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Camacho Korsholm posted an update 6 months ago
Overall, each increase in an adverse social factor was associated with 27% increased odds of mortality, after accounting for demographics, medical comorbidity, and military service-related disability. Non-specific psychosocial factors were most strongly associated with mortality, followed by social or familial problems. Although women were more likely than men to have multiple adverse social factors, social factors were not associated with mortality among women as they were among men. By incorporating social factors data, health care systems can better understand patient all-cause mortality and identify potential prevention efforts built around social determinants.
U.S. reductions in smoking have not been experienced equally. Smoking prevalence is greater among persons of lower education, lower income, and unemployed. We evaluated whether a cessation intervention for job-seekers would result in significantly fewer cigarettes smoked per day and a greater likelihood of tobacco abstinence and re-employment, compared to the control condition at 6-months follow-up.
Unemployed, job-seekers who smoked daily were recruited from five employment development departments in the San Francisco Bay Area, October 2015 to February 2018. Intention to quit smoking was not required. Participants were randomized to a brief motivationally-tailored, computer-assisted counseling intervention or referred to a toll-free quitline. Midstudy, 8-weeks of combination nicotine replacement was added to the intervention. Expired carbon monoxide and cotinine testing verified abstinence. Data were analyzed fall 2019.
Participants (N=360; 70% men; 43% African American, 27% non-Hispanic Caucasian; 19%eded on smoking and re-employment.Gang membership is associated with many risky behaviors but is often overlooked as a source of mortality among young Americans. Gang Member-Linked Mortality Files (GM-LMFs) match St. Louis, Missouri gang members listed in a law enforcement gang database to mortality records in the National Death Index. We created three analytic samples composed of black males aged 15-35 years by merging cases of the GM-LMFs with National Vital Statistics System and Census data in years 1993-2016. Mortality rates standardized to the 15-35-year-old 2010 U.S. male population were estimated for all-cause (1477.4, 99% CI = 1451.5-1503.3), homicide (950.1, 99% CI = 932.2-967.9), non-homicide injury (314.0, 99% CI = 308.8-319.2), and non-injury (213.3, 99% CI = 202.3-224.4) deaths in the GM-LMFs. We fitted Poisson rate models to estimate mortality rate ratios (RR) between gang members and demographically-matched comparison groups. Black male gang members in St. Louis were at an elevated mortality risk from all causes of death, and homicides contributed substantially to this risk. Compared to black males in St. Louis, gang members experienced greater relative risk of all-cause (RR = 2.9, 99% CI = 2.4-3.5), homicide (RR = 3.2, 99% CI = 2.5-4.1), and non-homicide injury (RR = 4.0, 99% CI = 2.8-5.8) mortality between 1993 and 2016. Relative risk was greater when compared to black males in St. Louis MSA, Missouri, and the USA. These results identify a key source of excess mortality among young black Americans. Health policies and interventions may be most efficacious when they acknowledge, address, and incorporate information about and target high-risk populations, including gang members, that contribute to relatively high mortality risk in the USA.This study analyzes the direct medical costs of low physical activity by race/ethnicity and gender. Average health expenditures based on physical activity status for Black non-Hispanics (NH), Asian NHs, and Hispanics were compared to White NHs. Imidazole ketone erastin supplier Data from the National Health Interview Survey were merged with the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey for years 2000-2010 and 2001-2011, respectively, and weights were applied to ensure generalizability to the larger US population. The sample was restricted to non-pregnant adults between the ages of 25 and 64, with a final sample size of 44,953. The multivariate estimates reveal statistically significant lower annual health care expenditures among physically active men and women in five out of eight racial/ethnic groups relative to their inactive counterparts on average, for men, $1041 less is spent among White NHs, $905 less is spent for Black NHs and $876 less is spent for Asian NHs. Among women, medical expenditures were $956 per year less among active White non-Hispanics relative to their inactive counterparts, and $815 per year among Hispanics. Essentially, the average reduction in health care expenditures is relatively consistent for five out of the eight groups. The absence of any reduction in average health care expenditures for three of the groups, however, suggests that there may be environmental factors at play for certain groups that mitigate the impact of physical activity on health expenditures.Human papillomavirus (HPV)-associated anal cancer is orders of magnitude higher among men living with HIV than the general male population. Our objective was to examine factors associated with HPV awareness and self-perceived risk for HPV-associated anal cancer among men living with HIV, which may influence uptake of cancer prevention strategies. A cross-sectional questionnaire on HPV was administered from 2016 to 2017 to 1677 men in a multisite, HIV clinical cohort in Ontario, Canada. We used logistic regression and proportional odds models to identify factors associated with being familiar with HPV and increasing self-perceived risk for anal cancer, respectively. We used correspondence analysis to examine associations of specific HPV-related knowledge with self-perceived risk. Only 52% were familiar with HPV, and 72% felt they had no or low risk for anal cancer. Familiarity with HPV was more common among men who have sex with men than heterosexual men (58% vs. 21%). Older men were less likely to be familiar with HPV (adjusted odds ratio per 10 years = 0.77; 95% confidence interval 0.69, 0.85). Familiarity with HPV was associated with increasing self-perceived risk (aOR = 2.39; 95% CI 1.87, 3.04). After accounting for differences in HPV awareness and sexual orientation, racialized men had lower self-perceived risk (aOR = 0.68; 95% CI 0.52, 0.88). In the correspondence analysis, risk-focused HPV-related knowledge (e.g., knowing smoking increases risk) was associated with highest risk perception. Efforts are needed to improve HPV-related health literacy in this population. Our findings suggest specific HPV-related knowledge may differentially influence self-perceived risk for anal cancer.