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1.
Diabet Med ; 41(6): e15277, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38150286

ABSTRACT

AIM: To explore factors affecting participation in the pilot of the synchronous online national diabetes prevention programme (NDPP) in Ireland from the perspectives of those who attended and the educators who recruited for and delivered the programme. METHODS: A qualitative study involving semi-structured interviews and focus groups with NDPP attenders (attended the assessment and at least one session) and educators (dietitians) on the programme. The Framework Method using the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) guided the analysis. RESULTS: Thirteen attenders took part in two online focus groups and five online or phone interviews. Eight educators took part. Four themes which cut across the TDF domains were identified as factors influencing participation; (i) lack of awareness of prediabetes and fear of diabetes, relating to attenders' fear of diabetes and lack of knowledge of prediabetes and diabetes prevention; (ii) perceived need for programme support to change health behaviour, concerning attenders' and educators' recognition of the need for the NDPP; (iii) trust in healthcare professionals (HCPs), relating to trust in HCPs to convey the seriousness of prediabetes and the value of diabetes prevention programmes (DPPs) and (iv) practical and personal ease of joining online, relating to the flexibility and accessibility of the synchronous online group format, the IT skills of attenders and educators and apprehension about group education. CONCLUSIONS: Raising awareness of prediabetes and the need for prevention programmes should be a priority for health services and HCPs. The synchronous online group format was seen as less daunting to join than a face-to-face programme and may be a useful option to encourage participation.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 , Focus Groups , Qualitative Research , Humans , Male , Female , Middle Aged , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/prevention & control , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/psychology , Adult , Ireland/epidemiology , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Prediabetic State/psychology , Prediabetic State/epidemiology , Aged , Patient Education as Topic/methods , Pilot Projects , Internet
2.
Gut ; 63(12): 1913-20, 2014 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25021423

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The commensal microbiota, host immunity and metabolism participate in a signalling network, with diet influencing each component of this triad. In addition to diet, many elements of a modern lifestyle influence the gut microbiota but the degree to which exercise affects this population is unclear. Therefore, we explored exercise and diet for their impact on the gut microbiota. DESIGN: Since extremes of exercise often accompany extremes of diet, we addressed the issue by studying professional athletes from an international rugby union squad. Two groups were included to control for physical size, age and gender. Compositional analysis of the microbiota was explored by 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing. Each participant completed a detailed food frequency questionnaire. RESULTS: As expected, athletes and controls differed significantly with respect to plasma creatine kinase (a marker of extreme exercise), and inflammatory and metabolic markers. More importantly, athletes had a higher diversity of gut micro-organisms, representing 22 distinct phyla, which in turn positively correlated with protein consumption and creatine kinase. CONCLUSIONS: The results provide evidence for a beneficial impact of exercise on gut microbiota diversity but also indicate that the relationship is complex and is related to accompanying dietary extremes.


Subject(s)
Diet/adverse effects , Dietary Proteins/metabolism , Exercise/physiology , Gastrointestinal Tract/microbiology , Microbiota/physiology , Sports/physiology , Adult , Biomarkers/metabolism , Body Mass Index , Creatine Kinase/blood , Food Analysis , Humans , Immunity/physiology , Inflammation/metabolism , Male , Sports Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
3.
Genome Biol ; 21(1): 175, 2020 07 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32684155

ABSTRACT

Vaccination has transformed public health, most notably including the eradication of smallpox. Despite its profound historical importance, little is known of the origins and diversity of the viruses used in smallpox vaccination. Prior to the twentieth century, the method, source and origin of smallpox vaccinations remained unstandardised and opaque. We reconstruct and analyse viral vaccine genomes associated with smallpox vaccination from historical artefacts. Significantly, we recover viral molecules through non-destructive sampling of historical materials lacking signs of biological residues. We use the authenticated ancient genomes to reveal the evolutionary relationships of smallpox vaccination viruses within the poxviruses as a whole.


