Background: The effects of housing insecurity on surgical care are under researched and largely unknown. Thus far, studies on surgery outcomes of people experiencing homelessness either focus on shelter-based patients or do not differentiate whether patients are sheltered or unsheltered, despite significant differences in care needs and health risks. Herein we provide the first report on surgical care trends of people experiencing unsheltered homelessness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recruitment registries are maximally effective when registrants are retained to the point of referral. The Research Attitudes Questionnaire (RAQ) has previously been shown to predict research participation behaviors, including Alzheimer's disease clinical trial completion.
Objective: To test the hypothesis that RAQ score is associated with retention behaviors in a local recruitment registry.
Vitamin D (Vit D) has gained significant attention in health research recently as a result of its potential protective effects against various cellular damages. This study aimed to investigate the ability of vitamin D to mitigate deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) fragmentation in liver cells and bone marrow cytotoxicity induced by chloramphenicol (CAP). Sixty male albino mice were divided into six groups: control, chloramphenicol-treated (250 and 500 mg/kg body weight, 5 days per week for 4 weeks), vitamin D-treated (800 IU/kg body weight, 5 days per week for 4 weeks) and vitamin D plus chloramphenicol-treated groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParticipation in sexual medicine research may depend on a patient's willingness to speak openly about sex, sexual function, or other sensitive topics. These topics may be difficult or uncomfortable to talk about, and this discomfort may be further amplified when a patient comes from a cultural background that stigmatizes open conversation about sex and sexuality. We used qualitative analysis to better understand the intersection between cultural identity, the experience of sexual dysfunction as a side-effect of pelvic radiotherapy, and willingness to communicate about sexual dysfunction with healthcare providers, in Cuban American women in Miami, Florida.
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