899 results match your criteria: "Oklahoma State University-Center for Health Sciences[Affiliation]"
Autoimmun Rev
March 2024
Department of Chemical, Physical, Mathematical and Natural Sciences, University of Sassari, Italy. Electronic address:
Autoimmunity is a multifaceted disorder influenced by both genetic and environmental factors, and metal exposure has been implicated as a potential catalyst, especially in autoimmune diseases affecting the central nervous system. Notably, metals like mercury, lead, and aluminum exhibit well-established neurotoxic effects, yet the precise mechanisms by which they elicit autoimmune responses in susceptible individuals remain unclear. Recent studies propose that metal-induced autoimmunity may arise from direct toxic effects on immune cells and tissues, coupled with indirect impacts on the gut microbiome and the blood-brain barrier.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Perinat Med
February 2024
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Office of Medical Student Research, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Objectives: Optimized preconception care improves birth outcomes and women's health. Yet, little research exists identifying inequities impacting preconception health. This study identifies age, race/ethnicity, education, urbanicity, and income inequities in preconception health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Pathol
January 2024
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood, Illinois, USA.
Aims: Pathology education is a core component of medical training, and its literature is critical for refining educational modalities. We performed a cross-sectional bibliometric analysis to explore publications on pathology education, focusing on new medical education technologies.
Methods: The analysis identified 64 pathology journals and 53 keywords.
Int J Cancer
April 2024
Office of Medical Student Research, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.
Drug development is complex and costly. Clinical trial participants take on risks, making it essential to maximize trial efficiency and maintain participant safety. Identifying periods of excessive burden during drug development can inform trial design, ensure patient benefit and prevent harm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Osteopath Med
June 2024
Office of Medical Student Research, Oklahoma State University College of Osteopathic Medicine at Cherokee Nation, Tahlequah, OK, USA.
Context: Early-stage cognitive decline occurs when an individual experiences memory loss or other cognitive impairment but does not meet the criteria for Alzheimer's disease (AD) or other dementias. After diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), approximately 5-15 % of cases progress to dementia per year. AD and many other causes of dementia are presently incurable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Urol
January 2024
Office of Medical Student Research, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Purpose: Harms are often overlooked, but important, outcomes of randomized controlled trial reporting. Our goal was to determine if harms reporting has improved in high-impact urology journals.
Materials And Methods: Randomized controlled trials published in , , , and in 2012 and 2020 were analyzed.
Background: Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) inform evidence-based decision-making in the clinical setting; however, systematic reviews (SRs) that inform these CPGs may vary in terms of reporting and methodological quality, which affects confidence in summary effect estimates.
Objective: Our objective was to appraise the methodological and reporting quality of the SRs used in CPGs for cutaneous melanoma and evaluate differences in these outcomes between Cochrane and non-Cochrane reviews.
Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis by searching PubMed for cutaneous melanoma guidelines published between January 1, 2015, and May 21, 2021.
J Comp Neurol
February 2024
Poultry Science Department, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, USA.
Image processing in amniotes is usually accomplished by the thalamofugal and/or tectofugal visual systems. In laterally eyed birds, the tectofugal system dominates with functions such as color and motion processing, spatial orientation, stimulus identification, and localization. This makes it a critical system for complex avian behavior.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Alcohol Depend
January 2024
Department of Pharmacy Practice & Administrative Sciences, University of New Mexico Health and Health Sciences, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA.
Background: Studies of prenatal substance exposure often rely on self-report, urine drug screens, and/or analyses of blood or meconium biomarkers. Accuracy of these measures is limited when assessing exposure over many weeks or months of gestation. Nails are increasingly being considered as a matrix from which to assess substance exposure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Health Forum
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa.
Nat Med
December 2023
Department of Pharmacology & Physiology, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Front Health Serv
October 2023
Center for Health Policy, Division of Academic Innovation, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
Introduction: Amid rural health worker shortages and hospital closures, it is imperative to build and maintain the local workforce. Telementoring (TM) or technology-enabled mentoring, is a tool for improving health care quality and access by increasing workforce capacity and support. The national Rural Telementoring Training Center (RTTC) was developed to compile and disseminate TM best practices by delivering free training, tools, and technical assistance to support the implementation, sustainability, and evaluation of new and current TM programs for rural health workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiol Behav
January 2024
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, 1111 W 17th St, Tulsa, OK, 74107, USA.
The low salt diet is a first line treatment for hypertension, but it is a difficult diet to maintain. As a result, patients may alternate between periods of high and low salt intake, the effects of which are unclear. Importantly, blood pressure increases in women after menopause, suggesting that estrogen plays a role in preventing hypertension.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Acad Dermatol
February 2024
Office of Medical Student Research, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, Oklahoma; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Prev Chronic Dis
November 2023
Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Prisma Health, Greenville, South Carolina.
Introduction: An intersectionality framework recognizes individuals as simultaneously inhabiting multiple intersecting social identities embedded within systems of disadvantage and privilege. Previous research links perceived discrimination with worsened health outcomes yet is limited by a focus on racial discrimination in isolation. We applied an intersectional approach to the study of discrimination to examine the association with adverse perinatal health outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Syst Evol Microbiol
October 2023
School of Microbiology, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
A novel bacterial strain, APC 3343, was isolated from the intestine of a deep-sea loosejaw dragon fish, , caught at a depth of 1000 m in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean. Cells were aerobic, rod-shaped, yellow/orange-pigmented, non-motile and Gram-negative. Growth of strain APC 3343 was observed at 4-30 °C (optimum, 21-25 °C), pH 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK USA.
The Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity (CIIHE) at Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences (OSU-CHS) is a community-academic partnership with Indigenous peoples from Alaska, Hawai'i, and Oklahoma. The CIIHE supports communities to strengthen traditional food practices and food sovereignty and evaluate the impact of those efforts on health. In February 2022, the CIIHE sponsored and hosted a virtual conference to better understand how food sovereignty initiatives can improve health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK USA.
Access to healthy and appealing food is essential for individuals to be able to live a healthy and quality life. For decades, food security has been a priority issue for public health professionals. Food sovereignty expands upon the concept of food insecurity (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Traditional foods and foodways are a critical part of health and well-being for Alaska Native/American Indian (ANAI) peoples. However, many of these foods are being replaced by ultra-processed foods high in fat, sugar, and sodium. The cultural knowledge needed to gather, hunt, and fish to acquire these foods is not being passed down to younger generations, due to lingering effects of colonialism, leading to poor health outcomes among ANAI peoples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
The transmission of generational knowledge in Alaska Native communities has been disrupted by colonization and led to declining health among Alaska Natives, as evidenced by the loss of knowledge regarding traditional foods and foodways and increasing rates of cardiometabolic disorders impacting Alaska Natives. Elders play a central role in passing down this generational knowledge, but emerging Elders may have difficulty in stepping into their roles as Elders due to the rapid social and cultural changes impacting their communities. The Center for Alaska Native Health Research (CANHR) and the Denakkanaaga Elders Program are partnering with the Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity to uplift and support traditional food knowledge and practices to promote health in Alaska Native communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Previous research in American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities has documented high prevalence of food insecurity. Yet many AI/AN scholars and communities have expressed concerns that the dominant societal conceptions of food security are not reflective of the teachings, priorities, and values of AI/AN communities. Food security initiatives often focus on access to food and, at times, nutrition but little consideration is given to cultural foods, the spirituality carried through foods, and whether the food was stewarded in a way that promotes well-being not just for humans but also for plants, animals, land, and water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK USA.
Settler colonialism disrupted traditional Indigenous foodways and practices and created high rates of diet-related disease among Indigenous peoples. Food sovereignty, the rights of Indigenous peoples to determine their own food systems, is a culturally centered movement rooted in traditional Indigenous knowledge. This approach directly intervenes upon systems-level barriers to health, making it an important strategy for health equity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA.
Health Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK, USA.
Over the last decade, the Osage Nation has actively worked to build Tribal food sovereignty within the reservation where rates of chronic disease and food insecurity are higher than the United States general population. In 2013, the Nation repurposed land toward the development of a Tribal farm with the aim of providing healthy foods to Osage citizens. Produce from the farm is distributed to elders groups, at Tribal Head Starts and schools, and to support the tribal food distribution program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Promot Pract
November 2023
Center for Indigenous Health Research and Policy, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Tulsa, OK USA.
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma's Historic Preservation Department (HPD) and the Center for Indigenous Health Equity (CIIHE) are partnering to implement and evaluate food sovereignty interventions to better understand the potential impact of such programs on individual and community health. The HPD's Growing Hope Program is a food sovereignty initiative that aims to restore traditional Choctaw gardens, which were once a physical, social, and cultural center of Choctaw life. The program combines heirloom seeds and the stories of their origins, gardening education and technical assistance, cooking classes, and a Choctaw youth internship program to support intergenerational knowledge and the restoration of culture and food security.
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