Subject(s)
Genome, Viral , Smallpox Vaccine/history , Vaccinia virus/genetics , American Civil War , Genetic Variation , History, 19th Century , Humans , Metagenome , Vaccination/instrumentation
4.
Evol Med Public Health ; 2018(1): 219-229, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30410762

ABSTRACT

The 1918 influenza pandemic was the deadliest in known human history. It spread globally to the most isolated of human communities, causing clinical disease in a third of the world's population, and infecting nearly every human alive at the time. Determination of mortality numbers is complicated by weak contemporary surveillance in the developing world, but recent estimates put the death toll at 50 million or even higher. This outbreak is of great interest to modern day epidemiologists, virologists, global health researchers and evolutionary biologists. They ask: Where did it come from? And if it happened once, could it happen again? Understanding how such a virulent epidemic emerged and spread offers hope for prevention and strategies of response. This review uses historical methodology and evolutionary perspectives to revisit the 1918 outbreak. Using the American military experience as a case study, it investigates the emergence of virulence in 1918 by focusing on key susceptibility factors that favored both the influenza virus and the subsequent pneumococcal invasion that took so many lives. This article explores the history of the epidemic and contemporary measures against it, surveys modern research on the virus, and considers what aspects of 1918 human and animal ecology most contributed to the emergence of this pandemic.

5.
Soc Sci Med ; 64(8): 1766-75, 2007 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17240029

ABSTRACT

Using a comprehensive database constructed from the pension files of US Civil War veterans, we explore characteristics and occurrence of type 2 diabetes among older black and white males, living circa 1900. We find that rates of diagnosed diabetes were much lower among males in this period than a century later. In contrast to the late 20th Century, the rates of diagnosed diabetes were lower among black than among white males, suggesting that the reverse pattern is of relatively recent origin. Two-thirds of both white and black veterans had body-mass indexes (BMIs) in the currently recommended weight range, a far higher proportion than documented by recent surveys. Longevity among persons with diabetes was not reduced among Civil War veterans, and those with diabetes suffered comparatively few sequelae of the condition. Over 90% of black veterans engaged in low paying, high-physical effort jobs, as compared to about half of white veterans. High rates of work-related physical activity may provide a partial explanation of low rates of diagnosed diabetes among blacks. We found no evidence of discrimination in testing by race, as indicated by rates of examinations in which a urinalysis was performed. This dataset is valuable for providing a national benchmark against which to compare modern diabetes prevalence patterns.


Subject(s)
American Civil War , Black or African American/history , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/history , Veterans Disability Claims/history , White People/history , Black or African American/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Body Mass Index , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/epidemiology , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Occupations , Residence Characteristics , United States/epidemiology , Veterans Disability Claims/statistics & numerical data , White People/statistics & numerical data
6.
Curr Biol ; 26(24): 3407-3412, 2016 12 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27939314

ABSTRACT

Smallpox holds a unique position in the history of medicine. It was the first disease for which a vaccine was developed and remains the only human disease eradicated by vaccination. Although there have been claims of smallpox in Egypt, India, and China dating back millennia [1-4], the timescale of emergence of the causative agent, variola virus (VARV), and how it evolved in the context of increasingly widespread immunization, have proven controversial [4-9]. In particular, some molecular-clock-based studies have suggested that key events in VARV evolution only occurred during the last two centuries [4-6] and hence in apparent conflict with anecdotal historical reports, although it is difficult to distinguish smallpox from other pustular rashes by description alone. To address these issues, we captured, sequenced, and reconstructed a draft genome of an ancient strain of VARV, sampled from a Lithuanian child mummy dating between 1643 and 1665 and close to the time of several documented European epidemics [1, 2, 10]. When compared to vaccinia virus, this archival strain contained the same pattern of gene degradation as 20th century VARVs, indicating that such loss of gene function had occurred before ca. 1650. Strikingly, the mummy sequence fell basal to all currently sequenced strains of VARV on phylogenetic trees. Molecular-clock analyses revealed a strong clock-like structure and that the timescale of smallpox evolution is more recent than often supposed, with the diversification of major viral lineages only occurring within the 18th and 19th centuries, concomitant with the development of modern vaccination.


Subject(s)
DNA, Viral/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Smallpox/history , Variola virus/genetics , Child, Preschool , DNA, Viral/isolation & purification , Genome, Viral , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Mummies/history , Mummies/virology , Phylogeny , Smallpox/virology , Smallpox Vaccine/history , Vaccination/history
7.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 28(6): 1734-44, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19887414

ABSTRACT

Four major diseases stigmatized the American South in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: yellow fever, malaria, hookworm, and pellagra. Each disease contributed to the inhibition of economic growth in the South, and the latter three severely affected children's development and adult workers' productivity. However, all four had largely disappeared from the region by 1950. This paper analyzes the reasons for this disappearance. It describes the direct effects of public health interventions and the indirect effects of prosperity and other facets of economic development. It also offers insights into the invaluable benefits that could be gained if today's neglected diseases were also eliminated.


