3,333 results on '"Schneider, John"'
Search Results
2. The Romance of Expertise: The Research University and the Methodological Turn
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Schneider, John
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- 2021
3. Remaking the Renaissance Man: General Education and the Golden Age of the American University
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Schneider, John W.
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- 2021
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4. Relativistic Binary Precession: Impact on Eccentric Binary Accretion and Multi-Messenger Astronomy
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DeLaurentiis, Stanislav, Haiman, Zoltan, Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Krauth, Luke Major, Davelaar, Jordy, Zrake, Jonathan, and MacFadyen, Andrew
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Recent hydrodynamical simulations have shown that circumbinary gas disks drive the orbits of binary black holes to become eccentric, even when general relativistic corrections to the orbit are significant. Here, we study the general relativistic (GR) apsidal precession of eccentric equal-mass binary black holes in circumbinary disks (CBDs) via two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations. We perform a suite of simulations comparing precessing and non-precessing binaries across a range of eccentricities, semi-major axes, and precession rates. We find that the GR precession of the binary's semi-major axis can introduce a dominant modulation in the binary's accretion rate and the corresponding high-energy electromagnetic light-curves. We discuss the conditions under which this occurs and its detailed characteristics and mechanism. Finally, we discuss the potential to observe these precession signatures in electromagnetic and gravitational wave (GW) observations, as well as the precession signal's unique importance as a potential tool to constrain the mass, eccentricity, and semi-major axis of binary merger events., Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2024
5. Natural Language Processing of Clinical Notes to Identify Mental Illness and Substance Use Among People Living with HIV: Retrospective Cohort Study
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Ridgway, Jessica P, Uvin, Arno, Schmitt, Jessica, Oliwa, Tomasz, Almirol, Ellen, Devlin, Samantha, and Schneider, John
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Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundMental illness and substance use are prevalent among people living with HIV and often lead to poor health outcomes. Electronic medical record (EMR) data are increasingly being utilized for HIV-related clinical research and care, but mental illness and substance use are often underdocumented in structured EMR fields. Natural language processing (NLP) of unstructured text of clinical notes in the EMR may more accurately identify mental illness and substance use among people living with HIV than structured EMR fields alone. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to utilize NLP of clinical notes to detect mental illness and substance use among people living with HIV and to determine how often these factors are documented in structured EMR fields. MethodsWe collected both structured EMR data (diagnosis codes, social history, Problem List) as well as the unstructured text of clinical HIV care notes for adults living with HIV. We developed NLP algorithms to identify words and phrases associated with mental illness and substance use in the clinical notes. The algorithms were validated based on chart review. We compared numbers of patients with documentation of mental illness or substance use identified by structured EMR fields with those identified by the NLP algorithms. ResultsThe NLP algorithm for detecting mental illness had a positive predictive value (PPV) of 98% and a negative predictive value (NPV) of 98%. The NLP algorithm for detecting substance use had a PPV of 92% and an NPV of 98%. The NLP algorithm for mental illness identified 54.0% (420/778) of patients as having documentation of mental illness in the text of clinical notes. Among the patients with mental illness detected by NLP, 58.6% (246/420) had documentation of mental illness in at least one structured EMR field. Sixty-three patients had documentation of mental illness in structured EMR fields that was not detected by NLP of clinical notes. The NLP algorithm for substance use detected substance use in the text of clinical notes in 18.1% (141/778) of patients. Among patients with substance use detected by NLP, 73.8% (104/141) had documentation of substance use in at least one structured EMR field. Seventy-six patients had documentation of substance use in structured EMR fields that was not detected by NLP of clinical notes. ConclusionsAmong patients in an urban HIV care clinic, NLP of clinical notes identified high rates of mental illness and substance use that were often not documented in structured EMR fields. This finding has important implications for epidemiologic research and clinical care for people living with HIV.
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- 2021
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6. Work2Prevent, an Employment Intervention Program as HIV Prevention for Young Men Who Have Sex With Men and Transgender Youth of Color (Phase 3): Protocol for a Single-Arm Community-Based Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability in a Real-World Setting
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Hill, Brandon J, Motley, Darnell N, Rosentel, Kris, VandeVusse, Alicia, Garofalo, Robert, Kuhns, Lisa M, Kipke, Michele D, Reisner, Sari, Rupp, Betty, West Goolsby, Rachel, McCumber, Micah, Renshaw, Laura, and Schneider, John A
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundIn the United States, young cisgender men who have sex with men (YMSM), young transgender women (YTW), and gender nonconforming (GNC) youth face elevated rates of HIV infection. However, racial and ethnic disparities in adolescent HIV infection cannot be attributed to individual-level factors alone and are situated within larger social and structural contexts that marginalize and predispose sexual and gender minority youth of color to HIV. Addressing broader ecological factors that drive transmission requires interventions that focus on the distal drivers of HIV infection, including violence exposure, housing, food insecurity, educational attainment, and employment. Given the ways that economic instability may make YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color vulnerable to HIV exposure, this study focuses on employment as an HIV prevention intervention. More specifically, the intervention, called Work2Prevent (W2P), targets economic stability through job readiness and employment as a means of preventing behaviors and factors associated with adolescent and young adult HIV, such as transactional sex work and homelessness. The intervention was adapted from iFOUR, an evidence-based employment program for HIV-positive adults in phase 1 of this study, and pilot tested in a university-based setting in phase 2. ObjectiveThis paper aims to describe the protocol for the community-based test phase of W2P. The purpose of this phase was to pilot test a tailored, theoretically informed employment intervention program among YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color within a lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) community setting. MethodsThe employment intervention was pilot tested using a single-arm pretest-posttest trial design implemented among a sample of vulnerable YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color using services within a community-based LGBTQ center. Assessments will examine intervention feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary estimates of efficacy. ResultsPhase 3 of W2P research activities began in May 2019 and was completed in December 2019. Overall, 41 participants were enrolled in the community-based pilot. ConclusionsThis study will assess intervention feasibility and acceptability in the target populations and determine preliminary efficacy of the intervention to increase employment and reduce vulnerability to HIV when implemented in a community-based setting serving LGBTQ youth of color. Testing the intervention in a community setting is an opportunity to evaluate how recruitment, retention, and other outcomes are impacted by delivery in a venue akin to where this intervention could eventually be used by nonresearchers. If W2P demonstrates feasibility and acceptability, a larger multisite trial implemented in multiple community settings serving YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color is planned. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03313310; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03313310 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/18051
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- 2020
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7. An Employment Intervention Program (Work2Prevent) for Young Men Who Have Sex With Men and Transgender Youth of Color (Phase 2): Protocol for a Single-Arm Mixed Methods Pilot Test to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability
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Hill, Brandon J, Motley, Darnell N, Rosentel, Kris, VandeVusse, Alicia, Garofalo, Robert, Schneider, John A, Kuhns, Lisa M, Kipke, Michele D, Reisner, Sari, Rupp, Betty M, Sanchez, Maria, McCumber, Micah, Renshaw, Laura, West Goolsby, Rachel, and Loop, Matthew Shane
