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Racial and Ethnic Inequities in Development of Type 2 Diabetes After Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
CONCLUSION: Population-based racial and ethnic inequities are substantial in type 2 diabetes after GDM. Characteristics at the time of delivery partially explain disparities, creating an opportunity to intervene on life-course cardiometabolic inequities, whereas weak associations of common social or structural measures and BMI in Black, Hispanic and South and Southeast Asian individuals demonstrate the need for greater understanding of how structural racism influences postpartum cardiometabolic risk in these groups.PMID:37678923 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005324
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Teresa Janevic Katharine McCarthy Shelley H Liu Mary Huyhn Joseph Kennedy Hiu Tai Chan Victoria L Mayer Luciana Vieira Bahman Tabaei Frances Howell Elizabeth Howell Gretchen Van Wye Source Type: research

Association Among Race, Ethnicity, Insurance Type, and Postpartum Permanent Contraception Fulfillment
CONCLUSION: In unadjusted models, we find marked racial disparities in fulfillment of permanent contraception. Controlling for individual- and facility-level factors eliminated associations among race, ethnicity, insurance type, and fulfillment, likely because covariates are mediators on the pathway between racism and fulfillment.PMID:37678912 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005328
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Brooke W Bullington Kristen A Berg Emily S Miller Margaret Boozer Tania Serna Jennifer L Bailit Kavita Shah Arora Source Type: research

Racial and Ethnic Inequities in Development of Type 2 Diabetes After Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
CONCLUSION: Population-based racial and ethnic inequities are substantial in type 2 diabetes after GDM. Characteristics at the time of delivery partially explain disparities, creating an opportunity to intervene on life-course cardiometabolic inequities, whereas weak associations of common social or structural measures and BMI in Black, Hispanic and South and Southeast Asian individuals demonstrate the need for greater understanding of how structural racism influences postpartum cardiometabolic risk in these groups.PMID:37678923 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005324
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Teresa Janevic Katharine McCarthy Shelley H Liu Mary Huyhn Joseph Kennedy Hiu Tai Chan Victoria L Mayer Luciana Vieira Bahman Tabaei Frances Howell Elizabeth Howell Gretchen Van Wye Source Type: research

Association Among Race, Ethnicity, Insurance Type, and Postpartum Permanent Contraception Fulfillment
CONCLUSION: In unadjusted models, we find marked racial disparities in fulfillment of permanent contraception. Controlling for individual- and facility-level factors eliminated associations among race, ethnicity, insurance type, and fulfillment, likely because covariates are mediators on the pathway between racism and fulfillment.PMID:37678912 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005328
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Brooke W Bullington Kristen A Berg Emily S Miller Margaret Boozer Tania Serna Jennifer L Bailit Kavita Shah Arora Source Type: research

Racial and Ethnic Inequities in Development of Type 2 Diabetes After Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
CONCLUSION: Population-based racial and ethnic inequities are substantial in type 2 diabetes after GDM. Characteristics at the time of delivery partially explain disparities, creating an opportunity to intervene on life-course cardiometabolic inequities, whereas weak associations of common social or structural measures and BMI in Black, Hispanic and South and Southeast Asian individuals demonstrate the need for greater understanding of how structural racism influences postpartum cardiometabolic risk in these groups.PMID:37678923 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005324
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Teresa Janevic Katharine McCarthy Shelley H Liu Mary Huyhn Joseph Kennedy Hiu Tai Chan Victoria L Mayer Luciana Vieira Bahman Tabaei Frances Howell Elizabeth Howell Gretchen Van Wye Source Type: research

Association Among Race, Ethnicity, Insurance Type, and Postpartum Permanent Contraception Fulfillment
CONCLUSION: In unadjusted models, we find marked racial disparities in fulfillment of permanent contraception. Controlling for individual- and facility-level factors eliminated associations among race, ethnicity, insurance type, and fulfillment, likely because covariates are mediators on the pathway between racism and fulfillment.PMID:37678912 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005328
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Brooke W Bullington Kristen A Berg Emily S Miller Margaret Boozer Tania Serna Jennifer L Bailit Kavita Shah Arora Source Type: research

Racial and Ethnic Inequities in Development of Type 2 Diabetes After Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
CONCLUSION: Population-based racial and ethnic inequities are substantial in type 2 diabetes after GDM. Characteristics at the time of delivery partially explain disparities, creating an opportunity to intervene on life-course cardiometabolic inequities, whereas weak associations of common social or structural measures and BMI in Black, Hispanic and South and Southeast Asian individuals demonstrate the need for greater understanding of how structural racism influences postpartum cardiometabolic risk in these groups.PMID:37678923 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005324
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Teresa Janevic Katharine McCarthy Shelley H Liu Mary Huyhn Joseph Kennedy Hiu Tai Chan Victoria L Mayer Luciana Vieira Bahman Tabaei Frances Howell Elizabeth Howell Gretchen Van Wye Source Type: research

Association Among Race, Ethnicity, Insurance Type, and Postpartum Permanent Contraception Fulfillment
CONCLUSION: In unadjusted models, we find marked racial disparities in fulfillment of permanent contraception. Controlling for individual- and facility-level factors eliminated associations among race, ethnicity, insurance type, and fulfillment, likely because covariates are mediators on the pathway between racism and fulfillment.PMID:37678912 | DOI:10.1097/AOG.0000000000005328
Source: Obstetrics and Gynecology - September 7, 2023 Category: OBGYN Authors: Brooke W Bullington Kristen A Berg Emily S Miller Margaret Boozer Tania Serna Jennifer L Bailit Kavita Shah Arora Source Type: research

Prenatal Exposure to Opioids and Neurodevelopmental Disorders in Children: A Bayesian Mediation Analysis
In conclusion, adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes jointly mediated the association between prenatal opioid exposure and accelerated time to NDD diagnosis. The proportion of JNIE increased as timing of opioid exposure approached delivery.PMID:37671942 | DOI:10.1093/aje/kwad183
Source: Am J Epidemiol - September 6, 2023 Category: Epidemiology Authors: Shuang Wang Gavino Puggioni Jing Wu Kimford J Meador Aisling Caffrey Richard Wyss Jonathan L Slaughter Etsuji Suzuki Kristina E Ward Adam K Lewkowitz Xuerong Wen Source Type: research

Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansion Association with Improved Cancer Outcomes: Quality at What Cost?
Ann Surg Oncol. 2023 Sep 5. doi: 10.1245/s10434-023-14087-x. Online ahead of print.NO ABSTRACTPMID:37668762 | DOI:10.1245/s10434-023-14087-x
Source: Ann Oncol - September 5, 2023 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Timothy L Fitzgerald Liam R Fitzgerald Source Type: research

Retrospective Case-Control Study of REGEN-COV (casirivimab and imdevimab) Therapy for Patients with COVID-19 and Cancer Using the United States MarketScan ® Database
Conclusion Patients with cancer treated with REGEN-COV experienced a decreased risk for hospitalization, hospitalization duration, and total COVID-19-related costs. Patients with cancer were at a higher risk of being hospitalized for COVID-19 than were those without cancer. The use of neutralizing antibody therapy may reduce the risk of severe COVID-19 infection for patients with cancer with an otherwise high risk. Future replication studies should be conducted using other databases that include Medicaid users and other insured persons for comparison and validation.PMID:37666220 | DOI:10.1159/000533614
Source: Oncology - September 4, 2023 Category: Cancer & Oncology Authors: Kazue Takemoto Source Type: research