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Pellagra/history , Public Health/history , Yellow Fever/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Malaria/prevention & control , Pellagra/prevention & control , Southeastern United States , Yellow Fever/prevention & control
8.
Perspect Biol Med ; 51(1): 103-20, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18192770

ABSTRACT

As part of a mid-1940s malaria research program, U.S. Public Health Service researchers working in South Carolina chose to withhold treatment from a group of subjects while testing the efficacy of a new insecticide. Research during World War II had generated new tools to fight malaria, including the insecticide DDT and the medication chloroquine. The choices made about how to conduct research in one of the last pockets of endemic malaria in the United States reveal much about prevailing attitudes and assumptions with regard to malaria control. We describe this research and explore the ethical choices inherent in the tension between environmentally based interventions and the individual health needs of the population living within the study domain. The singular focus on the mosquito and its lifecycle led some researchers to view the humans in their study area as little more than parasite reservoirs, an attitude fueled by the frustrating disappearance of malaria just when the scientists were on the verge of establishing the efficacy of a powerful new agent in the fight against malaria. This analysis of their choices has relevance to broader questions in public health ethics.


Subject(s)
DDT/history , Ethics, Research/history , Insecticides/history , Malaria/history , United States Public Health Service/history , Animals , Anopheles , Child , Chloroquine/history , Chloroquine/therapeutic use , DDT/therapeutic use , History, 20th Century , Humans , Insecticides/therapeutic use , Malaria/prevention & control , South Carolina , United States
9.
Bull Hist Med ; 80(2): 269-90, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16809864

ABSTRACT

Medical observers during the American Civil War were happily surprised to find that typhus fever rarely made an appearance, and was not a major killer in the prisoner-of-war camps where the crowded, filthy, and malnourished populations appeared to offer an ideal breeding ground for the disease. Through a review of apparent typhus outbreaks in America north of the Mexican border, this article argues that typhus fever rarely if ever extended to the established populations of the United States, even when imported on immigrant ships into densely populated and unsanitary slums. It suggests that something in the American environment was inhospitable to the extensive spread of the disease, most likely an unrecognized difference in the North American louse population compared to that of Europe.


Subject(s)
Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/history , American Civil War , Animals , Disease Outbreaks/history , Disease Vectors , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Mexico/epidemiology , Military Medicine/history , Phthiraptera , Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/epidemiology , Typhus, Epidemic Louse-Borne/transmission , United States/epidemiology
10.
South Med J ; 99(8): 862-4, 2006 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16929881

ABSTRACT

The early 20th century Southerner lived in a disease environment created by a confluence of poverty, climate and the legacy of slavery. A deadly trio of pellagra, hookworm and malaria enervated the poor Southerner--man, woman and child--creating a dull, weakened people ill equipped to prosper in the modem world. The Northern perceptions of the South as a backward and sickly region were only compounded by the realization that her population was malnourished, infected by worms, and continually plagued by agues and fevers. As historian John Duffy concluded, "As a chronically debilitating disease, it [malaria] shared with the other two the responsibility for the term 'lazy Southerner".


Subject(s)
Hookworm Infections/history , Malaria/history , Pellagra/history , History, 20th Century , Hookworm Infections/epidemiology , Humans , Malaria/epidemiology , Pellagra/epidemiology , Southeastern United States/epidemiology
11.
Perspect Biol Med ; 49(1): 77-83, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16489278

ABSTRACT

Before the discovery of insulin, one of the most common dietary treatments of diabetes mellitus was a high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet. A review of Frederick M. Allen's case histories shows that a 70% fat, 8% carbohydrate diet could eliminate glycosuria among hospitalized patients. A reconsideration of the role of the high-fat, low-carbohydrate diet for the treatment of diabetes mellitus is in order.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus/history , Diet, Diabetic/history , Diabetes Mellitus/diet therapy , Diabetes Mellitus/drug therapy , History, 20th Century , Humans , Hypoglycemic Agents/history , Hypoglycemic Agents/therapeutic use , Insulin/history , Insulin/therapeutic use
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