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Contents contributed and discussions participated by pjt111 taylor

pjt111 taylor

The Virus and the Virus: Tells the Facts, Names the Names - 1 views

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    "Explaining the ecosystemic dependencies out of which new pathogens arise isn't nearly enough, however. Quammen rarely touches the processes occurring farther upstream. Pathogens are embedded in circuits of capital in such a way as to reverse conclusions based on ecology alone."
pjt111 taylor

Evidence-Based Policy: A Practical Guide to Doing It Better | General | Times Higher Ed... - 1 views

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    "You are told: use policies that work. And you are told: RCTs - randomized controlled trials - will show you what these are. That's not so. RCTs are great, but they do not do that for you. They cannot alone support the expectation that a policy will work for you" [i.e., here, not there where the RCT was done].
pjt111 taylor

Social Media: A Systematic Review to Understand the Evidence and Application in Infodem... - 0 views

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    Social media represents a new frontier in disease surveillance. Infoveillance allows for the real-time retrieval of internet data. Our objective was to systematically review the literature utilizing social media as a source for disease prediction and surveillance. A review of English-language conference proceedings and journal articles from 1999 to 2011 using EMBASE and PubMed was conducted. A total of 12 full-text articles were included. Results of these studies show the use of open-source micro-blogging sites to inform influenza-like-illness monitoring. These results inform recommendations for future research directions.
pjt111 taylor

Data Resource Profiles - 0 views

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    Why data resource profiles (DRPs)? We can't do epidemiology without data. Data are cen- tral to epidemiology's three main challenges: to describe health states in populations, make inferences about their causes and to apply that knowledge to improve health. The more high quality data we have to support these three tasks, the better.10,11 The challenge of providing health data coverage on a global scale is immense. Termed a 'scandal of invisi- bility', in the world's least developed countries more than two-thirds of all births and deaths go unregis- tered.12 Meanwhile, in advanced industrialised na- tions publicly funded data collection systems are under threat, particularly at a time of state retrench- ment.13 In the UK and Canada the long-form census was cancelled. Canada, too, cancelled some of its premier longitudinal studies of children and youth, leaving the country with little signal about the state of human capability development of its future gener- ations. Removing parts of the publicly funded health information infrastructure is easy, but rebuilding sur- veillance will require orders of magnitude more vision, dedication and money.
pjt111 taylor

Social Inequalities in Height: Persisting Differences Today Depend upon Height of the P... - 0 views

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    In a cohort of children born in the 1990s, mothers with higher education gave birth to taller boys and girls. Although height differences were small they persisted throughout childhood. Maternal and paternal height fully explained these differences.
pjt111 taylor

The Health Toll of Immigration - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "A growing body of mortality research on immigrants has shown that the longer they live in this country, the worse their rates of heart disease, high blood pressure and diabetes. And while their American-born children may have more money, they tend to live shorter lives than the parents. "
pjt111 taylor

Why the Fuss Over the D.S.M.-5? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    revisions in the D.S.M… won't alter clinical practice much… because psychiatrists tend to treat according to symptoms. So why the fuss over D.S.M.-5? Because of the unwarranted clout that its diagnoses carry with the rest of society: They are the passports to insurance coverage, the keys to special educational and behavioral services in school and the tickets to disability benefits.
pjt111 taylor

How Care Provider Behavior Impacts Dementia in Their Loved Ones - Collaborative Family ... - 0 views

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    "caregiver problem-focused coping was the strongest predictor of slower cognitive and functional decline in the person with dementia"
pjt111 taylor

Watch "Innovative thinking: Can you be taught?: Roberta B. Ness, MD, MPH@TEDxHouston" V... - 0 views

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    "Innovative thinking: Can you be taught?: Roberta B. Ness" (using examples from her field of epidemiology & health)
pjt111 taylor

We Need a Structural One Health - 1 views

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    Disease isn't synonymous with its etiological agent or the map of its victims, whether or not either is placed within a... context that acknowledges the functional ecologies humans, livestock and wildlife share. [This] misses the structural factors underlying pathogen emergence and by virtue of that omission the pathogens' likely reemergence. Every one of the new potentially human-specific influenzas, for instance, have evolved out of industrial poultry and livestock. "
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