2021
Lessons Learned From COVID-19 Contact Tracing During a Public Health Emergency: A Prospective Implementation Study
Shelby T, Schenck C, Weeks B, Goodwin J, Hennein R, Zhou X, Spiegelman D, Grau LE, Niccolai L, Bond M, Davis JL. Lessons Learned From COVID-19 Contact Tracing During a Public Health Emergency: A Prospective Implementation Study. Frontiers In Public Health 2021, 9: 721952. PMID: 34490198, PMCID: PMC8417826, DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.721952.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsProspective implementation studyOutreach callsContact tracingAge-related disparitiesPublic health nursesRE-AIM implementation frameworkMultivariable regression modelsTimeliness of caseImplementation studyPublic health responsePublic health emergencyMedian timeHealth nursesAfrican American casesHealth responseInfectious diseasesFuture epidemicsDays of exposureHealth emergencyCOVID-19System-level predictorsRegression modelsCOVID-19 Contact TracingDaysPredictors
2018
Barriers to medication adherence and links to cardiovascular disease risk factor control: the Framingham Heart Study
Hennein R, Hwang S, Au R, Levy D, Muntner P, Fox CS, Ma J. Barriers to medication adherence and links to cardiovascular disease risk factor control: the Framingham Heart Study. Internal Medicine Journal 2018, 48: 414-421. PMID: 29193523, PMCID: PMC5889324, DOI: 10.1111/imj.13687.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCVD risk factorsMini-Mental State ExaminationMedication adherenceLow adherenceRisk factorsFramingham Heart StudyCardiovascular diseaseDepressive symptomsHeart StudyCardiovascular disease risk factor controlHigher mean diastolic blood pressureMean low-density lipoprotein cholesterolFour-item Morisky Medication Adherence ScaleMean diastolic blood pressureMedian age 70 yearsLow-density lipoprotein cholesterolMorisky Medication Adherence ScaleFive-unit increaseRisk factor controlLipid-lowering medicationsDiastolic blood pressureMedication Adherence ScaleAge 70 yearsLow medication adherenceCES-D scoresImproved Diet Quality Associates With Reduction in Liver Fat, Particularly in Individuals With High Genetic Risk Scores for Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
Ma J, Hennein R, Liu C, Long MT, Hoffmann U, Jacques PF, Lichtenstein AH, Hu FB, Levy D. Improved Diet Quality Associates With Reduction in Liver Fat, Particularly in Individuals With High Genetic Risk Scores for Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. Gastroenterology 2018, 155: 107-117. PMID: 29604292, PMCID: PMC6035111, DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2018.03.038.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMediterranean-style diet scoreNonalcoholic fatty liver diseaseAlternative Healthy Eating IndexGenetic risk scoreHigh genetic risk scoreDiet quality changesIncident fatty liverFatty liver diseaseLiver fat accumulationFatty liverDiet scoreLiver fatRisk scoreFramingham Heart StudyAHEI scoreLiver diseaseFat accumulationHeart StudyHarvard Food Frequency QuestionnaireDiet qualityFood frequency questionnaireThird Generation cohortsHealthy Eating IndexAssociation of changesStandard deviation increase