4 results match your criteria: "Hennepin Health care Research Institute[Affiliation]"
BMC Public Health
April 2024
Divisions of General Internal Medicine and Infectious Diseases, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Background: The number of people experiencing unsheltered homelessness in the U.S. is increasing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transplant
March 2022
Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, Hennepin Health care Research Institute, Minneapolis, MN.
SRTR uses data collected by OPTN to calculate metrics such as donation rate, organ yield, and rate of organs recovered for transplant but not transplanted. In 2020, there were 12,588 deceased donors, an increase from 11,870 in 2019; this number has been increasing since 2010. The number of deceased donor transplants increased to 33,303 in 2020, from 32,313 in 2019; this number has been increasing since 2012.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transplant
March 2022
Scientific Registry of Transplant Recipients, Hennepin Health care Research Institute, Minneapolis, MN.
The first successful solid organ transplant was a living donor kidney transplant in 1954. Since then, living donation has been an important source of organs for kidney and liver transplants in the United States. Unfortunately, the demand for organs has not kept pace with the supply, and unlike deceased donor transplant, there has been little growth in the number of living donor transplants over the past decade.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev
July 2020
Zoe Global Limited, London, United Kingdom.
The rapid pace of the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19) pandemic presents challenges to the real-time collection of population-scale data to inform near-term public health needs as well as future investigations. We established the COronavirus Pandemic Epidemiology (COPE) consortium to address this unprecedented crisis on behalf of the epidemiology research community. As a central component of this initiative, we have developed a COVID Symptom Study (previously known as the COVID Symptom Tracker) mobile application as a common data collection tool for epidemiologic cohort studies with active study participants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF