Publications by authors named "Noya Galai"

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the salience of material needs and financial precarity on mental health and distress. Women who use drugs (WWUD) experienced significant mental distress and multiple material need insecurities before the pandemic. However, research is limited on the nature of these insecurities during the pandemic despite both material scarcity and mental distress placing WWUD at greater risk of drug-related harms such as overdose.

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Female sex workers (FSW) living with HIV experience greater depression and worse HIV outcomes than people living with HIV (PLHIV) overall. Mindfulness is related to lower depression and higher ART adherence in PLHIV. Few studies have assessed these relationships among FSW, especially longitudinally.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study evaluates cardiovascular health (CVH) from early childhood to late adolescence, finding that while most children maintain high CVH during early years, there is a noticeable decline by late adolescence.
  • Using data from 1530 youths, researchers calculated CVH scores based on behaviors like diet and physical activity, revealing stability in scores until late adolescence when only 39.4% had high CVH.
  • The study highlights key sociodemographic factors associated with high CVH, such as being non-Hispanic White and having educated parents, suggesting that behavioral factors are crucial for targeted cardiovascular disease prevention efforts.
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Background: Sleep problems are reported for up to 80% of autistic individuals. We examined whether parsimonious sets of items derived from the Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers, Revised (M-CHAT-R) and the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire (BISQ) are superior to the standard M-CHAT-R in predicting subsequent autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnoses.

Methods: Participants from 11 Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) cohorts were included.

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Intersecting forms of stigma including both HIV and sex work stigma have been known to impede HIV prevention and optimal treatment outcomes among FSW. Recent research has indicated that intersectional stigma can be resisted at the community and individual level. We assessed pathways between HIV stigma, sex work stigma, social cohesion and viral suppression among a cohort of 210 FSW living with HIV in the Dominican Republic.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study analyzed the link between neighborhood deprivation and Staphylococcus aureus infections in hospitals in the mid-Atlantic from 2016 to 2018, focusing on both community-onset and hospital-onset cases.
  • - Findings revealed that higher area deprivation index (ADI) scores correlated with an increased risk of methicillin-resistant (MRSA) and methicillin-sensitive (MSSA) infections, indicating that socioeconomic factors may play a significant role in these infections.
  • - Racial factors were also examined, showing that Black patients had higher odds of hospital-onset MRSA, while Asian and unknown race patients showed lower odds for both community-onset MRSA and MSSA infections; however, when ADI was considered, the
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Residential mobility remains an underexplored yet critical construct that may influence the risk of violence among women who exchange sex. This study examined the longitudinal relationship between residential mobility and experience of client-perpetrated physical or sexual violence among women who exchange sex in Baltimore, Maryland. Participants were at least at 18 years of age, were cisgender women, reported having engaged in transactional sex three or more times within the last 3 months, and were willing to be contacted for 6-, 12-, and 18-month follow-up visits.

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Unlabelled: Eastern Europe continues to have the highest rates of cancer of the uterine cervix (CUC) and human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in Europe.

Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate CUC trends in Bulgaria in the context of a lack of a population-based screening program and a demographic crisis.

Methodology: This was a retrospective study of 7861 CUC patients who were registered in the Bulgarian National Cancer Registry (BNCR) between 2013 and 2020 and followed up with until March 2022.

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Background: Female sex workers ( FSWs) are vulnerable to a number of health issues, but often delay seeking health care due to structural barriers. Multiservice drop-in centers have been shown to increase FSW access to health services globally, but their impact on FSW in the United States is lacking. This study seeks to evaluate the effect of a community-level empowerment intervention (the multiservice drop-in SPARC center) on cumulative sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among FSW in a city in the United States.

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Women who use drugs (WWUD) experience structural vulnerabilities (e.g., housing, food insecurities) and comorbidities that elevate their susceptibility to more severe COVID-19 symptoms or fatality compared to similarly-aged women who do not use illicit drugs.

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Female sex workers (FSW) have worse HIV outcomes in part due to lower anti-retroviral therapy (ART) adherence. Substance use and depression are important barriers to ART adherence, yet few studies have assessed these relationships among FSW in longitudinal studies. Cross-Lagged Panel Models and autoregressive mediation analyses assessed substance use (illicit drug use and alcohol use disorders) in relation to ART non-adherence and the mediation role of depressive symptoms among 240 FSW living with HIV in the Dominican Republic.

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Background: We assessed volume-outcome relationships of resternotomy coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG).

Methods: We studied 1,362,218 first-time CABG and 93,985 resternotomy CABG patients reported to The Society of Thoracic Surgeons Adult Cardiac Surgery Database between 2010 and 2019. Primary outcomes were in-hospital mortality and mortality and morbidity (M&M) rates calculated per hospital and per surgeon.

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Background: Women who exchange sex (WES) experience extensive interpersonal violence from multiple perpetrators. Violence towards WES contributes to poor mental and behavioral health outcomes, including high rates of drug use. However, it is difficult to disentangle the temporal relationship between drug use and violence among WES.

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Objectives: Modalities of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) for HIV prevention offer options to women at high risk including female sex workers (FSW). This study aimed to explore FSW's acceptability and preferences for oral pills, long-acting (LA) injectable and vaginal ring PrEP.

Design: Sequential, explanatory, mixed methods.

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Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) has the potential to transform HIV in young Black and Latinx sexual minority men (SMM) and transgender women (TW). Addressing low PrEP uptake in this population depends on the better understanding of barriers to PrEP use. This article uses an ecological framework to explore barriers to daily oral PrEP in a sample of young Black and Latinx SMM and TW in three geographically prioritized cities in the United States.

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This study assessed the relationship between the quality of HIV care and treatment literacy on antiretroviral therapy (ART) adherence and viral suppression among female sex workers (FSWs) living with HIV (n = 211) in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Multivariable logistic regression results indicate better patient-provider communication (AOR 1.04; 95% CI 1.

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Background: Previous single-center studies suggest that exposure to a room previously occupied by a patient with CDI may increase the risk of CDI in subsequent patients. We evaluated the risk of previous room occupant on CDI risk across 5 adult hospitals.

Methods: This is a non-concurrent cohort study of adult inpatients admitted to 5 hospitals.

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Among women who exchange sex (WES), social cohesion is associated with multi-level HIV-risk reduction factors, and client condom coercion (CCC) is associated with increased HIV-risk. Sexual minority WES (SM-WES) face exacerbated HIV-risk, yet relevant research is scant. We examined the role of sexual orientation in the relationship between social cohesion and CCC among cisgender WES (n = 384) in Baltimore, Maryland using stratified logistic regression, controlling for potential confounders.

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Background: The COVID-19 pandemic and its associated socioeconomic disruptions have disproportionally affected marginalized populations, including people living with HIV. Little is known about how the pandemic has affected populations experiencing multiple forms of stigma, discrimination, and violence, such as female sex workers (FSW) living with HIV.

Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey between August and December 2020 among 187 FSW living with HIV in the Dominican Republic to examine the impact of COVID-19.

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Background: The role of business employees and community members in the HIV risk environment of female sex workers (FSW) is underexplored, despite sex work often located in commercial and residential urban areas. We explored the effect of negative interactions between business employees and community members on inconsistent condom use with clients of female sex workers.

Methods: This study uses baseline data from the EMERALD study, a community empowerment intervention with FSW.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the characteristics and risk factors of transactional sex among young black and Latinx sexual minority cisgender men and transgender women aged 15 to 24 who are living with or at high risk for HIV infection.
  • A sample of 454 participants from various cities completed a survey and HIV testing, revealing that about 22.7% reported engaging in transactional sex, with associations found related to gender identity, housing instability, financial struggles, and substance use.
  • The findings highlight that young black and Latinx sexual minorities face significant risks of transactional sex, which may worsen HIV vulnerability due to overlapping issues like unstable housing, violence, and drug use.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the poor rollout of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among young Black and Latinx men who have sex with men, transgender women, and gender diverse individuals in three U.S. cities.
  • Despite a high willingness to use PrEP, 82% of participants were not currently on it, indicating a gap in engagement.
  • Factors like having health insurance, being connected to others who use PrEP, and individual HIV risk scores were linked to better engagement in the PrEP continuum, suggesting the need for strategies that improve healthcare access and leverage social connections.
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There is growing evidence for the key role of social determinants of health (SDOH) in understanding morbidity and mortality outcomes globally. Factors such as stigma, racism, poverty or access to health and social services represent complex constructs that affect population health via intricate relationships to individual characteristics, behaviors and disease prevention and treatment outcomes. Modeling the role of SDOH is both critically important and inherently complex.

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Article Synopsis
  • Most female sex workers (FSW) in Baltimore are mothers, yet their roles as parents are often overlooked in health and social programs.
  • A study of 214 FSW mothers found that 27% engaged in sex work primarily to support their children, with significant links to factors like race, housing stability, and early age of entering sex work.
  • The research highlighted that those who work to support children were less likely to have lost custody and more likely to live with their children compared to other FSW, emphasizing the need for tailored support for these women in public health initiatives.
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