157 research outputs found

    Health departments in the U.S. 1920-1988: statements of mission with special reference to the role of C.-E.A. Winslow.

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    The mission of local health departments in the U.S. is traced from the 1920s to the present through examination of official promulgations of the American Public Health Association and other organizations. As the communicable diseases came under general control, this mission was conceived more broadly. Nevertheless, in effect their public health role was diminished due to the rapid ascendancy of private and not-for-profit medical care, which consistently sought to keep public health out of potential areas of competition. Thinking both within the public health field (as represented by C.-E.A. Winslow) and outside the public health field (as represented by the American Medical Association), had created boundaries limiting public health's role to preventive medical services. This restriction, in turn, largely excluded the public health field from participation in the tremendous expansion of medical care since World War II. The public health role was further limited in 1970 by the removal of much of environmental pollution from its purview. The sum of these and other forces has left the public health field weakened and in considerable confusion about its role at a time when the resurgence of infectious disease (e.g., AIDS and Lyme disease), environmental hazards, and medical care institutions requires a strong public health presence

    Epidemiology of spontaneous premature rupture of membranes: factors in pre-term births.

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    The frequency of spontaneous premature rupture of membranes (PROM) was determined in the pregnancies of 1,848 white mothers and their singleton infants, born at the University of Kansas Medical Center between April 1975 and April 1978. The frequency of PROM increased significantly from a low of 34/707 (4.8 percent) among low-risk mothers, to 40/444 (9.0 percent) among mothers smoking one to 60 cigarettes a day, to 21/204 (10.3 percent) among mothers with multiple adverse maternal practices, and to 12/46 (26 percent) among mothers with selected complications of their pregnancies. The proportion of low birth weight (LBW) (less than 2,500 g) pre-term infants born to PROM mothers increased among the risk factor groups in a similar manner, from a low of 2/34 (6 percent) in low-risk pregnancies to 8/40 (20 percent) among mothers smoking one to 60 cigarettes a day, to 7/21 (33 percent) among mothers with multiple adverse practices, and to 7/12 (58 percent) among mothers with selected complications of pregnancy. The increased incidence of low birth weight pre-term infants born to mothers with PROM was associated with evidence of growth retardation among full-term infants in the high-risk groups. This finding was manifested by reductions in mean birth weights of full-term infants born to high-risk mothers but not observed in full-term infants born to low-risk mothers. The attained growth at birth of low birth weight pre-term infants could not be determined, because appropriate birth weight standards for pre-term infants born to mothers with low-risk pregnancies are not available. These results suggest that growth retardation in fetuses increased the probability of the mothers having PROM prior to the onset of labor, and, if PROM did occur, of having a premature delivery. We hypothesize that the tensile strength of the amnion and chorion is diminished by the same conditions that retard fetal growth, and that this reduction in strength of the fetal membranes contributes to premature rupture of membranes and pre-term delivery

    Incidence of low birth weight infants born to mothers with multiple risk factors.

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    Low birth weight (LBW) is associated with a large number and variety of risk conditions during pregnancy. The number and types of risk conditions per pregnancy were determined in 1,864 white and 872 black mothers delivered at the University of Kansas Medical Center between 1975 and 1978. The incidence of LBW infants increased steadily among white and black mothers as the number of risk factors increased from none to three or four per pregnancy. Among pregnancies without spontaneous premature rupture of membranes (PROM), 51 percent of the LBW infants were born to mothers who had multiple risk factors associated with their pregnancies, even though only 18 percent of these pregnancies were associated with multiple risk factors. Among pregnancies with PROM, 72 percent were associated with multiple risk conditions, and 31 percent resulted in LBW infants. About 90 percent of LBW infants from PROM pregnancies had mothers with multiple risk factors. For all numbers of risk conditions, black mothers had a higher incidence of LBW infants than white mothers. Among black mothers without spontaneous premature rupture of membranes (PROM), the incidence of LBW infants increased from 3.2 percent (10/308) in low (zero)-risk condition pregnancies to 33 percent (16/49) among mothers with three or four risk conditions during the pregnancy. Among white mothers without PROM, the incidence of LBW infants increased from 1.7 percent (12/708) in low (zero)-risk condition pregnancies to 30 percent (19/64) in pregnancies with three or four risk conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS

    Trends in drug abuse in the mid-1980s.