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundYoung cisgender men who have sex with men (YMSM), young transgender women (YTW), and gender nonconforming (GNC) youth of color face substantial economic and health disparities. In particular, HIV risk and infection among these groups remains a significant public health issue. In 2017, 17% of all new HIV diagnoses were attributed to male-to-male sexual contact among adolescents and young adults aged 13 to 24 years. However, such disparities cannot be attributed to individual-level factors alone but rather are situated within larger social and structural contexts that marginalize and predispose YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color to increased HIV exposure. Addressing social and structural risk factors requires intervention on distal drivers of HIV risk, including employment and economic stability. The Work2Prevent (W2P) study aims to target economic stability through job readiness and employment as a structural-level intervention for preventing adolescent and young adult HIV among black and Latinx YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth. This study seeks to assess intervention feasibility and acceptability in the target populations and determine preliminary efficacy of the intervention to increase employment and reduce sexual risk behaviors. ObjectiveThe goal of the research is to pilot-test a tailored, theoretically informed employment intervention program among YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color. This intervention was adapted from Increased Individual Income and Independence, an existing evidence-based employment program for HIV-positive adults during phase 1 of the W2P study. MethodsThe employment intervention will be pilot-tested among vulnerable YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth of color in a single-arm pre-post trial to assess feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary estimates of efficacy. ResultsResearch activities began in March 2018 and were completed in November 2019. Overall, 5 participants were enrolled in the pretest and 51 participants were enrolled in the pilot. ConclusionsInterventions that address the social and structural drivers of HIV exposure and infection are sorely needed in order to successfully bend the curve in the adolescent and young adult HIV epidemic. Employment as prevention has the potential to be a scalable intervention that can be deployed among this group. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03313310; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03313310 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/16401
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- 2020
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8. An Employment Intervention Program (Work2Prevent) for Young Men Who Have Sex With Men and Transgender Youth of Color (Phase 1): Protocol for Determining Essential Intervention Components Using Qualitative Interviews and Focus Groups
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Hill, Brandon J, Motley, Darnell N, Rosentel, Kris, VandeVusse, Alicia, Garofalo, Robert, Schneider, John A, Kuhns, Lisa M, Kipke, Michele D, Reisner, Sari, Rupp, Betty M, Sanchez, Maria, McCumber, Micah, Renshaw, Laura, and Loop, Matthew Shane
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundHIV continues to have a disparate impact on young cisgender men who have sex with men (YMSM), young trans women (YTW), and gender-nonconforming (GNC) youth who are assigned male at birth. Outcomes are generally worse among youth of color. Experiences of discrimination and marginalization often limit educational attainment and may even more directly limit access to gainful employment. Though seemingly distal, these experiences influence young people’s proximity to HIV risk by limiting their access to health care and potentially moving them toward sex work as a means of income as well as increased substance use. Work2Prevent (W2P) aims to achieve economic stability through employment as a structural-level intervention for preventing adolescent and young adult HIV infection. The study will pilot-test an effective, theoretically driven employment program (increased individual income and independence [iFOUR]), for HIV-positive adults, and adapt it to the needs of black and Latinx YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth aged 16 to 24 years who are vulnerable to HIV exposure. ObjectiveThis paper aimed to describe the protocol for the exploratory phase of W2P. The purpose of this phase was to determine the essential components needed for a structural-level employment intervention aimed at increasing job-seeking self-efficacy and career readiness among black and Latinx YMSM, YTW, and GNC youth aged 16 to 24 years. MethodsThe exploratory phase of the W2P study consisted of in-depth interviews and focus groups with members of the target community as well as brief interviews with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ)–inclusive employers. The study team will conduct in-depth interviews with up to 12 YMSM and 12 YTW and GNC youth, up to 10 focus groups with a maximum of 40 YMSM and 40 YTW and GNC youth, and up to 40 brief interviews with LGBTQ-inclusive employers. Participants will be recruited through a community-based recruiter, passive recruitment in community spaces and on social media, and active recruitment by research staff in community spaces serving LGBTQ youth. ResultsIn-depth interviews were conducted with 21 participants, and 7 focus groups were conducted with 46 participants in total. In addition, 19 brief interviews with LGBTQ-inclusive employers were conducted. The analysis of the data is underway. ConclusionsPreliminary findings from the formative phase of the study will be used to inform the tailoring and refinement of the iFOUR adult-based intervention into the youth-focused W2P intervention curriculum. Perspectives from YMSM, YTW, GNC youth, and LGBTQ-inclusive employers offer a multidimensional view of the barriers and facilitators to adolescent and young adult LGBTQ employment. This information is critical to the development of a culturally appropriate and relevant youth-focused intervention. Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT03313310; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03313310 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/16384
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- 2020
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9. Innovative Approaches to Obtain Minors’ Consent for Biomedical HIV Prevention Trials: Multi-Site Quasi-Experimental Study of Adolescent and Parent Perspectives
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Knopf, Amelia, Ott, Mary A, Draucker, Claire Burke, Fortenberry, J Dennis, Reirden, Daniel H, Arrington-Sanders, Renata, Schneider, John, Straub, Diane, Baker, Rebecca, Bakoyannis, Giorgos, and Zimet, Gregory D
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Medicine ,Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,R858-859.7 - Abstract
BackgroundDespite the high burden of new HIV infections in minor adolescents, they are often excluded from biomedical HIV prevention trials, largely owing to the ethical complexities of obtaining consent for enrollment. Researchers and ethics regulators have a duty to protect adolescents—as a special category of human subjects, they must have protection that extends beyond those afforded to all human subjects. Typically, additional protection includes parental consent for enrollment. However, parental consent can present a risk of harm for minor adolescents. Research involving minor adolescents indicate that they are unwilling to join biomedical trials for stigmatized health problems, such as HIV, when parental consent is required. This presents a significant barrier to progress in adolescent HIV prevention by creating delays in research and the translation of new scientific evidence generated in biomedical trials in adult populations. ObjectiveThis protocol aims to examine how parental involvement in the consent process affects the acceptability of hypothetical participation in biomedical HIV prevention trials from the perspectives of minor adolescents and parents of minor adolescents. MethodsIn this protocol, we use a quasi-experimental design that involves a simulated consent process for 2 different HIV prevention trials. The first trial is modeled after an open-label study of the use of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate and emtricitabine as preexposure prophylaxis for HIV. The second trial is modeled after a phase IIa trial of an injectable HIV integrase inhibitor. There are 2 groups in the study—minor adolescents aged 14 to 17 years, inclusive, and parents of minor adolescents in the same age range. The adolescent participants are randomized to 1 of 3 consent conditions with varying degrees of parental involvement. After undergoing a simulated consent process, they rate their willingness to participate (WTP) in each of the 2 trials if offered the opportunity. The primary outcome is WTP, given the consent condition. Parents undergo a similar process but are asked to rate the acceptability of each of the 3 consent conditions. The primary outcome is acceptability of the consent method for enrollment. The secondary outcomes include the following: capacity to consent among both participant groups, the prevalence of medical mistrust, and the effects of the study phase (eg, phase IIa vs the open-label study) and drug administration route (eg, oral vs injection) on WTP (adolescents) and acceptability (parents) of the consent method. ResultsEnrollment began in April 2018 and ended mid-September 2019. Data are being analyzed and dissemination is expected in April 2020. ConclusionsThe study will provide the needed empirical data about minor adolescents’ and parents’ perspectives on consent methods for minors. The evidence generated can be used to guide investigators and ethics regulators in the design of consent processes for biomedical HIV prevention trials. International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/16509
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- 2020
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10. Leveraging social networks for identification of people with HIV who are virally unsuppressed
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Cummins, Breschine, Johnson, Kara, Schneider, John A, Del Vecchio, Natascha, Moshiri, Niema, Wertheim, Joel O, Goyal, Ravi, and Skaathun, Britt
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Research ,Infection ,Male ,Humans ,HIV Infections ,Sexual Partners ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Social Networking ,Contact Tracing ,contact tracing ,engagement ,HIV ,people with HIV ,recruitment ,social networks ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study investigates primary peer-referral engagement (PRE) strategies to assess which strategy results in engaging higher numbers of people with HIV (PWH) who are virally unsuppressed.DesignWe develop a modeling study that simulates an HIV epidemic (transmission, disease progression, and viral evolution) over 6 years using an agent-based model followed by simulating PRE strategies. We investigate two PRE strategies where referrals are based on social network strategies (SNS) or sexual partner contact tracing (SPCT).MethodsWe parameterize, calibrate, and validate our study using data from Chicago on Black sexual minority men to assess these strategies for a population with high incidence and prevalence of HIV. For each strategy, we calculate the number of PWH recruited who are undiagnosed or out-of-care (OoC) and the number of direct or indirect transmissions.ResultsSNS and SPCT identified 256.5 [95% confidence interval (CI) 234-279] and 15 (95% CI 7-27) PWH, respectively. Of these, SNS identified 159 (95% CI 142-177) PWH OoC and 32 (95% CI 21-43) PWH undiagnosed compared with 9 (95% CI 3-18) and 2 (95% CI 0-5) for SPCT. SNS identified 15.5 (95% CI 6-25) and 7.5 (95% CI 2-11) indirect and direct transmission pairs, whereas SPCT identified 6 (95% CI 0-8) and 5 (95% CI 0-8), respectively.ConclusionWith no testing constraints, SNS is the more effective strategy to identify undiagnosed and OoC PWH. Neither strategy is successful at identifying sufficient indirect or direct transmission pairs to investigate transmission networks.
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- 2024
11. Neighborhood Safety and Neighborhood Police Violence Are Associated with Psychological Distress among English- and Spanish-Speaking Transgender Women of Color in New York City: Finding from the TURNNT Cohort Study
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Duncan, Dustin T., Park, Su Hyun, Dharma, Christoffer, Torrats-Espinosa, Gerard, Contreras, Jessica, Scheinmann, Roberta, Watson, Kim, Herrera, Cristina, Schneider, John A., Khan, Maria, Lim, Sahnah, Trinh-Shevrin, Chau, and Radix, Asa
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- 2024
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12. A Network Science Approach to Sex-Polydrug Use Among Black Sexually Minoritized Men and Transgender Women: The N2 Cohort Study
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Shrader, Cho-Hee, Duncan, Dustin T., Knox, Justin, Chen, Yen-Tyng, Driver, Redd, Russell, Jonathan S., Moody, Raymond L., Kanamori, Mariano, Durrell, Mainza, Hanson, Hillary, Eavou, Rebecca, Goedel, William C., and Schneider, John A.
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- 2024
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13. Self-lensing flares from black hole binaries III: general-relativistic ray tracing of circumbinary accretion simulations
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Krauth, Luke Major, Davelaar, Jordy, Haiman, Zoltán, Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Zrake, Jonathan, and MacFadyen, Andrew
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Self-lensing flares (SLFs) are expected to be produced once or twice per orbit by an accreting massive black hole binary (MBHB), if the eclipsing MBHBs are observed close to edge-on. SLFs can provide valuable electromagnetic (EM) signatures to accompany the gravitational waves (GWs) detectable by the upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). EM follow-ups are crucial for, e.g., sky-localization, and constraining the Hubble constant and the graviton mass. We use high-resolution two-dimensional viscous hydrodynamical simulations of a circumbinary disk (CBD) embedding a MBHB. We then use very high-cadence output of these hydrodynamical simulation inputs for a general-relativistic ray-tracing code to produce synthetic spectra and phase-folded light curves. Our main results show a significant periodic amplification of the flux with the characteristic shape of a sharp flare with a central dip, as the foreground black hole (BH) transits across the minidisk and shadow of the background BH, respectively. These corroborate previous conclusions based on the microlensing approximation and analytical toy models of the emission geometry. We also find that at lower inclinations, without some occlusion of the minidisk emission by the CBD, shocks from quasi-periodic mass-trading between the minidisks can produce bright flares which can mimic SLFs and could hinder their identification., Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, submitted to journal, split Fig. 1 by frequency, fixed some typos
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- 2023
14. Reading Tender Is the Night as a Serial Text
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West, James L. W., Greenwell, Joe, Mellette, Justin, McConnell, David J., Birdwell, Robert, Maguire, Michael, Lee, Derek, Quesenberry, Krista, Gatzmeyer, Jace, Schneider, John, and Quinn, Emmet
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- 2014
15. Impact of post-incarceration care engagement interventions on HIV transmission among young Black men who have sex with men and their sexual partners: an agent-based network modeling study
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Hotton, Anna L, Lee, Francis, Sheeler, Daniel, Ozik, Jonathan, Collier, Nicholson, Edali, Mert, Ardestani, Babak Mahdavi, Brewer, Russell, Schrode, Katrina M, Fujimoto, Kayo, Harawa, Nina T, Schneider, John A, and Khanna, Aditya S
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Mental Health ,Minority Health ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Health Disparities ,HIV/AIDS ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Agent-based modeling ,HIV ,Incarceration ,Sexual minorities - Abstract
BackgroundUnderstanding the impact of incarceration on HIV transmission among Black men who have sex with men is important given their disproportionate representation among people experiencing incarceration and the potential impact of incarceration on social and sexual networks, employment, housing, and medical care. We developed an agent-based network model (ABNM) of 10,000 agents representing young Black men who have sex with men in the city of Chicago to examine the impact of varying degrees of post-incarceration care disruption and care engagement interventions following release from jail on HIV incidence.MethodsExponential random graph models were used to model network formation and dissolution dynamics, and network dynamics and HIV care continuum engagement were varied according to incarceration status. Hypothetical interventions to improve post-release engagement in HIV care for individuals with incarceration (e.g., enhanced case management, linkage to housing and employment services) were compared to a control scenario with no change in HIV care engagement after release.FindingHIV incidence at 10 years was 4.98 [95% simulation interval (SI): 4.87, 5.09 per 100 person-years (py)] in the model population overall; 5.58 (95% SI 5.38, 5.76 per 100 py) among those with history of incarceration, and 12.86 (95% SI 11.89, 13.73 per 100 py) among partners of agents recently released from incarceration. Sustained post-release HIV care for agents with HIV and experiencing recent incarceration resulted in a 46% reduction in HIV incidence among post-incarceration partners [incidence rate (IR) per 100 py = 5.72 (95% SI 5.19, 6.27) vs. 10.61 (95% SI 10.09, 11.24); incidence rate ratio (IRR) = 0.54; (95% SI 0.48, 0.60)] and a 19% reduction in HIV incidence in the population overall [(IR per 100 py = 3.89 (95% SI 3.81-3.99) vs. 4.83 (95% SI 4.73, 4.92); IRR = 0.81 (95% SI 0.78, 0.83)] compared to a scenario with no change in HIV care engagement from pre-to post-release.InterpretationDeveloping effective and scalable interventions to increase HIV care engagement among individuals experiencing recent incarceration and their sexual partners is needed to reduce HIV transmission among Black men who have sex with men.FundingThis work was supported by the following grants from the National Institutes of Health: R01DA039934; P20 GM 130414; P30 AI 042853; P30MH058107; T32 DA 043469; U2C DA050098 and the California HIV/AIDS Research Program: OS17-LA-003; H21PC3466.
