13 results on '"Justin Gerding"'
Search Results
2. Community-based control of the brown dog tick in a region with high rates of Rocky Mountain spotted fever, 2012-2013.
- Author
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Naomi Drexler, Mark Miller, Justin Gerding, Suzanne Todd, Laura Adams, F Scott Dahlgren, Nelva Bryant, Erica Weis, Kristen Herrick, Jessica Francies, Kenneth Komatsu, Stephen Piontkowski, Jose Velascosoltero, Timothy Shelhamer, Brian Hamilton, Carmen Eribes, Anita Brock, Patsy Sneezy, Cye Goseyun, Harty Bendle, Regina Hovet, Velda Williams, Robert Massung, and Jennifer H McQuiston
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) transmitted by the brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato) has emerged as a significant public health risk on American Indian reservations in eastern Arizona. During 2003-2012, more than 250 RMSF cases and 19 deaths were documented among Arizona's American Indian population. The high case fatality rate makes community-level interventions aimed at rapid and sustained reduction of ticks urgent. Beginning in 2012, a two year pilot integrated tick prevention campaign called the RMSF Rodeo was launched in a ∼ 600-home tribal community with high rates of RMSF. During year one, long-acting tick collars were placed on all dogs in the community, environmental acaricides were applied to yards monthly, and animal care practices such as spay and neuter and proper tethering procedures were encouraged. Tick levels, indicated by visible inspection of dogs, tick traps and homeowner reports were used to monitor tick presence and evaluate the efficacy of interventions throughout the project. By the end of year one,
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Rebuilding Caribbean Environmental Health Post-Crisis Programs: Case Study for Virtual Mentorship
- Author
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Rosann DeVito, Elizabeth Landeen, David Dyjack, Rebecca Labbo, Gagandeep Gill, Justin Gerding, Martin Kalis, Scott Daly, Raymond Lopez, Chintan Somaiya, Sukhdeep Chera, Christine Vanover, and Manjit Randhawa
- Abstract
After the U.S. Caribbean 2017 hurricanes, rebuilding, strengthening, and sustaining essential environmental health (EH) services and systems were critical. The National Environmental Health Association, in partnership with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), developed an online mentorship program for both newly hired and existing environmental health staff, as well as health department leadership in the Caribbean health departments. Participants were provided both practical and didactic learning and were given the opportunity to evaluate the program. Both mentors and mentees were highly satisfied with the knowledge and skills acquired, and mentees expressed it was relevant to their daily work. Based on the findings, we recommend both an online and a hybrid mentorship program be considered for leadership- and inspector-level workforces in EH and potentially other fields.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Roles in Hurricane Response and Postdisaster Mosquito Control1
- Author
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Renee Funk, Andrew Ruiz, Justin Gerding, Joseph Laco, and Miguel A. Cruz
- Subjects
Mosquito Control ,Cyclonic Storms ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Civil Defense ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Health outcomes ,030210 environmental & occupational health ,Disease control ,United States ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emergency response ,Disease registry ,Insect Science ,Environmental health ,Agency (sociology) ,Center (algebra and category theory) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,Natural disaster ,Environmental Health ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Hurricanes and other natural disasters leave behind multifaceted and complex environmental challenges that may contribute to adverse health outcomes, such as increased potential for exposure to vector-borne disease. Through an incident management system tailored for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (NCEH/ATSDR) fulfills a leadership role in facilitating the agency's natural disaster emergency response activities through coordination with other CDC programs, liaising with other government agencies and impacted jurisdictions, and responding to requests for technical assistance. On the ground, NCEH/ATSDR deploys environmental health (EH) practitioners who provide consultation and inform mosquito control efforts from a systematic perspective. In the wake of recent hurricanes, NCEH staff mobilized to manage critical elements of the responses and to provide assets for addressing environmental hazards and conditions that contributed to the presence of mosquitoes. In this article, we describe NCEH/ATSDR's emergency response roles and responsibilities, interactions within the national emergency response framework, and provision of EH technical assistance and resources, particularly in the context of postdisaster mosquito control.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Continuation of Mosquito Surveillance and Control During Public Health Emergencies and Natural Disasters
- Author
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Roberto Barrera, C. Ben Beard, Susan M Jennings, Andrew Ruiz, C Roxanne Connelly, Justin Gerding, and Sue Partridge
- Subjects
