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47121“…Past research documents the heterogeneity in US immigrants, particularly in terms of racial and ethnic categories and specific ethnic subgroups. …”
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47122por Elmore, Rebecca, Schmidt, Lena, Lam, Juleen, Howard, Brian E., Tandon, Arpit, Norman, Christopher, Phillips, Jason, Shah, Mihir, Patel, Shyam, Albert, Tyler, Taxman, Debra J., Shah, Ruchir R.“…We noted a paucity of COVID-19 studies among children and susceptible sub-groups, including pregnant women, racial minorities, refugees/migrants, and healthcare workers, with few studies examining protective factors. …”
Publicado 2020
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47123por Lin, Annie Wen, Baik, Sharon H, Aaby, David, Tello, Leslie, Linville, Twila, Alshurafa, Nabil, Spring, Bonnie“…Future eHealth weight loss interventions should investigate strategies to engage younger cancer survivors with comorbidities and address racial and ethnic disparities in eHealth use.…”
Publicado 2020
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47124por Blackburn, Jessica, Chapur, Valeria F., Stephens, Julie A., Zhao, Jing, Shepler, Anne, Pierson, Christopher R., Otero, José Javier“…SIDS correlates with markers of poor prenatal and postnatal care, generally rooted in the lack of access and quality of healthcare endemic to select racial and ethnic groups, and thus can be viewed in the context of health disparities. …”
Publicado 2020
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47125“…Most patients were male (60%) and the mean age was 49 years of age. The racial/ethnic breakdown was 46% Hispanic, 45% Black and 8% White. …”
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47126por Rahman, Nazia, Robles, Roberta Lugo, Magno, Nicholas, Hsieh, Hsing-Chuan, Waggoner, Sandra, Kao, Tzu-cheg, Smith, Realisha, Lalani, Tahaniyat, Garges, Eric“…Partnership inventories suggest sexual concurrency and disassortative mixing on age, racial and ethnic groups, and military service. CONCLUSION: While previous studies demonstrate that service members will complete sexual risk behavior surveys, this pilot egocentric partnership study demonstrates their willingness to provide detailed information on risk behaviors as well as detailed information on sexual partnerships. …”
Publicado 2020
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47127“…CONCLUSIONS: Given the significance and magnitude of race, hunger, income and employment in determining socioeconomic inequalities in poor health, addressing racial disparities and hunger, income inequality and unemployment will likely mitigate income-related health inequalities in South Africa during the COVID-19 pandemic.…”
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47128por Benefield, Halei C, Reeder-Hayes, Katherine E, Nichols, Hazel B, Calhoun, Benjamin C, Love, Michael I, Kirk, Erin L, Geradts, Joseph, Hoadley, Katherine A, Cole, Stephen R, Earp, H Shelton, Olshan, Andrew F, Carey, Lisa A, Perou, Charles M, Troester, Melissa A“…RESULTS: Black women had higher recurrence risk relative to White women (crude hazard ratio = 1.81, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.34 to 2.46), which remained elevated after standardizing for clinical covariates (hazard ratio = 1.42, 95% CI = 1.05 to 1.93). Racial disparities were most pronounced among those with high PAM50 Risk of Recurrence score (5-year standardized recurrence risk = 18.9%, 95% CI = 8.6% to 29.1% in Black women vs 12.5%, 95% CI = 2.0% to 23.0% in White women) and high grade (5-year standardized recurrence risk = 16.6%, 95% CI = 11.7% to 21.5% in Black women vs 12.0%, 95% CI = 7.3% to 16.7% in White women). …”
Publicado 2020
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47129por Assari, Shervin, Mardani, Abbas, Maleki, Maryam, Boyce, Shanika, Bazargan, Mohsen“…CONCLUSION: Diminished returns of parental education (MDRs) contribute to the racial achievement gap in urban but not suburban American high schools. …”
Publicado 2021
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47130“…CONCLUSIONS: Substantial inequalities in COVID-19 mortality are likely, with disproportionate burdens falling on those who are of racial/ethnic minorities, are poor, have less education, and are veterans. …”
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47131“…As interpersonal, racial, social, and international conflicts intensify in the world, it is important to safeguard the mental health of individuals affected by them. …”
