Publications by authors named "Stroebel C"

Introduction: Kentucky has the highest all-site cancer incidence and death rate in the US. In 2021, the University of Kentucky Markey Cancer Center convened a steering committee to conduct a statewide community cancer needs assessment (CNA). The goal of the final CNA phase was to gather community input on prioritizing Kentucky's cancer-related needs and ways to address them.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Community health needs assessments are required for most state and local public health agencies and non-profit hospitals. Typically based on community health improvement planning models, these assessments encompass overall community health and multiple diseases to inform program planning. National Cancer Institute (NCI)-designated Cancer Centers and community-based cancer-focused programs share the goal of reducing cancer burden in the catchment areas they serve.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Assessment and feedback is a common implementation strategy to improve healthcare provider fidelity to clinical guidelines. For immunization guidelines, fidelity is often measured with doses administered during eligible visits. Adding a patient refusal measure captures provider fidelity more completely (i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The COVID-19 pandemic led to rapid expansion of telemedicine services. We surveyed parent/guardians from March 10 to June 29, 2020, in an academic and community pediatric practice, and community pediatric providers from June 5 to July 13, 2020, to better understand their perceptions of telemedicine and compare parent/guardian satisfaction between in-person and telemedicine encounters. Overall patient satisfaction scores were high in both settings and did not differ between in-person and telemedicine visits (community setting: 93.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reports in the literature indicate that species of commonly occur in African wild dog (AWD) or painted wolf () populations. These findings were based on examination of blood smears by microscopy, and specific identity of the sp. gamonts seen could not be confirmed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Effects of probiotics on the intestinal microbiota of foals are yet insufficiently studied. The aim of this study was to investigate whether supplementation of Lactobacillus rhamnosus (DSM 7133) and Enterococcus faecium (DSM 7134) influences the bacterial composition of the faecal microbiota of foals. A total of 34 newborn foals were randomly assigned to the placebo group (PG, n = 16) and the treatment group (TG, n = 18).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The objective was to study effects of transportation to and co-mingling at an auction market on nasopharyngeal and tracheal bacterial communities of feedlot cattle. Two groups of 30 Angus-cross heifers were studied from weaning to 28 d after arrival at a feedlot. For each group, half the heifers were either transported directly to a feedlot after weaning (RANC) or transported to and co-mingled at an auction market for 24 h before being placed in a feedlot (AUCT).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An initiative to assess and improve practices in terms of fall prevention was instigated in 2008 within the follow-up and rehabilitation care department of the Les Ormes medium and long-term care facility in Montfermeil (Seine-Saint-Denis). This initiative has been continued in order to be able to identify patients and situations at risk and then implement targeted and coordinated actions to reduce this risk. Ultimately, the aim was to reduce the annual prevalence of the number of falls within the establishment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Social network analysis (SNA) provides a way of quantitatively analyzing relationships among people or other information-processing agents. Using 2 practices as illustrations, we describe how SNA can be used to characterize and compare communication patterns in primary care practices.

Methods: Based on data from ethnographic field notes, we constructed matrices identifying how practice members interact when practice-level decisions are made.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Quality improvement processes have sometimes met with limited success in small, independent primary care settings. The theoretical framework for these processes uses an implied understanding of organizations as predictable with potentially controllable components. However, most organizations are not accurately described using this framework.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Electronic medical record (EMR) systems offer substantial opportunities to organize and manage clinical data in ways that can potentially improve preventive health care, the management of chronic illness, and the financial health of primary care practices. The functionality of EMRs as implemented, however, can vary substantially from that envisaged by their designers and even from those who purchase the programs. The purpose of this study was to explore how unique aspects of a family medicine office culture affect the initial implementation of an EMR.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As part of the Minnesota Children's Pesticide Exposure Study we measured volatile organic compound (VOC) concentrations in a probability sample of households with children. The 6-day average concentrations for 10 common VOCs were obtained in urban and nonurban residences twice during this multiphase study: screening-phase indoor measurements were collected in 284 households, and in the intensive-phase matched outdoor (O), indoor (I), and personal (P) measurements were collected in a subset (N=72) of the screened households. Screening-phase households with smokers had significantly higher concentrations of benzene and styrene compared to nonsmoking households; households with an attached garage had significantly higher levels of benzene, chloroform, styrene, and m/p- and o-xylene compared to households without an attached garage; and nonurban residences, which had a greater prevalence of smokers and attached garages, had significantly higher 1,1,1-trichloroethane, styrene, and toluene and significantly lower tetrachloroethylene concentrations compared to urban households.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The U.S. health care system serves a diverse population, often resulting in significant disparities in delivery and quality of care.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is an increasing need for community health promotion efforts directed to populations that are often disenfranchised from the health care system. The rapidly growing Hispanic population can benefit from outreach efforts that provide health education and promote community awareness of health status and health problems. This article describes a cost effective survey system that measured health status, health needs and provided individualized health feedback and education to Hispanic residents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The purpose of this manuscript is to describe the practical strategies developed for the implementation of the Minnesota Children's Pesticide Exposure Study (MNCPES), which is one of the first probability-based samples of multi-pathway and multi-pesticide exposures in children. The primary objective of MNCPES was to characterize children's exposure to selected pesticides through a combination of questionnaires, personal exposure measurements (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As part of the National Human Exposure Assessment Survey (NHEXAS), residential pesticide storage and use patterns were evaluated in a population-based sample of Minnesota households with children aged 3-13. In-home interviews and inventories were conducted to identify pesticide products stored and used in and around 308 households. This statistically based sample represents more than 49,000 urban and rural households in the census tracts sampled.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although children are exposed to a variety of environmental hazards, including pesticides, there is a scarcity of information available to estimate exposures realistically. This article reports on one of the first attempts to measure multi-pathway pesticide exposures in a population-based sample of urban and non-urban children. A design strategy was developed to assess multi-pathway pesticide exposures in children using personal exposure measurements in combination with complimentary measurements of biological markers of exposure, concentrations in relevant environmental media, and time spent in important microenvironments and participating in exposure-related activities.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A 4-year case study was made of a 42-year-old white woman as seen through the psychophysiological diary. There was an awakening diary and a bedtime diary composed of 125 variables. The data are divided into two series: series I containing a manic episode, and series II as a control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An open clinical trial was conducted on the use of oral clomipramine in the treatment of obsessive-compulsive symptomatology in patients with various primary psychiatric diagnoses. The overall success rate of the 50 patients was 60%; those with a primary diagnosis of obsessive-compulsive disorder had an 80% success rate. No significant differences in outcome were observed by current age, age of illness onset, duration of illness, or severity of illness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Extensive personality, demographic, and symptom-related information from a heterogeneous group of more than 300 patients was examined for patterns that would discriminate between successful and unsuccessful outcomes in patients undergoing Quieting Response (QR) training, an 8-week program that integrated EMG and thermal biofeedback with a variety of relaxation exercises. Follow-up evaluations were at 3, 6, 12 and 24 months. Agreement between expected (from stepwise discriminant analyses) and observed outcomes was 65% (whole sample), 62% (headache only), and 70% (Raynaud's only).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clinical evidence for the long-term effectiveness of biofeedback related relaxation training is accumulating. The purpose of this report is to describe the population, self-regulation procedure, outcome criteria, and final outcome for patients who received Quieting Response (QR) training. Data from 340 patients who completed at least the first follow-up at 3 months is presented.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A careful study of 106 patients, diagnosed as borderline using the criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 3rd Edition, is in progress at a private psychiatric facility. Three distinct subcategories of the borderline personality disorder have been identified: history of no organicity, history of trauma, encephalitis, or epilepsy, and history of attentional deficit disorder/learning disabilities. A discriminant function analysis approach clearly distinguishes the three borderline subcategories from one another and from a schizophrenic control group.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Self-regulation methods incorporating biofeedback are known to be useful in the treatment of psychophysiological disorders in psychologically normal patients. In this study, the effectiveness of Quieting Response (QR) training for the treatment of secondary psychophysiological complaints in psychiatric inpatients was assessed. Ten male and 27 female inpatients with a variety of secondary psychophysiological diagnoses were accepted into the study.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF