8 results match your criteria: "School of Public Health University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA.[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic reduced population immunity to influenza, particularly in children who had fewer exposures to the virus before the pandemic.
  • A study in Managua, Nicaragua, compared the incidence and severity of influenza A/H3N2 and B/Victoria in 2022 with data from two prepandemic seasons.
  • Findings indicated a higher incidence of A/H3N2 in older children in 2022 and a greater severity of influenza in children aged 0-4, highlighting the pandemic's impact on influenza outcomes in kids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Learning health systems are challenged to combine computable biomedical knowledge (CBK) models. Using common technical capabilities of the World Wide Web (WWW), digital objects called Knowledge Objects, and a new pattern of activating CBK models brought forth here, we aim to show that it is possible to compose CBK models in more highly standardized and potentially easier, more useful ways.

Methods: Using previously specified compound digital objects called Knowledge Objects, CBK models are packaged with metadata, API descriptions, and runtime requirements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

COVID-19 is not the first, nor the last, public health challenge the US political system has faced. Understanding drivers of governmental responses to public health emergencies is important for policy decision-making, planning, health and social outcomes, and advocacy. We use federal political disaster-aid debates to examine political factors related to variations in outcomes for Puerto Rico, Texas, and Florida after the 2017 hurricane season.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Nail salon workers (NSW) in the United States (U.S.) are predominantly immigrant women who face a number of occupational hazards, such as biological, ergonomic, and chronic chemical exposures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a case of adult-onset, sporadic, hyperkalemic periodic paralysis with primary brainstem musculature symptoms masquerading as recurrent transient ischemic attacks. Unilateral brainstem weakness could be induced with rapid eye blinking, which was followed by lower extremity weakness and cramping. Treatment with acetazolamide and albuterol ameliorated the patient's attacks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study quantifies the effect of the 2020 state COVID economic activity reopening policies on daily mobility and mixing behavior, adding to the economic literature on individual responses to public health policy that addresses public contagion risks. We harness cellular device signal data and the timing of reopening plans to provide an assessment of the extent to which human mobility and physical proximity in the United States respond to the reversal of state closure policies. We observe substantial increases in mixing activities, 13.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) are growing at an alarming rate around the world, drawing attention in multiple United Nations high-level meetings, the Sustainable Development Goals, regional alliances for NCDs, and in scientific research agendas. In 2018, the World NCD Federation selected the University of Michigan from seven universities around the world to host the 2nd World NCD Congress in 2020. For the scientific program, we defined an intersecting matrix of "risk factors" and "disease-oriented" lenses for examining NCDs to highlight the multiple risk factors that contribute to major NCDs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Aims: Conjunctival squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) varies in incidence geographically from 0 to 1 case per 100 000 per year globally. Additionally, the incidence of CSCC is known to increase 49% for every 10° decrease in latitude. Since the onset of the AIDS epidemic, there has been a trend of increasing incidence of CSCC in Africa, and despite relatively stable levels of ultraviolet (UV) exposure, there is an observed 12 times greater risk of developing CSCC when individuals are infected with HIV.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF