Latino/a/x sexual minority men (SMM) and transgender women remain disproportionately impacted by HIV, with higher HIV incidence and lower uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) than their non-Hispanic White peers. Disparities in PrEP uptake among Latino/a/x populations have been found to be due to structural, social, and personal barriers. Social marketing interventions have been shown to effectively address barriers and increase PrEP uptake in other populations, and thus offer potential as a tool to increase PrEP uptake for Latino/a/x populations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
August 2024
The task of managing diverse electronic health records requires the consolidation of data from different sources to facilitate clinical research and decision-making support, with the emergence of the Observational Medical Outcomes Partnership - Common Data Model (OMOP-CDM) as a standard relational database schema for structuring health records from different sources. Working with ontologies is strongly associated with reasoners. Implementing them over expansive and intricate Ontologies can pose computational challenges, potentially resulting in slow performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Epilepsy is the most common major neurological disorder that affects people of all ages. The prevalence varies from one country to another and even between different areas, due to a lack of access to medical care for reasons related to limited resources.
Objective: Epilepsy is a worldwide public health problem that affects more deeply populations living in developing countries such as Mexico, where more aggressive health policies based on epidemiological data are needed; however, this information is scarce and the evolution of this data over time remains unclear.
Serum samples obtained from 20 insulin-dependent diabetics (IDD), 23 non-insulin-dependent diabetics (NIDD) and 30 controls were assayed for their pancreatic lipase activity, immunoreactive trypsin concentration and glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1) respectively. The distribution of serum pancreatic lipase activity in normal subjects and diabetics was nonparametric. The median serum lipase activity in IDDs (86 U/l) was significantly lower that that in controls (131 U/l, p less than 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF