PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study: Racial/ethnic and language inequities in ways patients obtain COVID-19 testing

2021-07-13
(Press-News.org) The COVID-19 pandemic caused an unprecedented disruption to health care delivery, with resources shifted toward telehealth services and mass viral testing. While early studies in the pandemic highlighted differences in health care utilization among patients with commercial insurance, data from publicly insured or uninsured "safety-net" patient populations continue to emerge.

A recent study from researchers at the University of Minnesota and Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute (HHRI) is among the first to examine how different socio-demographic groups used telehealth, outpatient (i.e., clinic), emergency department and inpatient (i.e., hospital) care to test for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Their findings were recently published in JAMA Network Open.

The study was led by U of M School of Public Health graduate student Rohan Khazanchi. Along with others from Hennepin Healthcare and HHRI, researchers included Medical School Assistant Professor Tyler Winkelman, who is also with the U of M Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, and HHRI Data Scientist Peter Bodurtha. The team analyzed anonymous electronic health record data for people with symptoms of viral illness who received SARS-CoV-2 testing at Hennepin Healthcare, a large safety-net health system in Minneapolis.

The study found that:

Patients who initiated testing via telehealth were disproportionately white and English-speaking, whereas patients who initiated testing through the emergency department were disproportionately Black, Native American, non-English-speaking and had one or more pre-existing conditions. Testing initiated through telehealth and outpatient encounters was associated with lower rates of subsequent inpatient and intensive care unit care than testing initiated in more care-intensive settings, such as emergency departments. "Inequities by race, ethnicity and language in where people seek SARS-CoV-2 testing may point to several structural root causes, including barriers to timely testing access, delays in care seeking, difficulty accessing telehealth services, and higher rates of pre-existing conditions among patients who require higher levels of care," said Khazanchi.

The researchers also added that the inequities could be partially explained by clinician and clinic variations in telehealth use.

"Without structural reforms, rapid implementation of telehealth and other new services may exacerbate inequities in access to care, particularly if these investments come at the expense of other care sites," said Bodurtha.

The authors said that as investigators explore the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on health use and patient outcomes, future research should continue to examine how and why the health care use of safety-net patients differs from commercially insured individuals to inform equity-oriented interventions.

The study was supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (#UL1TR002494).


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Higher-order topological superconductivity in monolayer Fe(Te,Se)

Higher-order topological superconductivity in monolayer Fe(Te,Se)
2021-07-13
In particle physics, a Majorana Fermion is charge neutral and its antiparticle is just itself. In condensed matter physics, a Majorana zero mode (MZM) is a quasi-particle excitation, which appears in the surfaces or edges of topological superconductors. Unlike the ordinary particles or quasi-particles that obey boson or fermion statistics, MZM obeys non-abelian statistics, a key property that makes MZM the building block for realizing topological quantum computation. Currently major experimental efforts focus on heterostructures made of superconductors and spin-orbit coupled systems (such as semiconducting nano-wires and topological insulators), where evidences of MZMs have been found. Unambiguous detection and manipulation of MZMs in these heterostructures, ...

Mosquito-resistant clothing prevents bites in trials

2021-07-13
North Carolina State University researchers have created insecticide-free, mosquito-resistant clothing using textile materials they confirmed to be bite-proof in experiments with live mosquitoes. They developed the materials using a computational model of their own design, which describes the biting behavior of Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that carries viruses that cause human diseases like Zika, Dengue fever and yellow fever. Ultimately, the researchers reported in the journal Insects that they were able to prevent 100 percent of bites when a volunteer wore their clothing - a base layer undergarment and a combat shirt initially designed for the military - in a cage with 200 live, disease-free mosquitoes. Vector Textiles, an NC State startup company, ...

Photorhabdus Virulence Cassette as a causative agent in Photorhabdus asymbiotica

Photorhabdus Virulence Cassette as a causative agent in Photorhabdus asymbiotica
2021-07-13
Contractile injection systems (CISs) are widely distributed in bacteria and archaea that can form a nanomachine resembling the contractile tails of bacteriophage (T4, P2, etc.) to translocate proteins and nucleic acids . The P. asymbiotica was shown to be involved in the human infection with severe skin lesions. The PVC loci within P. asymbiotica genome produce molecular needle complexes and encode several putative effector genes. It would be a candidate P. asymbiotica weapon that participates in the attack of mammalian cells, but substantial evidences will be needed to verify this hypothesis. In this study, researchers have characterized the PAU_RS16575 as a potent PVC effector, which is widely present in bacteria. ...

High performance polarization sensitive photodetectors on 2D β-InSe

High performance polarization sensitive photodetectors on 2D β-InSe
2021-07-13
To extract the polarization information of incident light, polarization-sensitive photodetectors (PSPDs) exhibit significant practical application in both military and civil areas, like bio-imaging, remote sensing, night vision, and helmet-mounted sight for fighter plane. Optical filters combined with polarizers are usually needed for traditional photodetectors to realize polarized light detection. But it will increase the size and complexity of devices. To obtain a small-size PSPD, one-dimensional (1D) nanomaterials with geometrical anisotropy, such as nanowires, nanoribbons, and nanotubes, have been used as the sensitive materials for PSPDs, which can directly identify the polarization information of incident light without any optical filters and polarizers. However, it is not ...

