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

Financial hardship and employment loss among adults with disabilities during COVID-19

JAMA Network Open

2023-03-16
(Press-News.org) About The Study: This survey study found that people with disabilities were more likely to report household employment loss and financial hardship during the initial COVID-19 pandemic, which are especially pronounced among racial and ethnic minority respondents. These findings suggest people with disabilities may be disproportionately affected by the initial pandemic and may require additional resources and policy strategies (e.g., training programs, workplace accommodations) as several labor markets adapt to the pandemic (e.g., shifting to remote working). 

Authors: Kea Turner, Ph.D., M.P.H., M.A., of the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute in Tampa, is the corresponding author. 

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ 

(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.3364)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

#  #  #

Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time http://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.3364?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=031623

About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Readmission rates, episode costs for Alzheimer disease and related dementias

2023-03-16
About The Study: In this study of 722,000 hospitalization episodes, patients with Alzheimer disease and related dementias (ADRD) had higher readmission rates and overall readmission and episode costs than their counterparts without ADRD. Hospitals may need to be better equipped to care for patients with ADRD, especially in the post-discharge period. Considering that any type of hospitalization may put patients with ADRD at a high risk of 30-day readmission, judicious preoperative assessment, postoperative discharge, and ...

Preterm babies do not habituate to repeated pain

2023-03-16
Preterm infants do not get used to repeated pain in the way that full-term infants, children and adults do habituate to pain, finds a study led by UCL (University College London) researchers. The authors of the new Current Biology paper say that if preterm infants have not yet developed the mechanism that enables people to get used to moderate pain, medical procedures in their first few weeks of life could potentially impact their development. Lead author Dr Lorenzo Fabrizi (UCL Neuroscience, Physiology & Pharmacology) said: “The way that we can get used to things can be seen as the simplest example of behavioural and brain plasticity, and it is ...

Compressive stress shapes the symmetry of Arabidopsis root vascular tissue

Compressive stress shapes the symmetry of Arabidopsis root vascular tissue
2023-03-16
Ikoma, Japan – The generation and maintenance of tissue boundaries are fundamental to the development of functional organs in both plants and animals. In general, tissue boundaries are initially set among primordial cells, and their shapes and arrangements are refined during subsequent organ growth. In this process, cell migration plays a curtail role for boundary refinement in animal systems, however, plant tissue lacks such cell fluidity due to its cell walls. Despite significant progress in understanding the initial patterning of tissue boundaries in several ...

How countries can benefit from linking data

2023-03-16
A recent study makes it clear: Countries like Sweden that can link data from different areas - such as the labor market and health care - have a decisive advantage when it comes to setting targeted actions. A research team from the Complexity Science Hub, together with scientists from Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands, investigated the extent to which mental and somatic illnesses influence integration into the labor market and whether there is a difference here between refugee and Swedish-born young adults. "In total, we analyzed ...

Pusan National University researchers examine combined effects of two combustion technologies on the emission of coal-fired boilers

Pusan National University researchers examine combined effects of two combustion technologies on the emission of coal-fired boilers
2023-03-16
Coal-fired power plants have been in place for a long time to meet the global demands for power generation. Needless to say, there are environmental and human health concerns to be addressed on this front. While there are ongoing efforts to transition to renewable energy resources, coal-fired power plants may not become obsolete just yet. Against this backdrop, it is pertinent to explore how the efficiency of these coal-fired boilers can be improved while mitigating their harmful effects on the environment, namely greenhouse gas emissions, acid rain, and photochemical smog generation, and the human health. To this end, various ...

Bottled water masks world’s failure to supply safe water for all, can slow sustainable development: UN

Bottled water masks world’s failure to supply safe water for all, can slow sustainable development: UN
2023-03-16
The rapidly-growing bottled water industry can undermine progress towards a key sustainable development goal: safe water for all, says a new United Nations report.   Based on an analysis of literature and data from 109 countries, the report says that in just five decades bottled water has developed into “a major and essentially standalone economic sector,” experiencing 73% growth from 2010 to 2020. And sales are expected to almost double by 2030, from US$ 270 billion to $500 billion. Released ...

Quantifying the life expectancy gap for people living with sickle cell disease

2023-03-16
(WASHINGTON, March 16, 2023) – While research has long established disparities in health outcomes among individuals living with sickle cell disease (SCD), few studies have quantified these gaps. A new study published in Blood Advances finds that the average life expectancy of publicly insured patients living with SCD is roughly 52.6 years. In contrast, the CDC reports that the average life expectancy in the United States is 73.5 years for men and 79.3 years for women, demonstrating the considerable ...

Genetics as conservation tool for endangered chimpanzees

Genetics as conservation tool for endangered chimpanzees
2023-03-16
The western chimpanzees of Guinea are threatened by mining activities. Using a novel genetic approach, UZH researchers and an international team have collected information on population size and community structure of the endangered species. These data provide an important baseline to assess the impact of mining. The western chimpanzee is listed as “Critically Endangered” on the Red List of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. The Mount Nimba Strict Nature Reserve, a UNESCO World Heritage site, located on the borders of Guinea, Liberia and Côte ...

CityU scientists develop energy-saving, tunable meta-devices for high-precision, secure 6G communications

CityU scientists develop energy-saving, tunable meta-devices for high-precision, secure 6G communications
2023-03-16
The future of wireless communications is set to take a giant leap with the advent of sixth-generation (6G) wireless technology. A research team at City University of Hong Kong (CityU) invented a groundbreaking tunable terahertz (THz) meta-device that can control the radiation direction and coverage area of THz beams. By rotating its metasurface, the device can promptly direct the 6G signal only to a designated recipient, minimizing power leakage and enhancing privacy. It is expected to provide a highly adjustable, directional and secure means for future 6G communications systems. The potential of THz band technology ...

Ochsner Health advances precision medicine, becomes national leader in universal genomic testing for chemotherapy

2023-03-16
New Orleans, Louisiana – Ochsner Health is leading the way for precision medicine nationwide by becoming one of the first hospital systems to standardize genomic testing, significantly advancing ways in which care teams can treat cancer patients. This change helps providers determine individualized treatment by understanding how patients will react to certain drugs, thereby lowering risk of adverse side effects, improving patient experience, and bettering patient outcomes. Pharmacogenomics, or PGx, testing guides physicians how patients metabolize certain drugs and warns of possible side effects so they may ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Tracing the quick synthesis of an industrially important catalyst

New software sheds light on cancer’s hidden genetic networks

UT Health San Antonio awarded $3 million in CPRIT grants to bolster cancer research and prevention efforts in South Texas

Third symposium spotlights global challenge of new contaminants in China’s fight against pollution

From straw to soil harmony: International team reveals how biochar supercharges carbon-smart farming

Myeloma: How AI is redrawing the map of cancer care

Manhattan E. Charurat, Ph.D., MHS invested as the Homer and Martha Gudelsky Distinguished Professor in Medicine at the University of Maryland School of Medicine

Insilico Medicine’s Pharma.AI Q4 Winter Launch Recap: Revolutionizing drug discovery with cutting-edge AI innovations, accelerating the path to pharmaceutical superintelligence

Nanoplastics have diet-dependent impacts on digestive system health

Brain neuron death occurs throughout life and increases with age, a natural human protein drug may halt neuron death in Alzheimer’s disease

SPIE and CLP announce the recipients of the 2025 Advanced Photonics Young Innovator Award

Lessons from the Caldor Fire’s Christmas Valley ‘Miracle’

Ant societies rose by trading individual protection for collective power

Research reveals how ancient viral DNA shapes early embryonic development

A molecular gatekeeper that controls protein synthesis

New ‘cloaking device’ concept to shield sensitive tech from magnetic fields

Researchers show impact of mountain building and climate change on alpine biodiversity

Study models the transition from Neanderthals to modern humans in Europe

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on AI-driven skilling to reduce burnout and restore worker autonomy

AIs fail at the game of visual “telephone”

The levers for a sustainable food system

Potential changes in US homelessness by ending federal support for housing first programs

Vulnerability of large language models to prompt injection when providing medical advice

Researchers develop new system for high-energy-density, long-life, multi-electron transfer bromine-based flow batteries

Ending federal support for housing first programs could increase U.S. homelessness by 5% in one year, new JAMA study finds

New research uncovers molecular ‘safety switch’ shielding cancers from immune attack

Bacteria resisting viral infection can still sink carbon to ocean floor

Younger biological age may increase depression risk in older women during COVID-19

Bharat Innovates 2026 National Basecamp Showcases India’s Most Promising Deep-Tech Ventures

Here’s what determines whether your income level rises or falls

[Press-News.org] Financial hardship and employment loss among adults with disabilities during COVID-19
JAMA Network Open