8 results match your criteria: "The Social Policy Research Institute[Affiliation]"
Gerontology
May 2019
Illinois Citizens for Better Care, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Background: Studies have demonstrated that measures of lower quality of care and associated adverse health effects are more prevalent in for-profit nursing homes compared to not-for-profit facilities. However, these studies omit persons who receive care in the community setting, and exclusively focus on isolated clinical signs that may obscure the true effect size, since these clinical signs rarely occur in isolation.
Objective: In this study, we use the Clinical Signs of Neglect Scale (CSNS), which is an aggregate measure of clinical signs of neglect and substandard care, to evaluate the association of residence type on health outcomes among individuals living in both private community residences and for-profit and not-for-profit long-term care facilities.
J Elder Abuse Negl
July 2018
f Illinois Citizens for Better Care , Chicago , Illinois , USA.
Elder neglect is the one of the most pervasive forms of mistreatment, and often the only place outside of the individual's residence to identify and assist neglected individuals is in a medical setting. However, elder neglect cases treated in hospitals do not present with a single diagnosis or clinical sign, but rather involve a complex constellation of clinical signs. Currently, there is a lack of comprehensive guidelines on which clinical signs to use in screening tools for neglect among patients treated in hospitals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Occup Environ Med
September 2016
University of Illinois, School of Public Health, Division of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, Chicago; and The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, IL The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, IL.
J Occup Environ Med
March 2016
University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health (L Friedman); and The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, Illinois (M Friedman).
Objectives: To date, there is no comprehensive analysis of the relationship between financial conflict of interest (COI) and a potential publication bias in environmental and occupational health studies.
Methods: We analyzed original research articles published in 2012 in 17 peer-reviewed journals. Multivariable ordinal logistic regression models were developed to evaluate the relationship between financial COI and the study outcome.
Alcohol
June 2014
University of Illinois, School of Public Health, Division of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, Chicago, IL 60612, USA; The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, IL 60076, USA. Electronic address:
Alcohol increases the risk of injuring oneself and others. However, following an injury there appears to be a benefit to alcohol in mediating the body's response to a traumatic injury and reducing mortality. The physiological mechanism underlying this reported association is poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Occup Environ Health
June 2006
The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, Illinois 60076, USA.
The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) has outlined ethical guidelines concerning the advertising practices of peer-reviewed journals that briefly discuss issues of excessive and disproportionate advertising. The authors evaluated these guidelines using quantitative data, assessing the types and frequencies of advertising in 2001 print issues of NEJM and JAMA, two principal members of ICMJE. Advertising ratios (ratio of advertisements to editorial content) were near unity in NEJM and 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Intern Med
January 2004
The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, Illinois 60076, USA.
Context: To date, research regarding the influence of conflicts of interest on the presentation of findings by researchers has been limited.
Objective: To evaluate the sources of funding for published manuscripts, and association between reported findings and conflicts of interest.
Methods: Data from both print and electronic issues of The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) and The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) were analyzed for sources of funding, areas of investigation, conflict of interest (COI), and presentation of results.
Arch Environ Health
March 2003
The Social Policy Research Institute, Skokie, Illinois 60076, USA.
In this study, the authors describe 2 patients who experienced confirmed exposures to anticholinesterases that commenced in the 1970s. Subsequently, elevations in creatine phosphate kinase (CPK) were initially detected more than a decade following the first acute exposure. Beginning in the early 1980s, the patients suffered from progressive generalized muscle weakness, chronic fatigue, myopathy, neuropathy, and severe neurobehavioral impairments.
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