Google trends, the COVID-19 vaccine and infertility misinformation

2021-07-13
Google searches related to infertility and coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccines increased by 34,900% after a pair of physicians submitted a petition questioning the safety and efficacy data of the COVID-19 Pfizer vaccine. Referencing the petition, anti-vaccine activists circulated claims that misconstrued the information regarding the possibility that the vaccine could impact fertility in women. The inaccurately represented information spread rapidly on social media channels, potentially influencing public perception and decision-making among pregnant patients or those ...

Less is more: the efficient brain structural and dynamic organization

Less is more: the efficient brain structural and dynamic organization
2021-07-13
The human brain has extreme ability in thinking and computation, but it only requires a very low energy power of about 20W, which is much lower than that of electronic computers. The neuronal connections in the brain network have a globally sparse but locally compact modular topological characteristics, which greatly reduces the total resource consumption for establishing the connections. The spikes of each neuron in the brain are sparse and irregular, and the clustered firing of the neuronal populations has a certain degree of synchronization, forming neural avalanches with scale-free characteristics, and the network can sensitively respond to external stimuli. However, it is still not clear how the ...

US citizen migrant children in Mexico lacking adequate health insurance

US citizen migrant children in Mexico lacking adequate health insurance
2021-07-13
While attending a conference at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Mexico City several years ago, Sharon Borja was struck by the story of a young man who, as a child, joined his parents repatriating to their native country of Mexico. Like millions of Mexican immigrants, the family had called the United States home for years, and having been born in the U.S., he was an American citizen. Walking one day in his newfound urban Mexican neighborhood, a couple carrying a wooden stick approached him on the street and encouraged him to ...

Cuts to local government funding in recent years cost lives, study finds

2021-07-13
A new study from researchers at the University of Liverpool shows that decreasing local government funding over recent years probably contributed to declines in life expectancy in some areas of England, which was stalling even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Local government funding and life expectancy in England, a longitudinal ecological study published in The Lancet Public Health, linked annual local government funding data from the Ministry of Housing, Communities, and Local Government with life expectancy and mortality data from Public Health England between 2013 and 2017. Corresponding author Dr Alexandros ...

ICE violated internal medical standards, potentially contributing to deaths

2021-07-13
A USC analysis of deaths among individuals in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody found that ICE violated its own internal medical care standards in 78% of cases, potentially contributing to deaths in relatively young and healthy men. The study appears in END ...

Language isolation affects health of Mexican Americans

2021-07-13
New research from the University of Georgia finds that older Mexican Americans who live in low English-speaking neighborhoods are at greater risk for poor health and even an early death. Language barriers can be a significant deterrent to health. People who don't speak English well are less likely to seek health care or receive health information. This can lead to delay of care and missed health screenings for chronic disease and cancers. Language isolation is also linked to poor mental health. These issues only compound as non-English speakers age, said study co-author Kerstin Emerson, a clinical ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Toxic chemicals can be detected with new AI method

The people who are most active on social media are also the most active offline

Climate is one culprit in spread and growth of dust in Middle East

Gene signatures from tissue-resident T cells as a predictive tool for melanoma patients

FAU creates new Department of Biomedical Engineering

Program announced for NUTRITION 2024 to be held June 29–July 2

A link between breast changes and … UTIs?

Researchers create new chemical compound to solve 120-year-old problem

Four state-of-the-art, artificial intelligence search engines for histopathology images may not be ready for clinical use

Young adults reduced drinking during and after pandemic

Random robots are more reliable

Why do male chicks play more than females? Study finds answers in distant ancestor

When good bacteria go bad - New links between bacteremia and probiotic use

MCG scientists identify new treatment target for leading cause of blindness

Promising new treatment strategy for deadly flu-related brain disorders

Scientists’ new approach in fight against counterfeit alcohol spirits

Cost-effective, high-capacity, and cyclable lithium-ion battery cathodes

Artificial intelligence enhances monitoring of threatened marbled murrelet

The solution to kidney bleeding and recovery lies within a hemostasis sponge, using the inherent capabilities of the kidneys

Sylvester Cancer adding cellular therapy to its arsenal against metastatic melanoma

Study finds biomarkers for psychiatric symptoms in patients with rare genetic condition 22q

Medical school scientist creates therapy to kill hypervirulent bacteria

New study supports psilocybin’s potential as an antidepressant

The Lancet Public Health: Global study reveals stark differences between females and males in major causes of disease burden, underscoring the need for gender-responsive approaches to health

Revealed: face of 75,000-year-old female Neanderthal from cave where species buried their dead

Hepatitis B is globally underassessed and undertreated, especially among women and Asian minorities in the West

Efficient stochastic parallel gradient descent training for on-chip optical processors

Liquid crystal-integrated metasurfaces for an active photonic platform

Unraveling the efficiency losses and improving methods in quantum dot-based infrared up-conversion photodetectors

A novel deep proteomic approach unveils molecular signatures affected by aging and resistance training

[Press-News.org] Study: Racial/ethnic and language inequities in ways patients obtain COVID-19 testing