556 results match your criteria: "* Oak Ridge Associated Universities[Affiliation]"

Under the best circumstances, achieving or sustaining optimum ecological conditions in estuaries is challenging. Persistent information gaps in estuarine data make it difficult to differentiate natural variability from potential regime shifts. Long-term monitoring is critical for tracking ecological change over time.

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Youth experiencing homelessness (YEH) and sexual and gender minority (SGM) YEH may be at increased risk for infectious diseases due to living arrangements, risk behaviors, and barriers to healthcare access that are dissimilar to those of housed youth and older adults experiencing homelessness. To better understand infectious diseases among YEH populations, we synthesized findings from 12 peer-reviewed articles published between 2012 to 2020 which enumerated YEH or SGM YEH infectious disease burden in locations across the U.S.

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A database of chemical absorption in human skin with mechanistic modeling applications.

Sci Data

July 2024

United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), Center for Computational Toxicity and Exposure, Office of Research and Development (ORD), Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.

Whether from environmental and occupational hazards or from topical pharmaceuticals, the human skin comes into contact with various chemicals every day. In vivo experiments not only require large investments of both time and money, but in vivo experiments can also be unethical due to the need to intentionally or incidentally expose humans or animals to toxic chemicals. Comparatively, in vitro experiments offer ethical and financial advantages when combined with the opportunity to selectively choose chemicals for experimentation.

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Strontium-90 is a radionuclide found in high concentrations in nuclear reactor waste and nuclear fallout from reactor accidents and atomic bomb explosions. In the 1950s, little was known regarding the health consequences of strontium-90 internalization. To assess the health effects of strontium-90 ingestion in infancy through adolescence, the Atomic Energy Commission and Department of Energy funded large-scale beagle studies at the University of California Davis.

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Community-Based Cluster-Randomized Trial to Reduce Opioid Overdose Deaths.

N Engl J Med

September 2024

The authors' affiliations are as follows: Boston Medical Center, Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine, and Boston University School of Public Health (J.H.S.), Boston Medical Center and Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics (S.M.B.), Boston Medical Center, Section of General Internal Medicine (T.J.B., P.B., D. Beers, C. Bridden, K.C., J. Carpenter, E.B.G., A. Harris, S.K., Nikki Lewis, R.M.L., M.R., M. Saucier, R.S.C.), Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine (T.A.B.), Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Policy and Management (D.D.B., M.D. Stein), Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Bureau of Substance Addiction Services (D. Calvert), Boston University School of Social Work (D. Chassler), Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics (D.M.C.), Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Section of Infectious Diseases, and Boston University School of Public Health, Department of Health Law, Policy and Management (M.-L.D.), Massachusetts HCS Community Advisory Board (J.L.K., K.P.), Boston Medical Center, Section of Infectious Diseases (E.N.K., C.S.), Boston Medical Center and Boston University Chobanian and Avedisian School of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine (M.R. Larochelle, J.L.T., A.Y.W.), Boston Medical Center, Department of Medicine (H.M.L.), Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Registry of Vital Records and Statistics (S.P.), Tufts University School of Medicine, Department of Public Health and Community Medicine (T.J.S.), and McLean Hospital, Division of Alcohol, Drugs, and Addiction, and Harvard Medical School, Department of Psychiatry (R.W.) - all in Boston; the Social Intervention Group, School of Social Work, Columbia University (N.E.-B., A. Dasgupta, J.L.D., A. Davis, K.H.G., L. Gilbert, D.A.G.-E., D.E.G., J. Hotchkiss, T. Hunt, J.L.N., E.R., S. Rodriguez, E.W.), New York HCS Community Advisory Board (A. Angerame, R. Caldwell, S.M., K.M., J.P., K.R., W.R., M. Salvage), Columbia University Irving Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry (D. Blevins, A.N.C.C., F.R.L., E.V.N.), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health (N.B., D.G., D.W.L., B.D.R.), Montefiore Medical Center (J. Chaya), New York State Office of Addiction Services and Supports (C.O.C.), City University of New York (T. Huang, N.S.), Weill Cornell Medicine, Department of Population Health Sciences (B.S.), and the New York Office of Mental Health (A. Sullivan), New York, and the New York State Department of Health, Albany (T.Q.N., E.S.) - all in New York; the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine (T.J.W.), University of Cincinnati Corrections Institute (T.D.), University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Department of Emergency Medicine (C.E.F., J. McMullan), University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Emergency Medicine (N.H.D.), University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Department of Environmental and Public Health Sciences (T.I.), Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Department of Family Medicine and Community Health (T.V.P.), Brightview Health (S. Ryan), and University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience (J.S.), Cincinnati, the College of Medicine (R.D.J., S.F., K.H., J.E.L., M.S.L.) and the College of Social Work (B.F.), Center of Health Outcomes and Policy Evaluation Studies (W.F.), Department of Family and Community Medicine (T.R.H., A.S.M., D.M.W.), College of Public Health and Translational Data Analytics Institute (A. Hyder), Department of Emergency Medicine (E.K.), Ohio Colleges of Medicine Government Resource Center (A.M., R.M.), One Ohio Foundation (A.N.), College of Public Health (P.S., E.E.S., A. Shoben), Recovery Ohio (A. Shadwick), and the School of Communication (M.D. Slater), Ohio State University, Columbus, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences (D.A.F.), and Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Clinical and Translational Science Institute (M.W.K.), Cleveland, and Brown County Mental Health and Addiction Services, Georgetown (D.J.V.) - all in Ohio; RTI International, Research Triangle Park, NC (E.A.O., J.A., A. Aldridge, D. Babineau, C. Barbosa, R. Caspar, B.E., L. Glasgow, S.G., M.E.H., J. Holloway, C.K., P.A.L., R.C.L., L.N., N.V., G.A.Z.); the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Bethesda, MD (R.K.C., J.V.); University of Colorado School of Medicine, Divisions of General Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases, Aurora (J.B.); University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth (S.T.W.); Kentucky Office of Drug Control Policy, Frankfort (V.L.I.), University of Kentucky, College of Public Health (H.M.B.), University of Kentucky, Kentucky Injury Prevention Research Center (J.L. Bush, S.L.H ), University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Center on Drug and Alcohol Research (L.C.F.), University of Kentucky, Department of Pharmacy Practice and Science (P.R.F., D.H., D.R.O.), Commonwealth of Kentucky, Cabinet for Health and Family Services (E.F., K.R.M.), University of Kentucky, Department of Communication (D.W.H., Nicky Lewis), University of Kentucky, Department of Behavioral Science (H.K.K.), University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Center on Drug and Alcohol Research (M.R. Lofwall, S.L.W.), University of Kentucky, Department of Health Management and Policy and Center for Innovation in Population Health (M.L.M.), University of Kentucky, Substance Use Research Priority Area (J. Miles, M.F.R., P.R., D.S.), University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Internal Medicine (D.A.O.), University of Kentucky, Department of Sociology (C.B.O.), University of Kentucky (B.D.R.), University of Kentucky, Department of Biostatistics (S.S., P.M.W.), University of Kentucky, Dr. Bing Zhang Department of Statistics (K.L.T.), University of Kentucky, Department of Behavioral Science (M. Staton, H.L.S.), University of Kentucky, Center for Health Equity Transformation (D.J.S.-W.), University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Institute for Biomedical Informatics (J.C.T.), and University of Kentucky, Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health (R.A.V.-S., A.M.Y.), Lexington, and the Commonwealth of Kentucky, Clark County Health Department, Winchester (J.G.) - all in Kentucky; Purdue University, Department of Psychological Sciences, Lafayette, IN (J.L. Brown); University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Department of Public Health Sciences, Miami (D.J.F.); Oak Ridge Associated Universities (ORAU), Health Communications, Marketing, and Promotion Program, Oak Ridge, TN (J.G.R.); and University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing, Department of Family and Community Health, Philadelphia (L.E.S.).

Article Synopsis
  • The study examines a community-based intervention aimed at reducing opioid-related overdose deaths by increasing the adoption of evidence-based practices including overdose education and naloxone distribution, medication treatment for opioid use disorder, and prescription safety.
  • In a cluster-randomized trial, 67 communities across Kentucky, Massachusetts, New York, and Ohio were assigned to either receive the intervention or serve as a control group during a period marked by the COVID-19 pandemic and an increase in fentanyl overdoses.
  • Results showed no significant difference in opioid-related overdose death rates between the intervention and control groups, with both averaging similar rates, indicating that the community-engaged strategies did not have a measurable impact during the study period.
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Impairment of the central nervous system (CNS) poses a significant health risk for astronauts during long-duration space missions. In this study, we employed an innovative approach by integrating single-cell multiomics (transcriptomics and chromatin accessibility) with spatial transcriptomics to elucidate the impact of spaceflight on the mouse brain in female mice. Our comparative analysis between ground control and spaceflight-exposed animals revealed significant alterations in essential brain processes including neurogenesis, synaptogenesis and synaptic transmission, particularly affecting the cortex, hippocampus, striatum and neuroendocrine structures.

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Developmental hazard evaluation is an important part of assessing chemical risks during pregnancy. Toxicological outcomes from prenatal testing in pregnant animals result from complex chemical-biological interactions, and while New Approach Methods (NAMs) based on in vitro bioactivity profiles of human cells offer promising alternatives to animal testing, most of these assays lack cellular positional information, physical constraints, and regional organization of the intact embryo. Here, we engineered a fully computable model of the embryonic disc in the CompuCell3D.

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TiO nanoparticle photoactivation and oxidation reactions in freshwater and marine systems: The role of radical scavengers.

Chemosphere

August 2024

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, National Risk Management Research Laboratory, Robert S. Kerr Environmental Research Center, 919 Kerr Lab Dr., Ada, OK, 74820, USA. Electronic address:

Titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO-NP) present in wastewater effluent are discharged into freshwater and saltwater (i.e., marine) systems.

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Trends in the administration of COVID-19 vaccines with other vaccines in the United States reported to V-safe during December 14, 2020-May 19, 2023.

Hum Vaccin Immunother

December 2024

Immunization Safety Office, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.

Introduction COVID-19 vaccines may be administered with other vaccines during the same healthcare visit. COVID-19 monovalent (Fall 2021) and bivalent (Fall 2022) vaccine recommendations coincided with annual seasonal influenza vaccination. Data describing the frequency of the co-administration of COVID-19 vaccines with other vaccines are limited.

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Translating nanoEHS data using EPA NaKnowBase and the resource description framework.

F1000Res

May 2024

ORD-CPHEA, US Environmental Protection agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, 27711, USA.

Background: The U.S. Federal Government has supported the generation of extensive amounts of nanomaterials and related nano Environmental Health and Safety (nanoEHS) data, there is a need to make these data available to stakeholders.

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Objectives: People with disabilities, people experiencing homelessness, and people who have substance use disorders face unique health challenges. Gaps in public health surveillance data limit the identification of public health needs of these groups and data-driven action. This study aimed to identify current practices, challenges, and opportunities for collecting and reporting COVID-19 surveillance data for these populations.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bone stress injury (BSI) is a prevalent overuse injury among active women, classified into high-risk (pelvis, sacrum, femoral neck) and low-risk (tibia, fibula, metatarsals) categories with various risk factors.
  • This study aimed to assess differences in bone mineral density (BMD) and load rates between premenopausal women with a history of high-risk BSI, low-risk BSI, and no BSI history, hypothesizing that high-risk patients would have poorer bone health.
  • Results indicated that women with high-risk BSI had significantly lower spine BMD compared to those with low-risk BSI, highlighting the impact of BSI on bone health in pre
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Impoverished and under-served communities are often exposed to the worst environmental and climate hazards. Identifying these communities and building their resilience capacity to withstand such hazards is a vital justice aspect of environmental management. Building community resilience requires five activities: (1) examination of existing information, (2) community engagement and assessment of local knowledge, (3) development of reasonable strategies to build resilience, (4) implementation and these strategies, and (5) monitoring and transability of the process.

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Temperature influences desiccation resistance of bumble bees.

J Insect Physiol

June 2024

North Central Agricultural Research Laboratory, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Brookings, SD 57006, USA.

Ongoing climate change has increased temperatures and the frequency of droughts in many parts of the world, potentially intensifying the desiccation risk for insects. Because resisting desiccation becomes more difficult at higher temperatures and lower humidity, avoiding water loss is a key challenge facing terrestrial insects. However, few studies have examined the interactive effects of temperature and environmental humidity on desiccation resistance in insects.

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Absolute (ALW) and relative (RLW) liver weight changes are sensitive endpoints in repeat-dose rodent toxicity studies, and their changes are often used for quantitative assessment of health effects induced by hepatotoxic chemicals using the benchmark dose-response modeling (BMD) approach. To find biologically relevant liver weight changes to chemical exposures, we evaluated all data available for liver weight changes and associated liver histopathologic findings from the Toxicity Reference Database (ToxRefDB). Our analysis of 389 subchronic mouse and rat studies for 273 chemicals found significant differences in treatment-related ALW and RLW changes between dose groups with and without liver histopathologic changes.

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Adjustment for duration of employment in occupational epidemiology.

Ann Epidemiol

June 2024

Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 2525 West End Avenue Suite 1100, Nashville, TN 37203, USA. Electronic address:

Purpose: In occupational epidemiology, the healthy worker survivor effect can manifest as a time-dependent confounder because healthier workers can accrue greater amounts of exposure over longer periods of employment. For example, in occupational studies of radiation exposure that focus on cumulative annualized radiation dose, workers can accrue greater amounts of cumulative radiation exposure over longer periods of employment, while workers with longer periods of employment can transition into jobs with a reduced potential for annualized radiation exposure. The extent to which confounding arising from the healthy worker survivor effect impacts radiation risk estimates is unknown.

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Background: Lead (Pb) in house dust contributes significantly to blood lead levels (BLLs) in children which may result in dire health consequences. Assessment of house dust Pb in the United States, relationships with Pb in soil and paint, and residential factors influencing Pb concentrations are essential to probing drivers of house dust Pb exposure.

Objective: Pb concentrations in vacuum-collected house dust are characterized across 346 homes participating in the American Health Homes Survey II (AHHS II), a US survey (2018-2019) evaluating residential Pb hazards.

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Dust loading in West and South Asia has been a major environmental issue due to its negative effects on air quality, food security, energy supply and public health, as well as on regional and global weather and climate. Yet a robust understanding of its recent changes and future projection remains unclear. On the basis of several high-quality remote sensing products, we detect a consistently decreasing trend of dust loading in West and South Asia over the last two decades.

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Modeling Nicotine-Induced Chlorine Loss in Drinking Water Using Updated EPANET-MSX.

J Environ Eng (New York)

October 2023

Environmental Engineer, Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, 26 Martin Luther King Dr. West, MS689, Cincinnati, OH 45268.

Multispecies water quality modeling is critical for simulating complex chemical reactions in drinking water distribution systems. An updated EPANET 2.2-compatible version of EPANET multi-species eXtension (EPANET-MSX) was used, which included dispersion and improved mass balance reporting, to simulate an experimental study.

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An evaluation of properly operated NSF/ANSI-53 Pb certified drinking water filters in Benton Harbor, MI.

J Water Health

February 2024

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Center for Environmental Solutions and Emergency Response, Water Infrastructure Division, 26 W. Martin Luther King Dr, Cincinnati, OH 45268, USA.

Communities across the United States and particularly in the Midwest continue to grapple with the complications associated with aging infrastructure. This includes the presence of lead (Pb)-bearing plumbing components such as lead service lines, downstream galvanized iron pipes, and Pb/tin solder. The community of Benton Harbor, MI, experienced six Pb action level exceedances between 2018 and 2021, leading to increasing community concern and a request from the state of Michigan for the US Environmental Protection Agency involvement.

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Exposure to cosmic ionizing radiation is an innate risk of the spaceflight environment that can cause DNA damage and altered cellular function. In astronauts, longitudinal monitoring of physiological systems and interactions between these systems are important to consider for mitigation strategies. In addition, assessments of sex-specific biological responses in the unique environment of spaceflight are vital to support future exploration missions that include both females and males.

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Self-reported health impacts of do-it-yourself air cleaner use in a smoke-impacted community.

Heliyon

February 2024

Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Durham, NC, USA.

Background: Smoke exposure from wildfires or residential wood burning for heat is a public health problem for many communities. Do-It-Yourself (DIY) portable air cleaners (PACs) are promoted as affordable alternatives to commercial PACs, but evidence of their effect on health outcomes is limited.

Objective: Pilot test an evaluation of the effect of DIY PAC usage on self-reported symptoms, and investigate barriers and facilitators of PAC use, among members of a tribal community that routinely experiences elevated concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM) from smoke.

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Characterizing Chemical Exposure Trends from NHANES Urinary Biomonitoring Data.

Environ Health Perspect

January 2024

Center for Computational Toxicology and Exposure, Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA.

Background: Xenobiotic metabolites are widely present in human urine and can indicate recent exposure to environmental chemicals. Proper inference of which chemicals contribute to these metabolites can inform human exposure and risk. Furthermore, longitudinal biomonitoring studies provide insight into how chemical exposures change over time.

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Methods for a composite ecological suitability measure to inform cumulative restoration assessments in Gulf of Mexico estuaries.

Ecol Indic

October 2023

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Gulf Ecosystem Measurement and Modeling Division, 1 Sabine Island Dr., Gulf Breeze, FL 32561, USA.

Ecosystem management requires a systematic, holistic approach that considers ecological and social outcomes. Effective restoration practices promote a balance of ecological and social goals by addressing ecological integrity, efficiently maximizing benefits while minimizing investment, and encompassing collaborative stakeholder engagement. Socio-ecological assessments can inform adaptive management and be utilized to prioritize restoration activities and monitor restoration effectiveness.

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Article Synopsis
  • The CDC funded a wide network of 1,161 partners (110 primary and 1,051 subrecipients) across the U.S. to enhance COVID-19 vaccination efforts between March 2021 and December 2022, focusing on marginalized communities and various high-risk groups.
  • These partners used evidence-based strategies and created innovative partnerships (like with libraries and museums) to boost vaccine access and confidence through community outreach in diverse settings.
  • Over 295,000 trusted messengers were trained, over 2.1 million vaccinations were given, and significant improvements were made in healthcare systems to better incorporate COVID-19 vaccine protocols.
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