MPH News
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Collegiate golfers and tennis players reportedly underuse sunscreen; habits may be attributable to increase in melanoma cases, says Karpinos
Collegiate tennis players aren’t using enough sunscreen, a new survey finds. And collegiate golfers aren’t either. As reported in Clinics in Dermatology, Georgina Sellyn, MA, Ashley Karpinos, MD, MPH, and research partners surveyed members of tennis and golf teams in five National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I conferences. Spending up to four hours per… Read MoreJan. 9, 2024
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Gastineau and colleagues find youth who suffer nonfatal firearm injuries experience greater likelihood for future health issues
According to a recent study released in Pediatrics, youth who suffer nonfatal firearm injuries have a significantly increased risk of hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits, outpatient visits and costs in the 12 months following injury compared to youth without a firearm injury. “We’ve seen firearm injuries in youth dramatically climb over… Read MoreJan. 8, 2024
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Halasa and colleagues find infants in intensive care for RSV did not have preexisting conditions
New study findings from JAMA Network Open announced that most infants that were admitted to the intensive care or high acuity unit during fall of 2022 due to infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) were healthy and born at term prior to infection. The study results aid preventative interactions to protect… Read MoreDec. 22, 2023
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Acknowledging traditional definitions of health care-associated influenza can lead to gross undercounting of patient cases, says Talbot
The traditional definition of health care-associated influenza leads to gross undercounting, a recent study suggests. As reported in Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, Erin Gettler, MD, Thomas Talbot, MD, MPH, and colleagues analyzed data on 5,904 patients from eight counties in Middle Tennessee who were hospitalized with influenza from 2012 to 2019. Only 147… Read MoreDec. 21, 2023
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Belcher and colleagues advocate for more in-depth audiology screenings in infants with cleft palates to minimize risks of hearing loss
Newborn screening alone cannot fully predict hearing loss in children born with a cleft palate. Hazards faced by children born with cleft palate include the risk of temporary or permanent hearing loss, particularly before their palate is repaired between 9 and 12 months. During this time, these babies are… Read MoreDec. 13, 2023
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Cooper named interim chair of the Department of Pediatrics
William Cooper, MD, MPH, Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Pediatrics and Health Policy and Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs for Vanderbilt University School of Medicine (VUSM) has been named Interim chair of the Department of Pediatrics. He will assume this role Feb. 1, 2024. Cooper succeeds Steven Webber, MBChB, MRCP, James… Read MoreDec. 12, 2023
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Hung and colleagues challenge NOSTONE trial and reaffirm positive attributes of thiazide diuretics for kidney stone protection
A new Vanderbilt University Medical Center genetic association study of more than 1 million adults supports the use of thiazide diuretics for kidney stone prevention. Kidney stones affect nearly 10% of the global population. For more than three decades, thiazide diuretics, a common medication used for high blood pressure, have… Read MoreDec. 11, 2023
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VUMC receives $10 million research award; Heerman to lead study on childhood obesity interventions in rural and minority communities in Tennessee and Louisiana
Vanderbilt University Medical Center has received a $10 million, five-year research funding award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) to study the ideal “dose” of behavioral interventions to treat childhood obesity in rural and minority communities across Tennessee and Louisiana. Bill Heerman, MD, MPH, chief of the Division of… Read MoreDec. 6, 2023
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Study finds many patients don’t seek more health services after receiving genetic screening results, says Wilmayani and colleagues
If you sequence the DNA of adult research participants with respect to pathologic variants that, if found, could be expected to prompt diagnostic tests and perhaps also preventive measures, and you return that information to participants and their doctors along with preventive care recommendations, many of those found at risk… Read MoreNov. 24, 2023
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Iron storage “spheres” inside the bacterium C. diff may offer targets for drug therapy, says Nicholson and colleagues
Iron storage “spheres” inside the bacterium C. diff — the leading cause of hospital-acquired infections — could offer new targets for antibacterial drugs to combat the pathogen. A team of Vanderbilt researchers discovered that C. diff (Clostridioides difficile) produces the spheres, called ferrosomes, and that these structures are important for… Read MoreNov. 22, 2023