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- 2023
16. Bottomless Water
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Schneider, John
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- 2019
17. Constraining the PG 1553+113 binary hypothesis: interpreting hints of a new, 22-year period
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Adhikari, Sagar, Penil, Pablo, Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Dominguez, Alberto, Ajello, Marco, Buson, Sara, Rico, Alba, and Zrake, Jonathan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
PG 1553+113 is a well-known blazar exhibiting evidence of a $\sim\! 2.2$-yr quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) in radio, optical, X-ray, and $\gamma$-ray bands. Since QPO mechanisms often predict multiple QPOs, we search for a second QPO in its historical optical light curve covering a century of observations. Despite challenging data quality issues, we find hints of a $21.8 \pm 4.7$ yr oscillation. On its own, this $\sim\! 22$-yr period has a modest statistical significance of $1.6\sigma$ when accounting for the look-elsewhere effect. However, the joint significance of both the $2.2$- and $22$-yr periods arising from colored noise alone is $\sim 3.6\sigma$. The next peak of the 22-yr oscillation is predicted to occur around July 2025. We find that such a $\sim\,$10:1 relation between two periods can arise in the gas dynamics of a plausible supermassive black hole binary model of PG 1553+113. While the 22-yr QPO is preliminary, an interpretation of PG 1553+113's two QPOs in this binary model suggests that the binary engine has a mass ratio $\gtrsim 0.2$, an eccentricity $\lesssim 0.1$, and accretes from a disk with characteristic aspect ratio $\sim 0.03$. The putative binary radiates nHz gravitational waves, but the amplitude is $\sim10-100$ times too low for detection by foreseeable pulsar timing arrays., Comment: 20 pages, 15 figures, 1 table
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- 2023
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18. Eccentric Minidisks in Accreting Binaries
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Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Zrake, Jonathan, MacFadyen, Andrew, and Haiman, Zoltán
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We show that gas disks around the components of an orbiting binary system (so-called minidisks) may be susceptible to a resonant instability which causes the minidisks to become significantly eccentric. Eccentricity is injected by, and also induces, regular impacts between the minidisks at roughly the orbital period of the binary. Such eccentric minidisks are seen in vertically integrated, two-dimensional simulations of a circular, equal-mass binary accreting from a circumbinary gas disk with a $\Gamma$-law equation of state. Minidisk eccentricity is suppressed by the use of an isothermal equation of state. However, the instability still operates, and can be revealed in a minimal disk-binary simulation by removing the circumbinary disk, and feeding the minidisks from the component positions. Minidisk eccentricity is also suppressed when the gravitational softening length is large ($\gtrsim 4\%$ of the binary semi-major axis), suggesting that its absence could be an artifact of widely adopted numerical approximations; a follow-up study in three dimensions with well-resolved, geometrically thin minidisks (aspect ratios $\lesssim 0.02$) may be needed to assess whether eccentric minidisks can occur in real astrophysical environments. If they can, the electromagnetic signature may be important for discriminating between binary and single black hole scenarios for quasi-periodic oscillations in active galactic nuclei; in turn, this might aid in targeted searches with pulsar timing arrays for individual supermassive black hole binary sources of low-frequency gravitational waves., Comment: 5 Mb, 22 pages, video content URLs provided in the captions to Figures 5, 6, 9, 11, and 15. Version 2 is close to the published, open-access version (see the DOI to the journal version below)
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- 2023
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19. Assessing readiness to implement long-acting injectable HIV antiretroviral therapy: provider and staff perspectives
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Koester, Kimberly A, Colasanti, Jonathan A, McNulty, Moira C, Dance, Kaylin, Erguera, Xavier A, Tsuzuki, Manami Diaz, Johnson, Mallory O, Sauceda, John A, Montgomery, Elizabeth, Schneider, John, and Christopoulos, Katerina A
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Mental Health ,Dissemination and Implementation Research ,Minority Health ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,CFIR ,Focus groups ,HIV antiretroviral therapy ,Long-acting injectable medication ,Pre-implementation ,Qualitative methods ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundLong-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (LAI-ART) represents the next innovation in HIV therapy. Pre-implementation research is needed to develop effective strategies to ensure equitable access to LAI-ART to individuals living with HIV.MethodsWe conducted focus group discussions (FGDs) with providers and staff affiliated with HIV clinics in San Francisco, Chicago, and Atlanta to understand barriers to and facilitators of LAI-ART implementation. Participants also completed a short survey about implementation intentions. FGDs were held via video conference, recorded, transcribed, and thematically analyzed using domains associated with the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).ResultsBetween September 2020 and April 2021, we led 10 FDGs with 49 participants, of whom ~60% were prescribing providers. Organizational readiness for implementing change was high, with 85% agreeing to being committed to figuring out how to implement LAI-ART. While responses were influenced by the unique inner and outer resources available in each setting, several common themes, including implementation mechanisms, dominated: (1) optimism and enthusiasm about LAI-ART was contingent on ensuring equitable access to LAI-ART; (2) LAI-ART shifts the primary responsibility of ART adherence from the patient to the clinic; and (3) existing clinic systems require strengthening to meet the needs of patients with adherence challenges. Current systems in all sites could support the use of LAI-ART in a limited number of stable patients. Scale-up and equitable use would be challenging or impossible without additional personnel. Participants outlined programmatic elements necessary to realize equitable access including centralized tracking of patients, capacity for in-depth, hands-on outreach, and mobile delivery of LAI-ART. Sites further specified unknown logistical impacts on implementation related to billing/payer source as well as shipping and drug storage.ConclusionsAmong these HIV care sites, clinic readiness to offer LAI-ART to a subset of patients is high. The main challenges to implementation include concerns about unequal access and a recognition that strengthening the clinic system is critical.
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- 2023
20. Adverse childhood experiences among black sexually minoritized men and Black transgender women in Chicago
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Dharma, Christoffer, Keyes, Katherine M., Rudolph, Kara E., Shrader, Cho-Hee, Chen, Yen-Tyng, Schneider, John, and Duncan, Dustin T.
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- 2024
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21. Predictors of mental health among U.S. adults during COVID-19 early pandemic, mid- pandemic, and post-vaccine eras
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Ramezani, Niloofar, Taylor, Bruce G., Balawajder, Elizabeth Flanagan, MacLean, Kai, Pollack, Harold A., Schneider, John A., and Taxman, Faye S.
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- 2024
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22. Gender identity, stimulant drug use, and criminal justice history on internalized stigma among a nationally representative sample of adults who misuse opioids
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Bailey, Amelia, Taylor, Bruce G., Pollack, Harold A., Schneider, John A., and Evans, Elizabeth A.
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- 2024
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23. Disappearing thermal X-ray emission as a tell-tale signature of merging massive black hole binaries
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Krauth, Luke Major, Davelaar, Jordy, Haiman, Zoltán, Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Zrake, Jonathan, and MacFadyen, Andrew
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The upcoming Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is expected to detect gravitational waves (GWs) from massive black hole binaries (MBHB). Finding the electromagnetic (EM) counterparts for these GW events will be crucial for understanding how and where MBHBs merge, measuring their redshifts, constraining the Hubble constant and the graviton mass, and for other novel science applications. However, due to poor GW sky localisation, multi-wavelength, time-dependent electromagnetic (EM) models are needed to identify the right host galaxy among many candidates. We studied merging MBHBs embedded in a circumbinary disc using high-resolution two-dimensional simulations, with a $\Gamma$-law equation of state, incorporating viscous heating, shock heating, and radiative cooling. We simulate the binary from large separation until after merger, allowing us to model the decoupling of the binary from the circumbinary disc (CBD). We compute the EM signatures and identify distinct features before, during, and after the merger. Our main result is a multi-band EM signature: we find that the MBHB produces strong thermal X-ray emission until 1-2 days prior to the merger. However, as the binary decouples from the CBD, the X-ray-bright minidiscs rapidly shrink in size, become disrupted, and the accretion rate drops precipitously. As a result, the thermal X-ray luminosity drops by orders of magnitude, and the source remains X-ray dark for several days after the merger, regardless of any post-merger effects such as GW recoil or mass loss. Looking for the abrupt spectral change where the thermal X-ray disappears is a tell-tale EM signature of LISA mergers that does not require extensive pre-merger monitoring., Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2023
24. Stimulating dissemination of research that addresses the social and contextual drivers of HIV prevention and treatment in the journal AIDS
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Schneider, John, Coutinho, Roel, Hatcher, Abigail M, Larmarange, Joseph, Letendre, Scott, Paraskevis, Dimitrios, Strathdee, Steffanie, Vance, David E, and Martínez, Esteban
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,HIV Infections ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Health Education ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Published
- 2023
25. Predictors of HIV Molecular Cluster Membership and Implications for Partner Services
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Hallmark, Camden J, Luswata, Charles, Del Vecchio, Natascha, Hayford, Christina, Mora, Ricardo, Carr, Michelle, McNeese, Marlene, Benbow, Nanette, Schneider, John A, Wertheim, Joel O, and Fujimoto, Kayo
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Coinfection ,Retrospective Studies ,HIV Infections ,Cluster Analysis ,Genes ,Viral ,Syphilis ,HIV ,cluster detection and response ,partner services ,molecular surveillance ,syphilis coinfection ,Virology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Public health surveillance data used in HIV molecular cluster analyses lack contextual information that is available from partner services (PS) data. Integrating these data sources in retrospective analyses can enrich understanding of the risk profile of people in clusters. In this study, HIV molecular clusters were identified and matched to information on partners and other information gleaned at the time of diagnosis, including coinfection with syphilis. We aimed to produce a more complete understanding of molecular cluster membership in Houston, Texas, a city ranking ninth nationally in rate of new HIV diagnoses that may benefit from retrospective matched analyses between molecular and PS data to inform future intervention. Data from PS were matched to molecular HIV records of people newly diagnosed from 2012 to 2018. By conducting analyses in HIV-TRACE (TRAnsmission Cluster Engine) using viral genetic sequences, molecular clusters were detected. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to estimate the association between molecular cluster membership and completion of a PS interview, number of named partners, and syphilis coinfection. Using data from 4,035 people who had a viral genetic sequence and matched PS records, molecular cluster membership was not significantly associated with completion of a PS interview. Among those with sequences who completed a PS interview (n = 3,869), 45.3% (n = 1,753) clustered. Molecular cluster membership was significantly associated with naming 1 or 3+ partners compared with not naming any partners [adjusted odds ratio, aOR: 1.27 (95% confidence interval, CI: 1.08-1.50), p = .003 and aOR: 1.38 (95% CI: 1.06-1.81), p = .02]. Alone, coinfection with syphilis was not significantly associated with molecular cluster membership. Syphilis coinfection was associated with molecular cluster membership when coupled with incarceration [aOR: 1.91 (95% CI: 1.08-3.38), p = .03], a risk for treatment interruption. Enhanced intervention among those with similar profiles, such as people coinfected with other risks, may be warranted.
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- 2023
26. Dynamical Thin Disks
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Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Thin disk accretion is often modeled in highly dynamical settings using the two-dimensional equations of viscous hydrodynamics, with viscosity representing unresolved turbulence. These equations are supposed to arise after vertical integration of the full three-dimensional equations of hydrodynamics, under the assumption of a geometrically thin disk with mirror symmetry about the midplane. But in the dynamical context, vertical dynamics are neglected by incorrectly assuming instantaneous vertical hydrostatic equilibrium. The resulting errors in the local disk height couple to the horizontal dynamics through some viscosity prescriptions and gravitational softening models. Furthermore, the viscous terms in the horizontal equations are only complete if they are inserted after vertical integration, as if the system is actually two-dimensional. Since turbulence breaks mirror symmetry, it is more physically correct to insert a turbulence model at the three-dimensional level, and impose mirror symmetry only on average. Thus, some viscous terms are usually missing. We revisit the vertical integration procedure, restricting to the regime of a Newtonian, non-self-gravitating disk. We obtain six evolution equations with only horizontal dependence, which determine the local vertical position and velocity of the disk surface, in addition to the usual fluid variables. This "2.5-dimensional" formulation opens the door to efficiently study vertical oscillations of thin disks in dynamical settings, and to improve the treatment of unresolved turbulence. As a demonstration, by including viscous stress at the three-dimensional level, we recover missing viscous terms which involve the vertical variables. We also propose a resummation of the vertically integrated gravitational force, which has a strikingly similar form to a gravitational softening model advocated for in protoplanetary disk studies., Comment: Accepted to Physical Review D. Fixed a sign error in the gravitational source term in the energy equation
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- 2023
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27. Shifting BSMM research paradigms in the context of HIV status-neutral care continuums
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Schneider, John A., Motley, Darnell N., Schumm, L. Philip, and Pagkas-Bather, Jade
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- 2024
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28. Multi-Level and Intersectional Stigma Experienced by Black Transgender Women in Chicago: a Qualitative Study to Inform Sociostructural Interventions for Reducing Stigma and Improving Health Outcomes
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Kerman, Jared, Brewer, Russell, Hotton, Anna, Flores, Rey, Devlin, Samantha A., Friedman, Eleanor E., Schneider, John A., and McNulty, Moira C.
