Preventive medicine
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2021
Trends in young adults' mental distress and its association with employment: Evidence from the behavioral risk factor surveillance system, 1993-2019.
Few have examined how employment is linked to trends in mental health among young adults across economic contexts in more recent years. To better understand the burden of non-employment and mental distress in this age group, this study examines the association of short-term (<1 year) and long-term (1+ year) out-of-work status with mental health across three recessions among young men and women ages 18-34. We report sex-stratified estimates of frequent mental distress (FMD), out-of-work status, and their association through adjusted prevalence ratios across 27 cycles of the U. ⋯ Short-term (PR men = 1.53, 95%CI 1.46-1.61; PR women = 1.34, 95%CI 1.29-1.40) and long-term (PR men = 1.61, 95%CI 1.51-1.71; PR women = 1.28, 95%CI 1.22-1.34) out-of-work status were each associated with a higher risk of FMD during this period. The magnitude of associations between long-term out-of-work status and FMD significantly varied across cycles, and was strongest after the 1991 recession in men and the 2008 recession in women. Whereas employment represents an important determinant of mental health among young adults, particularly during economic downturns, it did not suffice to explain the rise in mental distress in this age group in more recent years.
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2021
Out-of-pocket costs for preventive care persist almost a decade after the Affordable Care Act.
Higher cost-sharing reduces the amount of high-value health care that patients use, such as preventive care. Despite a sharp reduction in out-of-pocket (OOP) costs for preventive care after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), patients often still get unexpected bills after receiving preventive services. We examined out-of-pocket costs for preventive care in 2018, almost ten years after the implementation of the ACA. ⋯ We found that in addition to premium costs meant to cover preventive care, Americans with employer-sponsored insurance were still charged between $75 million and $219 million in total for services that ought to be free to them ($0.50 to $1.40 per ESI-covered individual and $0.75 to $2.17 per ESI-covered individual using preventive care). However, some enrollees still faced OOP costs for eligible preventive services ranging into the hundreds of dollars. OOP costs are most likely to be incurred for women's services (e.g., contraception) and basic screenings (e.g., diabetes and cholesterol screenings), and by patients in the South or in rural areas.
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2021
Beyond "Safe and Effective": The urgent need for high-impact smoking cessation medications.
Smoking cessation medications (SCMs) are an evidence-based cornerstone of comprehensive tobacco control programs globally. However, the impact of SCMs on population smoking prevalence is controversial, with inconsistencies between randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and population-based observational studies. We estimated SCM impact on permanent cessation and population smoking prevalence by extrapolating efficacy estimates from meta-analyses of RCTs, using the standard population impact formula: efficacy*reach. ⋯ Even under ideal conditions, the potential of current first-line SCMs to increase cessation in a substantial proportion of smokers, and reduce population smoking prevalence, is limited. In order to avert the predicted billion tobacco-caused deaths in this century, "safe and effective" medications are not sufficient: SCMs with high population impact are urgently needed. Policies to ensure the availability and accessibility of highly efficacious SCMs, with behavioral support, are crucial.
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Preventive medicine · Sep 2021
The impact of a universal human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccination program on lower genital tract dysplasia and genital warts.
Assess Ontario's school-based human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination program on reducing rates of cervical dysplasia, colposcopy services and treatment for genital warts, cervical conization, cryotherapy and laser vaporization of the lower genital tract. Women born in 1995 in Ontario, Canada were the first cohort of students to receive the vaccine. We followed these women from age 18-23 and identified pap test cytology results, referral and attendance at colposcopy, treatment of HPV related warts and treatment of lower-genital tract dysplasia using administrative databases. ⋯ The relative risk of requiring colposcopy if unvaccinated was 1.94 and they were 6.15 times more likely to require treatment. There were no differences between socio-economic groups and geographic regions. Vaccination programs are effective at decreasing rates of cervical dysplasia, lead to reduced need for colposcopy, treatment of HPV related warts and pre-invasive disease even at early ages.
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Research documents that criminal justice contact, such as incarceration, impairs health among family members of those experiencing the contact. Yet little is known about the health consequences of vicarious exposure to another common type of criminal justice contact, police stops. In the present study, we examined the association between youth police stops and mothers' health. ⋯ Associations were similar across mothers' race/ethnicity and education. Taken together, results show that youth police stops exacerbate health problems among mothers. Given the concentration of police stops among youth of color, these findings highlight the consequences of the criminal justice system for population health inequalities.