13 results on '"Terra Wiens"'
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2. Víctimas hispanas de violencia letal por armas de fuego en Estados Unidos (2023)
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Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, and Terra Wiens
- Abstract
En 2001 los Estados Unidos experimentaron un cambio demográfico de carácter histórico. Por primera vez los hispanos se convirtieron en el grupo minoritario más grande del país, al sobrepasar en número a los residentes de raza negra. Con una población de 62.1 millones en 2020, los hispanos constituyen 18.7 por ciento del total de la población de los Estados Unidos.Este estudio busca informar sobre la victimización por homicidios y suicidios de la población hispana en los Estados Unidos, así como el papel que juegan las armas de fuego en homicidios y suicidios, y también las cifras totales de muertes por armas de fuego. La importancia de documentar dicha victimización queda clara al percatarnos del respectivo panorama demográfico en que ocurre. En efecto, hay estudios que han encontrado que una persona hispana tiene más probabilidades de morir por homicidio con arma de fuego que una persona blanca no-hispana.
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- 2023
3. When Men Murder Women: A Review of 25 Years of Female Homicide Victimization in the United States
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Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, and Terra Wiens
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In January of 2021, the FBI changed the way crime data are collected and reported, which has impacted the reliability of subsequent data. That year, the FBI retired the SHR system and replaced it with the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). While NIBRS will eventually provide much more comprehensive and robust crime data compared to the SHR, transitioning law enforcement agencies to the new data collection and reporting system has been slow and burdensome. Indeed, many law enforcement agencies did not transition to NIBRS by January of 2021, which has had a significant impact on the reliability of 2021 crime data. After a careful analysis of that year's crime data, the VPC has determined that current NIBRS data are not reliable for state-by-state gun violence research as required by When Men Murder Women.Lacking reliable crime data from 2021, this report will instead focus on trends revealed in previous editions of When Men Murder Women over the past 25 years. Previous years' reports described the age and race of victims, weapons used, the relationship between victim and offender, and circumstance. Prior reports also ranked the states by their rates of females killed by males. This study summarizes the findings of these reports and the patterns and characteristics of these homicides between 1996 and 2020.
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- 2023
4. Hispanic Victims of Lethal Firearms Violence in the United States (2023)
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Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, and Terra Wiens
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In 2001, the United States experienced a historic demographic change. For the first time, Hispanics became the largest minority group in the nation, exceeding the number of Black residents. With a population in 2020 of 62.1 million, Hispanics represent 18.7 percent of the total population of the United States.This study is intended to report on Hispanic homicide victimization and suicide in the United States, the role of firearms in homicide and suicide, and overall gun death figures. Recognizing this demographic landscape, the importance of documenting such victimization is clear. Indeed, studies have found that Hispanic individuals are more likely to die by firearm homicide compared to white, non-Hispanic individuals.
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- 2023
5. American Roulette: Murder-Suicide in the United States, Eighth Edition
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Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, Marty Langley, Terra Wiens, Terra Wiens, and Marty Langley
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Murder-suicide is "a dramatic, violent event" in which a person commits one murder or multiple murders, and then shortly after commits suicide. What makes these acts particularly disturbing is that they affect more than one person and often involve a family. Murder-suicides are almost always committed by a man with a firearm. Yet outside of high-profile mass shootings, the phenomenon of murder-suicide usually garners little public attention as a significant contributor to gun-related death and injury. This is despite the fact that, as one medical professional has observed, "because many murder suicides result in the death or injury of family members and sometimes mass murder, they cause countless additional morbidity, family trauma, and disruption of communities."Currently, comprehensive, up-to-date information specific to murder-suicides in the United States is not readily available, making it challenging to assess the toll in death and injury. In order to more fully understand the human costs of murder-suicide, in 2002 the Violence Policy Center (VPC) began collecting and analyzing news reports of murder-suicides, resulting in a series of studies titled American Roulette: Murder-Suicide in the United States. This is the eighth edition of the study. For each analysis, the VPC tracked murder-suicide incidents over a six-month period using Internet news reports. For this most recent edition of the study, news reports of murder-suicides were collected for the period January 1, 2021 through June 30, 2021. To be included in the study, both the murder and subsequent suicide had to occur within 72 hours of each other and within this six-month time period. Recognizing the lack of publicly available data, this study likely provides one of the most current and accurate portraits possible of murder suicide in the United States.
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- 2023
6. Lessons Learned From the E-cigarette, or Vaping, Product Use-Associated Lung Injury (EVALI) Outbreak Response, Minnesota, 2019-2020
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Stacy Holzbauer, Jason Peterson, Joanne Taylor, Jamie Margetta, Paige D’Heilly, Ruth Lynfield, Terra Wiens, Cory Cole, Mark D. Lunda, and Stefan Saravia
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Outbreak response ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Minnesota ,Vaping ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Lung Injury ,Lung injury ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Disease Outbreaks ,Noncommunicable disease ,Emergency medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Product (category theory) ,business ,Noncommunicable Diseases - Abstract
Objective Electronic cigarette (e-cigarette), or vaping, product use–associated lung injury (EVALI) is a novel noncommunicable disease with an unknown cause. The objective of this analysis was to describe the Minnesota Department of Health’s (MDH’s) outbreak response to EVALI, including challenges, successes, and lessons learned. Methods MDH began investigating EVALI cases in August 2019 and quickly coordinated an agencywide response. This response included activating the incident command system; organizing multidisciplinary teams to perform the epidemiologic investigation; laboratory testing of e-cigarette, or vaping, products (EVPs) and clinical specimens; and collaborating with partners to gather information and develop recommendations. Results MDH faced numerous investigational challenges during the outbreak response of EVALI, including the need to gather information on unregulated and illicit substances and their use and collecting information from minors and critically ill people. MDH laboratorians faced methodologic challenges in characterizing EVPs. Despite these challenges, MDH epidemiologists successfully collaborated with the MDH public health laboratory, law enforcement, partners with clinical and toxicology expertise, and local and national public health partners. Practice Implications Lessons learned included ensuring the state public health agency has legal authority to conduct noncommunicable disease outbreak investigations and the necessity of cultivating and using internal and external partnerships, specifically with laboratories that can analyze clinical specimens and unknown substances. The lessons learned may be useful to public health agencies responding to similar public health emergencies. To improve preparedness for the next outbreak of EVALI or other noncommunicable diseases, we recommend building and maintaining partnerships with internal and external partners.
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- 2023
7. Practices and policies of marijuana retail stores in the first two US states to legalize recreational marijuana sales
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Terra Wiens, Lindsey E. A. Fabian, Darin J. Erickson, and Kathleen M. Lenk
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Health (social science) ,biology ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Advertising ,Cannabis ,Business ,biology.organism_classification ,Recreation - Abstract
With the recent introduction of recreational marijuana retail stores throughout the United States and other jurisdictions, research is warranted on whether responsible sales practices are implement...
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- 2020
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8. Biosurveillance of Drug Overdoses and Substance Misuse Treated in Selected Emergency Departments in Minnesota, 2017-2020
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Elisabeth F. Bilden, Ruth Lynfield, Jon Roesler, Nate Wright, Kaila Hanson, Jason Peterson, Stefan Saravia, Terra Wiens, Matthew T. Wogen, and Roon Makhtal
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Minnesota ,Drug overdose ,Fentanyl ,Biosurveillance ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical prescription ,Toxicology testing ,Harm reduction ,business.industry ,Public health ,Research ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Emergency department ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Opioid ,Emergency medicine ,Female ,Drug Overdose ,business ,Emergency Service, Hospital ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Objectives Increasing knowledge about the toxicology of drug overdose and substance misuse (DOSM) is important in improving our understanding of the epidemic. We describe the Minnesota Drug Overdose and Substance Use Pilot Surveillance Activity, which started collecting data on emergency department (ED) visits attributable to DOSM in 2017, with a focus on the toxicology results of a subset of clinical encounters. Methods From November 1, 2017, through January 30, 2020, we collected near–real-time data on DOSM-related ED encounters. The Minnesota Department of Health Public Health Laboratory tested leftover clinical specimens (blood and/or urine) for the presence of various substances for patients who died, were hospitalized, had an atypical clinical presentation, or were part of a local drug overdose cluster. Testing looked for >250 drugs or their metabolites, including those commonly misused (eg, methamphetamine, cocaine), prescription medications, synthetic cannabinoids and cathinones, and opioids. We describe characteristics of the overall group and a subgroup of clinical encounters with toxicology results. Results Specimens submitted from 6 EDs during the study period represented 239 clinical encounters. Methamphetamine was the most frequently detected substance (67.4%) but was suspected in only 45.6% of encounters. At least 1 opioid was detected in 42.5% of encounters but suspected in only 29.7%. Testing also detected potential adulterants and additives (eg, fentanyl, fentanyl analogues, levamisole) and showed frequent patient exposure to substances not reported by patients or suspected by clinicians. Nearly half (44.4%) of clinical encounters had >1 substance detected. Conclusions ED surveillance for DOSM encounters, enhanced by toxicology testing, can provide local situational awareness on overdoses, prevent potential mischaracterization of the true drug overdose epidemic, and inform harm reduction and drug overdose prevention efforts.
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- 2021
9. Characteristics of E-cigarette, or Vaping, Products Used by Patients with Associated Lung Injury and Products Seized by Law Enforcement — Minnesota, 2018 and 2019
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Joanne, Taylor, Terra, Wiens, Jason, Peterson, Stefan, Saravia, Mark, Lunda, Kaila, Hanson, Matt, Wogen, Paige, D'Heilly, Jamie, Margetta, Maria, Bye, Cory, Cole, Erica, Mumm, Lauren, Schwerzler, Roon, Makhtal, Richard, Danila, Ruth, Lynfield, Stacy, Holzbauer, and Liza, Valentin-Blasini
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Health (social science) ,Adolescent ,Epidemiology ,Minnesota ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems ,Lung injury ,01 natural sciences ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Law Enforcement ,0302 clinical medicine ,Health Information Management ,Illicit market ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Vitamin E ,Dronabinol ,Full Report ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Vitamin E Acetate ,Aged ,business.industry ,Vaping ,Public health ,010102 general mathematics ,Law enforcement ,Outbreak ,Lung Injury ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Legislation, Drug ,Female ,Causal link ,business - Abstract
During August 9-October 31, 2019, 96 patients were classified as having e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury (EVALI) by the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH); other patients are being investigated for case classification and exposures. Among 58 patients interviewed, 53 (91%) reported obtaining tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)-containing products from informal sources such as friends, family members, or in-person or online dealers. Using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GCMS), the MDH Public Health Laboratory (PHL) analyzed 46 THC-containing e-cigarette, or vaping, products obtained from 12 EVALI patients for various potential toxicants, including vitamin E acetate, which has recently been detected in some THC-containing products and in samples of lung fluid from EVALI patients (1-4). To explore whether vitamin E acetate is a recently added component in THC-containing products, MDH tested ten products seized by law enforcement in 2018, before the EVALI outbreak, and 20 products seized in 2019, during the outbreak. Twenty-four products obtained from 11 EVALI patients from 2019 contained vitamin E acetate. Among the seized products tested by MDH, none seized in 2018 contained vitamin E acetate, although all tested THC-containing products seized in 2019 tested positive for vitamin E acetate. These chemical analyses of products obtained from EVALI patients and of products intended for the illicit market both before and during the outbreak support a potential role for vitamin E acetate in the EVALI outbreak; however, the number of products tested was small, and further research is needed to establish a causal link between exposure to inhaled vitamin E acetate and EVALI. Collaboration between public health jurisdictions and law enforcement to characterize THC-containing products circulating before the recognition of the EVALI outbreak and during the outbreak might provide valuable information about a dynamic market. These Minnesota findings highlight concerns about e-cigarette, or vaping, products that contain THC acquired from informal sources. Because local supply chains and policy environments vary, CDC continues to recommend not using e-cigarette, or vaping, products that contain THC or any e-cigarette, or vaping, products obtained from informal sources. E-cigarette, or vaping, products should never be used by youths, young adults, or pregnant women.* Until the relationship between inhaled vitamin E acetate and lung health is better characterized, vitamin E acetate should not be added to e-cigarette, or vaping, products.
