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Jan 09, 2023
South Florida Sun Sentinel

COVID-19 activity is picking up as a new subtype of the omicron variant - XBB.1.5 - makes its way across the United States.

Florida State University College of Medicine's Daniel Van Durme, M.D., said the new subvariant seems to bypass previous immunity and resist treatments such a monoclonal antibodies, though there has not been enough research to determine whether XBB.1.5 will be more severe than its predecessors.

"Get the newest booster," Van Durme said. "It can keep you out of the hospital and can literally save your life."

 

Gerend studies Black, Latina, and sexual minority women health discrimination

Dec 14, 2022

Mary Gerend, Ph.D., and her co-authors Cylena Stewart, medical student, and Karen Wetzel, graduate student, have studied intersectional issues regarding weight, race, and sexual discrimination. Relatively little is known of how weight discrimination interacts with other forms of negative bias. 

The study identified several key factors regarding the amplification of negative treatment and health consequences regarding socially marginalized women with high body weight. 

Read the study here.

Millender and Wong Examine Dating Violence Among Adolescents

Jan 01, 2022

Eugenia Millender and Frank Wong are joined by other researchers in studying the lasting effects of adolescent dating violence (ADV) on youth well-being and development in Panama. Their findings conclude that a majority of the participants experienced some form of ADV at least once on an emotional, physical, or sexual front, though the proportions differed based on gender. The high report rate of ADV in urban public schools in panama support the need for programs to address ADV.

Read the Study

Zhe He Publication on Cognitive Training for Older Adults

Nov 17, 2022

Dr. Zhe He, with others, have proposed that developing cognitive training interventions for those with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), Alzheimer's disease, and other forms of dementia will require lapses in adherence to be predictable. This is so that such interventions can be engaged in at optimal points in time. This is one of the earliest studies done to predict older adults' daily adherence to cognitive training programs with advanced machine learning techniques. 

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African American Alzheimer's Caregiver Pilot Study Outcome

Nov 01, 2022

Dr. Robert L. Gluecklauf (et al.) analyzed the outcomes of the African American Alzheimer's Caregiver Training and Support Project 2 pilot. The objectives being analyzed included caregiver depression, health status, burden, quality of relationships, and social support within a 12-week training program of skill-building and problem-solving sessions. 

Overall, the results of the study were promising with a larger sample size being needed to confirm the reliability of these methods. 

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Ennis Study Assesses Tuberculosis Risk among HIV Patients

Aug 04, 2022

Nicole Ennis, Ph.D., along with others, examined the factors linked with tuberculosis among people who lived with HIV in Florida via medical documentation and self-reporting. Tuberculosis prevalence was higher in self-reporting than in documentation, with the highest self-reporting demographic being older, homeless African Americans. 

The use of self-reporting combined with screening test confirmation would help in establishing the true prevalence of tuberculosis and associated risk factors of those living with HIV. 

Read the Study

Nair-Collins on the Social Status of Brain Death

Mar 17, 2022

Michael Nair-Collins puts forth this essay regarding the definition of the irreversible coma and brain death. The essay emphasizes the aspect of compulsorily applying the status of "corpse", socially and legally, to a living human body. 

Read the Essay