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1.
iScience ; 25(4): 104139, 2022 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35402875

ABSTRACT

Energy burden directly influences households' health and safety. Amid a growing literature on energy, poverty and gender remains relatively understudied. We evaluate socioeconomic, geographic, and health factors as multidimensions of concentrated disadvantage that magnify energy burden in the United States over time. We show that the energy burden is more pronounced in disadvantaged counties with larger elderly, impoverished, disabled people, and racialized populations where people do not have health insurance. Neighborhoods with households headed by women of color (especially Black women) are more likely to face a high energy burden, which worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although energy costs are often regarded as an individual responsibility, these findings illustrate the feminization of energy poverty and indicate the need for an intersectional and interdisciplinary framework in devising energy policy directed to households with the most severe energy burden.

2.
Am J Emerg Med ; 26(7): 792-5, 2008 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18774045

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Physicians often administer intravenous multivitamins to intoxicated patients in the emergency department (ED); however, this practice is not supported by evidence from any prior study. We determined the prevalences of vitamin deficiencies in patients presenting to our ED with alcohol intoxication. METHODS: This study was a prospective, cross-section, observational study of a convenience sample of ED patients presenting with acute alcohol intoxication. Patients were tested for B(12), folate, and thiamine levels as add-ons to their blood samples. RESULTS: Seventy-seven patients were included in the final analysis. The mean age was 46 years, and 19% were female; the mean blood alcohol level was 280 mg/dL. Of 75 patients, no one (0%) had low B(12) or folate levels (95% confidence interval, 0-0.05); 6 (15%) of 39 patients had low thiamine levels (95% confidence interval, 0.06-0.31). Of these 6 patients, none exhibited clinical signs of thiamine deficiency. CONCLUSIONS: In our ED, patients with acute ethanol intoxication do not have B(12) or folate deficiencies. A significant minority (15%) of patients have thiamine deficiency; its clinical significance is unclear. Widespread administration of multivitamins is unwarranted by these findings, but thiamine may be considered.


Subject(s)
Alcoholic Intoxication/complications , Emergency Service, Hospital/statistics & numerical data , Thiamine Deficiency/etiology , Acute Disease , Adult , Aged , Alcoholic Intoxication/blood , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Folic Acid/blood , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Thiamine/therapeutic use , Thiamine Deficiency/blood , Thiamine Deficiency/drug therapy , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/blood , Vitamin B Complex/therapeutic use
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