,Cholesterol ,Female ,Humans ,Influenza Vaccines ,Insurance Coverage ,Male ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Preventive Health Services ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,United States ,Young Adult ,Preventive care ,Preventive visit ,Preventive services ,Young adults ,ACA ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeYoung adults have unique health and health care needs. Although morbidity and mortality stem largely from preventable factors, they lack a structured set of preventive care guidelines. The Affordable Care Act (ACA), enacted in 2010, increased young adult insurance coverage, prohibited copayments for preventive visits among privately insured and for many preventive services. The objectives were to evaluate pre- to post-ACA changes in young adults' past-year well visits and, among those using a past-year health care visit, the receipt of preventive services.MethodsWe used pooled Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data, comparing pre-ACA (2007-2009, N = 10,294) to post-ACA (2014-2016, N = 10,567) young adults aged 18-25 years. Bivariable and multivariable stratified logistic regression, adjusting for sociodemographic covariates, were conducted to determine differences in well visits and in preventive services among past-year health care utilizers: blood pressure and cholesterol checks, influenza immunization, and all three received.ResultsPast-year well visits increased from pre-ACA (28%) to post-ACA (32%), p < .001. Increases were noted for most demographic subgroups with greatest increases among males, Asian, and highest income subgroups. Larger pre- to post-ACA increases were found for most of the preventive services, p < .05, including the receipt of all three services (7% vs. 16%), p < .001, among past-year health care utilizers.ConclusionFollowing ACA implementation, young adults experienced modest increases in well visit rates and larger increases in most preventive services received. Overall rates of both remain low. Building on these improvements requires concerted efforts that account for young adults' unique combination of health care issues and challenges in navigating an adult health care system.
- Published
- 2019
17. Renal Function in Patients Hospitalized With Anorexia Nervosa Undergoing Refeeding: Findings From the Study of Refeeding to Optimize Inpatient Gains
- Author
-
Downey, Amanda E., Cheng, Jing, Adams, Sally H., Buckelew, Sara M., Kapphahn, Cynthia J., Machen, Vanessa I., Rosen, Elaine L., Moscicki, Anna-Barbara, Golden, Neville H., and Garber, Andrea K.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Association of cannabis potency with mental ill health and addiction: a systematic review
- Author
-
Petrilli, Kat, Ofori, Shelan, Hines, Lindsey, Taylor, Gemma, Adams, Sally, and Freeman, Tom P
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Law and the construction of highly skilled migrant identity in the United Kingdom
- Author
-
Adams, Sally Linda, Bowling, Benjamin, and Player, Elaine Beryl
- Abstract
This thesis examines how contemporary immigration law contributes to shaping highly skilled migrants' self- and social identities in the United Kingdom at a time when migration has become the subject of much political and public concern. Applying a socio-legal and interdisciplinary approach, the study combines legal analysis with empirical research and draws on literature on high-skilled migration, legal history, media analysis, racialisation and law and identity. Qualitative interviews were conducted with Australian and Indian nationals living in south-east England who held or had previously held highly skilled migrant immigration status in the United Kingdom. A media analysis based on news stories on high-skilled and skilled migration in the British national press in 2010 was also undertaken. The thesis reaches the following key conclusions. First, it finds that the highly skilled migrant is an unstable social identity. Although the media construction of the highly skilled migrant is distinct from the public depiction of other migrant groups, it is a thin social identity, predicated on highly skilled migrants' perceived economic value. Second, the highly skilled migrant is a racialised social identity with negative media portrayals reserved for non-white migrants. The third finding is that law is an integral part of highly skilled migrants' day-to-day experiences and plays a significant role in their self-identity formation. Not only does law, in the form of visa conditions, shape their everyday social relations, highly skilled migrants also strongly identify as economic contributors and perceive their relationship with the British state as largely transactional. This economic framing of their self-identity aligns with the figure of the highly skilled migrant constructed by policymakers and the media. Fourth, highly skilled migrants tend to regard their immigration status (and therefore their ability to continue living in the United Kingdom) as insecure which manifests in an ambivalence towards their immigration status. This uncertainty stems in large part from their encounters with immigration law in action, that is, their experiences of the mutable complexities of the visa process.
- Published
- 2019
20. Balancing selfing and outcrossing: the genetics and cell biology of nematodes with three sexual morphs.
- Author
-
Adams, Sally, Tandonnet, Sophie, and Pires-daSilva, Andre
- Abstract
Trioecy, a rare reproductive system where hermaphrodites, females, and males coexist, is found in certain algae, plants, and animals. Though it has evolved independently multiple times, its rarity suggests it may be an unstable or transitory evolutionary strategy. In the well-studied Caenorhabditis elegans , attempts to engineer a trioecious strain have reverted to the hermaphrodite/male system, reinforcing this view. However, these studies did not consider the sex-determination systems of naturally stable trioecious species. The discovery of free-living nematodes of the Auanema genus, which have naturally stable trioecy, provides an opportunity to study these systems. In Auanema , females produce only oocytes, while hermaphrodites produce both oocytes and sperm for self-fertilization. Crosses between males and females primarily produce daughters (XX hermaphrodites and females), while male-hermaphrodite crosses result in sons only. These skewed sex ratios are due to X-chromosome drive during spermatogenesis, where males produce only X-bearing sperm through asymmetric cell division. The stability of trioecy in Auanema is influenced by maternal control over sex determination and environmental cues. These factors offer insights into the genetic and environmental dynamics that maintain trioecy, potentially explaining its evolutionary stability in certain species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Increasing Delivery of Preventive Services to Adolescents and Young Adults: Does the Preventive Visit Help?
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Park, M Jane, Twietmeyer, Lauren, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Vaccine Related ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,and promotion of well-being ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Health Services ,Adult ,Child ,Female ,Health Care Surveys ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Preventive Health Services ,United States ,Young Adult ,Preventive visit ,Preventive services ,Adolescents ,Young adults ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health - Abstract
PurposeDespite decades of emphasizing the delivery of adolescent preventive care visits and evidence that many preventive services reduce risk, little evidence links preventive visits to increased preventive service delivery. This study examined whether a preventive healthcare visit versus any nonpreventive healthcare visit was associated with higher rates of adolescent and young adult preventive services.MethodsAnalyzed Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data (2013-2015) to determine whether those with a preventive versus nonpreventive healthcare visit had higher rates of past-year preventive services receipt; adolescents (N = 8,474, ages 10-17) and young adults (N = 5,732, ages 18-25). Bivariable and multivariable analyses adjusting for personal/sociodemographic covariates tested for differences in preventive services rates between preventive versus nonpreventive care groups. Adolescent services were blood pressure, height and weight measured, and all three measured; and guidance given regarding healthy eating, physical activity, seatbelts and helmets, secondhand smoke, dental care, all six topics received, and time alone with provider. Young adult services were blood pressure and cholesterol checked, received influenza immunization, and all three services received.ResultsAll preventive services rates were significantly higher in those attending preventive visits versus those with nonpreventive visits. Adolescent services increase ranged from 7% to 19% and young adults increase from 9% to 14% (all bivariable and multivariable analyses, p < .001). However, most rates were low overall.ConclusionsHigher rates of preventive services associated with preventive visits support its clinical care value. However, low preventive services rates overall highlight necessary increased efforts to promote preventive care and improve the provider delivery of prevention for both age groups.