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47132por Cohen, Megan A., Powell, Anna M., Coleman, Jenell S., Keller, Jean M., Livingston, Alison, Anderson, Jean R.“…Social distancing requirements may place patients at higher risk for intimate partner violence and mental health concerns, threaten continued access to contraception and abortion services, affect prepregnancy planning, interrupt routine screening for breast and cervical cancer, increase risk of sexually transmitted infection acquisition and decrease access to treatment, and exacerbate already underlying racial and minority disparities in care and health outcomes. …”
Publicado 2020
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47133por Shannon, Adrienne B., Roberson, Jeffrey L., Keele, Luke, Bharani, Tina, Song, Yun, Miura, John T., Kelz, Rachel R., Dempsey, Daniel T., Fleisher, Lee A., DeMatteo, Ronald P., Karakousis, Giorgos C.“…CONCLUSIONS: COVID-19 restrictions on surgical operations were associated with a change in the racial and insurance demographics in patients undergoing medically necessary surgical procedures but were not associated with worse postoperative morbidity. …”
Publicado 2021
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47134por Eltes, Peter Endre, Bartos, Marton, Hajnal, Benjamin, Pokorni, Agoston Jakab, Kiss, Laszlo, Lacroix, Damien, Varga, Peter Pal, Lazary, Aron“…Introduction: Revision surgery of a previous lumbosacral non-union is highly challenging, especially in case of complications, such as a broken screw at the first sacral level (S1). Here, we propose the implementation of a new method based on the CT scan of a clinical case using 3D reconstruction, combined with finite element analysis (FEA), computer-assisted design (CAD), and 3D-printing technology to provide accurate surgical navigation to aid the surgeon in performing the optimal surgical technique by inserting a pedicle screw at the S1 level. …”
Publicado 2021
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47135por Schoenthaler, Antoinette, De La Calle, Franzenith, Soto, Amanda, Barrett, Derrel, Cruz, Jocelyn, Payano, Leydi, Rosado, Marina, Adhikari, Samrachana, Ogedegbe, Gbenga, Rosal, Milagros“…BACKGROUND: Poor adherence to antihypertensive medications is a significant contributor to the racial gap in rates of blood pressure (BP) control among Latino adults, as compared to Black and White adults. …”
Publicado 2021
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47136por Kern, Lisa M., Rajan, Mangala, Colantonio, Lisandro D., Reshetnyak, Evgeniya, Ringel, Joanna Bryan, Muntner, Paul M., Casalino, Lawrence P., Pinheiro, Laura C., Safford, Monika M.“…METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal analysis of data from the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study, using the REGARDS baseline visit plus the first year of follow-up. …”
Publicado 2021
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47137por de Villiers, Katusha“…BACKGROUND: Despite the end of apartheid in the early 1990s, South Africa remains racially and economically segregated. The country is beset by persistent social inequality, poverty, unemployment, a heavy burden of disease and the inequitable quality of healthcare service provision. …”
Publicado 2021
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47138por Khullar, Karishma, Plascak, Jesse J., Drachtman, Richard, Cole, Peter D., Parikh, Rahul R.“…CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that racial disparities in survival may be mediated by clinical and treatment parameters.…”
Publicado 2021
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47139por Bhatt, Deepti, Verma, Amit Kumar, Bharti, Prahalad Singh, Goyal, Yamini, Alsahli, Mohammed A., Almatroudi, Ahmad, Rahmani, Arshad Husain, Almatroodi, Saleh, Joshi, Prakash C., Alam, Mohammad Mahtab, Ahmad, Irfan, Zaman, Gaffar Sarwar, Dev, Kapil“…Therefore, we suggest that each population need to evaluate its own genetic profile for breast cancer risk that may be helpful for better understanding the racial and geographic differences reported for breast cancer incidence and mortality.…”
Publicado 2021
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47140por Narain, Kimberly Danae Cauley, Harwood, Jessica, Mangione, Carol, Duru, O. Kenrik, Ettner, Susan“…RESULTS: We do not find any statistically significant changes in ER or hospital utilization associated with D-SNP regulation implementation in the broad D-SNP population or among specific racial/ethnic groups; however, we do find a reduction in hospitalizations associated with D-SNP regulations in New Jersey (DD level = − 3.37%; p = 0.02)/(DD slope = − 0.23%; p = 0.01) and among individuals with higher, relative to lower levels of co-morbidity (DDD slope = − 0.06%; p = 0.01). …”
Publicado 2021
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