Integrated pest management ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mosquito Control ,Health (social science) ,Resource (biology) ,Epidemiology ,Natural Disasters ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public opinion ,01 natural sciences ,Disease Outbreaks ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,Environmental health ,Agency (sociology) ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,United States Environmental Protection Agency ,0101 mathematics ,Natural disaster ,business.industry ,Public health ,010102 general mathematics ,Outbreak ,General Medicine ,United States ,Mosquito control ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,business ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Mosquitoborne disease outbreaks occur every year in the United States from one or more of the arboviral diseases dengue, West Nile, LaCrosse, Eastern equine encephalitis, and Zika (1). Public opinion communicated through traditional and social media and the Internet, competing public health and resource priorities, and local conditions can impede the ability of vector control organizations to prevent and respond to outbreaks of mosquitoborne disease. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and CDC performed a coordinated review of the concerns and challenges associated with continuation of mosquito surveillance and control during public health emergencies and disasters. This report highlights the first joint recommendation from EPA and CDC. Mosquito surveillance and control should be maintained by state and local mosquito control organizations to the extent that local conditions and resources will allow during public health emergencies and natural disasters. Integrated pest management (IPM) is the best approach for mosquito control (2). IPM uses a combination of methods, including both physical and chemical means of control (3). For chemical means of control, CDC and EPA recommend the use of larvicides and adulticides following the EPA label. It is imperative that public health recommendations be followed to ensure the safety of the pesticide applicator and the public.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Identifying Needs for Advancing the Profession and Workforce in Environmental Health
- Author
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Adam Inman, Michael Dorshorst, Sandra Long, Elizabeth Landeen, Carolyn White, Tammy McKeever, John Sarisky, Lane Drager, Tyler Pigman, Amy Allen, Tannie Eshenaur, Kaitlyn R. Kelly, Jennifer Scott, Sarah Scanlan, Jeff Freund, Sandra Whitehead, Nancy Rising, Colin Shukie, Darren Tamekazu, Valerie Wade, Jessica Maloney, Gary Stewart, Justin Gerding, Bryan W. Brooks, and David Banaszynski
- Subjects
ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSION ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Political science ,Environmental health ,Workforce ,AJPH Environmental Health Workforce & Regulation ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Environmental Health ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
An ever-changing landscape for environmental health (EH) requires in-depth assessment and analysis of the current challenges and emerging issues faced by EH professionals. The Understanding the Needs, Challenges, Opportunities, Vision, and Emerging Roles in Environmental Health initiative addressed this need. After receiving responses from more than 1700 practitioners, during an in-person workshop, focus groups identified and described priority problems and supplied context on addressing the significant challenges facing EH professionals with state health agencies and local health departments. The focus groups developed specific problem statements detailing the EH profession and workforce’s prevailing challenges and needs according to 6 themes, including effective leadership, workforce development, equipment and technology, information systems and data, garnering support, and partnerships and collaboration. We describe the identified priority problems and needs and provide recommendations for ensuring a strong and robust EH profession and workforce ready to address tomorrow’s challenges.
- Published
- 2020
7. Environmental Health Practice Challenges and Research Needs for U.S. Health Departments
- Author
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Martin A. Kalis, Timothy Hatch, Robert Stratman, Carolyn White, Nancy Hall, Greg Olsen, Joseph Laco, Niki Lemin, Kaitlyn R. Kelly, Eric Bradley, Stephanie Cushing, Bryan W. Brooks, Elizabeth Landeen, John Sarisky, Steven Wille, Fikru Hailu, Sherise Jurries, Timothy Callahan, Justin Gerding, and Carol McInnes
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,MEDLINE ,Research needs ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,United States ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Commentary ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,Public Health ,Environmental Health ,Public health workforce ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Background: Environmental health (EH) professionals, one of the largest segments of the public health workforce, are responsible for delivery of essential environmental public health services. The challenges facing these professionals and research needs to improve EH practice are not fully understood, but 26% of EH professionals working in health departments of the United States plan to retire in 5 y, while only 6% of public health students are currently pursuing EH concentrations. Objectives: A groundbreaking initiative was recently launched to understand EH practice in health departments of the United States. This commentary article aims to identify priority EH practice challenges and related research needs for health departments. Methods: A horizon scanning approach was conducted in which challenges facing EH professionals were provided by 1,736 respondents working at health departments who responded to a web-based survey fielded in November 2017. Thematic analyses of the responses and determining the frequency at which respondents reported specific issues and opportunities identified primary EH topic areas. These topic areas and related issues informed focus group discussions at an in-person workshop held in Anaheim, California. The purpose of the in-person workshop was to engage each of the topic areas and issues, through facilitated focus groups, leading to the formation of four to five related problem statements for each EH topic. Discussion: EH professionals are strategically positioned to diagnose, intervene, and prevent public health threats. Focus group engagement resulted in 29 priority problem statements partitioned among 6 EH topic areas: a) drinking water quality, b) wastewater management, c) healthy homes, d) food safety, e) vectors and public health pests, and f) emerging issues. This commentary article identifies priority challenges and related research needs to catalyze effective delivery of essential environmental public health services for common EH program areas in health departments. An unprecedented initiative to revitalize EH practice with timely and strategic recommendations for student and professional training, nontraditional partnerships, and basic and translational research activities is recommended. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP5161
- Published
- 2019
8. Tools to Drive Quality Improvement of Vector Control Services
- Author
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Vanessa, Lamers and Justin, Gerding
- Subjects
Missouri ,Maryland ,Alabama ,North Carolina ,Animals ,Humans ,Oklahoma ,Public Health ,Disease Vectors ,Environmental Health ,Quality Improvement ,Disease Outbreaks - Published
- 2017
9. CAPT Mark Miller retires
- Author
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Maggie, Byrne, Justin, Gerding, Mike, Herring, and Mark, Miller
- Subjects
Public Health ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,History, 20th Century ,Environmental Health ,History, 21st Century ,United States - Published
- 2014
10. Community-based control of the brown dog tick in a region with high rates of Rocky Mountain spotted fever, 2012-2013
- Author
-
Velda Williams, Jessica Francies, Regina Hovet, Naomi A. Drexler, Jennifer H. McQuiston, Robert F. Massung, Patsy Sneezy, Suzanne R. Todd, Erica Weis, Kenneth Komatsu, Mark Miller, Nelva Bryant, Stephen Piontkowski, Carmen Eribes, Timothy Shelhamer, Harty Bendle, Jose Velascosoltero, Cye Goseyun, Anita Brock, Brian Hamilton, F. Scott Dahlgren, Laura Adams, Kristen Herrick, and Justin Gerding
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Epidemiology ,Rocky Mountain spotted fever ,Rickettsia rickettsii ,lcsh:Medicine ,Plant Science ,Disease Vectors ,Ticks ,Residence Characteristics ,Case fatality rate ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Public and Occupational Health ,Field Trials ,lcsh:Science ,Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Arizona ,Research Design ,Environmental Health ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Arthropoda ,Rhipicephalus sanguineus ,Tick ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Infectious Disease Epidemiology ,Environmental Epidemiology ,Dogs ,parasitic diseases ,Arachnida ,Animals ,Humans ,Tick Control ,Ixodes ,business.industry ,Acaricide ,Public health ,lcsh:R ,Organisms ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Plant Pathology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,bacterial infections and mycoses ,Invertebrates ,Tick Infestations ,Health Care ,Indians, North American ,lcsh:Q ,Arachnid Vectors ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) transmitted by the brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato) has emerged as a significant public health risk on American Indian reservations in eastern Arizona. During 2003-2012, more than 250 RMSF cases and 19 deaths were documented among Arizona's American Indian population. The high case fatality rate makes community-level interventions aimed at rapid and sustained reduction of ticks urgent. Beginning in 2012, a two year pilot integrated tick prevention campaign called the RMSF Rodeo was launched in a ∼ 600-home tribal community with high rates of RMSF. During year one, long-acting tick collars were placed on all dogs in the community, environmental acaricides were applied to yards monthly, and animal care practices such as spay and neuter and proper tethering procedures were encouraged. Tick levels, indicated by visible inspection of dogs, tick traps and homeowner reports were used to monitor tick presence and evaluate the efficacy of interventions throughout the project. By the end of year one
- Published
- 2014
11. Public health department accreditation and environmental public health: sustaining the collaboration
- Author
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Justin, Gerding, Valeria P, Carlson, and Robin, Wilcox
- Subjects
Interprofessional Relations ,Humans ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,Cooperative Behavior ,Environmental Health ,Public Health Administration ,United States ,Accreditation - Published
- 2013
12. Environmental public health systems and services research
- Author
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John, Sarisky and Justin, Gerding
- Subjects
Systems Analysis ,Humans ,Health Promotion ,Health Services Research ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,Environmental Health ,United States - Published
- 2011
13. Putting theory into practice--CDC's summer program in environmental health (SUPEH)
- Author
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Justin, Gerding and Jasen, Kunz
- Subjects
Humans ,Internship, Nonmedical ,Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S ,Environmental Health ,United States - Published
- 2011
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