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    This paper summarizes some of the causes of, and some of the health and social concerns from, the growing illicit drug problem in the 1980s. It suggests that two recent developments, the decentralization of much drug production and modification to chemical laboratories in homes, and the application of increasingly innovative marketing techniques, have brought us to a new and more hazardous era of drug abuse. The new designer drugs and the new developments in cocaine abuse reveal these to be of major concern to the medical and public health professions, as well as a major worry to the public. In the absence of effective elimination of illegal drugs from the environment, attention must focus on alternative ways to reduce drug abuse. Education regarding the nature of the hazards of these drugs must increase, but there are no simple methods for reducing drug use. We must be prepared to fight growing drug abuse for some time to come

    The effect of race on the incidence of low birth weight: persistence of effect after controlling for socioeconomic, educational, marital, and risk status.

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    The purpose of this study was to determine whether the elevated risk for low birth weight (LBW) infants among black mothers would persist when biologic, behavioral, and socioeconomic factors (as measured by socioeconomic status, level of education, and marital status) were controlled. It was found that the odds ratios for the risk of LBW for blacks/whites persisted above 1.5, regardless of what subgroups were used and what factors were controlled. The black/white odds ratios were, however, less than 2.0 when cigarette smoking was not a risk factor and higher than 2.0 when it was. In fact, the highest odds ratios, up to 2.65, occurred among the smoking group. These data suggest that smoking may have a more strongly negative effect among black than white pregnant mothers. In general, the effect of race on the LBW risk was much less strong than that of risk factors that can be influenced, such as adverse maternal practices

    The epidemiology of white full-term infants with short crown-heel lengths for gestational ages at birth.

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    Fetal growth retardation was diagnosed in 137 (7.8 percent) of 1,757 white full-term infants who had crown-heel lengths below the fifth percentiles for their gestational ages. The incidence of short infants was 121 (11.1 percent) among 1,093 mothers with high-risk pregnancies compared to 16 (2.4 percent) in 664 low-risk mothers (p less than 0.0001). There were four high-risk categories: spontaneous premature rupture of membranes (PROM), fetal conditions, complications of pregnancy, and adverse maternal practices. The incidence of short infants was significantly higher in each of the four high-risk categories than in the low-risk group. There were three other conditions that were present in all pregnancies that were associated with the frequency of short infants: maternal height, socioeconomic status of head of household, and sex of infant. A short maternal height (under 157.7 cm = 62 inches) was significantly associated with an increase in short infants among mothers who smoked cigarettes at any level during pregnancy and among mothers with PROM in combination with other risks, but not in the group of 664 low-risk mothers. Significantly more short girls than short boys were born to mothers who smoked ten or more cigarettes a day throughout pregnancy or who had multiple adverse maternal practices, but no statistically significant differences were noted among mothers who smoked fewer than ten cigarettes per day, among those with PROM as the only risk factor, or among those with medical or obstetrical complications. Moreover, those mothers who were in socioeconomic groups III and IV and had other risk factors had a significantly higher incidence of short infants than did similar mothers in socioeconomic groups I and II

    A case-control study of maternal knowledge of malnutrition and health-care-seeking attitudes in rural South India.