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- 2023
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29. Factors associated with HIV testing and treatment among young Black MSM and trans women in three jail systems
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Antos, Nicholas, Flores, Rey, Harawa, Nina, Del Vecchio, Natascha, Issema, Rodal, Fujimoto, Kayo, Khanna, Aditya S, Di Paola, Angela, Schneider, John A, and Hotton, Anna L
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Health Disparities ,Mental Health ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Clinical Research ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Homosexuality ,Male ,HIV Infections ,Jails ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,HIV Testing ,Transgender Persons ,Men who have sex with men ,transgender women ,HIV testing ,ART adherence ,jail health care ,black ,African American ,black/African American ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Public health ,Sociology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) and transgender women (BTW) are disproportionately affected by incarceration and HIV. We assessed factors associated with HIV testing and viral suppression among 176 incarcerated BMSM and BTW in Chicago, IL; Los Angeles, CA; and Houston, TX. In multivariable logistic regression, having a sexual orientation of bisexual, heterosexual, or other vs. gay or same-gender loving was associated with higher odds of testing in custody (aOR 8.97; 95% CI 1.95 - 41.24). Binge drinking (aOR 0.19; 95% CI 0.04 - 0.92) and being unemployed prior to incarceration (aOR 0.03; 95% CI 0.00 - 0.23) were associated with lower odds of testing; participants in Los Angeles were also more likely to be tested than those in Chicago. Being housed in protective custody (aOR 3.12; 95% CI 1.09-9.59) and having a prescription for ART prior to incarceration (aOR 2.58; 95% CI 1.01-6.73) were associated with higher odds of viral suppression when adjusted for site and duration of incarceration, though the associations were not statistically significant in the full multivariable model. Future research should examine structural and process level factors that impact engagement in HIV testing and treatment among detained BMSM and BTW.
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- 2023
30. “I feel like marijuana is the only drug that wouldn’t kill me”: perceptions of cannabis use in previously incarcerated Black men who have sex with other men
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Flores, Rey, Kerman, Jared, Schneider, John, and Harawa, Nina
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Social Determinants of Health ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Clinical Research ,Cannabinoid Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Male ,Humans ,Adult ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Cannabis ,Black or African American ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Prisoners ,HIV Infections ,Marijuana ,Black MSM ,Incarceration ,Substance use ,Social network ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundFragmented state laws have impacted cannabis uptake and perceptions in the USA. Little research has explored the attitudes, beliefs, and social network influences of young Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) who have experienced incarceration and use cannabis. While problematic cannabis use is not well defined and understudied, scholars have found that a person's social network can mediate problematic substance use and reduce recidivism rates by providing both tangible and emotional support. This analysis examines how social networks contribute to cannabis perceptions and use among BMSM with criminal legal system involvement in Chicago, IL, and Houston TX.MethodsResearchers conducted interviews with 25 cis gender Black men informed by life course theory, with a focus on the role of social networks, incarceration, and other life experiences in substance use. All interviews were audio-recorded, de-identified, and transcribed; participants were compensated $50. A deductive-inductive thematic analysis was used to analyze all qualitative data collected.ResultsTwelve BMSM in Chicago and 13 BMSM in Houston (M = 26.6 years old, SD = 3.7) were interviewed. A majority identified as gay (56%), with 12 participants (48%) reporting having a high school diploma or equivalent; their average age of first substance use was 15.2 (SD = 2.9). Participants perceived cannabis usage to be categorically distinct from other intoxicating substance usage, with many describing it as not harmful and potentially beneficial. Three themes shaped their choices and attitudes regarding cannabis and "hard" drugs-social networks, need fulfillment, and knowledge of risk.ConclusionParticipant descriptions of cannabis use emphasize their drug-use behavior as being produced by agent decision-making and risk assessment. Future work should expand on how these decisions are made, and how social networks can be leveraged to encourage non-harmful drug consumption behaviors.
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- 2023
31. Expanding Medicaid to Reduce Human Immunodeficiency Virus Transmission in Houston, Texas
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Lee, Francis, Khanna, Aditya S, Hallmark, Camden J, Lavingia, Richa, McNeese, Marlene, Zhao, Jing, McNeese, Melanie L, Khuwaja, Salma, Ardestani, Babak M, Collier, Nicholson, Ozik, Jonathan, Hotton, Anna L, Harawa, Nina T, Schneider, John A, and Fujimoto, Kayo
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Applied Economics ,Economics ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Policy and Administration ,Pediatric ,Prevention ,Pediatric AIDS ,HIV/AIDS ,Mental Health ,Infectious Diseases ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Clinical Research ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Male ,HIV ,HIV Infections ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Texas ,pre-exposure prophylaxis ,computer simulation ,data mining ,sexual and gender minorities ,preventive medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Applied economics ,Health services and systems ,Policy and administration - Abstract
ContextMedicaid expansion has been nationally shown to improve engagement in the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) treatment and prevention continua, which are vital steps to stopping the HIV epidemic. New HIV infections in the United States are disproportionately concentrated among young Black men who have sex with men (YBMSM). Houston, TX, is the most populous city in the Southern United States with a racially/ethnically diverse population that is located in 1 of 11 US states that have not yet expanded Medicaid coverage as of 2021.MethodsAn agent-based model that incorporated the sexual networks of YBMSM was used to simulate improved antiretroviral treatment and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) engagement through Medicaid expansion in Houston, TX. Analyses considered the HIV incidence (number of new infections and as a rate metric) among YBMSM over the next 10 years under Medicaid expansion as the primary outcome. Additional scenarios, involving viral suppression and PrEP uptake above the projected levels achieved under Medicaid expansion, were also simulated.ResultsThe baseline model projected an HIV incidence rate of 4.96 per 100 person years (py) and about 368 new annual HIV infections in the 10th year. Improved HIV treatment and prevention continua engagement under Medicaid expansion resulted in a 14.9% decline in the number of annual new HIV infections in the 10th year. Increasing viral suppression by an additional 15% and PrEP uptake by 30% resulted in a 44.0% decline in new HIV infections in the 10th year, and a 27.1% decline in cumulative infections across the 10 years of the simulated intervention.FindingsSimulation results indicate that Medicaid expansion has the potential to reduce HIV incidence among YBMSM in Houston. Achieving HIV elimination objectives, however, might require additional effective measures to increase antiretroviral treatment and PrEP uptake beyond the projected improvements under expanded Medicaid.
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- 2023
32. Art Deco WWJ studio building becomes Cambria Hotel: The Cambria cherishes its roots as a broadcasting icon in Detroit
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Schneider, John
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Radio broadcasting ,Newspaper publishing ,Radio broadcasting industry ,Mass communications - Abstract
The owners of the Detroit Cambria Hotel have taken an outmoded building designed for live radio broadcasting and adapted it to modern 21st century needs. Here's how that came about. [...]
