2019
Cognitive Impairment and Cardiovascular Disease: A Comparison of Risk Factors, Disability, Quality of Life, and Access to Health Care
Adams M, Grandpre J, Katz D, Shenson D. Cognitive Impairment and Cardiovascular Disease: A Comparison of Risk Factors, Disability, Quality of Life, and Access to Health Care. Public Health Reports 2019, 135: 132-140. PMID: 31835014, PMCID: PMC7119259, DOI: 10.1177/0033354919893030.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAge FactorsAgedAged, 80 and overBehavioral Risk Factor Surveillance SystemBlood PressureCardiovascular DiseasesCognitive DysfunctionDiabetes MellitusDietDisabled PersonsFemaleHealth BehaviorHealth Services AccessibilityHumansLipidsMaleMiddle AgedObesityQuality of LifeRisk FactorsSedentary BehaviorSeverity of Illness IndexSex FactorsSmokingSocioeconomic FactorsConceptsPopulation attributable riskSubjective cognitive impairmentRisk factorsCardiovascular diseaseQuality of lifeHigh cholesterolSedentary lifestyleHealth careCognitive impairmentModifiable risk factorsDevelopment of dementiaRisk of dementiaMeasures of disabilityHealth-related measuresCurrent smokingInadequate fruitCVD interventionsDisability measuresVegetable consumptionKey outcomesLinear associationAdultsImpairmentWorse accessHypertension
2012
Clinical preventive services for older adults: the interface between personal health care and public health services.
Ogden L, Richards C, Shenson D. Clinical preventive services for older adults: the interface between personal health care and public health services. American Journal Of Public Health 2012, 102: 419-25. PMID: 22390505, PMCID: PMC3487658, DOI: 10.2105/ajph.2011.300353.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsClinical preventive servicesPreventive servicesHealth servicesPersonal health servicesPublic health servicesCare barriersHealth outcomesPersonal health systemsClinical settingCommunity settingsHealth disparitiesHealth systemHealthy agingOlder adultsPopulation healthHealth careHealth resultsPersonal health carePrevention programmingSignificant reductionHealth spendingAdultsImproved collaborationMorbidityMortality