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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
141

Prescribing Practices and Prescription Drug Abuse

Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 08 March 2014 (has links)
No description available.
142

Financial Literacy Showcase – ETSU Gatton College of Pharmacy Personal Finance for Future Pharmacists Course

Hagemeier, Nicholas E., Cross, Leonard B. 29 July 2013 (has links)
This session will feature the best financial literacy solutions in higher education, straight from the mouths of the college administrators who have implemented the programs! By the end of this presentation, you will be an expert in the various solutions that are available, as well as having a good idea of what will work best for your institution. In this session, you will find out: (1) How the college decided on its financial literacy program, (2) How each school is integrating the resources, (3) What practices have been the most successful.
143

Carter County, Tennessee: A Rural Community’s Response to Opioid Overdose Deaths

Mathis, S., Hagaman, Angela, Kirschke, David, Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 11 May 2016 (has links)
No description available.
144

Situational Prescription Drug Abuse-Related Communication Confidence among Community Pharmacists: An Exploratory Analysis

Hagemeier, Nicholas E., Sevak, Rajkumar J., Ventricelli, Daniel 01 November 2015 (has links)
Prescription drug abuse and misuse (PDA/M) prevalence has increased dramatically in the United States over the last two decades. Community pharmacists are intimately involved in the dispensing of a majority of eventually abused/misused prescription drugs and are thus well positioned to engage in PDA/M prevention and treatment. A known barrier to engagement in prevention efforts among providers is discomfort with PDA/M communication. The objective of this study was to explore relative situational self-perceived PDA/M communication confidence among Tennessee community pharmacists. Using the validated Self-Perceived Communication Competence instrument as a framework, an 18-item survey instrument (0-100 scale; 0=completely unconfident, 100=completely confident) was developed and administered to 2000 Tennessee pharmacists. Items elicited communication confidence across multiple contexts and receivers, including PDA/M situations and common community pharmacy situations. Parametric statistical tests were used to examine differences in communication confidence across demographic variables. A 40% response rate was obtained. Mean self-perceived communication confidence ratings ranged from 54.2 to 92.6. Statistically significant differences were noted across receiver type and context. Addiction communication confidence was significantly lower than all other scenarios involving patient communication, including items that could be considered accusatory to patients (non-adherence, smoking cessation). Differences in communicative self-confidence were noted across gender, practice setting, years in practice, hours worked per week, and number of prescriptions filled per week. Pharmacists’ self-perceived communication confidence is situational and varies across pharmacist and practice setting characteristics. Efforts to engage community pharmacists in PDA/M prevention and treatment should foster development of communicative self-confidence across multiple PDA/M situations.
145

Implementation and Evaluation of an Interprofessional Drug Take-Back Event on a University Campus

Ventricelli, Daniel J., Ahmad, Iqra, Sevak, Rajkumar J., Hagemeier, Nicholas E., Gray, Jeffrey A. 01 July 2015 (has links)
Objectives: 1) To describe the interprofessional implementation process and programmatic outcomes of an inaugural drug take-back event on a university campus; 2) To quantify donated medications and summarize donor demographics. Method: East Tennessee State University (ETSU) affiliated colleges, campus organizations, research teams, law enforcement and other community partners collaborated to host the inaugural live drug take-back event on ETSU’s main undergraduate campus. Programmatic outcomes included the number of community stakeholders, ETSU participating colleges, student donors, and donated medication metrics, including controlled substance medications. All donated medications were quantified by drug name and controlled substance schedule. Donor demographic information and perceptions of drug abuse on campus were collected using a brief survey. Results: Fifty pounds of medications were collected for disposal by 42 donors (9 students; 33 non-students). Controlled substances accounted for 8% of donated medications. Nearly 80% of student donors were enrolled in Academic Health Science Center colleges. Aggregate survey results indicated concerns about prescription drug abuse and misuse on campus. Three faculty members, two research fellows, two doctoral students, three graduate assistants and eight professional students from ETSU’s Colleges of Pharmacy and Public Health, as well as additional staff members, represented the contributing community entities and colleges during the live event. Implications: Conduction of drug take-back events on a university campus can promote interprofessional public health interventions and simultaneously reduce opportunities for nonmedical use of prescription drugs in college students. Further research is warranted to establish best practices and maximum impact for college-based take-back events.
146

Prescription Drug Abuse and DEA-Sanctioned Drug Take-Back Events: Characteristics and Outcomes in Rural Appalachia

Gray, Jeffrey A., Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 25 June 2012 (has links)
Proper disposal of controlled substance medications, a legally gray area since the Controlled Substance Act of 1970 was passed, has received renewed attention in recent years because of an increase in deaths related to opioid pain reliever (OPR) overdoses and increased nonmedical use of OPRs.1,2 Prescription drug take-back events have been organized under the purview of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) to properly dispose of controlled substance medications; to decrease prescription medication diversion, abuse, and accidental poisonings; and to decrease environmental hazards resulting from improper medication disposal. The DEA has reported pounds of medications in aggregate donated at take-back events but has not examined the extent to which OPRs are being donated at these events.3 We analyzed the characteristics of donors and medications donated at 11 take-back events in rural Appalachia, an area struggling with disproportionately high rates of OPR nonmedical use and abuse.
147

Public Health Minute: Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention and the Community Pharmacist

Hagemeier, Nicholas E. 01 January 2014 (has links)
Pharmacists’ ability to interfere with prescription drug abuse is hindered back a lack of confidence, training, and time.
148

Misperceptions of Overweight: Associations of Weight Misperception with Health-Related Quality of Life Among Normal-Weight College Students

Southerland, Jodi, Wang, Liang, Richards, Kasie, Pack, Robert P., Slawson, Deborah L. 01 January 2013 (has links)
Excerpt:Misperceptions about personal weight are common and include both under- and overestimates.1–6 Overweight misperception is found among both males and females across different racial/ethnic and age groups but is generally more common among females. Studies also indicate that body weight misperception is common among university students.2,4,7,8 In a study assessing the prevalence of weight misperception among U.S. college students, 12.9% of students had inflated body weight perception and 15.1% considered themselves to be thinner than they actually were.7 Gender and racial/ethnic differences in weight misperception have been observed among normal-weight college adults. According to the 2008 National College Health Assessment (NCHA), 28.8% of college females and 39.4% of college males were overweight or obese. However, more females (38.0%) than males (30.8%) described themselves as overweight or obese.8 Non-Hispanic white people are also more likely to report overweight misperception than other racial/ethnic minority groups.8,9
149

System-level Approaches to the Opioid Use Disorder Epidemic

Pack, Robert P. 19 June 2017 (has links)
Dr. Robert Pack, associate dean for Academic Affairs in ETSU’s College of Public Health, joined leaders from public health schools in four other states in the Appalachian region to discuss with members of the U.S. Congress the complex and dynamic processes at work in the opioid crisis. Pack joined his colleagues in sharing findings on unique approaches to address the course of the epidemic as well as discuss how university-based public health experts are assisting affected communities by bringing traditional and novel epidemic control strategies to bear on the disease.
150

Ethical Considerations Concerning Methadone and Suboxone Treatments

Pack, Robert P. 14 April 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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