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    INTRODUCTION: In India, approximately 20 percent of children under the age of four suffer from severe malnutrition, while half of all the children suffer from undernutrition. The contributions of knowledge and attitudes of nutrition-conscious behaviors of the mothers to childhood malnutrition has been unclear. The purpose of this study was to explore maternal knowledge of the causes of malnutrition, health-care-seeking attitudes and socioeconomic risk factors in relation to children's nutritional status in rural south India. METHODS: A case-controlled study was conducted in a rural area in Tamil Nadu, India. Thirty-four cases and 34 controls were selected from the population of approximately 97,000 by using the local hospital's list of young children. A case was defined as a mother of a severely malnourished child under four years of age. Severe malnutrition was defined as having less than 60 percent of expected median weight-for-age. A control had a well-nourished child and was matched by the location and the age of the child. Interviews obtained: (1) socioeconomic information on the family, (2) knowledge of the cause of malnutrition and (3) health-care-seeking attitudes for common childhood illnesses, including malnutrition. RESULTS: Poor nutritional status was associated with socioeconomic variables such as sex of the child and father's occupation. Female gender (OR = 3.44, p = .02) and father's occupation as a laborer (OR = 2.98, p = .05) were significant risk factors for severe malnutrition. The two groups showed a significant difference in nutrition-related knowledge of mild mixed malnutrition (OR = 2.62, p = .05). No significant difference was apparent in health-care-seeking attitudes. Based on their traditional beliefs, the mothers did not believe that medical care was an appropriate intervention for childhood illnesses such as malnutrition or measles. DISCUSSION: The results suggested that the gender of the child and socioeconomic factors were stronger risk factors for malnutrition than health-care availability and health-care-seeking attitudes. The father's occupation was a more accurate indicator for malnutrition than household income. These results suggest a need for intensive nutritional programs targeted toward poor female children and their mothers

    Teenage pregnancy in the Bahamas: trends and characteristics.

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    This survey of 99 pregnant teenagers in clinics on the island of New Providence, Bahamas, produced data suggesting that they are similar to their counterparts in urban clinics in the U.S.A. The pregnancies usually came from relationships of many months' standing, which were meaningful to the young mothers, rather than from "promiscuous" sexual behavior. Few of the young mothers had been using birth control before they became pregnant, sometimes because of a lack of expectation of needing it or from fear or ignorance about birth control, and sometimes due to an inability to organize their lives sufficiently to find, purchase, and use regularly the contraception that would have prevented the pregnancy. Most of the young mothers felt that abortion was sinful and would not have used it at any time. It is suggested that these general characteristics of teenage pregnancy are common in Western societies and are related to the perceived loneliness and uselessness of the teenage period. The pregnancies often may be seen as an attempt by teenagers, who see relatively little future for themselves in traditional education and employment, to strive for a creative life rooted in loving relationships

    Computational Design of Microarchitected Flow-Through Electrodes for Energy Storage

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    Porous flow-through electrodes are used as the core reactive component across electrochemical technologies. Controlling the fluid flow, species transport, and reactive environment is critical to attaining high performance. However, conventional electrode materials like felts and papers provide few opportunities for precise engineering of the electrode and its microstructure. To address these limitations, architected electrodes composed of unit cells with spatially varying geometry determined via computational optimization are proposed. Resolved simulation is employed to develop a homogenized description of the constituent unit cells. These effective properties serve as inputs to a continuum model for the electrode when used in the negative half cell of a vanadium redox flow battery. Porosity distributions minimizing power loss are then determined via computational design optimization to generate architected porosity electrodes. The architected electrodes are compared to bulk, uniform porosity electrodes and found to lead to increased power efficiency across operating flow rates and currents. The design methodology is further used to generate a scaled-up electrode with comparable power efficiency to the bench-scale systems. The variable porosity architecture and computational design methodology presented here thus offers a novel pathway for automatically generating spatially engineered electrode structures with improved power performance

    The Diagnostic Evaluation of Risk Factors for Urinary Tract Stones: An Analysis of Care Patterns in Five Hospitals

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    Medical records of hospitalized primary urolithiasis patients in five Connecticut hospitals were studied to determine the aggressiveness of the diagnostic search for metabolic and other renal stone risk factors. A total of 924 patients over three years were analyzed. Routine serum, urine, and X-ray tests were generally performed according to accepted criteria. However, medical histories were generally inadequate, and 24-hour urine studies for calcium and uric acid were performed on less than half of the patients for whom they were indicated. Neither the complexity of the stone problem nor the stone event number appeared to influence the intensity of the diagnostic search in any important way. Other deficiencies included the lack of followup of abnormal test findings and the lack of treatment of problems discovered. The diagnostic approach in each hospital was stable over time
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