2015
Cigarette smoking and emergency care utilization among asthmatic adults in the 2011 Asthma Call-back Survey
Khokhawalla S, Rosenthal S, Pearlman D, Triche E. Cigarette smoking and emergency care utilization among asthmatic adults in the 2011 Asthma Call-back Survey. Journal Of Asthma 2015, 52: 732-739. PMID: 25563058, DOI: 10.3109/02770903.2015.1004337.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAsthma Call-back SurveyUrgent visitsCall-back SurveyAsthmatic adultsFormer smokersEmergency departmentEmergency careCurrent smokersED visitsEmergency care useEmergency care visitsCessation of smokingCross-sectional study designEmergency care utilizationMultivariable logistic regressionPopulation attributable riskPopulation-based estimatesHealth care costsFormer smokingAdult asthmaticsCare visitsCurrent smokingCare utilizationSmoking statusCigarette smoking
2014
Low-to-moderate prenatal alcohol consumption and the risk of selected birth outcomes: a prospective cohort study
Lundsberg LS, Illuzzi JL, Belanger K, Triche EW, Bracken MB. Low-to-moderate prenatal alcohol consumption and the risk of selected birth outcomes: a prospective cohort study. Annals Of Epidemiology 2014, 25: 46-54.e3. PMID: 25453352, PMCID: PMC4255148, DOI: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2014.10.011.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAlcohol DrinkingConfidence IntervalsConfounding Factors, EpidemiologicConnecticutFemaleFetal Growth RetardationGestational AgeHumansInfant, Low Birth WeightInfant, NewbornLogistic ModelsMassachusettsMaternal-Fetal ExchangeOdds RatioPregnancyPregnancy ComplicationsPregnancy OutcomePremature BirthProspective StudiesRisk FactorsConceptsIntrauterine growth restrictionLow birthweightPreterm deliveryBirth lengthBirth outcomesGrowth restrictionAlcohol exposureOdds ratioLower oddsModerate prenatal alcohol exposureModerate alcohol exposureThird-trimester drinkingProspective cohort studyMultivariable logistic regressionConfidence intervalsPrenatal alcohol consumptionPrenatal alcohol exposurePregnancy drinkingNeonatal outcomesPerinatal outcomesSingleton infantsCohort studyAlcohol drinkingReduced oddsHead circumference