4 results match your criteria: "School of Public and Community Health Sciences University of Montana[Affiliation]"
J Occup Environ Med
March 2024
From the Center for Population Health Research, School of Public and Community Health Sciences University of Montana, Missoula, MT (M.Z.H., E.O.S., C.W.N.); Department of the Interior, Office of Wildland Fire, Boise, ID (K.N.D., L.K.M.).
Objective: The aim of the study is to compare subclinical measures of cardiovascular health among wildland firefighters (WFFs) to the US general population.
Methods: Our cross-sectional study compared body mass index, total cholesterol, and blood pressure in 11,051 WFFs aged 17 to 64 years using Department of the Interior Medical Screening Program clinical screening examinations between 2014-2018 to National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey of 2015-2016 cycle using adjusted logistic regression analyses.
Results: The logistic regression model shows significantly higher odds of hypertension and prehypertension in WFFs (2.
The coexistence of distinct alternative mating strategies (AMS) is often explained by mechanisms involving trade-offs between reproductive traits and lifetime fitness; yet their relative importance remains poorly understood. Here, we used an established individual-based, spatially explicit model to simulate bull trout () in the Skagit River (Washington, USA) and investigated the influence of female mating preference, sneaker-specific mortality, and variation in age-at-maturity on AMS persistence using global sensitivity analyses and boosted regression trees. We assumed that two genetically fixed AMS coexisted within the population: sneaker males (characterized by younger age-at-maturity, greater AMS-specific mortality, and lower reproductive fitness) and territorial males.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Modifiable risks for dementia are more prevalent in rural populations, yet there is a dearth of research examining life course rural residence on late-life cognitive decline.
Methods: The association of rural residence and socioeconomic status (SES) in childhood and adulthood with late-life cognitive domains (verbal episodic memory, executive function, and semantic memory) and cognitive decline in the Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences cohort was estimated using marginal structural models with stabilized inverse probability weights.
Results: After adjusting for time-varying SES, the estimated marginal effect of rural residence in childhood was harmful for both executive function ( = -0.
A lack of optimal gene combinations, as well as low levels of genetic diversity, is often associated with the formation of species range margins. Conservation efforts rely on predictive modelling using abiotic variables and assessments of genetic diversity to determine target species and populations for controlled breeding, germplasm conservation and assisted migration. Biotic factors such as interspecific competition and hybridization, however, are largely ignored, despite their prevalence across diverse taxa and their role as key evolutionary forces.
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