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1.
Epidemiology and Health ; : 2019041-2019.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-785746

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Previous research has found that greater income inequality is related to problematic alcohol use across a variety of geographical areas in the USA and New York City (NYC). Those studies used self-reported data to assess alcohol use. This study examined the relationship between within-neighborhood income inequality and alcohol-related emergency department (ED) visits.METHODS: The study outcome was the alcohol-related ED visit rate per 10,000 persons between 2010 and 2014, using data obtained from the New York Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System. The main predictor of interest was income inequality, measured using the Gini coefficient from the American Community Survey (2010-2014) at the public use microdata area (PUMA) level (n=55) in NYC. Variables associated with alcohol-related ED visits in bivariate analyses were considered for inclusion in a multivariable model.RESULTS: There were 420,568 alcohol-related ED visits associated with a valid NYC address between 2010 and 2014. The overall annualized NYC alcohol-related ED visit rate was 100.7 visits per 10,000 persons. The median alcohol ED visit rate for NYC PUMAs was 88.0 visits per 10,000 persons (interquartile range [IQR], 64.5 to 133.5), and the median Gini coefficient was 0.48 (IQR, 0.45 to 0.51). In the multivariable model, a higher neighborhood Gini coefficient, a lower median age, and a lower percentage of male residents were independently associated with the alcohol-related ED visit rate.CONCLUSIONS: This study found that higher neighborhood income inequality was associated with higher neighborhood alcohol-related ED visit rates. The precise mechanism of this relationship is not understood, and further investigation is warranted to determine temporality and to assess whether the results are generalizable to other locales.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Alcohol Drinking , Emergencies , Emergency Service, Hospital , Puma , Residence Characteristics , Socioeconomic Factors , Surveys and Questionnaires , Urban Health
2.
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health ; : 249-251, 2016.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-32751

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Nail salon owners in New York City (NYC) are required to provide their workers with gloves and it is their responsibility to maintain healthy, safe working spaces for their employees. The purpose of this study was to determine the frequency with which nail salon workers wear protective gloves. METHODS: A Freedom of Information Law request was submitted to New York Department of State's Division of Licensing Services for a full list of nail salons in Manhattan, NYC. A sample population of 800 nail salons was identified and a simple random sample (without replacement) of 30% (n=240) was selected using a random number generator. Researchers visited each nail salon from October to December of 2015, posing as a potential customer to determine if nail salon workers were wearing gloves. RESULTS: Among the 169 salons in which one or more workers was observed providing services, a total of 562 workers were observed. For 149 salons, in which one or more worker was observed providing services, none of the workers were wearing gloves. In contrast, in six of the salons observed, in which one or more workers was providing services, all of the workers (1 in 2 sites, 2 in 1 site, 3 in 2 sites, and 4 in 1 site) were wearing gloves. Almost three-quarters of the total number of workers observed (n=415, 73.8%) were not wearing gloves. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study indicate that, despite recent media attention and legislation, the majority of nail salon workers we observed were not wearing protective gloves when providing services.


Subject(s)
Freedom , Gloves, Protective , Jurisprudence , Licensure
3.
Memorandum ; 21: 21-38, out. 2011.
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-915331

ABSTRACT

Place is important for understanding knowledge and scientific practices. In turn, knowledge and practice influence the place they occur. Place is not simply the stage where the real action happens, but it is itself constitutive of systems of human interaction, thus ideas are produced and shaped in resonance with their environments. Here the author argues that New York City was an important site for the growth and diversification of application of psychology during the decade of the 1920s. The city both shaped the science and practice that grew there and was shaped by it.(AU)


Subject(s)
Psychology
4.
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society ; : 1238-1243, 2006.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-103819

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To determine risk factors for severe Thyroid-Associated Orbitopathy (TAO). METHODS: We retrospectively studied the clinical data of 385 patients of the New York City area diagnosed with TAO from January 1990 to December 2000. We reviewed clinical characteristics and tried to identify several risk factors. The statistical analysis was applied to the collected data. RESULTS: Men more frequently had proptosis, restrictive myopathy, and optic neuropathy than women. Patients older than 50 years presented more frequently with proptosis, restrictive myopathy, and optic neuropathy than younger than 50 years. Patients with a family history of thyroid disease had similar clinical characteristics compare to those without family history. Smokers more often had proptosis, restrictive myopathy, and compressive optic neuropathy than nonsmokers. Patients who had received radioactive iodine (RAI) treatment were older, and were more frequently smokers. If patients were smokers and treated with radioactive iodine treatment, they were more likely to have proptosis, restrictive myopathy, and compressive optic neuropathy than if not treated with radioactive iodine. However, the RAI treatment did not seem to be associated with severe characteristics of TAO in non-smokers. CONCLUSIONS: The risk factors for severe TAO are: male, age older than 50, smoking, treated with RAI in smokers.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Exophthalmos , Iodine , Muscular Diseases , Optic Nerve Diseases , Retrospective Studies , Risk Factors , Smoke , Smoking , Thyroid Diseases , Troleandomycin
5.
Yonsei Medical Journal ; : 31-37, 1996.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-183986

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: About 13,000 people immigrated to New York City from the Republic of Korea between 1986 and 1990, creating an important ethnic minority. METHODS: Using US-born Whites as a reference, age-adjusted proportional mortality ratios were computed for 314 men and 248 women of Korean ancestry born abroad who died in New York City in 1986-90. RESULTS: Males had a significant excess of viral hepatitis, cancer, stroke, and external causes: accidents, suicide, and homicide. They had significantly reduced proportional rates of AIDS and heart disease. Mortality patterns were similar for Korean women, who had significantly increased proportional rates of stroke and accidents, and reduced heart disease. Stomach and liver cancers were significantly elevated in both sexes, while female breast cancer was low. There were two male and one female tuberculosis deaths (4 to 7 fold increase), and one Korean woman died of childbirth complications (59-fold increase). CONCLUSIONS: Except for violent deaths, these observations resemble known mortality patterns in Korea.


Subject(s)
Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Emigration and Immigration , Ethnicity , Korea/ethnology , Middle Aged , Mortality , New York City/ethnology
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