Publications by authors named "A Batchelder"

Article Synopsis
  • Individuals of color and gender-diverse populations face higher rates of mental health issues, particularly depression and anxiety, compared to their White and cisgender counterparts.
  • A study analyzed health records of nearly 30,000 patients, categorizing them by race and gender identity to assess mental health symptom severity and diagnosis likelihood.
  • Results showed that transgender individuals had increased symptom severity, while nonbinary individuals consistently faced high symptom levels across races, with notably high rates of clinical depression and anxiety among Black nonbinary and transgender adults.
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Introduction: People with opioid use disorder (OUD) on buprenorphine smoke at high rates and have low cessation rates, even with evidence-based medications. Electronic cigarettes (EC) are a promising harm reduction strategy for combusted cigarette (CC) smokers unable to quit. Unfortunately, people with OUD are underrepresented in EC research.

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This study assesses differences in opioid use disorder (OUD) treatment among sexually and gender diverse (SGD) vs non-SGD people. Using electronic health record data from a federally qualified health center, this retrospective cohort study explores OUD treatment for adults with an OUD diagnosis, as well as any clinic visit from January 2013 until June 2021 (N = 1,133), through review of medication prescriptions for OUD and OUD-related visits. Patients identifying as lesbian/gay had the lowest prevalence of OUD, with 1% (n = 231) of lesbian/gay patients having an OUD diagnosis, as compared to 1.

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Background And Purpose: This study aimed to develop and test a novel model integrating social-learning and self-medication frameworks by examining the association between self-efficacy to resist alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and daily AOD use and unhealthy drinking risk among trauma-exposed sexual minority women (SMW) and transgender and gender-diverse (TGD) people. We examined whether minority stressors moderated these associations.

Methods: Data were from 57 trauma-exposed SMW and TGD people who participated in a 14-day daily diary study.

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This study evaluated the hypothesis that positive emotions attenuate associations between negative emotions with adaptive coping and adherence, as well as explored evidence of the hypothesis of an indirect effect association between adaptive coping and adherence via positive emotions. The sample was 202 gbMSM with HIV who use substances (mean age [standard deviation] = 47.15 [12.

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