2,170 results match your criteria: "National Center for Health Statistics[Affiliation]"

Quality of age data in the Sierra Leone Ebola database.

Pan Afr Med J

December 2020

United States Public Health Service, Rockville, Maryland, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the quality of age data collected during the 2014-2016 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone, focusing on issues like age heaping and terminal digit preference as indicators of data reliability.
  • Analysis of the Sierra Leone Ebola Database revealed low age data quality for adult patients, with particularly inaccurate reporting in the Eastern Province and among females.
  • The findings highlight the importance of accurate age data in future analyses and data collection methods for health outbreaks, especially in developing countries.
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Objectives: Adult day services centers (ADSCs) may serve as an entrée to advance care planning. This study examined state requirements for ADSCs to provide advance directives (ADs) information to ADSC participants, ADSCs' awareness of requirements, ADSCs' practice of providing AD information, and their associations with the percentage of participants with ADs.

Methods: Using the 2016 National Study of Long-Term Care Providers, analyses included 3,305 ADSCs that documented ADs in participants' files.

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Article Synopsis
  • Organizations collected various data during the 2014-2016 Ebola epidemic in Sierra Leone from different sources, such as hot line calls, surveillance, lab tests, clinical information, and burial records.
  • After the epidemic, the Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and the CDC collaborated to merge these separate records into a unified Sierra Leone Ebola Database.
  • This database serves as a valuable resource for postepidemic analysis and research, helping to improve outbreak response strategies and assisting families in finding the graves of loved ones lost during the epidemic.*
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Women with syndemic conditions, i.e., two or more co-occurring epidemics, are at elevated risk for HIV acquisition and are therefore prime candidates for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).

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Racial disparities in mortality in the adult hispanic population.

SSM Popul Health

August 2020

Mortality Statistics Branch, Division of Vital Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, 3311 Toledo Road, Hyattsville, 20782, MD, United States.

Objective: We addressed three research questions: (1) Are there racial mortality disparities in the adult Hispanic population that resemble those observed in the non-Hispanic population in the US? (2) Does nativity mediate the race-mortality relationship in the Hispanic population? and (3) What does the Hispanic mortality advantage relative to the non-Hispanic white population look like when Hispanic race is considered?

Methods: We estimated a series of parametric hazard models on eight years of mortality follow-up data and calculated life expectancy estimates using the Mortality Disparities in American Communities database.

Results: Hispanic white adults experience lower mortality than their Hispanic black, American Indian and Alaska Native, Some Other Race, and multiple race counterparts. This Hispanic white advantage is found mostly among the US born.

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Use of National Asthma Guidelines by Allergists and Pulmonologists: A National Survey.

J Allergy Clin Immunol Pract

October 2020

Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Research Triangle Park, NC.

Background: Little is known about specialist-specific variations in guideline agreement and adoption.

Objective: To assess similarities and differences between allergists and pulmonologists in adherence to cornerstone components of the National Asthma Education and Prevention Program's Third Expert Panel Report.

Methods: Self-reported guideline agreement, self-efficacy, and adherence were assessed in allergists (n = 134) and pulmonologists (n = 99) in the 2012 National Asthma Survey of Physicians.

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The mental health toll of common school problems that many children encounter every day is not well understood. This study examined individual differences in mood reactivity to naturally occurring school problems using daily diaries, and assessed their prospective associations with youth mental health, three years later. At baseline, 47 children ages 8 to 13 years described common problems at school and mood on a daily basis, for 8 weeks.

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Refining assessment of contraceptive use in the past year in relation to risk of unintended pregnancy.

Contraception

August 2020

National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities, Center for Chronic Disease Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, United States.

Objectives: Healthy People 2020 establishes objectives for reducing the proportion of pregnancies in the United States that are unintended and for improving contraceptive use. This analysis describes ways to more closely align measurement of contraceptive use with periods of risk for unintended pregnancy using the National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG).

Methods: Using the 2011-2015 NSFG we constructed two measures of contraceptive use for women we defined as at risk of an unintended pregnancy: (1) we augmented a measure of recent contraceptive use by recoding non-users according to their method use during their last month of sex in the past 12 months; (2) we augmented use at last sex in the past 12 months by excluding women who were pregnant at last sex.

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Objectives: Adults with multiple chronic conditions (MCCs; ≥2 chronic conditions) account for a substantial number of visits to health care providers. The complexity of a patient's care, including the number of chronic conditions, may differ by physician specialty. The objectives of this study were to (1) examine differences in physician office visits among adults with MCCs by physician specialty and (2) identify the types of MCC dyads (combinations of 2 chronic conditions) most common among visits to office-based physicians.

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Background: The American Cancer Society, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Cancer Institute, and the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries collaborate to provide annual updates on cancer occurrence and trends in the United States.

Methods: Data on new cancer diagnoses during 2001 through 2016 were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-funded and National Cancer Institute-funded population-based cancer registry programs and compiled by the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries. Data on cancer deaths during 2001 through 2017 were obtained from the National Center for Health Statistics' National Vital Statistics System.