- Published
- 2018
22. Author Correction: Sexual morph specialisation in a trioecious nematode balances opposing selective forces
- Author
-
Adams, Sally, Pathak, Prachi, Kittelmann, Maike, Jones, Alun R. C., Mallon, Eamonn B., and Pires‑daSilva, Andre
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Sexual morph specialisation in a trioecious nematode balances opposing selective forces
- Author
-
Adams, Sally, Pathak, Prachi, Kittelman, Maike, Jones, Alun R. C., Mallon, Eamonn B., and Pires-daSilva, Andre
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Growth Rates of Infants Randomized to Continuous Positive Airway Pressure or Intubation After Extremely Preterm Birth
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Laptook, Abbot R., Oh, William, Vohr, Betty R., Hensman, Angelita M., Stephens, Bonnie E., Alksninis, Barbara, Andrews, Dawn, Angela, Kristen, Barnett, Susan, Cashore, Bill, Caskey, Melinda, Francis, Kim, Gingras, Dan, Gargus, Regina A., Johnson, Katharine, Lainwala, Shabnam, Leach, Theresa M., Leonard, Martha R., Lillie, Sarah, Mehta, Kalida, Moore, James R., Noel, Lucy, Ventura, Suzy, Walden, Rachel V., Watson, Victoria E., Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Newman, Nancy S., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Siner, Bonnie S., Zadell, Arlene, DiFiore, Julie, Bhola, Monika, Friedman, Harriet G., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Schibler, Kurt, Donovan, Edward F., Yolton, Kimberly, Narendran, Vivek, Bridges, Kate, Alexander, Barbara, Grisby, Cathy, Mersmann, Marcia Worley, Mincey, Holly L., Hessling, Jody, Gratton, Teresa L., Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Ashley, Patricia, Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Foy, Katherine A., Freedman, Sharon F., Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Malcolm, William F., Wallace, David K., Stoll, Barbara J., Buchter, Susie, Piazza, Anthony J., Carlton, David P., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Black, Linda, Blackwelder, Ann M., Carter, Sheena, Dinkins, Elisabeth, Fritz, Sobha, Hale, Ellen C., Hutchinson, Amy K., LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Smikle, Gloria V., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Lemons, James A., Dusick, Anna M., Wilson, Leslie D., Hamer, Faithe, Cook, Ann B., Herron, Dianne E., Lytle, Carolyn, Minnich, Heike M., Berberich, Mary Anne, Blaisdell, Carol J., Gail, Dorothy B., Kiley, James P., Poole, W. Kenneth, Gantz, Marie G., Newman, Jamie E., Hastings, Betty K., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Huitema, Carolyn Petrie, Pickett, James W., II, Wallace, Dennis, Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Stevenson, David K., Hintz, Susan R., Ball, M. Bethany, Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth F., Davis, Alexis S., DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Kohn, Jean G., Proud, Melinda S., Pyle, Renee P., St. John, Nicholas H., Weiss, Hali E., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Furey, Anne, MacKinnon, Brenda L., Nylen, Ellen, Brussa, Ana, Sibley, Cecelia, Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Phillips, Vivien A., Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Hopkins, Maria, Johnston, Kristen C., Krzywanski, Sara, Nelson, Kathleen G., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Rector, Richard V., Rodriguez, Leslie, Soong, Amanda, Whitley, Sally, York, Sheree, Finer, Neil N., Rasmussen, Maynard R., Wozniak, Paul R., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Rich, Wade, Arnell, Kathy, Barbieri-Welge, Rene, Ben-Tall, Ayala, Bridge, Renee, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Ito, Elaine, Lukasik, Meghan, Pontillo, Deborah, Posin, Donna, Runyan, Cheryl, Wilkes, James, Zlotnik, Paul, Widness, John A., Klein, Jonathan M., Colaizy, Tarah T., Johnson, Karen J., Acarregui, Michael J., Eastman, Diane L., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Calejo, Maria, Diaz, Alexis N., Frade Eguaras, Silvia M., Garcia, Andrea, Hamlin-Smith, Kasey, Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Hiriart-Fajardo, Sylvia, Mathews, Elaine O., Pierre, Helina, Riguard, Arielle, Stroerger, Alexandra, Ohls, Robin K., Fuller, Janell, Rohr, Julie, Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Lowe, Jean, Montman, Rebecca, Laroia, Nirupama, Phelps, Dale L., Myers, Gary J., Markowitz, Gary David, Reubens, Linda J., Hust, Diane, Augostino, Lisa, Johnson, Julie Babish, Burnell, Erica, Gelbard, Harris, Jensen, Rosemary L., Kushner, Emily, Merzbach, Joan, Mink, Jonathan, Torres, Carlos, Wang, David, Yost, Kelley, Sánchez, Pablo J., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Salhab, Walid A., Heyne, Roy J., Adams, Sally S., Allen, James, Grau, Laura, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Lepps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., Martin, Melissa, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Solis, Araceli, Torres, Lizette E., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Vasil, Diana M., Wilder, Kerry, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., Alaniz, Nora I., Evans, Patricia W., Harris, Beverly Foley, Green, Charles, Jiminez, Margarita, Lis, Anna E., Martin, Sarah, McDavid, Georgia E., Morris, Brenda H., Poundstone, Margaret L., Reddoch, Stacy, Siddiki, Saba, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Whitely, Laura L., Wright, Sharon L., Yoder, Bradley A., Faix, Roger G., Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Cole, Laura, Osborne, Karen A., Spencer, Cynthia, Steffens, Mike, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Zanetti, Karen, O'Shea, T. Michael, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Peters, Nancy J., Jackson, Barbara G., Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Pappas, Athina, Sood, Beena G., Bara, Rebecca, Billian, Elizabeth, Goldston, Laura A., Johnson, Mary, Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Bhandari, Vineet, Jacobs, Harris C., Cervone, Pat, Gettner, Patricia, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Butler, Christine G., Close, Nancy, Gilliam, Walter, Greisman, Sheila, Romano, Elaine, Williams, Joanne, Salas, Ariel A., Carlo, Waldemar A., Do, Barbara T., Bell, Edward F., Das, Abhik, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Poindexter, Brenda B., Shankaran, Seetha, Younge, Noelle, Watterberg, Kristi L., and Higgins, Rosemary D.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Assessing the effectiveness of a patient-centred computer-based clinic intervention, Health-E You/Salud iTu, to reduce health disparities in unintended pregnancies among Hispanic adolescents: study protocol for a cluster randomised control trial.
- Author
-
Tebb, Kathleen P, Rodriguez, Felicia, Pollack, Lance M, Trieu, Sang Leng, Hwang, Loris, Puffer, Maryjane, Adams, Sally, Ozer, Elizabeth M, and Brindis, Claire D
- Subjects
Humans ,Treatment Outcome ,Contraception ,Program Evaluation ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Adolescent Behavior ,Contraception Behavior ,Sexual Behavior ,Telemedicine ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy in Adolescence ,Pregnancy ,Unplanned ,Research Design ,Schools ,Computers ,Adolescent ,Hispanic Americans ,Health Promotion ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Los Angeles ,Female ,Health Status Disparities ,Mobile Applications ,Adolescent Health ,adolescent health ,computer-based intervention ,contraception ,disparities ,latina ,mobile health ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Unplanned ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
INTRODUCTION:Teen pregnancy rates in the USA remain higher than any other industrialised nation, and pregnancies among Hispanic adolescents are disproportionately high. Computer-based interventions represent a promising approach to address sexual health and contraceptive use disparities. Preliminary findings have demonstrated that the Health-E You/Salud iTu, computer application (app) is feasible to implement, acceptable to Latina adolescents and improves sexual health knowledge and interest in selecting an effective contraceptive method when used in conjunction with a healthcare visit. The app is now ready for efficacy testing. The purpose of this manuscript is to describe patient-centred approaches used both in developing and testing the Health-E You app and to present the research methods used to evaluate its effectiveness in improving intentions to use an effective method of contraception as well as actual contraceptive use. METHODS AND ANALYSIS:This study is designed to assess the effectiveness of a patient-centred computer-based clinic intervention, Health-E You/Salud iTu, on its ability to reduce health disparities in unintended pregnancies among Latina adolescent girls. This study uses a cluster randomised control trial design in which 18 school-based health centers from the Los Angeles Unified School District were randomly assigned, at equal chance, to either the intervention (Health-E You app) or control group. Analyses will examine differences between the control and intervention group's knowledge of and attitudes towards contraceptive use, receipt of contraception at the clinic visit and self-reported use of contraception at 3-month and 6-month follow-ups. The study began enrolling participants in August 2016, and a total of 1400 participants (700 per treatment group) are expected to be enrolled by March 2018. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION:Ethics approval was obtained through the University of California, San Francisco Institutional Review Board. Results of this trial will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals. This study is registered with the US National Institutes of Health. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER:NCT02847858.
- Published
- 2018
26. Association Between Adolescent Preventive Care and the Role of the Affordable Care Act
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Park, M Jane, Twietmeyer, Lauren, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Prevention ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Health Services ,Child ,Female ,Health Care Surveys ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Male ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Preventive Health Services ,United States ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics - Abstract
ImportanceDespite decades of adolescent preventive well visit and services promotion (Guidelines for Adolescent Preventive Services and Bright Futures), rates are below recommended levels and little is known of the effect of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) implementation on these care rates.ObjectivesTo use Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data to determine (1) whether adolescent well visit rates increased from the pre-ACA period to post-ACA period, and (2) whether caregivers' reports of past-year preventive services delivery increased from the pre- to post-ACA period among adolescents with any past-year health care visit.Design, setting, and participantsSecondary data analysis of 2007-2009 (before ACA implementation) and 2012-2014 (after ACA implementation) Medical Expenditure Panel Survey data on the differences in well visits and preventive services. Data were collected through computer-assisted personal interviews of caregivers of a nationally representative sample of a noninstitutionalized US population (n = 25 695 10- to 17-year-old adolescents).Main outcomes and measuresFor objective 1, pre- to post-ACA period differences in past-year well visits: (1) stratified bivariable logistic regressions identifying subgroup rate differences and (2) multivariable analyses controlling for demographic factors. For objective 2, pre- to post-ACA period differences in caregiver reports of preventive services receipt, including time alone with clinician: (1) bivariable (year differences) and (2) multivariable logistic regressions controlling for demographic variables.ResultsA total of 6279 (50.9%) and 6730 (50.8%) participating adolescents in the pre- and post-ACA period data were male, respectively. Under objective 1, we found that well-visit rates increased from 41% to 48% post-ACA implementation (odds ratio, 1.3; 95% CI, 1.2-1.5); minority and low-income groups had the greatest increases. Under objective 2, we found that among those with any past-year visit, most preventive services rates (8 of 9) increased post-ACA implementation (range, 2%-9%, absolute), with little or no change when controlling for demographic variables. Time alone with clinicians increased 1%, significant only when covariates were controlled (adjusted odds ratio, 1.2; 95% CI, 1.0-1.3).Conclusions and relevanceDespite modest to moderate increases, with greatest gains for underserved youth, adolescent preventive care rates remain low, highlighting the need for increased efforts to bring adolescents into well care and improve clinician delivery of preventive care within their practices.
- Published
- 2018
27. Improving Receipt and Preventive Care Delivery for Adolescents and Young Adults: Initial Lessons from Top-Performing States
- Author
-
Brindis, Claire D, Twietmeyer, Lauren, Park, M Jane, Adams, Sally, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Health and social care services research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Health Services ,Adult ,Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System ,Female ,Health Care Surveys ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Insurance Coverage ,Insurance ,Health ,Male ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Preventive Health Services ,Quality of Health Care ,Socioeconomic Factors ,United States ,Young Adult ,Adolescents ,Young adults ,Preventive care ,Affordable Care Act ,Title V Block Grant transformation ,Well-visit ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Public Health - Abstract
Purpose Provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) of 2010 hold promise for improving access to and receipt of preventive services for adolescents and young adults (AYAs). The Title V Block Grant transformation also includes a focus on improving adolescent preventive care. This brief report describes and discusses an inquiry of promising strategies for improving access and preventive care delivery identified in selected high-performing states. Methods Two data sources were used to identify top-performing states in insurance enrollment and preventive care delivery: National Survey of Children's Health for adolescents (ages 12-17 years) and Behavioral Risk Factors Surveillance System for young adults (ages 18-25 years). Interviews were conducted with key stakeholders to identify promising strategies related to increasing AYAs' insurance enrollment and receipt of preventive services. Results Seven top-performing states were selected: California, Colorado, Illinois, Iowa, Oregon, Vermont, and Texas; 27 stakeholders completed interviews. Four strategies were identified regarding insurance enrollment: use of partnerships; special populations outreach; leveraging laws and resources; and youth engagement. Four strategies were identified regarding quality preventive care: expand provider capacity to serve AYAs; adopt medical home policies; establish quality improvement projects; and enhance consumer awareness of well-visit. States focused more on adolescents than young adults and on increasing health insurance enrollment than the provision of preventive services. Conclusions This commentary identifies strategies and recommends areas for future action, as Title V programs and their partners focus on improving healthcare for AYAs as ACA implementation and the Title V transformation continues.
