12 research outputs found

    Comparing media and family predictors of alcohol use: a cohort study of US adolescents

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    Objective: To compare media/marketing exposures and family factors in predicting adolescent alcohol use. Design: Cohort study. Setting: Confidential telephone survey of adolescents in their homes. Participants: Representative sample of 6522 US adolescents, aged 10ā€“14 years at baseline and surveyed four times over 2 years. Primary: outcome measure Time to alcohol onset and progression to binge drinking were assessed with two survival models. Predictors were movie alcohol exposure (MAE), ownership of alcohol-branded merchandise and characteristics of the family (parental alcohol use, home availability of alcohol and parenting). Covariates included sociodemographics, peer drinking and personality factors. Results: Over the study period, the prevalence of adolescent ever use and binge drinking increased from 11% to 25% and from 4% to 13%, respectively. At baseline, the median estimated MAE from a population of 532 movies was 4.5 h and 11% owned alcohol-branded merchandise at time 2. Parental alcohol use (greater than or equal to weekly) was reported by 23% and 29% of adolescents could obtain alcohol from home. Peer drinking, MAE, alcohol-branded merchandise, age and rebelliousness were associated with both alcohol onset and progression to binge drinking. The adjusted hazard ratios for alcohol onset and binge drinking transition for high versus low MAE exposure were 2.13 (95% CI 1.76 to 2.57) and 1.63 (1.20 to 2.21), respectively, and MAE accounted for 28% and 20% of these transitions, respectively. Characteristics of the family were associated with alcohol onset but not with progression. Conclusion: The results suggest that family focused interventions would have a larger impact on alcohol onset while limiting media and marketing exposure could help prevent both onset and progression

    Barriers and facilitators in implementing a pilot, pragmatic, telemedicine-delivered healthy lifestyle program for obesity management in a rural, academic obesity clinic

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    Few evidence-based strategies are specifically tailored for disparity populations such as rural adults. Two-way video-conferencing using telemedicine can potentially surmount geographic barriers that impede participation in high-intensity treatment programs offering frequent visits to clinic facilities. We aimed to understand barriers and facilitators of implementing a telemedicine-delivered tertiary-care, rural academic weight-loss program for the management of obesity

    Feasibility and acceptability of a rural, pragmatic, telemedicineā€ delivered healthy lifestyle programme

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    Background: The public health crisis of obesity leads to increasing morbidity that are even more profound in certain populations such as rural adults. Live, twoā€way videoā€conferencing is a modality that can potentially surmount geographic barriers and staffing shortages. Methods: Patients from the Dartmouthā€Hitchcock Weight and Wellness Center were recruited into a pragmatic, singleā€arm, nonrandomized study of a remotely delivered 16ā€week evidenceā€based healthy lifestyle programme. Patients were provided hardware and appropriate software allowing for remote participation in all sessions, outside of the clinic setting. Our primary outcomes were feasibility and acceptability of the telemedicine intervention, as well as potential effectiveness on anthropometric and functional measures. Results: Of 62 participants approached, we enrolled 37, of which 27 completed at least 75% of the 16ā€week programme sessions (27% attrition). Mean age was 46.9 Ā± 11.6 years (88.9% female), with a mean body mass index of 41.3 Ā± 7.1 kg/m2 and mean waist circumference of 120.7 Ā± 16.8 cm. Mean patient participant satisfaction regarding the telemedicine approach was favourable (4.48 Ā± 0.58 on 1ā€5 Likert scaleā€”low to high) and 67.6/75 on standardized questionnaire. Mean weight loss at 16 weeks was 2.22 Ā± 3.18 kg representing a 2.1% change (P \u3c .001), with a loss in waist circumference of 3.4% (P = .001). Fat mass and visceral fat were significantly lower at 16 weeks (2.9% and 12.5%; both P \u3c .05), with marginal improvement in appendicular skeletal muscle mass (1.7%). In the 30ā€second sitā€toā€stand test, a mean improvement of 2.46 stands (P = .005) was observed. Conclusion: A telemedicineā€delivered, intensive weight loss intervention is feasible, acceptable, and potentially effective in rural adults seeking weight loss

    Prise en charge des voies aĆ©riennes ā€“ 1re partie ā€“ Recommandations lorsque des difficultĆ©s sont constatĆ©es chez le patient inconscient/anesthĆ©siĆ©

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    Willingness to pay for a telemedicine-delivered healthy lifestyle programme

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    Introduction: Effective weight-management interventions require frequent interactions with specialised multidiscipli- nary teams of medical, nutritional and behavioural experts to enact behavioural change. However, barriers that exist in rural areas, such as transportation and a lack of specialised services, can prevent patients from receiving quality care. Methods: We recruited patients from the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Weight & Wellness Center into a single-arm, non- randomised study of a remotely delivered 16-week evidence-based healthy lifestyle programme. Every 4 weeks, partic- ipants completed surveys that included their willingness to pay for services like those experienced in the intervention. A two-item Willingness-to-Pay survey was administered to participants asking about their willingness to trade their face- to-face visits for videoconference visits based on commute and copay. Results: Overall, those with a travel duration of 31ā€“45 min had a greater willingness to trade in-person visits for telehealth than any other group. Participants who had a travel duration less than 15 min, 16ā€“30 min and 46ā€“60 min experienced a positive trend in willingness to have telehealth visits until Week 8, where there was a general negative trend in willingness to trade in-person visits for virtual. Participants believed that telemedicine was useful and helpful. Conclusions: In rural areas where patients travel 30ā€“45 min a telemedicine-delivered, intensive weight-loss interven- tion may be a well-received and cost-effective way for both patients and the clinical care team to connect

    Alterations in Fecal Short-Chain Fatty Acids after Bariatric Surgery: Relationship with Dietary Intake and Weight Loss

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    Bariatric surgery is associated with weight loss attributed to reduced caloric intake, mechanical changes, and alterations in gut hormones. However, some studies have suggested a heightened incidence of colorectal cancer (CRC) has been associated with bariatric surgery, emphasizing the importance of identifying mechanisms of risk. The objective of this study was to determine if bariatric surgery is associated with decreases in fecal short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), a group of bacterial metabolites of fiber. Fecal samples (n = 22) were collected pre- (~6 weeks) and post-bariatric surgery (~4 months) in patients undergoing Roux-en-Y gastric bypass and sleeve gastrectomy. SCFA levels were quantified using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. Dietary intake was quantified using 24-h dietary recalls. Using an aggregate variable, straight SCFAs significantly decreased by 27% from pre- to post-surgery, specifically acetate, propionate, butyrate, and valerate. Pre-surgery weight was inversely associated with butyrate, with no association remaining post-surgery. Multiple food groups were positively (sugars, milk, and red and orange vegetables) and inversely (animal protein) associated with SCFA levels. Our results suggest a potential mechanism linking dietary intake and SCFA levels with CRC risk post-bariatric surgery with implications for interventions to increase SCFA levels

    Feasibility and acceptability of a rural, pragmatic, telemedicineā€delivered healthy lifestyle programme

    No full text
    Background: The public health crisis of obesity leads to increasing morbidity that are even more profound in certain populations such as rural adults. Live, twoā€way videoā€conferencing is a modality that can potentially surmount geographic barriers and staffing shortages. Methods: Patients from the Dartmouthā€Hitchcock Weight and Wellness Center were recruited into a pragmatic, singleā€arm, nonrandomized study of a remotely delivered 16ā€week evidenceā€based healthy lifestyle programme. Patients were provided hardware and appropriate software allowing for remote participation in all sessions, outside of the clinic setting. Our primary outcomes were feasibility and acceptability of the telemedicine intervention, as well as potential effectiveness on anthropometric and functional measures. Results: Of 62 participants approached, we enrolled 37, of which 27 completed at least 75% of the 16ā€week programme sessions (27% attrition). Mean age was 46.9 Ā± 11.6 years (88.9% female), with a mean body mass index of 41.3 Ā± 7.1 kg/m2 and mean waist circumference of 120.7 Ā± 16.8 cm. Mean patient participant satisfaction regarding the telemedicine approach was favourable (4.48 Ā± 0.58 on 1ā€5 Likert scaleā€”low to high) and 67.6/75 on standardized questionnaire. Mean weight loss at 16 weeks was 2.22 Ā± 3.18 kg representing a 2.1% change (P \u3c .001), with a loss in waist circumference of 3.4% (P = .001). Fat mass and visceral fat were significantly lower at 16 weeks (2.9% and 12.5%; both P \u3c .05), with marginal improvement in appendicular skeletal muscle mass (1.7%). In the 30ā€second sitā€toā€stand test, a mean improvement of 2.46 stands (P = .005) was observed. Conclusion: A telemedicineā€delivered, intensive weight loss intervention is feasible, acceptable, and potentially effective in rural adults seeking weight loss
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