Featured Publications
Aging Hearts in a Hotter, More Turbulent World: The Impacts of Climate Change on the Cardiovascular Health of Older Adults
Chang A, Tan A, Nadeau K, Odden M. Aging Hearts in a Hotter, More Turbulent World: The Impacts of Climate Change on the Cardiovascular Health of Older Adults. Current Cardiology Reports 2022, 24: 749-760. PMID: 35438387, PMCID: PMC9017408, DOI: 10.1007/s11886-022-01693-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsOlder adultsDisproportionate health burdenLow socioeconomic statusAging populationPolicy-level interventionsEthnic minority groupsCardiovascular risk factorsMultiple environmental hazardsSocioeconomic statusCardiovascular healthHeart healthHealth burdenRisk factorsCardiovascular wellbeingCardiovascular diseaseReviewClimate changeMinority groupsPhysiological vulnerabilityIntensifying air pollutionAdultsHealthImpacts of climate changeData sourcesPoor outcomeAir pollutionThe Need to Expand the Framework of Environmental Determinants of Cardiovascular Health From Climate Change to Planetary Health
Chang A, Barry M, Harrington R. The Need to Expand the Framework of Environmental Determinants of Cardiovascular Health From Climate Change to Planetary Health. Circulation 2021, 143: 2029-2031. PMID: 34029138, DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.120.051892.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchThe impact of novel coronavirus COVID‐19 on noncommunicable disease patients and health systems: a review
Chang A, Cullen M, Harrington R, Barry M. The impact of novel coronavirus COVID‐19 on noncommunicable disease patients and health systems: a review. Journal Of Internal Medicine 2020, 289: 450-462. PMID: 33020988, PMCID: PMC7675448, DOI: 10.1111/joim.13184.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHealth system factorsNoncommunicable disease patientsNoncommunicable diseasesHealth systemLevels of health systemsSystemic factorsCare of patientsDisease-specific factorsPublic health measuresCare providersNCD patientsDisproportionate burdenHealth measuresCOVID-19Society statementEndocrine disordersPatientsCareLong-term effectsDisease patientsHealthDiseasePandemic disruptionCoronavirus diseaseProviders
2024
Interviewer biases in medical survey data: The example of blood pressure measurements
Geldsetzer P, Chang A, Meijer E, Sudharsanan N, Charu V, Kramlinger P, Haarburger R. Interviewer biases in medical survey data: The example of blood pressure measurements. PNAS Nexus 2024, 3: pgae109. PMID: 38525305, PMCID: PMC10959064, DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae109.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBlood pressure measurementsHealth SurveyGlobal health indicatorsMiddle-income countriesInterviewer effectsHypertension prevalenceBlood pressureHealth agenciesLinear mixed modelsHealth indicatorsPhysical measurementsPrevalence estimatesSystolic blood pressurePressure measurementsGlobal SouthHealthInterviewsSubdistrict levelIndividual factorsSurvey dataMedical survey dataInterview techniquesMixed modelsRandom effectsProportion of variation