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- 2023
33. A Systematic Review up to 2018 of HIV and Associated Factors Among Criminal Justice–Involved (CJI) Black Sexual and Gender Minority Populations in the United States (US)
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Brewer, Russell, Ramani, Santhoshini L, Khanna, Aditya, Fujimoto, Kayo, Schneider, John A, Hotton, Anna, Wilton, Leo, Escobedo, Tania, and Harawa, Nina T
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Mental Health ,Substance Misuse ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Social Determinants of Health ,Minority Health ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Women's Health ,HIV/AIDS ,Health Disparities ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Infection ,Peace ,Justice and Strong Institutions ,Good Health and Well Being ,Criminal Law ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Male ,Sexual Behavior ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Substance-Related Disorders ,United States ,HIV ,Criminal justice-involved ,Corrections ,Black men who have sex with men ,Black transgender women ,Criminal justice–involved ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public health - Abstract
Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) and Black transgender women (BTW) are impacted by dual epidemics of HIV and incarceration. We advanced understanding of the relationship between criminal justice involvement, HIV, and other key HIV-related characteristics among these key populations in the US. We conducted a systematic review up to 2018 and 47 articles met the inclusion criteria of scientific publications involving quantitative findings of US-based HIV-related studies focused on criminal justice-involved (CJI) BMSM and BTW. Overall, there was a dearth of studies focused specifically on BTW. Criminal justice involvement was relatively high among BMSM and BTW and more pronounced among BTW. The current evidence favors no association between incarceration and HIV acquisition among BMSM with limited information about BTW. Criminal justice involvement was associated with a greater likelihood of STIs among BMSM with mixed results for sexual risk behaviors. Criminal justice settings served as an important venue for HIV testing/diagnosis for both BMSM and BTW. However, these settings were not conducive for subsequent stages of the HIV care continuum. Studies pointed to an independent association between criminal justice involvement, substance use, housing instability, and greater odds of incarceration among BMSM who were unemployed and had limited education. Future incarceration was associated with high levels of perceived racism among BMSM. Among young BMSM, high network criminal justice prevalence was also associated with sexual risk behaviors, poorer mental health outcomes, drug use, and housing instability. CJI BMSM and BTW represent a critical subpopulation to end the HIV epidemic in the US.
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- 2022
34. Social support networks of incarcerated women with opioid use disorder: Differences associated with jail-based substance use treatment
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Tillson, Martha, Annett, Jaxin, Staton, Michele, Schneider, John A., and Oser, Carrie B.
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- 2024
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35. Using GPS-defined venue-based affiliation networks among Black sexually minoritized men and transgender women to identify locations for HIV prevention interventions
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Chen, Yen-Tyng, Shrader, Cho-Hee, Duncan, Dustin T., Rudolph, Abby E., Regan, Seann D., Kim, Byoungjun, Pagkas-Bather, Jade, Knox, Justin, Fujimoto, Kayo, and Schneider, John A.
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- 2024
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36. Using the Meaningful Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS (MIPA) Framework to Assess the Engagement of Sexual Minority Men of Color in the US HIV Response: a Literature Review
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Coleman, Jordan Lee, Jones, Mickaya, Washington, Dejuan, Almirol, Ellen, Forberg, Peter, Dyer, Typhanye V., Spieldenner, Andrew, Martinez, Omar, Rodriguez-Diaz, Carlos E., Parker, Sharon D., Schneider, John A., and Brewer, Russell
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- 2023
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37. Latent Profile Patterns of Network-Level Norms and Associations with Individual-Level Sexual Behaviors: The N2 Cohort Study in Chicago
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Shrader, Cho-Hee, Duncan, Dustin T., Chen, Yen-Tyng, Driver, Redd, Russell, Jonathan, Moody, Raymond L., Knox, Justin, Skaathun, Britt, Durrell, Mainza, Hanson, Hillary, Eavou, Rebecca, Goedel, William C., and Schneider, John A.
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- 2023
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38. Sexual Orientation, HIV Vulnerability-Enhancing Behaviors and HIV Status Neutral Care Among Black Cisgender Sexual Minority Men in the Deep South: The N2 Cohort Study
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Driver, Redd, Schneider, John A., Hickson, DeMarc A., Timmins, Liadh, Brewer, Russell A., Goedel, William C., and Duncan, Dustin T.
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- 2023
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39. Multi-band light curves from eccentric accreting supermassive black hole binaries
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Westernacher-Schneider, John Ryan, Zrake, Jonathan, MacFadyen, Andrew, and Haiman, Zoltán
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We use long-run, high-resolution hydrodynamics simulations to compute the multi-wavelength light curves (LCs) from thermal disk emission around accreting equal-mass supermassive black hole (BH) binaries, with a focus on revealing binary eccentricity. LCs are obtained by modeling the disk thermodynamics with an adiabatic equation of state, a local blackbody cooling prescription, and corrections to approximate the effects of radiation pressure. We find that modulation of multi-band LCs on the orbital time scale are generally in-phase (to within $\sim\,$2% of a binary orbital period), but they contain pulse substructure in the time domain that is not necessarily reflected in BH accretion rates $\dot M$. We thus predict that binary-hosting AGN will exhibit highly correlated, in-phase, periodic brightness modulations in their low-energy disk emission. However, detectability of these modulations in multi-wavelength observing campaigns could be seriously compromised because observed stochastic variability in AGNs typically has a higher amplitude than our proposed signal. It is possible that observations over temporal baselines of many binary periods may make the signal more prominent, but this would need to be analyzed carefully. If jet emission is predicted by $\dot{M}$, then we predict a weaker correlation with low-energy disk emission due to the differing sub-peak structure. For the binary parameters we explore, we show that LC variability due to hydrodynamics likely dominates Doppler brightening for all equal-mass binaries with disk Mach numbers $\lesssim 20$. A promising signature of eccentricity is weak or absent "lump" periodicity. We find hints that a significant lag exists between $\dot{M}$ and low-energy disk emission for circular binaries, but they are in-phase for eccentric binaries, which might explain some "orphan" blazar flares with no $\gamma$-ray counterpart., Comment: v6: accepted version (PRD)
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- 2021
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40. Neighborhood violent crime exposure is associated with preexposure prophylaxis nonuse among black sexually minoritized men and transgender women
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Flores, John M., Moline, Tyrone, Regan, Seann D., Chen, Yen-Tyng, Shrader, Cho-Hee, Schneider, John A., Duncan, Dustin T., and Kim, Byoungjun
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- 2024
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41. Are Patients and Their Providers Talking About Long-Acting Injectable Antiretroviral Therapy? Penetration into Clinical Encounters at Three U.S. Care Sites
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Christopoulos, Katerina A, Colasanti, Jonathan, Johnson, Mallory O, Tsuzuki, Manami Diaz, Erguera, Xavier A, Flores, Rey, Kerman, Jared, Dance, Kaylin, Sauceda, John A, Neilands, Torsten B, Dilworth, Samantha E, Koester, Kimberly A, Gutierrez, Jose, Schneider, John A, Montgomery, Elizabeth, and McNulty, Moira C
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Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,Infectious Diseases ,HIV/AIDS ,7.1 Individual care needs ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy ,implementation science ,Clinical sciences ,Medical microbiology - Abstract
Use of long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy depends on patient awareness, provider discussion, and patient willingness to use. We conducted a postvisit survey with patients at 3 HIV clinics in San Francisco, Chicago, and Atlanta in May 2021 to assess for inequities in these early implementation phases.
