27 results match your criteria: "Columbia University in New York City.[Affiliation]"
AAPS J
August 2024
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a complication of diabetes that affects circulating drug concentrations and elimination of drugs from the body. Multiple drugs may be prescribed for treatment of diabetes and co-morbidities, and CKD complicates the pharmacotherapy selection and dosing regimen. Characterizing variations in renal drug clearance using models requires large clinical datasets that are costly and time-consuming to collect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Nurs
May 2024
Christine Frazer is senior core MSN faculty at Walden University, Lois Lopez is a faculty development specialist at Chamberlain University, Ashley Graham-Perel is an assistant professor of nursing at Columbia University in New York City, Jessica Ochs is a professor of nursing at Endicott College in Beverly, MA, Natalie Pool is an associate professor at the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley, Denise Land is an academic coordinator and DBA faculty at Walden University, and Sonique Sailsman is an assistant professor at Mercer University in Atlanta. Contact author: Christine Frazer, . The authors have disclosed no potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.
How to address these behaviors to promote health equity and inclusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhat clinicians document about patients can have important consequences for those patients. Paternalistic language in patients' health records is of specific ethical concern because it emphasizes clinicians' power and patients' vulnerabilities and can be demeaning and traumatizing. This article considers the importance of person-centered, trauma-informed language in clinical documentation and suggests strategies for teaching students and trainees documentation practices that express clinical neutrality and respect.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCreat Nurs
November 2023
Developing a diverse talent pool starting at the high-school level, while students are making future education and career decisions, should be a national priority, given the need to build a diverse health-care workforce. This article describes a 6-week immersive simulation-based summer program to introduce 20 junior high-school students (13-15 years old) to the range of health professions. Because precollege students typically receive limited exposure to clinical settings, high-fidelity simulation is an excellent surrogate for providing realistic experiences in health care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPersistence of racial segregation makes equitable health care impossible for African Americans, as does the supra-geographic segregation perpetuated by enduring racial medical mythologies that remain unchallenged in health professions education. This article canvasses how these mythologies exacerbate myopia in health professions practice and education, maintain barriers, and perpetuate racial health inequity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis article examines iatrogenic harms incurred by closed-ward psychiatric hospitals. In particular, this article considers roles of narrative in one patient's experience of life-encompassing iatrogenic harm from being institutionalized from infancy to age 60 and also emphasizes Italy's comparative success, relative to the United States, in recovering from decades of deinstitutionalization to establish community-based mental health care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAMA J Ethics
March 2022
Senior lecturer in the graduate Narrative Medicine Program, the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, and the Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race at Columbia University in New York City.
In 2020, the authors of this article published "Abolition Medicine" as one contribution to international abolitionist conversations responding to widespread anti-Black police violence and inequity laid bare by the COVID-19 pandemic. Over the past year, there has been a surge of efforts to abolish deeply embedded patterns of race-based oppression in policing and incarceration in the United States. In this essay, the authors continue to explore how health care can join these conversations and move toward a praxis of health justice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
February 2020
Department of Computing, Imperial College London, London, SW7 2AZ, UK.
Background: Current popular variant calling pipelines rely on the mapping coordinates of each input read to a reference genome in order to detect variants. Since reads deriving from variant loci that diverge in sequence substantially from the reference are often assigned incorrect mapping coordinates, variant calling pipelines that rely on mapping coordinates can exhibit reduced sensitivity.
Results: In this work we present GeDi, a suffix array-based somatic single nucleotide variant (SNV) calling algorithm that does not rely on read mapping coordinates to detect SNVs and is therefore capable of reference-free and mapping-free SNV detection.
Fed Pract
September 2019
is a Psychiatrist and Senior Vice President of Program Operations at the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland. is a Reconstructive Plastic Surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Associate Professor of Surgery at Harvard Medical School in Boston, Massachusetts. is a Student at Columbia University in New York City.
AMA J Ethics
May 2015
Associate faculty member in the master of science in bioethics program and a retired associate clinical professor at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University in New York City, and founding director of the ProBE Program, which for 22 years has addressed the ethical remediation of physicians charged with unprofessional conduct in the practice of medicine.
Water Sci Technol
October 2015
Beijing Tongzhou Municipal Bureau of Human Resources and Social Security, Beijing, China.
The principles and degrees to which land use change and climate change affect direct runoff generation are distinctive. In this paper, based on the MODIS data of land use in 1992 and 2003, the impacts of land use and climate change are explored using the Soil Conservation Service Curve Number (SCS-CN) method under two defined scenarios. In the first scenario, the precipitation is assumed to be constant, and thus the consequence of land use change could be evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMonoclon Antib Immunodiagn Immunother
August 2013
Division of Experimental Therapeutics, Department of Medicine, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University in New York City, New York 10032, USA.
There are many methods for evaluating the cytotoxic effect of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against cancer cells. Most of these methods require either purified MAbs or biological solutions (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrev Med
September 2011
Department of Health and Behavior Studies, Teachers College of Columbia University in New York City, 525 W. 120th Street, New York, NY 10027, USA.
Objectives: We evaluated the feasibility and efficacy of a program to promote colorectal cancer screening (CRC) among uninsured Latinas receiving mammography through a cancer screening clinic in northern Manhattan.
Methods: Between August 2009 and March 2010, unscreened, average CRC risk, uninsured Latinas, aged 50-64 years, undergoing mammography received a screening recommendation, education, and fecal immunochemical test (FIT). Socio-demographic information and level of acculturation was collected.
Objective: The authors aimed to determine if writing narratives in psychiatric training can foster empathy for severely and persistently mentally ill patients.
Methods: One resident wrote first-person narrative pieces about three different patients at a community mental health clinic. She reviewed these pieces with a writing supervisor weekly.
Health Promot Pract
July 2008
Earth Institute, Columbia University in New York City, New York, USA.
This study examined the perceptions of community members' engaged in community-academia partnerships involved in developing nutrition interventions in three communities in the Lower Mississippi Delta. Perceptions on effectiveness of the partnerships were investigated. Six focus group interviews were conducted, with 33 participants that included 27 females and 6 males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
February 2008
This study investigates the effect of Medicare Part D on the elderly's prescription drug use and out-of-pocket costs using a difference-in-differences research design. We estimate that Medicare Part D reduced user cost among the elderly by 18.4 percent, increased their use of prescription drugs by about 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVirtual Mentor
December 2007
Associate professor in the Department of Sociomedical Sciences and assistant director for scholarly and academic affairs at the Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health at the Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University in New York City.
Virtual Mentor
January 2007
College of Physicians and Surgeons and Mailman School of Public Health, both at Columbia University in New York City.
Health Promot Pract
July 2006
Clinical Psychiatry and Public Health, New York State Psychiatric Institute at Columbia University in New York City, New York, USA.
The findings of health disparities research will have to be disseminated to a broad public in order to influence health outcomes. Some strategies for dissemination are obvious, and these generally work for ideas that are within the mainstream of current paradigms. However, ideas that challenge existing theories and assumptions may require different, and not-so-obvious, strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Relig Health
January 2002
Peter Van News is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Epidemiology in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Yale University School of Medicine. He is also a Lecturer in Chronic Disease Epidemiology teaching a course entitled "Religion, Health, and Society." Prior to coming to Yale Dr. Van Ness was a professor of the philosophy of religion at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University in New York City. Stanislav V. Kasl, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Chronic Disease Epidemiology Division of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Yale University School of Medicine. Beth A. Jones, M.P.H., Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the Chronic Disease Epidemiology Division of the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health at the Yale University School of Medicine.
The study objective was to investigate whether women who frequently attend religious services are more likely to have breast cancer screening-mammography and clinical breast examinations-than other women. Multivariate logistic regression models show that white women who attended religious services frequently had more than twice the odds of breast cancer screening than white women who attended less frequently (Odds Ratio (OR) = 2.61; 95% Confidence Interval (CI) = 1.
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