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In the original publication of the article, Figure 1 included footnotes which duplicated information appearing in the figure caption. Therefore the notes of "NOTES: ASD = autism spectrum disorder; MBDD = mental, behavioral, or developmental disorder. Indicators presented are unadjusted estimates.

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Antineoplastic drugs prescription during visits by adult cancer patients with comorbidities: findings from the 2010-2016 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey.

Cancer Causes Control

April 2020

Division of Health Care Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 3311 Toledo Rd. Rm. 3534, Hyattsville, MD, 20782, USA.

Purpose: Cancer treatment may be affected by comorbidities; however, studies are limited. The purpose of this study is to examine the frequency of comorbidities at visits by patients with breast, prostate, colorectal, and lung cancer and to estimate frequency of a prescription for antineoplastic drugs being included in the treatment received at visits by patients with cancer and concomitant comorbidities.

Methods: We used nationally representative data on visits to office-based physicians from the 2010-2016 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and selected visits by adults with breast, prostate, colorectal, or lung cancer (n = 4,672).

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Cancer Informatics for Cancer Centers (CI4CC) is a grassroots, nonprofit 501c3 organization intended to provide a focused national forum for engagement of senior cancer informatics leaders, primarily aimed at academic cancer centers anywhere in the world but with a special emphasis on the 70 National Cancer Institute-funded cancer centers. Although each of the participating cancer centers is structured differently, and leaders' titles vary, we know firsthand there are similarities in both the issues we face and the solutions we achieve. As a consortium, we have initiated a dedicated listserv, an open-initiatives program, and targeted biannual face-to-face meetings.

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On December 31, 2019, Chinese health officials reported a cluster of cases of acute respiratory illness in persons associated with the Hunan seafood and animal market in the city of Wuhan, Hubei Province, in central China. On January 7, 2020, Chinese health officials confirmed that a novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) was associated with this initial cluster (1). As of February 4, 2020, a total of 20,471 confirmed cases, including 2,788 (13.

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Importance: Pelvic examination is no longer recommended for asymptomatic, nonpregnant women and may cause harms such as false-positive test results, overdiagnosis, anxiety, and unnecessary costs. The bimanual pelvic examination (BPE) is an invasive and controversial examination component. Cervical cancer screening is not recommended for women younger than 21 years.

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Objective: To estimate the prevalence of health care transition components among youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) aged 12-17 using the 2016 National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH), compared to youth with other mental, behavioral, or developmental disorders (MBDDs) or youth without MBDDs.

Methods: The 2016 NSCH is a nationally and state representative survey that explores issues of health and well-being among children ages 0-17. Within the NSCH, parents of a subset of youth, ages 12-17, are asked a series of questions about their youth's eventual transition into the adult health care system.

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While web surveys have become increasingly popular as a method of data collection, there is concern that estimates obtained from web surveys may not reflect the target population of interest. Web survey estimates can be calibrated to existing national surveys using a propensity score adjustment, although requirements for the size and collection timeline of the reference data set have not been investigated. We evaluate health outcomes estimates from the National Center for Health Statistics' Research and Development web survey.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study assessed serum folate concentrations in the fasting US population from 2011-2016 to evaluate the effects of folic acid fortification, focusing on various folate forms and their associations with demographic and lifestyle factors.
  • Significant findings showed that age, sex, and race/ethnicity influenced folate levels, with differences observed in non-Hispanic whites, blacks, and Asians regarding specific folate types like 5-methyl-THF and unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA).
  • The results indicated that older adults had a higher prevalence of UMFA, particularly those with chronic kidney disease, while factors like alcohol consumption and smoking were linked to lower folate concentrations.*
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Latent class analysis (LCA) has been effectively used to cluster multiple survey items. However, causal inference with an exposure variable, identified by an LCA model, is challenging because (1) the exposure variable is unobserved and harbors the uncertainty of estimating parameters in the LCA model and (2) confounding bias adjustments need to be done with the unobserved LCA-driven exposure variable. In addition to these challenges, complex survey design features and survey weights must be accounted for if they are present.

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In August 2017 the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), part of the U.S. Federal Statistical System, published new standards for determining the reliability of proportions estimated using their data.

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Healthy People 2020: Rural Areas Lag In Achieving Targets For Major Causes Of Death.

Health Aff (Millwood)

December 2019

Melonie Heron is a health scientist in the Division of Vital Statistics, NCHS.

For the period 2007-17 rural death rates were higher than urban rates for the seven major causes of death analyzed, and disparities widened for five of the seven. In 2017 urban areas had met national targets for three of the seven causes, while rural areas had met none of the targets.

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Web, or online, probing has the potential to supplement existing questionnaire design processes by providing structured cognitive data on a wider sample than typical qualitative-only question evaluation methods can achieve. One of the practical impediments to the further integration of web probing is the concern of survey managers about how the probes themselves may affect response to other items and to a questionnaire as a whole. This study explores the effects web probes had on response to a self-administered web survey by comparing two rounds of this survey-one without web probes and one with web probes-that were administered to a probability-based panel of approximately 100,000 American adults.

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