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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.
21

Latino Youth with Diabetes: A Mixed Methods Examination of Adherence and Metabolic Control within the Context of Sociopolitical and Policy Challenges

Rosales, Alvina 12 August 2014 (has links)
The current study employed quantitative and qualitative methods to examine predictors of adherence and diabetes health outcomes in Latino youth, and to gain understanding of mechanisms that underlie health behaviors and outcomes. Forty-nine Latino youth and their caregivers were recruited at a hospital-based outpatient diabetes clinic, 76% of the youth were either first or second-generation Latino youth (i.e., immigrant youth or youth whose parents are immigrants). A primary aim of this study was to quantitatively examine the impact of parent immigrant-related stress on child health behaviors and outcomes. This study complements these quantitative analyses by qualitatively exploring how (e.g., under what conditions) pathways to health are created. Specifically, qualitative analyses examined the unique experiences of Latino immigrant families in managing adherence to treatment and metabolic control, and gain insight into specific health promoters and barriers. Further, the author intended to qualitatively explain the effects of recently enacted immigration laws on Latino youths’ health behaviors and outcomes. Results revealed that higher levels of fear of deportation predict lower child-reported adherence, β = -41, p < .05. Higher levels of caregiver immigrant stress predict higher BMI rates in children, β = .30, p < .05. Immigrant related stressors, including fear of deportation, did not predict A1c or diabetes ketoacidosis (DKA) hospitalizations in the last year. Qualitative results highlight themes related to direct and indirect barriers to health behaviors and outcomes for youth, as well as ethnocultural promoters of coping and resilience.
22

Examination of the Association Between Intimate Partner Violence and STI/HIV Risk in African American Women in High Risk Areas of Atlanta, GA: A Mixed Methods Analysis

Wendlandt, Rachael 09 January 2015 (has links)
In March 2012, President Obama issued a Presidential Memorandum creating an interagency Federal Working Group to explore the intersection of HIV/AIDS, violence against women and girls, and gender-related health disparities. Intimate partner violence (IPV) and HIV constitute major public health issues for women, particularly African American women who are disproportionately affected by HIV/AIDS. In 2012, the rate of HIV for African American women was four to 20 times higher than rates for females of other races. This study explores the complex relationship between IPV and STI/HIV risk in African American females. In an attempt to examine the intersection of IPV and STI/HIV risk this study used cross-sectional survey data to quantitatively examine the differences between women who had experienced IPV in the previous 12 months (cases) and women who had not experienced IPV in the previous 12 months (controls) in: 1) previous STI diagnosis, 2) accessing HIV testing and 3) mean scores of fear of condom negotiation due to physical violence. Chi-square analyses were completed to determine if the populations were statistically significant in terms of previous STI diagnosis and accessing HIV testing. An independent-samples t-test was conducted to compare the fear of condom negotiation scores for cases and controls. In addition, qualitative analysis was conducted to further elucidate the mechanisms from experiencing IPV to an increased risk of HIV infection. The quantitative analysis suggests a significant difference between fear of condom negotiation due to fear of physical violence. The qualitative analysis suggests that women who experience IPV are often forced to have sex with their partners, experience physical violence in response to condom negotiation and use drugs and/or alcohol to cope with the abuse. HIV prevention interventions need to address IPV as a possible risk factor. In addition, an enhancement of IPV screening in healthcare settings is needed. Future prospective studies are critical to address the issues of temporality and causality.
23

Chronic disease and county economic status: Does it matter where you live?

Shaw, Kate M 09 January 2015 (has links)
Chronic disease is a major health burden in the United States, affecting about half of adults, and leading to poor health, disability, and death. However, the burden of chronic disease is not shared equally among Americans, with some groups (created by determinants such as race/ethnicity and socioeconomic resources) experiencing higher rates of morbidity and mortality. When measures of health and socioeconomic resources are examined together, a stepwise gradient pattern emerges. This social gradient has been established for individual measures, such as household income and social class, and several measures of morbidity and mortality. However, nationally, little research has been conducted using area-level measures, such as county economics, to examine its relationship with chronic disease. Three studies were completed using data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). County economic status was determined using unemployment, per capita market income, and poverty. The first study examined the relationship between county economic status and chronic disease and risk factors, both nationally and by metropolitan classification, using data from BRFSS 2013. Further, the social gradient was explored. The second study also used data from BRFSS 2013 to examine county economic status and prevalence of hypertension, arthritis, and poor health, after controlling for known risk factors. This study also examined results by US region. Finally, the third study assessed changes in disparities between persistently poor and persistently affluent counties for heart disease, hypertension, arthritis, and diabetes using data from BRFSS 2001-2010.
24

Socioeconomic Inequalities in Health under Marketization and Community Context: Evidence from China

Lin, Shih-Chi 06 September 2017 (has links)
This dissertation examines China’s market reforms over the last few decades, and their implications for (re)shaping socioeconomic inequalities in health. Specifically, I study the effect of marketization and related structural changes at community level on individual health outcomes. The first part of this dissertation revisits the market transition theory of Nee (1989), using individual health status as the outcome variable to assess Nee’s theory. Using multiple waves of a longitudinal survey from 1991 to 2006, I compare temporal changes in the role of human capital, political capital, and state policy in determining health under marketization. In partial support of the market transition theory, the empirical results show that the significance of human capital for health increases with marketization, while the return to political capital and one’s household registration status diminishes with a growing market. Additionally, I distinguish between marketization effects on community level, and different aspects of community context in shaping the SES-health link. I find that the level of urbanization and available resources within each community exert influences on self-rated health and change the relative importance of individual socioeconomic conditions in shaping health. Overall, this study provides new longitudinal evidence from China to support the notion that health is influenced by dynamic processes moderated by the structural changes as well as the social stratification system. I discuss the findings in the context of China’s market reform, fundamental causes theory, and socio-ecological perspectives, highlighting that health is determined by a nexus of life experiences and social environment that impact individuals at different levels. / 10000-01-01
25

Associations between Social Determinants of Health and Adolescent Pregnancy: An Analysis of Data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health

Maness, Sarah Britney 01 January 2015 (has links)
This dissertation study utilized the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to analyze empirical relationships between social determinants of health and adolescent pregnancy. Although rates of adolescent pregnancy are at an all-time low in the United States, disparities persist. Examining relationships between the social determinants of health and adolescent pregnancy provides support for funding and interventions that expand on the current focus of individual and interpersonal level factors. Based on the Healthy People 2020 Social Determinants of Health Framework, proxy measures for social determinants of health were identified within the Add Health study and analyzed in relationship with adolescent pregnancy. Results indicated that six of 17 measures of social determinants of health had an empirical relationship with adolescent pregnancy. These measures included the following: feeling close to others at school, receipt of high school diploma, enrollment in higher education, participation in volunteering or community service, litter or trash in the neighborhood environment, and living in a two parent home. The results of this study can inform future research, allocation of funds and interventions based on social determinants of health that show an association with adolescent pregnancy.
26

Understanding Appointment Breaking: Dissecting Structural Violence and Barriers to Healthcare Access at a Central Florida Community Health Center

Mead, Paula 26 June 2017 (has links)
Access to healthcare is an important topic within medical anthropology, in part because access is denied or complicated through structural forces for many populations in the United States. Anthropological research explores the impact of lack of access to healthcare on the lives of at-risk populations, as well as the differing and unexpected ways that access is denied or limited (Adler and Newman 2002; Becker 2004; Becker 2007; Horton 2004; Horton, McCloskey, Todd, and Henricksen 2001; O'Daniel 2008). For low-income, rural and minority populations, research shows that access to healthcare is further complicated by a higher propensity to break appointments (Bean and Talaga 1992; Bean and Talaga 1995). The act of appointment breaking is an essential aspect of this discussion: it is through appointment breaking and other similar activities that it is possible to understand how people access care when it is “available” to them and what everyday barriers prevent them from having true and full access. In this project, I define appointment breaking as the act of missing a scheduled appointment without prior cancellation. Through this research, I explore how people understand their access to healthcare resources and what factors impact their use by focusing on appointment breaking at a Florida community health center. This research uses a critical medical anthropology approach and is grounded within the anthropological theories of access to healthcare, health disparities, structural violence, and the political economy of health; through this theoretical perspective, the issue of appointment breaking can be studied as a complex and integral aspect of access to healthcare, and rooted in the long history of medical anthropology studies on health disparities. Using qualitative research methods, specifically interviews and participant observation, as well as an analysis of the demographics of those patients that have missed appointments at this community health center, this study investigates the broader implications of a lack of access to care characterized by appointment breaking. This research connects the act of appointment breaking to cultural influences which shape access to healthcare. I found that barriers such as finances, mental health needs, personal issues, and lack of child care prevents patients from accessing healthcare, even through the safety net programs that are in place to serve at-risk populations, such as low income, rural, and minority populations. This research contributes to the existing literature on gaps in access to healthcare that is provided for at-risk populations and develops the anthropological research on the overlooked topic of appointment breaking. By exposing the issue of appointment breaking as a factor in the larger issues of access to care and health disparities, this research highlights the larger structural forces that impact access to care beyond access to insurance and the availability of affordable and accessible healthcare resources.
27

