15 research outputs found
Against Medical Advice Discharge: A Narrative Review and Recommendations for a Systematic Approach
Approximately 1%-2% of hospitalizations in the United States result in an against medical advice discharge. Still, the practice of discharging patients against medical advice is highly subjective and variable. Discharges against medical advice are associated with physician distress, patient stigma, and adverse outcomes, including increased morbidity and mortality. This review summarizes discharge against medical advice research, proposes a definition for against medical advice discharge, and recommends a standard approach to a patient's request for discharge against medical advice
Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances and Bone Mineral Density in Mid-childhood
Background:
• Identifying factors that impair bone accrual during childhood is a critical step toward osteoporosis prevention.
• One potential risk factor not well characterized in childhood is the role of chemicals in the environment.
• Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are synthetic additives used to make clothing, furniture, and cookware stain repellant and are detectable in almost all US adults.
• PFASs act as PPAR-γ agonists,2 androgen receptor antagonists, and directly intercalate into bone, raising the possibility that they may lead to low bone accrual.
• While two population-based studies in adults have shown associations between PFASs and low areal bone mineral density (aBMD),5,6 the extent to which PFASs may affect aBMD in children is unknown
Against Medical Advice Discharge: A Narrative Review and Recommendations for a Systematic Approach
Approximately 1%-2% of hospitalizations in the United States result in an against medical advice discharge. Still, the practice of discharging patients against medical advice is highly subjective and variable. Discharges against medical advice are associated with physician distress, patient stigma, and adverse outcomes, including increased morbidity and mortality. This review summarizes discharge against medical advice research, proposes a definition for against medical advice discharge, and recommends a standard approach to a patient's request for discharge against medical advice
Associations of maternal prenatal smoking with umbilical cord blood hormones: the Project Viva cohort.
BACKGROUND: Maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with low fetal growth and adverse cardiometabolic health in offspring. However, hormonal pathways underlying these associations are unclear. Therefore, we examined maternal smoking habits and umbilical cord blood hormone profiles in a large, prospective cohort.
METHODS: We studied 978 mother/infant pairs in Project Viva, a Boston-area cohort recruited 1999-2002. We categorized mothers as early pregnancy smokers, former smokers, or never smokers. Outcomes were cord blood concentrations of IGF-1, IGF-2, IGFBP-3, leptin, adiponectin, insulin, and C-peptide. We used linear regression models adjusted for maternal pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI), race/ethnicity, parity, education, and infant sex. We conducted analyses in the full cohort and stratified by infant sex.
RESULTS: Thirteen percent of women were early pregnancy smokers, 20% former smokers, and 68% never smokers. Infants of early pregnancy smokers had lower IGF-1 adjusted for IGFBP-3 [-5.2ng/mL (95% CI: -8.6, -1.7)], with more pronounced associations in girls [-10.7ng/mL (95% CI: -18.5, -2.9) vs. -4.0ng/mL (95% CI: -8.4, 0.4) for boys]. Early pregnancy smoking was not associated with cord blood hormones other than IGF-1. Infants of former smokers had a cord blood hormone profile similar to infants of never smokers.
CONCLUSIONS: As compared to mothers who never smoked, early pregnancy smokers had infants with lower cord blood IGF-1 which could prime adverse metabolic outcomes. This provides further reason to support smoking cessation programs in women of reproductive age
Body composition and bone mineral density in childhood.
BACKGROUND: Body mass compartments may have different directions of influence on bone accrual. Studies of children are limited by relatively small sample sizes and typically make strong assumptions of linear regression.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate associations of overall body mass, components of overall body mass (fat-free and total fat), and components of total fat mass (truncal and non-truncal fat), measured via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and anthropometry, with total body less head areal bone mineral density (aBMD) Z-score in mid-childhood.
METHODS: We performed a cross-sectional study among 876 Boston-area children who had DXA measures. We evaluated linearity of associations using generalized additive models.
RESULTS: Children were median 7.7 (range 6-10) years of age, and 61% were white. After adjustment for sociodemographics and other compartments of body mass, overall body mass, particularly the fat-free mass component, appeared to have a positive relationship with aBMD Z-score [e.g., 0.25 (95% CI: 0.23, 0.28) per 1-kg fat-free mass]. The relationship between truncal fat and aBMD Z-score appeared non-linear, with a negative association only in children with levels of fat mass in the upper 15th percentile [-0.17 (95% CI: -0.26, -0.07) aBMD Z-score per 1-kg truncal fat mass], while non-truncal fat mass was not associated with aBMD Z-score.
CONCLUSIONS: Our analyses suggest that central adiposity is associated with lower aBMD Z-score only in children with the highest levels of abdominal fat. This finding raises the possibility of a threshold above which central adipose tissue becomes more metabolically active and thereby adversely impacts bone
Cumulative exposure to environmental pollutants during early pregnancy and reduced fetal growth: the Project Viva cohort
Background: Reduced fetal growth is associated with perinatal and later morbidity. Prenatal exposure to environmental pollutants is linked to reduced fetal growth at birth, but the impact of concomitant exposure to multiple pollutants is unclear. The purpose of this study was to examine interactions between early pregnancy exposure to cigarette smoke, traffic pollution, and select perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) on birth weight-for-gestational age (BW/GA). Methods: Among 1597 Project Viva mother-infant pairs, we assessed maternal cigarette smoking by questionnaire, traffic pollution at residential address by black carbon land use regression model, and plasma concentration of select PFASs in early pregnancy. We calculated sex-specific BW/GA z-scores, an index of fetal growth, from national reference data. We fit covariate-adjusted multi-pollutant linear regression models and examined interactions between exposures, using a likelihood-ratio test to identify a best-fit model. Results: Two hundred six (13%) mothers smoked during pregnancy. Mean [standard deviation (SD)] for black carbon was 0.8 (0.3) μg/m3, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) was 29.1 (16.5) ng/mL, and BW/GA z-score was 0.19 (0.96). In the best-fit model, BW/GA z-score was lower in infants of mothers exposed to greater black carbon [− 0.08 (95% CI: -0.15, − 0.01) per interquartile range (IQR)]. BW/GA z-score (95% CI) was also lower in infants of mothers who smoked [− 0.09 (− 0.23, 0.06)] or were exposed to greater PFOS [− 0.03 (− 0.07, 0.02) per IQR], although confidence intervals crossed the null. There were no interactions between exposures. In secondary analyses, instead of PFOS, we examined perfluorononanoate (PFNA) [mean (SD): 0.7 (0.4) ng/mL], a PFAS more closely linked to lower BW/GA in our cohort. The best-fit multi-pollutant model included positive two-way interactions between PFNA and both black carbon and smoking (p-interactions = 0.03). Conclusions: Concurrent prenatal exposures to maternal smoking, black carbon, and PFOS are additively associated with lower fetal growth, whereas PFNA may attenuate associations of smoking and black carbon with lower fetal growth. It is important to examine interactions between multiple exposures in relation to health outcomes, as effects may not always be additive and may shed light on biological pathways. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (10.1186/s12940-018-0363-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users