In this study, we investigated Progressive Era public health interventions and connected two subsequent efforts to improve outcomes in the American South: the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission's hookworm eradication efforts in the early 1910s and investments in local health infrastructure between the 1910s and the 1930s. We tested whether hookworm eradication had the largest effects in areas that invested in public health and whether county health organizations-cooperative public-private institutional arrangements-impacted the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission program's success. The methods used to measure the effects involved estimation of difference-in-difference and triple-difference models across the geographic samples of the Rockefeller Sanitary Commission's surveyed area, the American South, and the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTracheal wall disruption is a rare complication of endotracheal intubation, typically occurring in the posterior (membranous) trachea lacking cartilaginous support. We present the case of a 68-year-old man who developed an anterior tracheal tear after routine endotracheal intubation, most likely occurring secondary to protrusion of a factory-preloaded stylet beyond the distal orifice of the endotracheal tube. Tracheal disruption should be considered in any patient with subcutaneous emphysema and respiratory distress after tracheal extubation and confirmed with bronchoscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCerebrovascular disease and trauma are leading causes of death in the United States. In addition to the initial insult to the brain, disturbances of cerebral oxygenation and metabolism underlie many of the secondary pathophysiological processes that increase both morbidity and mortality. Therefore, researchers and clinicians have sought to obtain a more thorough understanding of the physiological and biochemical principles of cerebral oxygenation and metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF