Publications by authors named "Dolan K"

Sex differences exist in acute kidney injury (AKI), and the role that sex and gender play along the AKI care continuum remains unclear. The 33 Acute Disease Quality Initiative meeting evaluated available data on the role of sex and gender in AKI and identified knowledge gaps. Data from experimental models, pathophysiology, epidemiology, clinical care, gender, social determinants of health, education, and advocacy were reviewed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Objectives: This qualitative study explored perceived community strengths and health issues among 3 underserved and under-studied populations in the Atlanta, Georgia-older adults, Black or African American persons, and refugees/immigrants/migrants.

Methods: Eight focus groups were conducted with 92 participants who were members of the 3 populations in Atlanta between November 2022 and March 2023.

Results: Although there were variations among groups, all groups emphasized diversity within their community as the foundation of community strength.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Indigenous fruits and vegetables can improve food security and biodiversity. However, their use is hindered by perishability, seasonal availability, cooking losses, lack of nutritional composition data, and connections to low socioeconomic status. This study aimed to process cowpea leaves into powder and determine the effect of five home-cooking methods on their protein, functional, physicochemical, and heavy metal profiles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Universal gloving by health care workers (HCW) for all patient care activities (beyond isolation and standard precautions) has been proposed to reduce health care-associated infection transmission, but patient perceptions of this approach are unclear. We interviewed patients who experienced a universal gloving intervention by HCW within Veterans Affairs inpatient acute care units to understand their perceptions of universal gloving.

Methods: We conducted interviews with 15 patients across 5 Veterans Affairs hospitals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Guava (Psidium guajava L.) is one of the most nutrient-dense fruits, which is native to tropical and subtropical regions of the world. The processing of value-added products from guava has not been carried out on a scale similar to some other fruits, which offers an opportunity to fully exploit the potential of this fruit, such as guava-based nutraceutical food products.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • M is a crucial structural protein in coronaviruses, specifically SARS-CoV-2, playing a key role in forming infectious virus particles and existing in two conformational states.
  • The study identifies a specific interaction between the M protein and a type of lipid (ceramide-1-phosphate) that influences M's structure and its ability to facilitate virus assembly.
  • Disrupting this lipid-protein interaction impacts M's localization and its interactions with other viral proteins, ultimately hindering the virus's ability to enter host cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In 2016, The World Health Organization introduced HIV self-testing (HIVST) as an alternative to traditional HIV testing (1), the present study aims to study the acceptability of HIV self-testing among Iranian women injecting drug users (WIDUs). The results of this study are expected to provide valuable evidence for the proper implementation of this program in Iran.

Methods: This study employed a content analysis approach to gather qualitative data.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

School share tables offer opportunities for food recovery and increased access to healthy foods by allowing students to donate or consume unopened items, such as cartons of milk. However, stakeholders have concerns about temperature abuse potentially causing premature milk spoilage. Although previous research showed short ambient temperature abuse of milk (under conditions representing share tables) does not meaningfully affect microbial milk quality, differences across school cafeterias (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Spirulina, a cyanobacterium or blue-green algae that contains phycocyanin, nutritional supplementation has been evaluated in patients living with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) due to its antiviral properties. This supplementation may be beneficial in low resource settings when awaiting antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV. This review aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of Spirulina supplement in antiviral-naïve HIV- and HCV-infected patients by assessing its immunological effect (Cluster of Differentiation 4 or CD-4 T-cell count) and disease progression (viral load).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Activation of the classical complement pathway is thought to contribute to the development and progression of glaucoma. The role of alternative complement or amplification pathways in glaucoma is not well understood. We evaluated complement factor B (FB) expression in postmortem human ocular tissues with or without glaucoma and the effect of FB inhibition and deletion in a mouse ocular hypertensive model of glaucoma induced by photopolymerized hyaluronic acid glycidyl methacrylate (HAGM).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Intraoperative Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy (iCRRT) can prevent life-threatening complications, facilitate fluid management, and maintain metabolic homeostasis during liver transplantation (LT) in adults. There is a paucity of data in pediatric LT. We evaluated the safety, efficacy, and impact on survival of iCRRT in pediatric LT.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of new extracorporeal blood purification (EBP) techniques has led to increased application in clinical practice but also inconsistencies in nomenclature and misunderstanding. In November 2022, an international consensus conference was held to establish consensus on the terminology of EBP therapies. It was agreed to define EBP therapies as techniques that use an extracorporeal circuit to remove and/or modulate circulating substances to achieve physiological homeostasis, including support of the function of specific organs and/or detoxification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: We measured the association between a history of incarceration and HIV positivity among people who inject drugs (PWID) across Europe.