- Published
- 2017
28. Limitations of Conventional Magnetic Resonance Imaging as a Predictor of Death or Disability Following Neonatal Hypoxic–Ischemic Encephalopathy in the Late Hypothermia Trial
- Author
-
Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Keszler, Martin, Oh, William, Vohr, Betty R., McGowan, Elizabeth C., Alksninis, Barbara, Basso, Kristin, Bliss, Joseph, Bishop, Carmena, Burke, Robert T., Cashore, William, Caskey, Melinda, Gingras, Dan, Guerina, Nicholas, Johnson, Katharine, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Leach, Theresa M., Leonard, Martha R., Little, Emilee, Stephens, Bonnie E., Vieira, Elisa, Watson, Victoria E., Hibbs, Anna Maria, Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Newman, Nancy S., Batton, Beau, Bhola, Monika, Di Fiore, Juliann M., Friedman, Harriet G., Siner, Bonnie S., Stork, Eileen K., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Zadell, Arlene, Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Knutson, Allison, Schibler, Kurt, Yolton, Kimberly, Grisby, Cathy, Gratton, Teresa L., Merhar, Stephanie, Wuertz, Sandra, Cotten, C. Michael, Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Finkle, Joanne, Goldstein, Ricki F., Gustafson, Kathryn E., Malcolm, William F., Ashley, Patricia L., Auten, Kathy J., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Clark, Cindy, Warner, Diane D., Wereszcsak, Janice, Aliaga, Sofia, Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne, Bottcher, Diane I., Mackie, Colleen, LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Adams-Chapman, Ira, Wineski, Lynn C., Carter, Sheena L., Higgins, Rosemary D., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Harmon, Heidi M., Papile, Lu-Ann, Dusick, Anna M., Gunn, Susan, Herron, Dianne E., Hines, Abbey C., Kardatzke, Darlene, Lytle, Carolyn, Minnich, Heike M., Richard, Leslie, Smiley, Lucy C., Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Allain, Elizabeth, Mason, Carrie M., Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Burson, Katrina, Dempsey, Allison G., Duncan, Andrea F., Evans, Patricia W., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles E., Jimenez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, M. Layne, Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., McDavid, Georgia E., McKee, Shannon, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba Khan, Sperry, Daniel K., Wright, Sharon L., Sánchez, Pablo J., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Luzader, Patricia, Fortney, Christine A., Grothause, Jennifer L., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Crawford, Margaret M., McDonald, Scott A., Newman, Jamie E., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., Pickett, James W., II, Yost, Patricia, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Stevenson, David K., Ball, M. Bethany, Bentley, Barbara, Chock, Valerie Y., Bruno, Elizabeth F., Davis, Alexis S., DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Kohn, Jean G., Krueger, Casey E., Proud, Melinda S., Rhine, William D., St. John, Nicholas H., Taylor, Heather, Weiss, Hali E., Carlo, Waldemar A., Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Phillips, Vivien A., Rector, Richard V., Whitley, Sally, Colaizy, Tarah T., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Johnson, Karen J., Eastman, Diane L., Acarregui, Michael J., Walker, Jacky R., Goeke, Claire A., Klein, Jonathan M., Krutzfield, Nancy J., Segar, Jeffrey L., Dagle, John M., Lindower, Julie B., McElroy, Steven J., Rabe, Glenda K., Roghair, Robert D., Meyer, Lauritz R., Ellsbury, Dan L., Campbell, Donia B., Murphy, Cary R., Bhavsar, Vipinchandra, Ohls, Robin K., Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Beauman, Sandra Sundquist, Brown, Sandra, Fernandez, Erika, Duncan, Andrea Freeman, Fuller, Janell, Kuan, Elizabeth, Lowe, Jean R., Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, DeMauro, Sara B., Dysart, Kevin C., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, D'Angio, Carl, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Laroia, Nirupama, Myers, Gary J., Yost, Kelley, Guilford, Stephanie, Jensen, Rosemary L., Wynn, Karen, Farooq, Osman, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Williams, Ashley, Merzbach, Joan, Conway, Patrick, Bowman, Melissa, Hartley-McAndrew, Michele, Zorn, William, Fallone, Cait, Binion, Kyle, Orme, Constance, Scorsone, Ann Marie, Brion, Luc P., Chalak, Lina F., Heyne, Roy J., Chen, Lijun, Vasil, Diana M., Adams, Sally S., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Guzman, Alicia, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Lee, Lizette E., Leps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., Miller, Nancy A., Ramon, Emma, Yoder, Bradley A., Osborne, Karen A., Spencer, Cynthia, Steele, R. Edison, Steffen, Mike, Strong, Karena, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Baker, Shawna, Winter, Sarah, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Sood, Beena G., Bara, Rebecca, Childs, Kirsten, De Jesus, Lilia C., Panaitescu, Bogdan, Chawla, Sanjay M.D., Prentice, Jeannette E., Goldston, Laura A., Woldt, Eunice Hinz, Natarajan, Girija, Bajaj, Monika, Barks, John, Christensen, Mary, Wiggins, Stephanie A., Laptook, Abbot R., Shankaran, Seetha, Barnes, Patrick, Rollins, Nancy, Do, Barbara T., Parikh, Nehal A., Hamrick, Shannon, Hintz, Susan R., Tyson, Jon E., Bell, Edward F., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Goldberg, Ronald N., Pappas, Athina, Huitema, Carolyn, Pedroza, Claudia, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Hensman, Angelita M., Das, Abhik, Wyckoff, Myra, Khan, Amir, Walsh, Michelle C., Watterberg, Kristi L., Faix, Roger, Truog, William, Guillet, Ronnie, Sokol, Gregory M., and Poindexter, Brenda B.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Monitoring Adolescents' Receipt of Time Alone From Two National Surveys
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H., Po, Justine, Jane Park, M., and Irwin, Charles E., Jr.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Behavior Profiles at 2 Years for Children Born Extremely Preterm with Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia
- Author
-
Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Laptook, Abbot R., Keszler, Martin, Hensman, Angelita M., Vieira, Elisa, Little, Emilee, Burke, Robert T., Stephens, Bonnie E., Alksninis, Barbara, Bishop, Carmena, Keszler, Mary L., Leach, Teresa M., Watson, Victoria E., Knoll, Andrea M., Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Newman, Nancy S., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Payne, Allison, Bhola, Monika, Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Siner, Bonnie S., Friedman, Harriet G., Roth, Elizabeth, Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Knutson, Allison, Schibler, Kurt, Poindexter, Brenda B., Merhar, Stephanie, Yolton, Kimberly, Gratton, Teresa L., Grisby, Cathy, Kirker, Kristin, Wuertz, Sandra, Carlton, David P., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne C., Bottcher, Diane I., Mackie, Colleen, Carter, Sheena L., LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Wineski, Lynn C., Smikle, Gloria V., Leon-Hernandez, Angela, Kendrick-Allwood, Salathiel, Cotten, C. Michael, Goldberg, Ronald N., Goldstein, Ricki F., Malcolm, William F., Ashley, Patricia L., Finkle, Joanne, Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Warner, Diane, Wereszczak, Janice, Kicklighter, Stephen D., Rhodes-Ryan, Ginger, Higgins, Rosemary D., Wilson Archer, Stephanie, Sokol, Gregory M., Papile, Lu Ann, Hines, Abbey C., Herron, Dianne E., Gunn, Susan, Smiley, Lucy, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Burson, Katrina, Dempsey, Allison G., Evans, Patricia W., Garcia, Carmen, Jiminez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, M. Layne, Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., McDavid, Georgia E., Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba Khan, Sperry, Daniel, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Sánchez, Pablo J., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Luzader, Patricia, Fortney, Christine A., Besner, Gail E., Parikh, Nehal A., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Newman, Jamie E., Auman, Jeanette O'Donnell, Crawford, Margaret, Gabrio, Jenna, Leblond, David, Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Van Meurs, Krisa P., Chock, Valerie Y., Stevenson, David K., Adams, Marian M., Ball, M. Bethany, Bentley, Barbara, DeAnda, Maria Elena, Debattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Ismael, Magdy, Krueger, Casey E., Palmquist, Andrew W., Proud, Melinda S., Reichert, Elizabeth N., Sankar, Meera N., St. John, Nicholas H., Taylor, Heather L., Weiss, Hali E., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Nylen, Ellen, Furey, Anne, Sibley, Cecelia E., Brussa, Ana K., Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Phillips, Vivien A., Rector, Richard V., Whitley, Sally, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Finer, Neil N., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Kaegi, David, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Arnell, Kathy, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Rich, Wade, West, Radmila, Baack, Michelle L., Ellsbury, Dan L., Hogden, Laurie A., Klein, Jonathan M., Dagle, John M., Johnson, Karen J., Tud, Tracy L., Elenkiwich, Chelsey, Henning, Megan M., Broadbent, Megan, Schmelzel, Mendi L., Walker, Jacky R., Goeke, Claire A., Watterberg, Kristi L., Ohls, Robin K., Backstrom Lacy, Conra, Brown, Sandra, Fuller, Janell, Hartenberger, Carol, Lowe, Jean R., Sundquist Beauman, Sandra, Hanson, Mary Ruffner, Dupont, Tara, Kuan, Elizabeth, Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, D'Angio, Carl T., Guillet, Ronnie, Myers, Gary J., Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Hartley-McAndrew, Michelle E., Wadkins, Holly I.M., Sacilowski, Michael G., Reubens, Linda J., Jensen, Rosemary L., Merzbach, Joan, Zorn, William, Farooq, Osman, Maffett, Deanna, Williams, Ashley, Hunn, Julianne, Guilford, Stephanie, Yost, Kelley, Rowan, Mary, Prinzing, Diane M., Wynn, Karen, Fallone, Cait, Scorsone, Ann Marie, Wyckoff, Myra H., Brion, Luc P., Heyne, Roy J., Vasil, Diana M., Adams, Sally S., Chen, Lijun, De Leon, Maria M., Eubanks, Frances, Guzman, Alicia, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Madden, Linda A., Miller, Nancy A., Lee, Lizette E., Pavageau, Lara, Sepulveda, Pollieanna, Boatman, Cathy Twell, Faix, Roger G., Yoder, Bradley A., Baserga, Mariana, Osborne, Karen A., Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Christensen, Susan, Davis, Brandy, Elmont, Jennifer O., Jensen, Jennifer J., Loertscher, Manndi C., Marchant, Trisha, Maxson, Earl, Minton, Stephen D., Parry, D. Melody, Rau, Carrie A., Schaefer, Susan T., Sheffield, Mark J., Spencer, Cynthia, Steffen, Mike, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Winter, Sarah, Woodbury, Kathryn D., Zanetti, Karen, Shankaran, Seetha, Chawla, Sanjay, Sood, Beena G., Pappas, Athina, Natarajan, Girija, Bajaj, Monika, Bara, Rebecca, Johnson, Mary E., Goldston, Laura, Wiggins, Stephanie A., Christensen, Mary K., Carlson, Martha, Barks, John, White, Diane F., Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Romano, Elaine, Brumbaugh, Jane E., Bell, Edward F., Grey, Scott F., DeMauro, Sara B., Vohr, Betty R., Harmon, Heidi M., Bann, Carla M., Rysavy, Matthew A., Logan, J. Wells, Colaizy, Tarah T., Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam A., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Duncan, Andrea F., Stoll, Barbara J., Das, Abhik, and Hintz, Susan R.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. The contribution of an X chromosome QTL to non-Mendelian inheritance and unequal chromosomal segregation in Auanema freiburgense
- Author
-
Al-Yazeedi, Talal, primary, Adams, Sally, additional, Tandonnet, Sophie, additional, Turner, Anisa, additional, Kim, Jun, additional, Lee, Junho, additional, and Pires-daSilva, Andre, additional
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Protocol for Circadian Clock Proteins
- Author
-
Adams, Sally, primary and Carré, Isabelle A., additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Respiratory Outcomes of Infants Born Extremely Preterm in the Necrotizing Enterocolitis Surgery Trial
- Author
-
Laptook, Abbot R., Keszler, Martin, Vohr, Betty R., Kurkchubasche, Arlette, Hensman, Angelita M., Vieira, Elisa, St. Pierre, Lucille, Alksninis, Barbara, Knoll, Andrea, Keszler, Mary L., Leach, Teresa M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Watson, Victoria E., Maria Hibbs, Anna, Walsh, Michele C., Newman, Nancy S., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Siner, Bonnie S., Roth, Elizabeth, Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Scott, Allison, Parimi, Prabhu S., Gaetano, Lisa, Merhar, Stephanie, Poindexter, Brenda B., Schibler, Kurt, Cahill, Tanya E., Russell, David, Gratton, Tari, Jackson, Lenora, Thompson, Julia, Beiersdorfer, Traci, Grisby, Cathy, Kirker, Kristin, Wuertz, Sandra, Dudley, Juanita, Henkes, Lisa, Stacey, Sara, Hayes, Devan, Cotten, C. Michael, Laughon, Matthew M., Goldberg, Ronald N., Malcolm, William F., Ashley, Patricia L., Mago-Shah, Deesha, Warren, Mollie, Finkle, Joanne, Fisher, Kimberley A., Gustafson, Kathryn E., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Wereszczak, Janice, Trembath, Andrea, Talbert, Jennifer, Kicklighter, Stephen D., Moore, Ryan, Bentley, Alexandra, Edwards, Laura, Rhodes-Ryan, Ginger, White, Donna, Patel, Ravi M., Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Maitre, Nathalie L., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Loggins, Yvonne, Hale, Ellen C., Bottcher, Diane, Carter, Sheena L., Kendrick-Allwood, Salathiel, LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Laursen, Judith, Mackie, Colleen, Sanders, Amy, Smikle, Gloria, Wineski, Lynn, Bremer, Andrew A., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Dusick, Anna, Papile, Lu Ann, Harmon, Heidi M., Hines, Abbey C., Herron, Dianne E., Lytle, Carolyn, Smiley, Lucy, Dawn Wilson, Leslie, Watkins, Donna, Gunn, Susan, Joyce, Jeff, Khan, Amir M., Kennedy, Kathleen A., Duncan, Andrea F., Eason, Elizabeth, Evans, Patricia, Jones, Patrick, Mosquera, Ricardo A., Lally, Kevin, Stoll, Barbara, Alaniz, Nora, Allain, Elizabeth, Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Boricha, Fatima, Burson, Katrina, Boral, Debasree Sana, Dempsey, IMG; Allison G., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles, Hall, Donna J., Jimenez, Margarita, John, Janice, Lillie, M. Layne, Mason, Carrie, Martin, Karen, Martin, Sarah, McDavid, Georgia E., McKee, Shannon L., Rennie, Kimberly, Reddy, Tina, Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba, Sperry, Daniel K., Stephens, Emily, Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Nelin, Leif D., Slaughter, Jonathan L., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Timan, Christopher, Fathi, Omid, Yeates, Keith O., Luzader, Patricia, Gutentag, Julie, Grothause, Jennifer L., Stein, Melanie, Sullivan, Rox Ann, Hague, Cole D., Carey, Helen, Chao, Michelle, Burkhardt, Stephanie, Sullivan, Margaret, Yossef-Salameh, Lina, Nelin, Mary Ann, Clark, Erna, Shadd, Julie C., Park, Courtney, Cira, Courtney, Fearns, Erin, Small, Kristi, Keim, Sarah A., Fortney, Christine A., Fowler, Aubrey, McCool, Jacqueline, Pietruszewski, Lindsay, Purnell, Jessica, Warnimont, CCRC; Kyrstin, Marzec, Laura, Miller, Bethany, Beckford, Demi R., Baugher, Hallie, Newton, Julia, Levengood, Katelyn, Batterson, Nancy, Brittany DeSantis, Das, Abhik, Bann, Carla M., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., O’Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Crawford, Margaret, Gabrio, Jenna, Newman, Jamie E., Parlberg, Lindsay, Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Lewis, Amanda, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Ball, M. Bethany, Chock, Valerie Y., Adams, Marian M., Davis, Alexis S., Bentley, Barbara, DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Krueger, Casey E., Lucash, Ryan E., Proud, Melinda S., Reichert, Elizabeth N., Taylor, CCRC; Heather, Weiss, Hali E., Williams, R. Jordan, Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Furey, Anne, Nylen, Ellen, Church, Paige T., Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Chopko, Stephanie A., Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Domnanovich, Kristy A., Jno-Finn, Chantel J., Ladinsky, Morissa, Moses, Mary Beth, McNair, Tara E., Phillips, Vivien A., Preskitt, Julie, Rector, Richard V., Stringer, Kimberlly, Whitley, Sally, Chapman, Sheree York, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Bell, Edward F., Colaizy, Tarah T., Widness, John A., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Johnson, Karen J., Schmelzel, Mendi L., Walker, Jacky R., Goeke, Claire A., Eastman, Diane L., Henning, Megan M., Elenkiwich, Chelsey, Broadbent, Megan, Van Muyden, Sarah, Ellsbury, Dan L., Bass, Donia B., Tud, Tracy L., Pitcher, Graeme J., Shelton, Julia S., Watterberg, Kristi L., Fuller, Janell, Ohls, Robin K., Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Hartenberger, Carol, Brown, Sandra, Beauman, Sandra Sundquist, Lowe, Jean R., Eichenwald, Eric C., Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, Abbasi, Soraya, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Mancini, Toni, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, Snyder, Jonathan, Ziolkowski, Kristina, D’Angio, Carl T., Guillet, Ronnie, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Myers, Gary J., Reynolds, Anne Marie, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Sacilowski, Michael G., Jensen, Rosemary L., Merzbach, Joan, Zorn, LMSW; William, Farooq, Osman, Guilford, Stephanie, Yost, Kelley, Scorsone, Ann Marie, Hartley-McAndrew, CCRC; Michelle, Binion, Kyle, Orme, Constance, Sabaratnam, Premini, Kent, Alison, Jones, Rachel, Li, Emily, Kachelmeyer, Jennifer, McKee, Kimberly G., Coleman, Kelly R., Stevens, Timothy, Lee, Yi Horng, Pegoli, Walter, Gitzelman, Christopher, Wakeman, Derek, Horihan, Cassandra, Hunn, Julianne, Bowman, Melissa, Fallone, Cait, Wynn, Karen, Conway, Patrick, Williams, Ashley, Wyckoff, Myra H., Brion, Luc P., Heyne, Roy J., Vasil, Diana M., Adams, Sally S., Chen, Lijun, De Leon, Maria M., Eubanks, Frances, Madden, Linda A., McDougald, E. Rebecca, Lara Pavageau, Sepulveda, Pollieanna, Guzman, Alicia, Heyne, Elizabeth, Lee, Lizette E., Vera, Azucena, Waterbury, Jillian, Boatman, Cathy Twell, Tolentino-Plata, Kristine, Yoder, Bradley A., Baserga, Mariana, Faix, Roger G., Winter, Sarah, Minton, Stephen D., Gerday, Erick B., Rau, Carrie A., Baker, Shawna, Burnett, Jill, Christensen, Susan, Cunningham, Sean D., Elmont, Jennifer O., Hall, Becky, Loertscher, Manndi C., Maxson, Earl, McGrath, Kandace M., Mickelsen, Hena G., Morshedzadeh, Galina, Schaefer, Susan T., Stout, Kelly, Stuart, Ashley L., Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Woodbury, Kathryn D., Shankaran, Seetha, Sood, Beena G., Pappas, Athina, Natarajan, Girija, Chawla, Sanjay, Bajaj, Monika, Agarwal, Prashant, Prentice, Jeanette, February, Melissa, De Jesus, Lilia, Muran, Gerry, Bara, Rebecca, Childs, Kirsten, Panaitescu, Bogdan, Woldt, Eunice, Johnson, Mary E., Goldston, Laura A., Wiggins, Stephanie A., Christensen, Mary K., White, Diane F., Carlson, Martha, Barks, John, Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Williams, Joanne, Romano, Elaine, DeMauro, Sara B., Jensen, Erik A., McDonald, Scott A., Hintz, Susan, Tyson, Jon, Stevenson, David K., and Blakely, Martin L.
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Exploring the use of workplaces to recruit “hard-to-reach” male drinkers to a survey on alcohol use and awareness of health messages
- Author
-
Dance, Sarah, Dack, Charlotte, Lasheras, Celia, McMahon, Cathy, Scott, Paul, and Adams, Sally
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Parental energy-sensing pathways control intergenerational offspring sex determination in the nematode Auanema freiburgensis
- Author
-
Robles, Pedro, Turner, Anisa, Zuco, Giusy, Adams, Sally, Paganopolou, Panagiota, Winton, Michael, Hill, Beth, Kache, Vikas, Bateson, Christine, and Pires-daSilva, Andre
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Developmental Outcomes of Extremely Preterm Infants with a Need for Child Protective Services Supervision
- Author
-
Polin, Richard A., Laptook, Abbott R., Keszler, Martin, Hensman, Angelita M., Alksninis, Barbara, Basso, Kristin M., Burke, Robert, Caskey, Melinda, Johnson, Katharine, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Leach, Theresa M., Little, Emilee, McGowan, Elisabeth C., Vieira, Elisa, Watson, Victoria E., Ventura, Suzy, Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Hibbs, Anna Marie, Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Newman, Nancy S., Payne, Allison H., Siner, Bonnie S., Bhola, Monika, Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Friedman, Harriet G., Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Knutson, Allison, Schibler, Kurt, Donovan, Edward F., Grisby, Cathy, Bridges, Kate, Alexander, Barbara, Fischer, Estelle E., Mincey, Holly L., Hessling, Jody, Gratton, Teresa L., Jackson, Lenora, Kirker, Kristin, Muthig, Greg, Steichen, Jean J., Tepe, Stacey, Yolton, Kimberly, Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Ashley, Patricia L., Malcolm, William F., Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Finkle, Joanne, Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Clark, Cindy, Manor, Linda, Warner, Diane, Wereszczak, Janice, Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne, Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Poindexter, Brenda B., Dusick, Anna M., Papile, Lu-Ann, Gunn, Susan, Hamer, Faithe, Herron, Dianne E., Hines, Abbey C., Lytle, Carolyn, Minnich, Heike M., Smiley, Lucy, Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Sanchez, Pablo J., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Luzader, Patricia, Fortney, Christine A., Besner, Gail E., Parikh, Nehal A., Das, Abhik, Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Poole, W. Kenneth, Newman, Jamie E., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Crawford, Margaret M., Petrie Huitema, Carolyn M., Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Van Meurs, Krisa P., Stevenson, David K., Hintz, Susan R., Ball, M. Bethany, Davis, Alexis S., Palmquist, Andrew W., Proud, Melinda S., Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth, DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Kohn, Jean G., Krueger, Casey, Weiss, Hali E., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Furey, Anne, Nylen, Ellen, Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Biasini, Fred J., Johnston, Kristen C., Nelson, Kathleen G., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Phillips, Vivien A., Whitley, Sally, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Finer, Neil N., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Kaegi, David, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Arnell, Kathy, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Rich, Wade, Bell, Edward F., Colaizy, Tarah T., Acarregui, Michael J., Ellsbury, Dan L., Widness, John A., Johnson, Karen J., Campbell, Donia B., Eastman, Diane L., Walker, Jacky R., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Fajardo-Hiriart, Sylvia, Rigaud, Arielle, Calejo, Maria, Frade Eguaras, Silvia M., Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Garcia, Andrea, Pierre, Helina, Stoerger, Alexandra, Watterberg, Kristi L., Lowe, Jean R., Fuller, Janell F., Ohls, Robin K., Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Duncan, Andrea F., Montman, Rebecca, Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, DeMauro, Sara B., Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, D'Angio, Carl T., Phelps, Dale L., Guillet, Ronnie, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Johnson, Julie Babish, Reubens, Linda J., Horihan, Cassandra A., Hust, Diane, Jensen, Rosemary L., Kushner, Emily, Merzbach, Joan, Myers, Gary J., Rowan, Mary, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Bowman, Melissa, Hunn, Julianne, Guilford, Stephanie, Maffett, Deanna, Osman, Farooq, Prinzing, Diane, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Sacilowski, Michael G., Williams, Ashley, Wynn, Karen, Yost, Kelley, Zorn, William, Zwetsch, Lauren, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., McDavid, Georgia E., Alaniz, Nora I., Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Burson, Katrina, Evans, Patricia W., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles, Harris, Beverly Foley, Jiminez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, Layne M., Lis, Anna E., Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., Morris, Brenda H., Poundstone, M. Layne, Robichaux, Peggy, Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba, Simmons, Maegan C., Sperry, Daniel, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Wyckoff, Myra H., Brion, Luc P., Heyne, Roy J., Salhab, Walid A., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Vasil, Diana M., Chen, Lijun, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Leps, Melissa H., Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Adams, Sally S., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Madden, Linda A., Torres, Lizette E., Faix, Roger G., Yoder, Bradley A., Osborne, Karen A., Spencer, Cynthia, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Steffen, Michael, Jensen, Jennifer J., Winter, Sarah, Zanetti, Karen, O'Shea, T. Michael, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Jackson, Barbara G., Peters, Nancy, Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Shankaran, Seetha, Pappas, Athina, Barks, John, Bara, Rebecca, Goldston, Laura A., Natarajan, Girija, Christensen, Mary, Wiggins, Stephanie A., White, Diane, Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Taft, Janet, Williams, Joanne, Romano, Elaine, Laptook, Abbot. R., Lowe, Jean, Chowdhury, Dhuly, Higgins, Rosemary D., and Vohr, Betty R.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Adolescent and young adult health in the United States in the past decade: little improvement and young adults remain worse off than adolescents.
- Author
-
Park, M Jane, Scott, Jazmyn T, Adams, Sally H, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Wounds and Injuries ,Chronic Disease ,Health Status Indicators ,Mortality ,Suicide ,Health Behavior ,Risk-Taking ,Sexual Behavior ,Mental Health ,Age Distribution ,Sex Distribution ,Violence ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,United States ,Female ,Male ,Minority Health ,Young Adult ,Adolescents ,Health status ,Young adults ,Public Health ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences - Abstract
Adolescence and young adulthood are unique developmental periods that present opportunities and challenges for improving health. Health at this age can affect health throughout the lifespan. This review has two aims: (1) to examine trends in key indicators in outcomes, behaviors, and health care over the past decade for U.S. adolescents and young adults; and (2) to compare U.S. adolescents and young adults on these indicators. The review also assesses sociodemographic differences in trends and current indicators. Guided by our aims, previous reviews, and national priorities, the present review identified 21 sources of nationally representative data to examine trends in 53 areas and comparisons of adolescents and young adults in 42 areas. Most health and health care indicators have changed little over the past decade. Encouraging exceptions were found for adolescents and young adults in unintentional injury, assault, and tobacco use, and, for adolescents, in sexual/reproductive health. Trends in violence and chronic disease and related behaviors were mixed. Review of current indicators demonstrates that young adulthood continues to entail greater risk and worse outcomes than adolescence. Young adults fared worse on about two-thirds of the indicators examined. Differences among sociodemographic subgroups persisted for both trends and current indicators.
- Published
- 2014
38. Young Adults' Health Care Utilization and Expenditures Prior to the Affordable Care Act
- Author
-
Lau, Josephine S, Adams, Sally H, Boscardin, W John, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Age Distribution ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Health Care Surveys ,Health Expenditures ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Infant ,Infant ,Newborn ,Insurance Coverage ,Male ,Medically Uninsured ,Patient Acceptance of Health Care ,Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act ,Socioeconomic Factors ,United States ,Young Adult ,Young adults ,Health care utilization ,Health care expenditures ,Affordable Care Act ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
PurposeTo examine young adults' health care utilization and expenditures prior to the Affordable Care Act.MethodsWe used 2009 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey to (1) compare young adults' health care utilization and expenditures of a full-spectrum of health services to children and adolescents and (2) identify disparities in young adults' utilization and expenditures, based on access (insurance and usual source of care) and other sociodemographic factors, including race/ethnicity and income.ResultsYoung adults had (1) significantly lower rates of overall utilization (72%) than other age groups (83%-88%, p < .001), (2) the lowest rate of office-based utilization (55% vs. 67%-77%, p < .001) and (3) higher rate of emergency room visits compared with adolescents (15% vs. 12%, p < .01). Uninsured young adults had high out-of-pocket expenses. Compared with the young adults with private insurance, the uninsured spent less than half on health care ($1,040 vs. $2,150/person, p < .001) but essentially the same out-of-pocket expenses ($403 vs. $380/person, p = .57). Among young adults, we identified significant disparities in utilization and expenditures based on the presence/absence of a usual source of care, race/ethnicity, home language, and sex.ConclusionsYoung adults may not be utilizing the health care system optimally by having low rates of office-based visits and high rates of emergency room visits. The Affordable Care Act provision of insurance for those previously uninsured or under-insured will likely increase their utilization and expenditures and lower their out-of-pocket expenses. Further effort is needed to address noninsurance barriers and ensure equal access to health services.
