4 results match your criteria: "1918 University Avenue[Affiliation]"

Are hormonal contraceptive users more likely to misreport unprotected sex? Evidence from a biomarker validation study in Zimbabwe.

AIDS Behav

December 2014

Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California, 1918 University Avenue, Suite 3C, Berkeley, CA, 94704, USA,

We analyzed biomarker validation data of unprotected sex from women in Zimbabwe to determine whether condom and sexual behavior misreporting differs between users of different contraceptive methods. Self-reported sexual behavior was compared with the presence of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) in vaginal fluid, a biomarker of semen exposure. Of the 195 women who were PSA positive, 94 (48 %) reported no sex or only condom-protected sex.

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Food insecurity (FI) is associated with higher-risk sexual behavior in some studies. However, the overlap between FI and socioeconomic status (SES) has been poorly described. The study objectives were to: (1) determine the relationship between household FI and four dimensions of SES among sexually active Tanzanian women in farming households: expenditures, assets, flooring material of the home, and land ownership; and (2) determine whether FI is associated with higher-risk sexual behavior and relationship power.

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Implementation of G-computation on a simulated data set: demonstration of a causal inference technique.

Am J Epidemiol

April 2011

Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California-Berkeley, 1918 University Avenue, Berkeley, CA 94704, USA.

The growing body of work in the epidemiology literature focused on G-computation includes theoretical explanations of the method but very few simulations or examples of application. The small number of G-computation analyses in the epidemiology literature relative to other causal inference approaches may be partially due to a lack of didactic explanations of the method targeted toward an epidemiology audience. The authors provide a step-by-step demonstration of G-computation that is intended to familiarize the reader with this procedure.

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The Survival of Sheltered Care Homes: Facility and Neighborhood Contributions.

Adult Resid Care J

January 1993

Center for Self Help Research, 1918 University Avenue, Suite 3D, Berkeley, CA 94704.

We use data from a representative probability sample of all 1973 California Sheltered Care facilities for ex-mental patients. Facilities were recontacted between 1983 and 1985. Based on several literatures, we hypothesized variables that might contribute to facility survival over this period including: neighborhood factors such as community reaction and gentrification and organizational and institutional characteristics such as profit motivation and legitimacy.

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