Design, Setting And Participants: This was a cross-sectional, multi-site, multi-year propensity-score matched analysis conducted in Europe. Participants comprised community-recruited PWID who reported a recent injection (within the last 12 months).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is independently associated with increased morbidity and mortality across the life course, yet care for AKI remains mostly supportive. Raising awareness of this life-threatening clinical syndrome through education and advocacy efforts is the key to improving patient outcomes. Here, we describe the unique roles education and advocacy play in the care of children with AKI, discuss the importance of customizing educational outreach efforts to individual groups and contexts, and highlight the opportunities created through innovations and partnerships to optimize lifelong health outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Failure to recognize and mitigate critical patient deterioration remains a source of serious preventable harm to hospitalized pediatric cardiac patients. Emergency transfers (ETs) occur 10-20 times more often than code events outside the intensive care unit (ICU) and are associated with morbidity and mortality. This quality improvement project aimed to increase days between ETs and code events on an acute care cardiology unit (ACCU) from a baseline median of 17 and 32 days to ≥70 and 90 days within 12 months.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In 2013, Nationwide Children's Hospital's (NCH) Quality Tool School (QTS) was created as an initial Quality Improvement educational series, composed of three separate classes, totaling 5.5 hours of hands-on QI training. QTS complemented the NCH 40-hour Quality Improvement Essentials course.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Wheat, the raw material for flour milling, can be contaminated with enteric pathogens, leading to outbreaks linked to flour. In previous lab-scale studies, vacuum steam treatment was able to reduce Salmonella Enteritidis PT30 and Shiga-toxin producing E. coli (STEC) O121 levels on soft wheat kernels while maintaining flour quality and gluten functionality.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Increasing evidence suggests that chronic inflammation plays an important role in the pathogenesis of age-related macular degeneration (AMD); however, the precise pathogenic stressors and sensors, and their impact on disease progression remain unclear. Several studies have demonstrated that type I interferon (IFN) response is activated in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of AMD patients. Previously, we demonstrated that human RPE cells can initiate RNA-mediated type I IFN responses through RIG-I, yet are unable to directly sense and respond to DNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Using model systems in infection biology has led to the discoveries of many pathogen-encoded virulence factors and critical host immune factors to fight pathogenic infections. Studies of the remarkable Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacterium that infects and causes disease in hosts as divergent as humans and plants afford unique opportunities to shed new light on virulence strategies and host defence mechanisms. One of the rationales for using model systems as a discovery tool to characterise bacterial factors driving human infection outcomes is that many P.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To address a known nutritional deficit and enhance the overall health of critically ill babies, this project sought to increase the percentage of cardiothoracic intensive care unit (CTICU) neonates consuming human milk from a 2019 baseline of 55% to 75% by December 2020 and 90% by December 2021.

Study Design: This was a quality improvement initiative targeted to all neonates admitted to the CTICU, with baseline data obtained from January 2019 through February 2020. We implemented 11 interventions from March 2020 to January 2022 to address the key drivers of "education of parents and providers," "environment/equipment," and "process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Abusive injuries can go unrecognized or improperly managed by medical providers. This study sought to standardize the nonaccidental trauma (NAT) workup and improve NAT evaluation completion for children <7 months with concerning injuries in the pediatric emergency department (PED) and inpatient settings at an urban, tertiary care children's hospital.

Methods: The quality improvement (QI) team created hospital guidelines for suspected NAT, including age-based recommendations (care bundle).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Frozen berries have been repeatedly linked to acute gastroenteritis caused by norovirus, the most common cause of foodborne illness in the United States. Many guidelines recommend that frozen berries be microwaved for at least 2 min, but it is unclear if this thermal treatment is effective at inactivating norovirus. The objective of this study was to model the effect of microwave heating at varying power levels on the survival of bacteriophage MS2, a norovirus surrogate, when inoculated onto frozen strawberries.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To characterize US State and Territorial Health Agencies' (S/THA) climate change adaptation activities and priorities to facilitate appropriate investments, skills development, and support that will strengthen health sector capacity in response to a changing climate.

Design: In 2021, we conducted an online survey of S/THA staff requesting information on current activities related to climate change and health, the state of climate and health programming, and anticipated needs and priorities for assistance. We analyzed survey results using descriptive statistics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: As the health implications of climate change become more apparent, agencies and institutions across the United States are developing recommendations for state and territorial health agencies (S/THAs) to implement evidence-informed climate and health adaptation strategies. The CDC established the Building Resilience Against Climate Effects (BRACE) framework in 2010 to encourage local and state public health engagement in climate change adaptation. However, even after a decade of the BRACE initiative, the elements that affect the adoption and implementation of climate and health programming by S/THAs are not well understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF