Preventive medicine
-
Preventive medicine · Sep 2019
Comparative StudyCancer mortality rates among US and foreign-born individuals: United States 2005-2014.
From 1970 to 2010 the foreign-born population in the United States has rapidly increased from 9.6 to 40.0 million individuals. Historically, differences in cancer rates have been observed between US-born and foreign-born individuals. However, comprehensive and up-to-date data on US cancer rates by birth place is lacking. ⋯ Overall, foreign-born individuals had a 31% lower cancer mortality rate when compared to US-born individuals (Rate Ratio (RR): 0.69 (95% CI: 0.68-0.69)), and similar results were observed when stratifying by sex, race/ethnicity, age, and geographic region. However, foreign-born individuals did have significantly elevated cancer mortality rates for seven cancers sites, of which five were infection-related, including: nasopharynx (RR: 2.01), Kaposi Sarcoma (RR: 1.94), stomach (RR: 1.82), gallbladder (RR: 1.47), acute lymphocytic leukemia (RR: 1.27), liver and intrahepatic bile duct (RR: 1.24), and thyroid (RR: 1.22) cancers. Many of these deaths could be avoided through improved access to prevention, screening, and treatment services for immigrant populations in the US or in their country of origin.
-
Preventive medicine · Sep 2019
Motivational interviewing in eHealth and telehealth interventions for weight loss: A systematic review.
The alarming prevalence of adult obesity warrants consideration of treatments with broad reach; digital health interventions meet this need and have demonstrated efficacy for weight loss. One approach that can be delivered remotely is motivational interviewing - a counseling style that helps resolve ambivalence to change unhealthy behavior. This is the first review to systematically examine eHealth and telehealth interventions that incorporate motivational interviewing for weight loss. ⋯ No trial had high risk of bias, but five lacked power calculations and only two reported fidelity to motivational interviewing. Telephone-based interventions that incorporate motivational interviewing hold promise as effective obesity treatments. There is a dearth of evidence to support the use of motivational interviewing via eHealth, signaling a needed research area.
-
Preventive medicine · Sep 2019
Facts or stories? How to use social media for cervical cancer prevention: A multi-method study of the effects of sender type and content type on increased message sharing.
Social media has become a valuable tool for disseminating cancer prevention information. However, the design of messages for achieving wide dissemination remains poorly understood. We conducted a multi-method study to identify the effects of sender type (individuals or organizations) and content type (personal experiences or factual information) on promoting the spread of cervical cancer prevention messages over social media. ⋯ Personal experience tweets and organizational senders were associated with more retweets. However, the experimental study revealed that informational tweets were shared significantly more (19%, 95% CI: 11 to 27) than personal experience tweets; and organizational senders were shared significantly more (10%, 95% CI: 3 to 18) than individual senders. While rare personal experience messages can achieve large success, they are generally unsuccessful; however, there is a reproducible causal effect of messages that use organizational senders and factual information for achieving greater peer-to-peer dissemination.
-
Goods and services provided by businesses can either promote health or represent an additional risk factor. We assessed the association between business pattern indicators and the prevalence of adult obesity, diabetes, physical inactivity, fair or poor health and frequent physical and mental distress. Data on business types were obtained from the 2013 U. ⋯ Full service restaurants and fitness centers may provide places for people to access higher quality food, socialize and exercise. Conversely, payday loans provide an expensive form of short-term credit and this debt may degrade an individual or family's ability to achieve or maintain health. Our study emphasizes the influence of local built environment characteristics on important health outcomes.
-
Preventive medicine · Sep 2019
Comparative StudyTobacco use increases risk of food insecurity: An analysis of continuous NHANES data from 1999 to 2014.
Tobacco use is a major health disparities issue in the United States; it is much more common in less-educated and lower-income groups. These groups also experience a higher prevalence of food insecurity. Previous studies analyzing the association between tobacco use and food insecurity have focused on only cigarettes. ⋯ For multiple product use the magnitude of association was higher for very low food security (AOR = 2.7, 95% CI: 1.8-4.0). The significant associations identified here can inform researchers and policymakers developing interventions to prevent tobacco- and food insecurity-related diseases. To be effective in reducing either health risk, interventions may need to target both tobacco use and food insecurity.