- Published
- 2014
39. Sociodemographic disparities and behavioral factors in clinical oral health status during pregnancy
- Author
-
Chung, Lisa H, Gregorich, Steven E, Armitage, Gary C, Gonzalez‐Vargas, Judy, and Adams, Sally H
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Dentistry ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Prevention ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Dental Care ,Educational Status ,Female ,Health Status Disparities ,Humans ,Income ,Insurance ,Dental ,Mouth Diseases ,Oral Health ,Pregnancy ,Pregnancy Complications ,Psychology ,Racial Groups ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Young Adult ,periodontal diseases ,public health ,disparities ,access ,clinical research ,Continental Population Groups ,Public Health and Health Services ,Epidemiology - Abstract
ObjectivesAlthough oral health (OH) problems are common during pregnancy, little is known about individual characteristics or behaviors relating to clinically assessed OH during pregnancy. This cross-sectional study describes the clinical OH status of a sample of pregnant women, examines relationships between sociodemographic factors and OH, behavioral factors and OH, and the influence of behavior on the relationships between sociodemographic clusters and OH. Baseline data were utilized from a pilot intervention study promoting OH during pregnancy.MethodsParticipants (n = 99), recruited from CenteringPregnancy(®) prenatal care groups completed questionnaires addressing race/ethnicity, income, education, dental insurance, oral hygiene practices, and dental care utilization; and clinical examinations for periodontal probing depths (PD), bleeding on probing (BOP), plaque assessment, and visual detection of untreated decay. Chi-squares and one-way anovas with Tukey's studentized range test of planned comparisons were conducted to examine bivariable relationships between both sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics to OH status. Multivariable logistic regression analyses tested whether the effects of sociodemographic variables on OH status might be mediated by behaviors, including self-reported oral hygiene and recent dental visits.ResultsForty-five percent of the sample had untreated decay and the mean percentage of sites with BOP = 18%. Bivariable analyses of sociodemographic factors indicated that compared with Whites, Hispanic women had greater % of sites with: BOP, PD ≥5 mm plus BOP, and Plaque Index (PI) scores of ≥2, all P = 0.05; and greater untreated decay (Chi-square 13.3, P
- Published
- 2014
40. Non-Mendelian transmission of X chromosomes: mechanisms and impact on sex ratios and population dynamics in different breeding systems.
- Author
-
Adams, Sally and Pires-daSilva, Andre
- Subjects
- *
SEX determination , *HEREDITY , *SEX chromosomes , *INSECT nematodes , *POPULATION dynamics , *X chromosome - Abstract
The non-Mendelian transmission of sex chromosomes during gametogenesis carries significant implications, influencing sex ratios and shaping evolutionary dynamics. Here we focus on known mechanisms that drive non-Mendelian inheritance of X chromosomes during spermatogenesis and their impact on population dynamics in species with different breeding systems. In Drosophila and mice, X-linked drivers targeting Y-bearing sperm for elimination or limiting their fitness, tend to confer unfavourable effects, prompting the evolution of suppressors to mitigate their impact. This leads to a complex ongoing evolutionary arms race to maintain an equal balance of males and females. However, in certain insects and nematodes with XX/X0 sex determination, the preferential production of X-bearing sperm through atypical meiosis yields wild-type populations with highly skewed sex ratios, suggesting non-Mendelian transmission of the X may offer selective advantages in these species. Indeed, models suggest X-meiotic drivers could bolster population size and persistence under certain conditions, challenging the conventional view of their detrimental effects. Furthering our understanding of the diverse mechanisms and evolutionary consequences of non-Mendelian transmission of X chromosomes will provide insights into genetic inheritance, sex determination, and population dynamics, with implications for fundamental research and practical applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Exploring Implicit and Explicit Affective Responses to Graphic Health Warnings on Cigarette Packages in Colombia.
- Author
-
TAMAYO, RICARDO M., LUGO, HAROLD A., and ADAMS, SALLY
- Subjects
COGNITIVE dissonance ,SMOKING cessation ,TOBACCO products ,CIGARETTE packaging ,SMOKING - Abstract
Copyright of Revista Colombiana de Psicología is the property of Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Departamento de Psicologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Behavioral Deficits at 18-22 Months of Age Are Associated with Early Cerebellar Injury and Cognitive and Language Performance in Children Born Extremely Preterm
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Laptook, Abbot R., Vohr, Betty R., Oh, William, Hensman, Angelita M., Alksninis, Barbara, Andrews, Dawn, Angela, Kristen, Barnett, Susan, Cashore, Bill, Caskey, Melinda, Francis, Kim, Gingras, Dan, Johnson, Katharine, Leach, Theresa M., Stephens, Bonnie E., Watson, Victoria E., Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Newman, Nancy S., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Siner, Bonnie S., Zadell, Arlene, DiFiore, Julie, Bhola, Monika, Friedman, Harriet G., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Bulas, Dorothy, Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Ashley, Patricia, Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Foy, Katherine A., Freedman, Sharon F., Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Malcolm, William F., Wallace, David K., Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Buchter, Susie, Piazza, Anthony J., Carter, Sheena, Fritz, Sobha, Hale, Ellen C., Hutchinson, Amy K., LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Higgins, Rosemary D., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Poindexter, Brenda B., Dusick, Anna M., Lemons, James A., Wilson, Leslie D., Hamer, Faithe, Cook, Ann B., Herron, Dianne E., Lytle, Carolyn, Minnich, Heike M., Berberich, Mary Anne, Blaisdell, Carol J., Gail, Dorothy B., Kiley, James P., Das, Abhik, Gantz, Marie G., Newman, Jamie E., Cheng, Helen, Hastings, Betty K., McClure, Elizabeth M., Auman, Jeanette O'Donnell, Huitema, Carolyn Petrie, Poole, W. Kenneth, Pickett, James W., II, Wallace, Dennis, Wrage, Lisa A., Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Van Meurs, Krisa P., Stevenson, David K., Ball, M. Bethany, Barnes, Patrick D., Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth F., DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Kohn, Jean G., Proud, Melinda S., Pyle, Renee P., Weiss, Hali E., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Furey, Anne, MacKinnon, Brenda L., Nylen, Ellen, Brussa, Ana, Sibley, Cecelia, Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Phillips, Vivien A., Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Hopkins, Maria, Johnston, Kristen C., Nelson, Kathleen G., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Rector, Richard V., Rodriguez, Leslie, Soong, Amanda, Whitley, Sally, York, Sheree, Finer, Neil N., Rasmussen, Maynard R., Wozniak, Paul R., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Rich, Wade, Arnell, Kathy, Barbieri-Welge, Rene, Ben-Tall, Ayala, Bridge, Renee, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Ito, Elaine, Lukasik, Meghan, Pontillo, Deborah, Posin, Donna, Runyan, Cheryl, Wilkes, James, Zlotnik, Paul, Bell, Edward F., Widness, John A., Acarregui, Michael J., Klein, Jonathan M., Colaizy, Tarah T., Johnson, Karen J., Eastman, Diane L., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Calejo, Maria, Diaz, Alexis N., Frade Eguaras, Silvia M., Garcia, Andrea, Hamlin-Smith, Kasey, Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Hiriart-Fajardo, Sylvia, Mathews, Elaine O., Pierre, Helina, Riguard, Arielle, Stroerger, Alexandra, Watterberg, Kristi L., Ohls, Robin K., Fuller, Janell, Rohr, Julie, Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Lowe, Jean, Montman, Rebecca, Brown, Sandra, Laroia, Nirupama, Phelps, Dale L., Myers, Gary J., Markowitz, Gary D., Reubens, Linda J., Hust, Diane, Augostino, Lisa, Johnson, Julie Babish, Burnell, Erica, Gelbard, Harris, Jensen, Rosemary L., Kushner, Emily, Merzbach, Joan, Mink, Jonathan, Torres, Carlos, Wang, David, Yost, Kelley, Sánchez, Pablo J., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Salhab, Walid A., Heyne, Roy J., Adams, Sally S., Allen, James, Grau, Laura, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Hickman, Jackie F., Leps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., Martin, Melissa, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Solis, Araceli, Torres, Lizette E., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Vasil, Diana M., Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., Evans, Patricia W., Akpa, Esther G., Alaniz, Nora I., Harris, Beverly Foley, Green, Charles, Jiminez, Margarita, Lis, Anna E., Martin, Sarah, McDavid, Georgia E., Morris, Brenda H., Poundstone, Margaret L., Reddoch, Stacy, Siddiki, Saba, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Yoder, Bradley A., Faix, Roger G., Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Bullwinkle, Anna E., Burnett, Jill, Cole, Laura, Osborne, Karen A., Spencer, Cynthia, Steele, R. Edison, Steffen, Michael, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, O'Shea, T. Michael, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Peters, Nancy J., Jackson, Barbara G., Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Shankaran, Seetha, Sood, Beena G., Slovis, Thomas L., Pappas, Athina, Bara, Rebecca, Billian, Elizabeth, Goldston, Laura A., Johnson, Mary, Duncan, Andrea F., Bann, Carla M., Dempsey, Allison, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, and Hintz, Susan
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Extreme Preterm Infant Rates of Overweight and Obesity at School Age in the SUPPORT Neuroimaging and Neurodevelopmental Outcomes Cohort
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Laptook, Abbot R., Hensman, Angelita M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Vieira, Elisa, Little, Emilee, Johnson, Katharine, Alksninis, Barbara, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Leach, Theresa M., Watson, Victoria E., Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Payne, Allison, Newman, Nancy S., Taylor, H. Gerry, Siner, Bonnie S., Zadell, Arlene, DiFiore, Julie, Bhola, Monika, Friedman, Harriet G., Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Bulas, Dorothy, Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Gustafson, Kathryn E., Ashley, Patricia, Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Foy, Katherine A., Freedman, Sharon F., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Malcolm, William F., Wallace, David K., Carlton, David P., Stoll, Barbara J., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Buchter, Susie, Piazza, Anthony J., Carter, Fritz, Sobha, Hale, Ellen C., Hutchinson, Amy K., LaRossa, Maureen Mulligan, Loggins, Yvonne, Bottcher, Diane, Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Poindexter, Brenda B., Sokol, Gregory M., Harmon, Heidi M., Papile, Lu-Ann, Hines, Abbey C., Wilson, Leslie D., Herron, Dianne E., Smiley, Lucy, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., Duncan, Andrea Freeman, Dempsey, Allison G., John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, M. Layne, Siddiki, Saba, Sperry, Daniel K., Berberich, Mary Anne, Blaisdell, Carol J., Gail, Dorothy B., Kiley, James P., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Newman, Jamie E., Auman, Jeanette O'Donnell, Hammond, Jane A., Poole, W. Kenneth, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Stevenson, David K., DeAnda, Maria Elena, Ball, M. Bethany, Goodlin, Gabrielle T., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., Furey, Anne, MacKinnon, Brenda L., Nylen, Ellen, Brussa, Ana, Sibley, Cecelia, Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Phillips, Vivien A., Bailey, Kirstin J., Biasini, Fred J., Hopkins, Maria, Johnston, Kristen C., Nelson, Kathleen G., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Rector, Richard V., Rodriguez, Leslie, Soong, Amanda, Whitley, Sally, York, Sheree, Guest, Kristy, Smith, Leigh Ann, Finer, Neil N., Garey, Donna, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Wozniak, Paul R., Vaucher, Yvonne E., Fuller, Martha G., Akshoomoff, Natacha, Rich, Wade, Arnell, Kathy, Bridge, Renee, Bell, Edward F., Colaizy, Tarah T., Widness, John A., Klein, Jonathan M., Johnson, Karen J., Acarregui, Michael J., Eastman, Diane L., Wilgenbusch, Tammy L.V., Watterberg, Kristi L., Ohls, Robin K., Fuller, Janell, Lowe, Jean, Rohr, Julie, Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Montman, Rebecca, Brown, Sandra, Sánchez, Pablo J., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Salhab, Walid A., Brion, Luc, Adams, Sally S., Allen, James, Grau, Laura, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Hickman, Jackie F., Leps, Melissa H., Madden, Linda A., Martin, Melissa, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Solis, Araceli, Lee, Lizette E., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Vasil, Diana M., Yoder, Bradley A., Faix, Roger G., Winter, Sarah, Baker, Shawna, Osborne, Karen A., Rau, Carrie A., Cunningham, Sean, Ford, Ariel, Shankaran, Seetha, Pappas, Athina, Sood, Beena G., Bara, Rebecca, Slovis, Thomas L., Billian, Elizabeth, Goldston, Laura A., Johnson, Mary, Vohr, Betty R., Heyne, Roy, Bann, Carla M., Das, Abhik, Higgins, Rosemary D., and Hintz, Susan R.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Outcome of Preterm Infants with Transient Cystic Periventricular Leukomalacia on Serial Cranial Imaging Up to Term Equivalent Age
- Author
-
Jobe, Alan H., Caplan, Michael S., Polin, Richard A., Keszler, Martin, Oh, William, Vohr, Betty R., Hensman, Angelita M., Alksninis, Barbara, Basso, Kristin M., Burke, Robert, Caskey, Melinda, Johnson, Katharine, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Leach, Theresa M., Little, Emilee, McGowan, Elisabeth C., Vieira, Elisa, Watson, Victoria E., Ventura, Suzy, Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Hibbs, Anna Marie, Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Newman, Nancy S., Payne, Allison H., Siner, Bonnie S., Bhola, Monika, Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Friedman, Harriet G., Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Knutson, Allison, Schibler, Kurt, Donovan, Edward F., Grisby, Cathy, Bridges, Kate, Alexander, Barbara, Fischer, Estelle E., Mincey, Holly L., Hessling, Jody, Gratton, Teresa L., Jackson, Lenora, Kirker, Kristin, Muthig, Greg, Steichen, Jean J., Tepe, Stacey, Mersmann, Marcia Worley, Yolton, Kimberly, Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Ashley, Patricia L., Malcolm, William F., Auten, Kathy J., Fisher, Kimberley A., Grimes, Sandra, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Lohmeyer, Melody B., Finkle, Joanne, Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Warner, Diane, Wereszczak, Janice, Carlton, David P., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Hale, Ellen C., Loggins, Yvonne, Blackwelder, Ann M., Bottcher, Diane I., Mackie, Colleen, Higgins, Rosemary D., Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Poindexter, Brenda B., Lemons, James A., Dusick, Anna M., Papile, Lu-Ann, Lytle, Carolyn, Hines, Abbey C., Minnich, Heike M., Herron, Dianne E., Smiley, Lucy, Gunn, Susan, Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Tyson, Jon E., McDavid, Georgia E., Akpa, Esther G., Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Alaniz, Nora I., Burson, Katrina, Bradt, Pamela J., Dieterich, Susan, Dempsey, Allison, Duncan, Andrea F., Evans, Patricia W., Franco, Claudia I., Garcia, Carmen, Green, Charles, Harris, Beverly Foley, Jiminez, Margarita, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, Layne M., Lis, Anna E., Major-Kincade, Terri, Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., Morris, Brenda H., Orekoya, Patricia Ann, Reddoch, Stacey, Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba, Simmons, Maegan C., Sperry, Daniel, Tate, Patti L. Pierce, Whitely, Laura L., Wright, Sharon L., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Luzader, Patricia, Fortney, Christine A., Besner, Gail E., Parikh, Nehal A., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Poole, W. Kenneth, Crawford, Margaret M., Gabrio, Jenna, Hastings, Betty K., Newman, Jamie E., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Huitema, Carolyn M. Petrie, Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Stevenson, David K., Ball, M. Bethany, Adams, Marian M., Davis, Alexis S., Palmquist, Andrew W., Proud, Melinda S., Bentley, Barbara, Bruno, Elizabeth, DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Kohn, Jean G., Krueger, Casey, Weiss, Hali E., Frantz, Ivan D., III, Fiascone, John M., MacKinnon, Brenda L., Furey, Anne, Nylen, Ellen, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Biasini, Fred J., Johnston, Kristen C., Nelson, Kathleen G., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Phillips, Vivien A., Whitley, Sally, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Finer, Neil N., Kaegi, David, Rasmussen, Maynard R., Wozniak, Paul R., Arnell, Kathy, Demetrio, Clarence, Fuller, Martha G., Henderson, Chris, Rich, Wade, Vaucher, Yvonne E., Colaizy, Tarah T., Acarregui, Michael J., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Ellsbury, Dan L., Widness, John A., Johnson, Karen J., Campbell, Donia B., Eastman, Diane L., Krutzfield, Nancy J., Duara, Shahnaz, Bauer, Charles R., Everett-Thomas, Ruth, Fajardo-Hiriart, Sylvia, Rigaud, Arielle, Calejo, Maria, Eguaras, Silvia M. Frade, Berkowits, Michelle Harwood, Garcia, Andrea, Pierre, Helina, Stoerger, Alexandra, Watterberg, Kristi L., Lowe, Jean R., Dupont, Tara, Fuller, Janell F., Ohls, Robin K., Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Montman, Rebecca, Schmidt, Barbara, Kirpalani, Haresh, DeMauro, Sara B., Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Cucinotta, Dara M., Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, Cook, Noah, D'Angio, Carl T., Phelps, Dale L., Guillet, Ronnie, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Johnson, Julie Babish, Burnell, Erica, Reubens, Linda J., Horihan, Cassandra A., Jensen, Rosemary L., Kushner, Emily, Merzbach, Joan, Myers, Gary J., Rowan, Mary, Wadkins, Holly I.M., Scorsone, Anne Marie, Bowman, Melissa, Hunn, Julianne, Guilford, Stephanie, Maffett, Deanna, Farooq, Osman, Prinzing, Diane, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Sacilowski, Michael G., Williams, Ashley, Wynn, Karen, Yost, Kelley, Zorn, William, Zwetsch, Lauren, Brion, Luc P., Broyles, R. Sue, Heyne, Roy J., Ipson, Merle, Salhab, Walid A., Rosenfeld, Charles R., Vasil, Diana M., Chen, Lijun, Guzman, Alicia, Hensley, Gaynelle, Hickman, Jackie F., Leps, Melissa H., Madison, Susie, Miller, Nancy A., Morgan, Janet S., Pavageau, Lara, Adams, Sally S., Dooley, Cristin, Heyne, Elizabeth T., Lee, Lizette E., Madden, Linda A., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Faix, Roger G., Yoder, Bradley A., Osborne, Karen A., Spencer, Cynthia, Weaver-Lewis, Kimberlee, Baker, Shawna, Bird, Karie, Burnett, Jill, Steffen, Michael, Jensen, Jennifer J., Winter, Sarah, Zanetti, Karen, O'Shea, T. Michael, Dillard, Robert G., Washburn, Lisa K., Jackson, Barbara G., Peters, Nancy J., Chiu, Korinne, Allred, Deborah Evans, Goldstein, Donald J., Halfond, Raquel, Peterson, Carroll, Waldrep, Ellen L., Welch, Cherrie D., Morris, Melissa Whalen, Hounshell, Gail Wiley, Pappas, Athina, Bara, Rebecca, Goldston, Laura A., Muran, Geraldine, Natarajan, Girija, Christensen, Mary, Wiggins, Stephanie A., White, Diane, Ehrenkranz, Richard A., Jacobs, Harris, Butler, Christine G., Cervone, Patricia, Gettner, Patricia, Greisman, Sheila, Konstantino, Monica, Poulsen, JoAnn, Romano, Elaine, Taft, Janet, Williams, Joanne, Sarkar, Subrata, Shankaran, Seetha, Barks, John, Do, Barbara T., Laptook, Abbot R., Das, Abhik, Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Van Meurs, Krisa P., Bell, Edward F., Sanchez, Pablo J., Hintz, Susan R., Wyckoff, Myra H., Stoll, Barbara J., and Carlo, Waldemar A.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Effects of acute alcohol consumption on impulsivity and motivational salience for alcohol cues in light and heavy social drinkers
- Author
-
Adams, Sally
- Subjects
150.724 - Published
- 2011
46. Medical Home for Adolescents: Low Attainment Rates for Those With Mental Health Problems and Other Vulnerable Groups
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H, Newacheck, Paul W, Park, M Jane, Brindis, Claire D, and Irwin, Charles E
- Subjects
Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Pediatric ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Health and social care services research ,7.1 Individual care needs ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adolescent Health Services ,African Americans ,Child ,Ethnicity ,Female ,Health Services Accessibility ,Health Services Needs and Demand ,Healthcare Disparities ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Income ,Male ,Mental Disorders ,Minority Groups ,Patient-Centered Care ,United States ,Vulnerable Populations ,adolescent medical home ,adolescent mental health disparities ,mental health ,underserved adolescents ,Black or African American ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Pediatrics - Abstract
BackgroundThe importance of the medical home for children has been demonstrated but has not been examined comprehensively for adolescents. Adolescence is a unique period of physical, cognitive, and psychosocial changes when many mental disorders first emerge; thus, receiving care within a medical home could improve well-being. This study examines rates of medical home attainment and its components for adolescents and subgroups, including those with mental health conditions.MethodsUtilizing the 2007 National Survey of Children's Health, we determined the following for adolescents aged 10 to 17 years (n = 45 897): 1) rates of medical home attainment and its 5 components (usual source of care, having a personal doctor, and receiving needed referrals, effective care coordination, and family-centered care); and 2) subgroup differences; gender, race/ethnicity, income, insurance, region, language spoken at home, respondent education, and the presence of mental health conditions.ResultsFifty-four percent of adolescents had a past-year medical home. Rates were lower for minority youth compared to whites; lower-income and uninsured youth; those in households that are non-English speaking in which the respondent did not have some college; and those with mental health as opposed to physical health conditions (all P < .01). Patterns of disparities in the medical home components were similar, and rates were lowest for effective care coordination and family-centered care components.ConclusionsNearly half of adolescents lacked a medical home in the past year. Even lower rates for subgroups highlight the need to increase access to comprehensive quality health care. Efforts to improve effective care coordination and family-centered care could result in higher quality of care for all children and adolescents, and specifically for disadvantaged adolescents and those with mental health conditions.
