Publications by authors named "S E Breslin"

The COVID-19 pandemic restructured university learning environments while also underscoring the need for granular local health data. We describe how the University of Memphis School of Public Health used the City Health Dashboard, an online resource providing data at the city and neighborhood level for more than 35 measures of health outcomes, health drivers, and health equity for all US cities with populations >50 000, to enrich students' learning of applying data to community health policy. By facilitating students' engagement with population needs, assets, and capacities that affect communities' health-key components of the master of public health accreditation process-the Dashboard supports in-person and virtual learning at undergraduate and graduate levels and is recommended as a novel and rigorous data source for public health trainees.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Pleural effusion is a frequent reason for hospital admissions, often requiring thoracentesis for diagnosis, and this study investigated the effectiveness of ultrasound imaging (TUS) in distinguishing between two types of pleural fluid: transudative and exudative.
  • A total of 166 patients were analyzed, with 74% of their pleural effusions classified as exudative by Light's Criteria; TUS identified anechoic effusions in 71% of cases.
  • While some TUS features like septation were highly specific for exudative effusions, the overall imaging characteristics did not reliably differentiate between transudative and exudative fluids, particularly in patients with underlying conditions like heart failure or malignancy
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We evaluated whether using county-level data to characterize public health measures in cities biases the characterization of city populations. We compared 4 public health and sociodemographic measures in 447 US cities (percent of children living in poverty, percent of non-Hispanic Black population, age-adjusted cardiovascular disease mortality, life expectancy at birth) to the same measures calculated for counties that contain those cities. We found substantial and highly variable city-county differences within and across metrics, which suggests that use of county data to proxy city measures could hamper accurate allocation of public health resources and appreciation of the urgency of public health needs in specific locales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Devices equipped with sensors to track mobility, such as through Global Position Systems (GPS) and accelerometery, are increasingly being used for research. Following Canadian, US, and International guidelines there is a need to give special consideration when conducting research with vulnerable populations. This paper examines specific ethical concerns for conducting research with mobile sensing devices for use by vulnerable populations, considering aspects of both research design and research process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF