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Institution

Ohio Department of Health

GovernmentColumbus, Ohio, United States
About: Ohio Department of Health is a government organization based out in Columbus, Ohio, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Public health. The organization has 308 authors who have published 354 publications receiving 14493 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Over a period of eleven months in 1980, 97% (or 204) of the acute care hospitals in Ohio were visited to assess specific characteristics of diabetes education programs and the educators offering them and it was found that diabetes education was usually conducted by staff nurses and dietitians.
Abstract: Over a period of eleven months in 1980, 97% (or 204) of the acute care hospitals in Ohio were visited to assess specific characteristics of diabetes education programs and the educators offering them. After performing these on-site interviews, it was found that 1) diabetes education was usually conducted by staff nurses and dietitians. 2) One-third of the facilities visited had a formal coordinator for diabetes education, while one-half had an informal coordinator, and one-fifth had no coordinator. 3) On-the-job training was the most frequently cited source of educational preparation on diabetes and on the teaching-learning process.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This case study reports on how Ohio is responding to the prescription drug epidemic by developing cross-system collaboration from local public health nurses to the Governor's office.
Abstract: Prescription drug overdose is the leading cause of injury death in Ohio, as well as in 16 other states. Responding to the prescription drug epidemic is particularly challenging given the fragmentation of the health care system and that the consequences of addiction span across systems that have not historically collaborated. This case study reports on how Ohio is responding to the prescription drug epidemic by developing cross-system collaboration from local public health nurses to the Governor's office. In summary, legal and regulatory policies can be implemented relatively quickly whereas changing the substance abuse treatment infrastructure requires significant financial investments.

17 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Young age and lack of experience were associated independently with increased risk, explaining some of the effects associated with types of boats and with lack of training, and interventions specific to certain type of boats are likely to reduce boating fatalities.
Abstract: To identify risk factors predicting the involvement of boat operators in incidents resulting in at least one fatality, the authors obtained data from a mail survey of registered boat owners in the State of Ohio and from the Boating Accident Report (BAR) files for 1983-86 compiled by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. Additionally, they reviewed Ohio death certificates for those years to identify cases missed by the BAR system. Forty percent of the fatal incidents would have been missed by a search of death certificates alone. During the period studied, 107 boating incidents resulted in 124 deaths. There were 0.9 fatal incidents per million boat-operator hours. Factors found to be associated with an increased risk of a fatal boating incident were the operator being younger than 30 years, having fewer than 20 hours of boat operating experience, and lacking formal boat safety training. Canoes, kayaks, rowboats, and inflatables were associated with a higher rate of fatal incidents per million hours of use than were motorboats. Young age and lack of experience were associated independently with increased risk, explaining some of the effects associated with types of boats and with lack of training. The findings suggest that supervised experience, safety training programs aimed at young operators, and interventions specific to certain types of boats are likely to reduce boating fatalities.

17 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Influenza hospitalization surveillance data from the 2011-2012 through 2014-2015 influenza seasons showed that immunocompromised children hospitalized with influenza received intensive care less frequently but had a longer hospitalization duration than nonimmunocompromising children, and vaccination and early antiviral use could be improved substantially.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Existing data on the clinical features and outcomes of immunocompromised children with influenza are limited. METHODS Data from the 2011-2012 through 2014-2015 influenza seasons were collected as part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Influenza Hospitalization Surveillance Network (FluSurv-NET). We compared clinical features and outcomes between immunocompromised and nonimmunocompromised children (<18 years old) hospitalized with laboratory-confirmed community-acquired influenza. Immunocompromised children were defined as those for whom ≥1 of the following applies: human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, cancer, stem cell or solid organ transplantation, nonsteroidal immunosuppressive therapy, immunoglobulin deficiency, complement deficiency, asplenia, and/or another rare condition. The primary outcomes were intensive care admission, duration of hospitalization, and in-hospital death. RESULTS Among 5262 hospitalized children, 242 (4.6%) were immunocompromised; receipt of nonsteroidal immunosuppressive therapy (60%), cancer (39%), and solid organ transplantation (14%) were most common. Immunocompromised children were older than the nonimmunocompromised children (median, 8.8 vs 2.8 years, respectively; P < .001), more likely to have another comorbidity (58% vs 49%, respectively; P = .007), and more likely to have received an influenza vaccination (58% vs 39%, respectively; P < .001) and early antiviral treatment (35% vs 27%, respectively; P = .013). In multivariable analyses, immunocompromised children were less likely to receive intensive care (adjusted odds ratio [95% confidence interval], 0.31 [0.20-0.49]) and had a slightly longer duration of hospitalization (adjusted hazard ratio of hospital discharge [95% confidence interval], 0.89 [0.80-0.99]). Death was uncommon in both groups. CONCLUSIONS Immunocompromised children hospitalized with influenza received intensive care less frequently but had a longer hospitalization duration than nonimmunocompromised children. Vaccination and early antiviral use could be improved substantially. Data are needed to determine whether immunocompromised children are more commonly admitted with milder influenza severity than are nonimmunocompromised children.

17 citations


Authors

Showing all 310 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Arthur Reingold9332737653
Shelley M. Zansky43907099
Lee Friedman411066860
Peter F. Buckley381457124
Jennifer Bogner381185403
Reena Oza-Frank21751774
Luis F. Ramirez21342224
Tammy L. Bannerman20255709
Rod Moore17341437
John D. Paulson1732786
Mary DiOrio16221091
Edmond A. Hooker1658668
Ellen Salehi15221648
Paul F. Granello1432530
Laurie M Billing14292407
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20223
202133
202022
201916
201816
201716