Preventive medicine
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2020
Impact of a single-age cohort human papillomavirus vaccination strategy in Catalonia, Spain: Population-based analysis of anogenital warts in men and women.
Extensive multiple-age cohort human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination has proved to be highly effective. We aimed to determine the 8-year population impact of a female single-age cohort HPV vaccination programme on the incidence of anogenital warts (AGW). In 2008, Catalonia initiated a school-based quadrivalent HPV vaccination programme targeting 11-year-old girls, achieving coverage over 80%. ⋯ A similar pattern was observed among men aged 23-25 years (APC 2009-2014: 16.0%; 95% CI: 12.0-20.2; and APC 2014-2016: -6.0%; 95% CI: -18.4 to 8.3). In contrast to AGW, among men aged 20-25 years, the incidence of genital herpes increased over this period. Our study strongly suggests that a single-cohort HPV vaccination strategy with high vaccine uptake not only provides direct benefit in the vaccinated cohorts but also extends protection through a herd effect to unvaccinated men.
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2020
Screening and linkage to care for hepatitis C among inpatients in Georgia's National Hospital Screening Program.
The country of Georgia initiated an ambitious national hepatitis C elimination program. To facilitate elimination, a national hospital hepatitis C screening program was launched in November 2016, offering all inpatients screening for HCV infection. This analysis assesses the effectiveness of the first year of the screening program to identify HCV-infected persons and link them to care. ⋯ Redundant screening is a challenge; 15.6% of patients were screened multiple times and 27.6% of anti-HCV+ patients had a prior viremia test. This evaluation demonstrates that hospital-based screening programs can identify large numbers of anti-HCV+ persons, supporting hepatitis C elimination. However, low linkage-to-care rates underscore the need for screening programs to be coupled with effective linkage strategies.
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2020
Effects of the Affordable Care Act's enhancement of Medicare benefits on preventive services utilization among older adults in the U.S.
Since 2011, the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires the provision of certain recommended clinical preventive services without cost-sharing for individuals in Medicare. We re-visited the effects of the ACA on preventive services utilization under Medicare, using data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) and examined the ACA's longer-term effects on preventive services utilization among Medicare beneficiaries. We analyzed nationally representative data on non-institutionalized Medicare beneficiaries (n = 27,124) from the 2006-2010 and 2012-2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. ⋯ Nationwide, among beneficiaries with traditional Medicare only, who stood to gain the most from eliminating cost-sharing for preventive services, the percentage of women receiving clinical breast exams rose post-reform (Δ = 8.1%; p < 0.015) as compared to Medicare beneficiaries with supplemental private coverage, while at the same time the percentage receiving other preventive services did not change post-reform (all p > 0.05). Based on this analysis of MEPS data spanning 2006-2016, the ACA's enhancement of Medicare coverage had only modest effects on the percentage of beneficiaries receiving a range of preventive services. Medicare beneficiaries should be better informed of the availability of these services and encouraged by their physicians to avail the no cost-sharing incentive of these reforms.
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Preventive medicine · Aug 2020
Randomized Controlled TrialReactions to graphic and text health warnings for cigarettes, sugar-sweetened beverages, and alcohol: An online randomized experiment of US adults.
We aimed to examine reactions to graphic versus text-only warnings for cigarettes, SSBs, and alcohol. A convenience sample of US adults completed an online survey in 2018 (n = 1352 in the analytic sample). We randomly assigned participants to view a: 1) text-only warning without efficacy information (i.e., message intended to increase consumers' confidence in their ability to stop using the product), 2) text-only warning with efficacy information, 3) graphic warning without efficacy information, or 4) graphic warning with efficacy information. ⋯ Compared to SSB and alcohol warnings, cigarette warnings led to higher perceived message effectiveness, believability, fear, thinking about harms, policy support, and greater reductions in product appeal (all p < .05). The efficacy information did not influence any outcomes. Graphic warnings out-performed text-only warnings on key predictors of behavior despite causing more reactance.
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Preventive medicine · Aug 2020
Lifestyle clusters related to type 2 diabetes and diabetes risk in a multi-ethnic population: The HELIUS study.
Little is known about how health-related behaviours cluster across different populations and how lifestyle clusters are associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk. We investigated lifestyle clusters and their association with T2D in a multi-ethnic population. 4396 Dutch, 2850 South-Asian Surinamese, 3814 African Surinamese, 2034 Ghanaian, 3328 Turkish, and 3661 Moroccan origin participants of the HELIUS study were included (2011-2015). K-medoids cluster analyses were used to identify lifestyle clusters. ⋯ The pooled 'unhealthy' cluster was positively associated with prediabetes (OR: 1.34, 95%CI 1.21-1.48) and incident T2D (OR: 1.23, 95%CI 0.89-1.69), and negatively associated with prevalent T2D (OR: 0.80, 95%CI 0.69-0.93). Results were similar for most, but not all, ethnic-specific clusters. This illustrates that targeting multiple behaviours is relevant in prevention of T2D but that ethnic differences in lifestyle clusters should be taken into account.