Publications by authors named "Sher K"

Introduction: Although there are evidence-based strategies (EBSs) for alcohol and other drug (AOD) prevention and treatment for college students, there has been little focus on evaluating AOD EBS implementation in higher education. The use of implementation strategies in higher education may help bridge the gap between research and practice and improve students' access to EBSs. However, it is important to first understand determinants of AOD EBS program implementation to support AOD EBS selection and implementation strategy selection.

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The role of Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) in the immunopathogenesis of Diabetic Kidney Disease (DKD) remains elusive. We used a machine learning approach to identify differentially expressed genes (DEGs) associated with NETs in human DKD kidney biopsy datasets and validated the results using single-nucleus RNA sequencing datasets. The expressions of these candidate genes and related cytokines were verified in blood obtained from DKD patients.

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  • The study aims to assess cannabis use and use disorder prevalence through epidemiologic surveys, addressing discrepancies in existing estimates and their reliability.
  • A meta-analysis of 39 studies from 1980-2013 revealed significant variability in prevalence rates, with past-year use estimated at 12.83% and lifetime use at 38.31%, indicating notable differences influenced by factors like country and methodology.
  • The findings highlight concerns about the generalizability of cannabis prevalence data and suggest recommendations for improving the validity and reliability of future estimates.
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In general, the incorporation of supplementary information reduces the Mean Square Error (MSE) and, consequently, enhances the precision of estimating a population parameter. This improvement relies on the appropriate application of a suitable function, with careful consideration. This study introduces two innovative families of estimators for the finite population mean, both of which exhibit superior performance in scenarios involving dual auxiliary information in simple random sampling.

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As part of the special issue of honoring the remarkable contributions of Dr Dante Cicchetti, the current paper attempts to describe the recent contributions that a developmental psychopathology perspective has made in understanding the development of alcohol use and alcohol-related problems over the lifespan. The paper also identifies some of the future challenges and research directions. Because the scope of this task far exceeds the confines of a journal length article this paper does not attempt a comprehensive review.

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Given the prevalence of alcohol and cannabis co-use among college students, prevention for co-use is crucial. We examined hypothetical receptiveness to substance-specific interventions among students who reported co-use. Students who use alcohol and cannabis were more receptive to alcohol interventions than cannabis interventions.

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Background: Symptoms often play an important role in the scientific inquiry of psychological disorders and have been theorized to play a functional role in the disorders themselves. However, little is known about the course of specific symptoms and individual differences in course. Understanding the course of specific symptoms and factors influencing symptom course can inform psychological theory and future research on course and treatment.

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The present paper highlights how alcohol use disorder (AUD) conceptualizations and resulting diagnostic criteria have evolved over time in correspondence with interconnected sociopolitical influences in the United States. We highlight four illustrative examples of how DSM-defined alcoholism, abuse/dependence, and AUD have been influenced by sociopolitical factors. In doing so, we emphasize the importance of recognizing and understanding such sociopolitical factors in the application of AUD diagnoses.

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  • The study aimed to identify the frequency of neurological disorders and associated disabilities in patients from both rural and urban neurology clinics in Pakistan.
  • Conducted across 39 centers from August 2017 to December 2019, it enrolled 28,845 adults, revealing that vascular diseases were the most common diagnosis, followed by headache disorders and epilepsy.
  • Over half of the participants had no neurological disability, but 36% experienced minor disability, while 10% suffered from moderate to severe disabilities.
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  • This study looked at how people feel and how it relates to how much alcohol they drink.
  • Researchers found that people do not drink more when they’re feeling sad or upset, but they drink more when they're feeling happy.
  • The results are important because they challenge the idea that people drink mainly to cope with negative feelings, and now researchers want to look deeper into this topic.
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Older adult drinking poses a growing public health concern, especially given the ongoing aging of the United States population. As part of a larger lifespan developmental project contrasting predictors of drinking reductions across different periods of adulthood, we tested age differences in effects of health problems on drinking declines across young adulthood, midlife, and older adulthood. We predicted these effects to be developmentally specific to midlife and older adulthood.

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  • Several frameworks have been created to understand the different ways people experience alcohol use disorder (AUD), with the Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA) being a key model focusing on three main areas: reward, negative emotionality, and cognitive control.
  • Recent research tested the ANA's effectiveness using data from participants with regular alcohol use and found that its structure is stable and valid over time, though some areas needed improvement due to poor discrimination and biases.
  • Future studies should aim to enhance how ANA measures are taken, track changes over time in relation to alcohol use severity, and explore different subgroups within AUD to compare ANA with other assessment frameworks.
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  • The study of alcohol use and its impacts is valuable across various fields like life sciences, behavioral sciences, and humanities.
  • The author shares their personal journey to becoming an alcohol researcher at the University of Missouri and the obstacles faced along the way.
  • A key point of the narrative is the importance of mentorship from supportive and knowledgeable individuals who have influenced the author's career.
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Sipping, an early form of alcohol initiation, is associated with aspects of psychopathology and personality that reflect long-term risk for harmful alcohol use. In the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development cohort ( = 11,872), sipping by age 9-10 was concurrently associated with impulsivity, other aspects of externalizing, and prodromal schizophrenia symptoms. Still, these associations were cross-sectional in nature, leaving open the possibility that these features of psychopathology and personality might not reflect long-term risk for alcohol consumption and related harm across development.

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Background And Aims: Alcohol use disorder is comorbid with numerous other forms of psychopathology, including externalizing disorders (e.g. conduct disorder) and, to a lesser extent, internalizing conditions (e.

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Objective: Level of response (LOR) to alcohol is associated with several alcohol-related risk factors and outcomes. However, existing self-report measures of LOR have important limitations. For example, the Self-Rating of the Effects of Alcohol Scale assesses a limited range of alcohol-related effects.

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While prior literature has largely focused on marriage effects during young adulthood, it is less clear whether these effects are as strong in middle adulthood. Thus, we investigated age differences in marriage effects on problem-drinking reduction. We employed parallel analyses with two independent samples (analytic-sample s of 577 and 441, respectively).

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Objective: Personalized feedback interventions are effective in reducing alcohol consumption and related problems. However, little is known about the role of choice in outcomes. The current study sought to (a) characterize individuals who opt in for brief alcohol-related feedback, (b) assess participants' consistency in that choice over two time points, and (c) evaluate changes in peak alcohol consumption among those who did and did not receive feedback.

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We used multitrait-multimethod (MTMM) modeling to examine general factors of psychopathology in three samples of youth (s = 2119, 303, 592) for whom three informants reported on the youth's psychopathology (e.g., child, parent, teacher).

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Objective: Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is an etiologically heterogeneous psychiatric disorder defined by a collection of commonly observed co-occurring symptoms. It is useful to contextualize AUD within theoretical frameworks to identify potential prevention, intervention, and treatment approaches that target personalized mechanisms of behavior change. One theoretical framework, behavioral economics, suggests that AUD is a temporally extended pattern of cost/benefit analyses favoring drinking decisions.

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: To develop a shortened form of the Young Adult Alcohol Problems Screening Test (YAAPST; original length = 27 items) using a novel combinatorial approach. : 489 college freshmen, half of whom were above average risk for alcohol use disorder based upon family history, attending a large, Midwestern University followed prospectively for 16-17 years across 7 measurement occasions (waves). : Using an exhaustive combinatorial approach, we evaluated all possible combinations of questions and questionnaire length.

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Background: Although a relatively large body of research has identified multiple factors associated with adolescent substance use, less is known about earlier substance-related factors during preadolescence, including curiosity to use substances. The present study examined individual-, peer-, and parent-level domains pertaining to substance use and how these domains vary by sociodemographic subgroups and substance type.

Methods: Participants were 11,864 9- and 10-year-olds from the baseline sample of the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study.

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Modern theoretical models of Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) highlight the different functional roles played by various mechanisms associated with different symptoms. Symptom network models (SNMs) offer one approach to modeling AUD symptomatology in a way that could reflect these processes and provide important information on the progression and persistence of disorder. However, much of the research conducted using SNMs relies on cross-sectional data, which has raised questions regarding the extent they reflect dynamic processes.

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