- Published
- 2013
47. Receipt of Preventive Health Services in Young Adults
- Author
-
Lau, Josephine S, Adams, Sally H, Irwin, Charles E, and Ozer, Elizabeth M
- Subjects
Paediatrics ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Aging ,Immunization ,Vaccine Related ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Adult ,California ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Delivery of Health Care ,Female ,Health Services Accessibility ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Male ,Preventive Health Services ,Primary Health Care ,Young Adult ,Preventive services ,Primary care ,Young adults ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Education ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
PurposeTo examine self-reported rates and disparities in delivery of preventive services to young adults.MethodsA population-based cross-sectional analysis, of 3,670 and 3,621 young adults aged 18-26 years who responded to California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) in 2005 and CHIS 2007, respectively. The main outcome measures were self-reported receipt of flu vaccination, sexually transmitted disease (STD) screening, cholesterol screening, diet counseling, exercise counseling, and emotional health screening. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine how age, gender, race/ethnicity, income, insurance, and usual source of care influence the receipt of preventive services.ResultsDelivery rates ranged from 16.7% (flu vaccine) to 50.6% (cholesterol screening). Being female and having a usual source of care significantly increased receipt of services, with female participants more likely to receive STD screening (p < .001), cholesterol screening (p < .01), emotional health screening (p < .001), diet counseling (p < .01), and exercise counseling (p < .05) than male participants after controlling for age, race/ethnicity, income, insurance, and usual source of care. Young adults with a usual source of care were more likely to receive a flu vaccine (p < .05), STD screening (p < .01), cholesterol screening (p < .001), diet counseling (p < .05), and exercise counseling (p < .05) than those without a usual source of care after adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, income, and insurance.ConclusionsRates of preventive services delivery are generally low. Greater efforts are needed to develop guidelines for young adults to increase the delivery of preventive care to this age-group, and to address the gender and ethnic/racial disparities in preventive services delivery.
- Published
- 2013
48. Adolescents' Receipt of Care in a Medical Home: Results From a National Survey
- Author
-
Adams, Sally H., primary, Park, M. Jane, additional, Brindis, Claire D., additional, and Irwin, Charles E., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. High potency cannabis use, mental health symptoms and cannabis dependence: Triangulating the evidence
- Author
-
Petrilli, Kat, primary, Hines, Lindsey, additional, Adams, Sally, additional, Morgan, Celia J., additional, Curran, H. Valerie, additional, and Freeman, Tom P., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Outcomes of Preterm Infants following Discussions about Withdrawal or Withholding of Life Support
- Author
-
Caplan, Michael S., Laptook, Abbot R., Hensman, Angelita M., Vieira, Elisa, Little, Emilee, Burke, Robert, Caskey, Melinda, Johnson, Katharine, Alksninis, Barbara, Keszler, Mary Lenore, Knoll, Andrea M., Leach, Theresa M., McGowan, Elisabeth C., Watson, Victoria E., Ventura, Suzy, Walsh, Michele C., Fanaroff, Avroy A., Hibbs, Anna Marie, Newman, Nancy S., Payne, Allison H., Wilson-Costello, Deanne E., Siner, Bonnie S., Bhola, Monika, Yalcinkaya, Gulgun, Friedman, Harriet G., Truog, William E., Pallotto, Eugenia K., Kilbride, Howard W., Gauldin, Cheri, Holmes, Anne, Johnson, Kathy, Knutson, Allison, Schibler, Kurt, Alexander, Barbara, Grisby, Cathy, Gratton, Teresa L., Steichen, Jean J., Fischer, Estelle E., Jackson, Lenora, Kirker, Kristin, Muthig, Greg, Tepe, Stacey, Yolton, Kimberly, Goldberg, Ronald N., Cotten, C. Michael, Goldstein, Ricki F., Malcolm, William F., Ashley, Patricia L., Fisher, Kimberley A., Finkle, Joanne, Gustafson, Kathryn E., Laughon, Matthew M., Bose, Carl L., Bernhardt, Janice, Bose, Gennie, Wereszczak, Janice, Carlton, David P., Hale, Ellen C., Adams-Chapman, Ira, Loggins, Yvonne, Archer, Stephanie Wilson, Sokol, Gregory M., Poindexter, Brenda B., Papile, Lu-Ann, Wilson, Leslie Dawn, Herron, Dianne E., Gunn, Susan, Smiley, Lucy, Hines, Abbey C., Nelin, Leif D., Jadcherla, Sudarshan R., Sánchez, Pablo J., Luzader, Patricia, Besner, Gail E., Parikh, Nehal A., Wallace, Dennis, Gantz, Marie G., Newman, Jamie E., O'Donnell Auman, Jeanette, Crawford, Margaret, Huitema, Carolyn M. Petrie, Zaterka-Baxter, Kristin M., Van Meurs, Krisa P., Stevenson, David K., Ball, M. Bethany, Hintz, Susan R., Proud, Melinda S., Bentley, Barbara, DeAnda, Maria Elena, DeBattista, Anne M., Earhart, Beth, Huffman, Lynne C., Krueger, Casey E., Weiss, Hali E., Carlo, Waldemar A., Ambalavanan, Namasivayam, Peralta-Carcelen, Myriam, Collins, Monica V., Cosby, Shirley S., Biasini, Fred J., Johnston, Kristen C., Patterson, Cryshelle S., Phillips, Vivien A., Whitley, Sally, Devaskar, Uday, Garg, Meena, Purdy, Isabell B., Chanlaw, Teresa, Geller, Rachel, Ellsbury, Dan L., Colaizy, Tarah T., Brumbaugh, Jane E., Widness, John A., Johnson, Karen J., Walker, Jacky R., Campbell, Donia B., Eastman, Diane L., Watterberg, Kristi L., Lowe, Jean R., Fuller, Janell F., Ohls, Robin K., Lacy, Conra Backstrom, Duncan, Andrea F., Schmidt, Barbara, Chaudhary, Aasma S., Abbasi, Soraya, Mancini, Toni, Bernbaum, Judy C., Gerdes, Marsha, Hurt, Hallam, D'Angio, Carl T., Guillet, Ronnie, Lakshminrusimha, Satyan, Reynolds, Anne Marie, Jensen, Rosemary L., Merzbach, Joan, Myers, Gary J., Williams, Ashley, Yost, Kelley, Zorn, William, Wynn, Karen, Maffett, Deanna, Prinzing, Diane, Hunn, Julianne, Guilford, Stephanie, Osman, Farooq, Rowan, Mary, Sacilowski, Michael G., Wadkins, Holly I.M., Bowman, Melissa, Kennedy, Kathleen A., Arldt-McAlister, Julie, Burson, Katrina, Duncan, Andrea Freeman, Garcia, Carmen, Harris, Beverly Foley, John, Janice, Jones, Patrick M., Lillie, Layne M., Martin, Karen, Martin, Sara C., McDavid, Georgia E., Rodgers, Shawna, Siddiki, Saba, Sperry, Daniel, Pierce Tate, Patti L., Wright, Sharon L., Wyckoff, Myra, Brion, Luc P., Vasil, Diana M., Chen, Lijun, Heyne, Roy J., Adams, Sally S., Madden, Linda A., Heyne, Elizabeth, Guzman, Alicia, Torres, Lizette E., Boatman, Catherine Twell, Pappas, Athina, Bara, Rebecca, Goldston, Laura A., Barks, John, Christensen, Mary, Wiggins, Stephanie, White, Diane, James, Jennifer, Munson, David, DeMauro, Sara B., Langer, John C., Dworetz, April R., Natarajan, Girija, Bidegain, Margarita, Fortney, Christine A., Seabrook, Ruth, Vohr, Betty R., Tyson, Jon E., Bell, Edward F., Shankaran, Seetha, Higgins, Rosemary D., Das, Abhik, Stoll, Barbara J., and Kirpalani, Haresh
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.