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- 2022
42. Do partner services linked to molecular clusters yield people with viremia or new HIV?
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Schneider, John A, Hayford, Christina, Hotton, Anna, Tabidze, Irina, Wertheim, Joel O, Ramani, Santhoshini, Hallmark, Camden, Morgan, Ethan, Janulis, Patrick, Khanna, Aditya, Ozik, Jonathan, Fujimoto, Kayo, Flores, Rey, D’aquila, Rich, and Benbow, Nanette
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,HIV/AIDS ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Chicago ,Cluster Analysis ,Cohort Studies ,Female ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Male ,Sexual Partners ,Viremia ,cluster membership ,HIV ,linkage to care ,molecular surveillance ,partner services ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Virology ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesWe examined whether molecular cluster membership was associated with public health identification of HIV transmission potential among named partners in Chicago.DesignHistorical cohort study.MethodsWe matched and analyzed HIV surveillance and partner services data from HIV diagnoses (2012-2016) prior to implementation of cluster detection and response interventions. We constructed molecular clusters using HIV-TRACE at a pairwise genetic distance threshold of 0.5% and identified clusters exhibiting recent and rapid growth according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention definition (three new cases diagnosed in past year). Factors associated with identification of partners with HIV transmission potential were examined using multivariable Poisson regression.ResultsThere were 5208 newly diagnosed index clients over this time period. Average age of index clients in clusters was 28; 47% were Black, 29% Latinx/Hispanic, 6% female and 89% MSM. Of the 537 named partners, 191 (35.6%) were linked to index cases in a cluster and of those 16% were either new diagnoses or viremic. There was no statistically significant difference in the probability of identifying partners with HIV transmission potential among index clients in a rapidly growing cluster versus those not in a cluster [adjusted relative risk 1.82, (0.81-4.06)].ConclusionPartner services that were initiated from index clients in a molecular cluster yielded similar new HIV case finding or identification of those with viremia as did interviews with index clients not in clusters. It remains unclear whether these findings are due to temporal disconnects between diagnoses and cluster identification, unobserved cluster members, or challenges with partner services implementation.
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- 2022
43. Stimulant use interventions may strengthen ‘Getting to Zero’ HIV elimination initiatives in Illinois: Insights from a modeling study
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Lee, Francis, Sheeler, Daniel, Hotton, Anna, Vecchio, Natascha Del, Flores, Rey, Fujimoto, Kayo, Harawa, Nina, Schneider, John A, and Khanna, Aditya S
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Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Sexual and Gender Minorities (SGM/LGBT*) ,Sexually Transmitted Infections ,HIV/AIDS ,Prevention ,Methamphetamine ,Infectious Diseases ,Substance Misuse ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Central Nervous System Stimulants ,HIV Infections ,Homosexuality ,Male ,Humans ,Illinois ,Male ,Mirtazapine ,Sexual and Gender Minorities ,Substance-related disorders ,HIV infections ,Pre-exposure prophylaxis ,Computer simulation ,Sexual and gender minorities ,Preventive medicine ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse ,Public health ,Policy and administration - Abstract
Objective(s)Getting to Zero (GTZ) is an Illinois-based HIV elimination initiative. GTZ identifies younger Black men who have sex with men (YBMSM) as a population who have experienced disproportionate HIV incidence. Rising stimulant use among YBMSM has been determined to impede engagement in the HIV prevention and treatment continua for reducing onward HIV transmission. Given the limited development of dedicated or culturally appropriate interventions for this population, this modeling study explores the impact of stimulant use on HIV incidence among YBMSM and assesses the impact of interventions to treat stimulant use on downstream HIV transmission to achieve GTZ goals.MethodsA previously developed agent-based network model (ABNM), calibrated using data for YBMSM in Illinois, was extended to incorporate the impact of stimulant use (methamphetamines, crack/cocaine, and ecstasy) on sexual networks and engagement in HIV treatment and prevention continua. The model simulated the impact of a residential behavioral intervention (BI) for reducing stimulant use and an outpatient biomedical intervention (mirtazapine) for treating methamphetamine use. The downstream impact of these interventions on population-level HIV incidence was the primary intervention outcome.ResultsBaseline simulated annual HIV incidence in the ABNM was 6.93 [95% Uncertainty Interval (UI): 6.83,7.04] per 100 person years (py) and 453 [95% UI: 445.9,461.2] new infections annually. A residential rehabilitation intervention targeted to 25% of stimulant using persons yielded a 27.1% reduction in the annual number of new infections. Initiating about 50% of methamphetamine using persons on mirtazapine reduced the overall HIV incidence among YBMSM by about 11.2%. A 30% increase in antiretroviral treatment (ART) and preexposure prophylaxis (PrEP) uptake in the non-stimulant using YBMSM population combined with a 25% uptake of BI for stimulant using persons produces an HIV incidence consistent with HIV elimination targets (about 200 infections/year) identified in the GTZ initiative.ConclusionsBehavioral and biomedical interventions to treat stimulant use, in addition to expanding overall ART and PrEP uptake, are likely to enhance progress towards achieving GTZ goals.
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- 2022
44. Hoboes: Bindlestiffs, Fruit Tramps, and the Harvesting of the American West (review)
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Schneider, John C.
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- 2011
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45. Changes in partner seeking and sexual behavior among United States adults during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic
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Rushmore, Julie, Copen, Casey E., Schneider, John, Lamuda, Phoebe S.M., Taylor, Bruce G., Kirkcaldy, Robert D., Learner, Emily R., and Bernstein, Kyle T.
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- 2024
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46. Anal human papillomavirus (HPV) disagreement by Linear Array compared to SPF10 PCR-DEIA-LiPA25 system in young sexual minority men
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Amboree, Trisha L., Kuo, Jacky, Sirak, Bradley A., Schneider, John A., Nyitray, Alan G., Hwang, Lu-Yu, Chiao, Elizabeth Y., Giuliano, Anna R., and Fujimoto, Kayo
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- 2024
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47. Racial discrimination and mental health in the context of anti-Asian xenophobia: An intersecting approach of race, ethnicity, nativity, and socioeconomic status
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Chen, Yen-Tyng, Zhou, Yuqing, Williams, Sharifa, Cantor, Joel, Taylor, Bruce G., Lamuda, Phoebe A., Pollack, Harold A., and Schneider, John
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- 2024
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48. When inflammation is not just inflammation—A review of systemic diseases of the nose and sinuses part 1: IgG4-related disease and sarcoidosis
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Cler, Samuel J., Ogden, M. Allison, Farrell, Nyssa Fox, Roland, Lauren T., Diffie, Colin E., and Schneider, John S.
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- 2024
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49. When inflammation is not just inflammation—A review of systemic diseases of the nose and sinuses part 2: Granulomatosis with polyangiitis and eosinophilic granulomatosis with polyangiitis
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Cler, Samuel J., Ogden, M. Allison, Farrell, Nyssa Fox, Roland, Lauren T., Diffie, Colin E., and Schneider, John S.
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- 2024
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50. The Rapid interaction: a qualitative study of provider approaches to implementing Rapid ART
- Author
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Moran, Lissa, Koester, Kimberly A., Le Tourneau, Noelle, Coffey, Susa, Moore, Jr., Kelvin, Broussard, Janessa, Crouch, Pierre-Cedric, VanderZanden, Lyndon, Schneider, John, Lynch, Elizabeth, Roman, Jorge, and Christopoulos, Katerina A.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
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