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Featured researches published by Alexander Liss.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Piped water consumption in Ghana: A case study of temporal and spatial patterns of clean water demand relative to alternative water sources in rural small towns

Alexandra V. Kulinkina; Karen C. Kosinski; Alexander Liss; Michael N. Adjei; Gilbert A. Ayamgah; Patrick Webb; David M. Gute; Jeanine D. Plummer; Elena N. Naumova

Continuous access to adequate quantities of safe water is essential for human health and socioeconomic development. Piped water systems (PWSs) are an increasingly common type of water supply in rural African small towns. We assessed temporal and spatial patterns in water consumption from public standpipes of four PWSs in Ghana in order to assess clean water demand relative to other available water sources. Low water consumption was evident in all study towns, which manifested temporally and spatially. Temporal variability in water consumption that is negatively correlated with rainfall is an indicator of rainwater preference when it is available. Furthermore, our findings show that standpipes in close proximity to alternative water sources such as streams and hand-dug wells suffer further reductions in water consumption. Qualitative data suggest that consumer demand in the study towns appears to be driven more by water quantity, accessibility, and perceived aesthetic water quality, as compared to microbiological water quality or price. In settings with chronic under-utilization of improved water sources, increasing water demand through household connections, improving water quality with respect to taste and appropriateness for laundry, and educating residents about health benefits of using piped water should be prioritized. Continued consumer demand and sufficient revenue generation are important attributes of a water service that ensure its function over time. Our findings suggest that analyzing water consumption of existing metered PWSs in combination with qualitative approaches may enable more efficient planning of community-based water supplies and support sustainable development.


Journal of Public Health Policy | 2016

Hospitalizations due to selected infections caused by opportunistic premise plumbing pathogens (OPPP) and reported drug resistance in the United States older adult population in 1991–2006

Elena N. Naumova; Alexander Liss; Jyotsna S. Jagai; Irmgard Behlau; Jeffrey K. Griffiths

The Flint Water Crisis—due to changes of water source and treatment procedures—has revealed many unsolved social, environmental, and public health problems for US drinking water, including opportunistic premise plumbing pathogens (OPPP). The true health impact of OPPP, especially in vulnerable populations such as the elderly, is largely unknown. We explored 108 claims in the largest US national uniformly collected data repository to determine rates and costs of OPPP-related hospitalizations. In 1991–2006, 617,291 cases of three selected OPPP infections resulted in the elderly alone of


Geospatial Health | 2014

Redefining climate regions in the United States of America using satellite remote sensing and machine learning for public health applications.

Alexander Liss; Magaly Koch; Elena N. Naumova

0.6 billion USD per year of payments. Antibiotic resistance significantly increased OPPP illness costs that are likely to be underreported. More precise estimates for OPPP burdens could be obtained if better clinical, microbiological, administrative, and environmental monitoring data were cross-linked. An urgent dialog across governmental and disciplinary divides, and studies on preventing OPPP through drinking water exposure, are warranted.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Heat-Related Hospitalizations in Older Adults: An Amplified Effect of the First Seasonal Heatwave

Alexander Liss; Ruiruo Wu; Kenneth Chui; Elena N. Naumova

Existing climate classification has not been designed for an efficient handling of public health scenarios. This work aims to design an objective spatial climate regionalization method for assessing health risks in response to extreme weather. Specific climate regions for the conterminous United States of America (USA) were defined using satellite remote sensing (RS) data and compared with the conventional Köppen-Geiger (KG) divisions. Using the nationwide database of hospitalisations among the elderly (≥65 year olds), we examined the utility of a RS-based climate regionalization to assess public health risk due to extreme weather, by comparing the rate of hospitalisations in response to thermal extremes across climatic regions. Satellite image composites from 2002-2012 were aggregated, masked and compiled into a multi-dimensional dataset. The conterminous USA was classified into 8 distinct regions using a stepwise regionalization approach to limit noise and collinearity (LKN), which exhibited a high degree of consistency with the KG regions and a well-defined regional delineation by annual and seasonal temperature and precipitation values. The most populous was a temperate wet region (10.9 million), while the highest rate of hospitalisations due to exposure to heat and cold (9.6 and 17.7 cases per 100,000 persons at risk, respectively) was observed in the relatively warm and humid south-eastern region. RS-based regionalization demonstrates strong potential for assessing the adverse effects of severe weather on human health and for decision support. Its utility in forecasting and mitigating these effects has to be further explored.


International Journal of Environment | 2015

Does the presence of vegetation affect asthma hospitalizations among the elderly? A comparison between rural, suburban, and urban areas

Elizabeth Erdman; Alexander Liss; David M. Gute; Christine Rioux; Magaly Koch; Elena N. Naumova

Older adults are highly vulnerable to the detriment of extreme weather. The rapid non-linear increase in heat-related morbidity is difficult to quantify, hindering the attribution of direct effects of exposure on severe health outcomes. We examine the effects of ambient temperatures on heat-related hospitalizations (HH) among the elderly in presence of strong seasonality and by assessing the effects caused by the first and subsequent seasonal heatwaves. We empirically derived the thresholds for a heatwave episode in Boston MSA based on 16 years of daily observations. We compared the health risks of heatwaves using the proposed and four alternative definitions. 701 cases of HH in older residents of Boston area were examined using harmonic regression models, designed to capture the non-linear effects of ambient temperatures and heatwave episodes when the night-time temperature is above 65.5 °F for 3 consecutive nights. The overall relative risk of HH associated with a heatwave episode was 6.9 [95%CI:4.8–9.8]. The relative risk of HH associated with the first heatwave increases up to 13.3 [95%CI:7.4–24.0]. The risk declined to 3.7 [95%CI:2.4–5.8] for the subsequent heatwave. Four other commonly used heatwave definitions confirmed these findings. Public health actions have to target the first heatwave to maximize the impact of preventive measures.


Unknown Journal | 2016

Extending LKN climate regionalization with spatial regularization: An application to epidemiological research

Alexander Liss; Yulia R. Gel; Alexandra V. Kulinkina; Elena N. Naumova


ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences | 2016

LINKING SATELLITE REMOTE SENSING BASED ENVIRONMENTAL PREDICTORS TO DISEASE: AN APPLICATION TO THE SPATIOTEMPORAL MODELLING OF SCHISTOSOMIASIS IN GHANA

M. Wrable; Alexander Liss; Alexandra V. Kulinkina; Magaly Koch; N. K. Biritwum; A. Ofosu; Karen C. Kosinski; David M. Gute; Elena N. Naumova


ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences | 2016

COMBINING REMOTELY SENSED ENVIRONMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS WITH SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL CONDITIONS THAT AFFECT SURFACE WATER USE IN SPATIOTEMPORAL MODELLING OF SCHISTOSOMIASIS IN GHANA

Alexandra V. Kulinkina; Y. Walz; Alexander Liss; Karen C. Kosinski; N. K. Biritwum; Elena N. Naumova


ISPRS - International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences | 2016

EXTENDING LKN CLIMATE REGIONALIZATION WITH SPATIAL REGULARIZATION: AN APPLICATION TO EPIDEMIOLOGICAL RESEARCH

Alexander Liss; Yulia R. Gel; Alexandra V. Kulinkina; Elena N. Naumova


IWISE2014 | 2014

Does the presence of vegetation affect asthma hospitalizations among the elderly

Elizabeth Erdman; Alexander Liss; David M. Gute; Christine Rioux; Magaly Koch; Elena N. Naumova

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Yulia R. Gel

University of Texas at Dallas

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Irmgard Behlau

Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

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Jeanine D. Plummer

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

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