Pediatric liver transplant outcomes exhibit disparities, necessitating the identification of modifiable risk factors to develop targeted interventions. We characterized associations between household material economic hardship (eg, financial barriers to housing or food) and pediatric liver transplant outcomes. We recruited pediatric recipients of liver transplants <18 years at the time of transplant across 8 US centers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Social risks are negatively associated with receipt of cancer preventive care. As knowledge is lacking on the pathways underlying these associations, we investigated associations between patient-reported social risks and colorectal cancer (CRC), cervical cancer, and breast cancer screening order provision and screening completion.
Methods: This study included patients eligible for CRC, cervical cancer, or breast cancer screening at 186 community-based clinics between July 1, 2015, and February 29, 2020.
In cold methanol, energetic ionic liquid 1-n-propyl-3-vinyl-imidazol-1-ium perchlorate, , crystallizes in the presence of excess Ba(ClO), , into tetrakis 1-propyl-3-vinyl-imidazol-1-ium·barium hexa-perchlorate, . Crystals of , with molecular formula (CHN)·BaClO, are colorless and monoclinic, with space group P2/c. The crystal structure is characterized by a dodecahedral coordination around the barium atom, with each perchlorate chelating Ba in a κO,O' fashion, and the Ba(ClO) anion is surrounded by four imidazolium cations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: New social risk screening standards and quality metrics reward or penalize healthcare delivery organizations for social risk screening. After summarizing the recent literature on social risk screening in pediatric healthcare settings we consider how this evidence - and persistent evidence gaps - might inform future standards development.
Recent Findings: Reported social risk screening rates, measures, and modality differ greatly across recent work.