Psychosocial Determinants of Diabetic Control and Satisfaction with Diabetes Care

Dzivakwe, Vanessa G. 05 1900 (has links)
Diabetes mellitus affects 7.8% of the American population. National health statistic data and other research shows that racial/ethnic disparities exist in terms of prevalence and treatment outcomes. The present study investigated the role of patient health beliefs (i.e., locus of control, self-efficacy) and the doctor-patient relationship (e.g., satisfaction and collaboration with health care provider), as relative predictors of diabetic control (i.e., HbA1c levels) and overall satisfaction with diabetes care, in older adult participants with diabetes. Demographic, psychosocial, and diabetes-related data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) 2003 Diabetes Study were analyzed to compare treatment outcomes among non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, and Hispanic individuals with various types of diabetes. Non-Hispanic White individuals exhibited better diabetic control than their minority counterparts (F(2, 592) = 7.60, p < .001); however, no significant group differences were noted in terms of psychosocial factors. Diabetic control was best predicted by time since diagnosis (&#946; = -.21, p < .001), satisfaction with diabetes self-care (&#946; = .19, p < .001) and age (&#946; = .12, p < .01). In addition, satisfaction with provider care was best predicted by perceived collaboration with provider (&#946; = .44, p < .001), satisfaction with diabetes self-care (&#946; = .22, p < .001) and diabetes self-efficacy (&#946; = .08, p < .05). Recommendations for future research were discussed.
28

Assessing Children\'s Restaurant Menus in a Health Disparate Region

Olive, Nicole Christine 05 June 2013 (has links)
Obesity is an increasing problem in the United States with 17% of youth currently classified as obese and an even higher prevalence of obesity among disadvantaged populations. The food environment may be contributing to these high rates as there has been a well documented association among increased away from home food consumption and excess adiposity, as well as evidence to support that children\'s diets are composed of a large portion of restaurant foods. The main purpose of this study is to describe the quality of restaurant food offered to children in a rural health disparate region. Two trained research assistants conducted systematic audits of all food outlets offering a children\'s menu in the Dan River region using the Children\'s Menu Assessment (CMA) tool. A composite score for each outlet for was calculated from the 29 scored items on the CMA. The total sample consisted of 137 outlets with CMA scores ranging from -4 to 9 with a mean score of 1.6+2.7. Scores were lowest in the predominantly Black block groups (0.2+0.4) when compared to the predominately White block groups (1.4+1.6) and Mixed block groups (2.6+2.4) with significantly lower scores in the predominantly Black block group than the Mixed block groups (F=4.3; p<0.05). The results of this study reveal a lack of few healthy food options available for children in this region. These findings have the potential to contribute to public health efforts in developing public policy changes or environmental interventions for the children\'s food environment in the Dan River Region. / Master of Science
29

Mitigating Barriers to Chronic Disease Risk Factor Prevention and Management in Disadvantaged Communities

Johnson, Krys M. 05 July 2019 (has links)
Background: The incidence and prevalence of chronic disease (CD) has increased in recent decades due to the advent of CD management and life-extending technologies. To address this burden on the population and healthcare system, evidence-based CD prevention programs have been developed to reduce the incidence and therefore the prevalence of these diseases. Despite the development and dissemination of effective interventions, African-Americans and Hispanics have disproportionately higher prevalence of CD and associated risk factors and disproportionately lower participation in CD prevention programs. Overweight/obesity and CDs may have intergenerational effects, with overweight adults being more likely to have overweight children who are in turn more likely to become overweight adults with CDs. These dissertative projects sought to disrupt this intergenerational cycle of CD by exploring how to engage people of minority background in CD prevention programs, to determine the acceptability and feasibility of a CD prevention program adapted to social media, the preferred method of health education for women of childbearing age, and to identify areas in Florida that would benefit from a CD prevention program such as this. Methods: Four focus groups of residents of disadvantaged and medically underserved areas and nine key informant interviews with local business owners were conducted using a standardized questionnaire to asses health beliefs, barriers to healthy behaviors, and preferred methods of health communication among the target population. These data were thematically analyzed in Atlas.ti version 8.0. Results of this analysis informed the adaptation of an existing CD prevention program, the national Diabetes Prevention Program (nDPP), to a social media platform, Facebook, to address the needs of the community. The first four weeks of the nDPP were adapted to Facebook using Powtoon and Canva software, were assessed for fidelity by a certified nDPP Lifestyle Coach, and underwent an iterative editing process in collaboration with a community partner, REACHUP, Inc., to ensure cultural appropriateness. Height, weight, and waist circumference were measured pre- and post-intervention via a standardized protocol. Perceived stress, social support, depressive symptoms, and health-related quality of life were also assessed pre- and post-intervention. The final dissertative project utilized the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s 500 Cities Data in conjunction with USDHHS locations of existing federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) to identify urban census tracts in Florida with high prevalence of CD and associated risk factors and inadequate access to FQHCs. Results: Overall, residents and business owners in medically underserved areas of west central Florida identified distrust of medical professionals and pharmaceuticals as a barrier to receiving health care. Lack of transportation and safe recreational areas, were barriers to participating in health behaviors, though participants were concerned about how to prevent and manage diabetes, heart disease, and cancer. The preferred identified method of health communication for women of childbearing was social media, with Facebook being the most used social medium. The nDPP was chosen for adaptation to Facebook because it addressed most of the concerns of the target community. This Facebook-based adaptation of the nDPP, called HealthyLIFE, had no statistically significant results, though there were encouraging reductions in depressive symptom, perceived stress, and health-related quality of life. Tampa, St. Petersburg, Lakeland, and Jacksonville were the urban areas of Florida with the greatest prevalence of CD and associated risk factors, with areas with low insurance, low physical activity, poor physical health, high levels of poverty, high concentration of people of minority background, and high prevalence of stroke and diabetes were statistically significantly more likely to be within 0.5 miles of an FQHC. Discussion: The results of this dissertation demonstrate the need for qualitative research to inform interventions to disrupt the etiology of chronic disease at the population level, particularly for people of minority background and low socioeconomic status who may experience greater barriers to participating in healthy behaviors and accessing preventive healthcare services. Integrating this type of data into the design and implementation of chronic disease prevention programs and targeting these programs to geographic areas with high prevalence of CD and associated risk factors can increase uptake by populations with historically low participation in these programs. With FQHCs serving less than 25% of urban census tracts with high prevalence of chronic disease and associated risk factors, there is a need for cost-efficient, effective, scalable, and accessible chronic disease prevention programs like HealthyLIFE to improve population health and reduce health disparities between racial and socioeconomic groups.
30

The State of LGBT+ Health Education: A Systematic Review of LGBT+ Curricula and Resources at M.D. Granting Institutions in the United States

Crockett, Stephen "Alex", Mann, Abbey 18 March 2021 (has links)
LGBT+ patients, medical students, and healthcare providers have been shown to experience significant health disparities and poor health outcomes, to less frequently seek out healthcare, and to often face discrimination in healthcare settings. Researchers suggest the lack of high quality and in-depth training on LGBT+ health and communication skills may contribute to hostile clinic cultures and reinforce implicit and explicit biases towards LGBT+ patients. Despite the growing body of research and interest in curriculum reforms, there has not been an up to date, comprehensive review of LGBT+ health trainings and resources at U.S. medical schools since 2015. We conducted a systematic review of available information on the presence of LGBT+ trainings, support groups, and resources for medical students, residents, and faculty at all M.D.-granting institutions who are part of the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC). The systematic review was conducted between May and September 2020 through Google using pre-determined keyword search strategies. Collected information included type of programming, targeted audience, and length of training among others that was built into an easily accessible online database of LGBT+ health curriculums and resources. Similar to 2015, most U.S. medical schools (52%) do not have or do not provide easily accessible information about LGBT+ trainings for their students. Even fewer medical schools (39%) report that they require their students to take some form of LGBT+ health training, and almost no information is easily available on LGBT+ trainings for residents and medical school faculty. Our findings suggest that medical schools have made some progress in creating more inclusive curricula and training environments compared to 2015. However, there has not been a consensus in how medical students should be trained to be more aware of and to address biases, discrimination, and poor health outcomes affecting their LGBTQ+ patients and colleagues.

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