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- 2019
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10. Vaping, lung injury, and mental health Minnesota 2018-2019
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Cory, Cole, Terra, Wiens, Joanne, Taylor, Richard, Danila, Paige, D'Heilly, Jamie, Margetta, Maria, Bye, Erica, Mumm, Lauren, Schwerzler, Roon, Makhtal, Stacy, Holzbauer, and Ruth, Lynfield
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Article - Abstract
This report describes and contextualizes the high prevalence of mental health conditions (MHC) among Minnesota 2019 EVALI patients by examining the prevalence of MHC and associations between MHC and e-cigarette or vaping product (EVP) use in Minnesota population surveys. Investigators reviewed medical records for 140 EVALI patients to determine history of MHC. History of MHC and EVP use in the general population was estimated using self-reported measures and screening tools from two population-based surveys, the 2019 Minnesota Student Survey (MSS) and the 2018 Minnesota Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (MN-BRFSS). Some 64.3% of EVALI patients had an MHC. In both Minnesota population surveys, MHCs were common among people who used EVP. The odds of MHC among youth aged
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- 2021
11. Law enforcement practices in the first two states in U.S. to legalize recreational marijuana
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Lindsey E. A. Fabian, Darin J. Erickson, Terra Wiens, and Kathleen M. Lenk
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Washington ,Marijuana Abuse ,Colorado ,Alcohol Drinking ,030508 substance abuse ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Poison control ,Criminology ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Law Enforcement ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,mental disorders ,Injury prevention ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Enforcement ,Recreation ,health care economics and organizations ,Legalization ,Local Government ,Health Policy ,Commerce ,Law enforcement ,Hallucinogens ,Marijuana Use ,Business ,0305 other medical science ,State Government - Abstract
Background There is a lack of research regarding law enforcement practices where recreational marijuana sales are legal. Given that legalization of recreational marijuana is expanding, lessons learned from areas with existing legalization can help inform future practices. This pilot study is an evaluation of enforcement of marijuana laws in the first two states in the U.S. to legalize sales of recreational marijuana, Colorado and Washington, several years post legalization. Methods We surveyed a random sample of local law enforcement agencies in the two states (25 agencies per state). We also attempted to survey the state-level marijuana enforcement agency but only Washington responded. Surveys focused on youth marijuana use, youth access to marijuana, and impaired driving but included other topics. Chi-square tests assessed differences between states (p Results All local agencies reported underage use was somewhat or very common in their jurisdictions. Thirty percent of local agencies conducted enforcement targeting underage use/possession. Twenty percent of agencies overall conducted underage compliance checks at licensed stores, with more agencies conducting checks in Colorado (32%) than Washington (8%; p = .03). Most agencies in both states reported marijuana-impaired driving was somewhat or very common in their jurisdictions. One local agency in each state specifically targeted marijuana-impaired driving. The state-level agency in Washington reported that their agency is the one primarily responsible for enforcing marijuana retail laws and they conducted routine underage compliance checks at all licensed marijuana stores three times per year. Conclusion Our findings indicate that marijuana enforcement can be improved regarding sales/provision to underage youth and impaired driving in these states, particularly given that underage use and impaired driving are perceived to be common. Larger studies with additional jurisdictions and types of agencies (e.g., highway patrol) are warranted.
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- 2018
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12. Clinical Factors and Antibiotic use During Campylobacter Enteritis: Association with Post-Infection IBS
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Maureen Leeds, Madhusudan Grover, Shoko Edogawa, Jayne Griffith, Elizabeth Abrahamson, Robert Prose, Carlota Medus, Kirk E. Smith, Terra Wiens, Ryan J. Lennon, and Gianrico Farrugia
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Gastroenterology ,Medicine ,Antibiotic use ,business ,Campylobacter enteritis ,Post infection - Published
- 2017
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13. Vaping, lung injury, and mental health Minnesota 2018-2019.
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Cole C, Wiens T, Taylor J, Danila R, D'Heilly P, Margetta J, Bye M, Mumm E, Schwerzler L, Makhtal R, Holzbauer S, and Lynfield R
- Abstract
This report describes and contextualizes the high prevalence of mental health conditions (MHC) among Minnesota 2019 EVALI patients by examining the prevalence of MHC and associations between MHC and e-cigarette or vaping product (EVP) use in Minnesota population surveys. Investigators reviewed medical records for 140 EVALI patients to determine history of MHC. History of MHC and EVP use in the general population was estimated using self-reported measures and screening tools from two population-based surveys, the 2019 Minnesota Student Survey (MSS) and the 2018 Minnesota Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (MN-BRFSS). Some 64.3% of EVALI patients had an MHC. In both Minnesota population surveys, MHCs were common among people who used EVP. The odds of MHC among youth aged <18 were higher among those who reported current EVP use compared with those did not report EVP use. Similarly, the odds of depression were higher among adults who reported current EVP use compared with those who did not. Clinicians treating patients with EVALI should consider evaluating the need for, and providing indicated referrals to, post-discharge mental health services for their patients., Competing Interests: None of the authors have any conflict of interest to disclose.
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- 2021
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