Christine Vatovec
University of Vermont
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christine Vatovec.
Journal of Health Communication | 2012
Dolores J. Severtson; Christine Vatovec
Theory-based research is needed to understand how maps of environmental health risk information influence risk beliefs and protective behavior. Using theoretical concepts from multiple fields of study including visual cognition, semiotics, health behavior, and learning and memory supports a comprehensive assessment of this influence. The authors report results from 13 cognitive interviews that provide theory-based insights into how visual features influenced what participants saw and the meaning of what they saw as they viewed 3 formats of water test results for private wells (choropleth map, dot map, and a table). The unit of perception, color, proximity to hazards, geographic distribution, and visual salience had substantial influences on what participants saw and their resulting risk beliefs. These influences are explained by theoretical factors that shape what is seen, properties of features that shape cognition (preattentive, symbolic, visual salience), information processing (top-down and bottom-up), and the strength of concrete compared with abstract information. Personal relevance guided top-down attention to proximal and larger hazards that shaped stronger risk beliefs. Meaning was more local for small perceptual units and global for large units. Three aspects of color were important: preattentive “incremental risk” meaning of sequential shading, symbolic safety meaning of stoplight colors, and visual salience that drew attention. The lack of imagery, geographic information, and color diminished interest in table information. Numeracy and prior beliefs influenced comprehension for some participants. Results guided the creation of an integrated conceptual framework for application to future studies. Ethics should guide the selection of map features that support appropriate communication goals.
Science of The Total Environment | 2016
Christine Vatovec; Patrick J. Phillips; Emily Van Wagoner; Tia-Marie Scott; Edward T. Furlong
Pharmaceutical pollution in surface waters poses risks to human and ecosystem health. Wastewater treatment facilities are primary sources of pharmaceutical pollutants, but little is known about the factors that affect drugs entering the wastewater stream. This paper investigates the effects of student pharmaceutical use and disposal behaviors and an annual demographic shift on pharmaceutical pollution in a university town. We sampled wastewater effluent during a ten-day annual spring student move-out period at the University of Vermont. We then interpreted these data in light of survey results that investigated pharmaceutical purchasing, use, and disposal practices among the university student population. Surveys indicated that the majority of student respondents purchased pharmaceuticals in the previous year. Many students reported having leftover drugs, though only a small portion disposed of them, mainly in the trash. We detected 51 pharmaceuticals in 80% or more of the wastewater effluent samples collected over the ten-day sampling period. Several increased in concentration after students left the area. Concentrations of caffeine and nicotine decreased weakly. Drug disposal among this university student population does not appear to be a major source of pharmaceuticals in wastewater. Increases in pharmaceutical concentration after the students left campus can be tied to an increase in the seasonal use of allergy medications directly related to pollen, as well as a demographic shift to a year-round older population, which supports national data that older people use larger volumes and different types of pharmaceuticals than the younger student population.
Preventive Medicine | 2015
Amy M. Berkman; Amy Trentham-Dietz; Kim Dittus; Vicki Hart; Christine Vatovec; John King; Ted A. James; Susan G. Lakoski; Brian L. Sprague
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a non-invasive breast cancer that comprises approximately 20% of new breast cancer diagnoses. DCIS is predominantly detected by screening mammography prior to the development of any clinical symptoms. Prognosis following a DCIS diagnosis is excellent, due to both the availability of effective treatments and the frequently benign nature of the disease. However, a DCIS diagnosis and its treatment have psychological and physical impacts that often lead to adverse changes in health-related behaviors, including changes in physical activity, body weight, alcohol intake, and smoking, which may represent a greater threat to the womans overall health than the DCIS itself. Depending on age at diagnosis, women diagnosed with DCIS are 3-13 times more likely to die from non-breast cancer related causes, such as cardiovascular disease, than from breast cancer. Thus, the maintenance and improvement of healthy behaviors that influence a variety of outcomes after diagnosis may warrant increased attention during DCIS management. This may also represent an important opportunity to promote the adoption of healthy behaviors, given that DCIS carries the psychological impact of a cancer diagnosis but also a favorable prognosis. Particular focus is needed to address these issues in vulnerable patient subgroups with pre-existing higher rates of unhealthy behaviors and demonstrated health disparities.
Ecohealth | 2013
Christine Vatovec; Laura Senier; Michael M. Bell
Healthcare organizations are increasingly examining the impacts of their facilities and operations on the natural environment, their workers, and the broader community, but the ecological impacts of specific healthcare services provided within these institutions have not been assessed. This paper provides a qualitative assessment of healthcare practices that takes into account the life-cycle impacts of a variety of materials used in typical medical care. We conducted an ethnographic study of three medical inpatient units: a conventional cancer ward, palliative care unit, and a hospice center. Participant observations (73 participants) of healthcare and support staff including physicians, nurses, housekeepers, and administrators were made to inventory materials and document practices used in patient care. Semi-structured interviews provided insight into common practices. We identified three major domains that highlight the cumulative environmental, occupational health, and public health impacts of medical supplies and pharmaceuticals used at our research sites: (1) medical supply procurement; (2) generation, handling, and disposal of medical waste; and (3) pharmaceutical handling and disposal. Impacts discovered through ethnographic inquiry included occupational exposures to chemotherapy and infectious waste, and public health exposures to pharmaceutical waste. This study provides new insight into the environmental, occupational, and public health impacts resulting from medical practices. In many cases, the lack of clear guidance and regulations regarding environmental impacts contributed to elevated harms to the natural environment, workers, and the broader community.
Archive | 2013
Christine Vatovec; Laura Senier; Michael M. Bell
Originality This chapter describes how the medicalization of dying has converged with institutional policies, practices, and actors to increase the negative consequences of medical care, and recognizes that the far-reaching impacts of clinical decisions make the provision of medical care a socioecological act.
Archive | 2016
Christine Vatovec
Environmental stewardship is a concept heralded by Aldo Leopold (1949) as the responsible use and conservation of natural resources in a way that protects and sustains these resources. It is a management concept that responds to the impacts that human activities have on ecological systems, and biodiversity in particular. Chapin et al. (2011) call for stewardship approaches that recognize the integral relationships between humans and the environment within social-ecological systems (see Box 17.1). Humans rely on biodiversity to provide food, fibers, and other materials that support our basic needs and well-being. Therefore, to maintain healthy human communities we must take actions to conserve the biodiversity on which we depend (Frumkin 2005). For example, agricultural practices that favor large-scale monoculture crops could lead to human starvation if the crops are decimated by a natural disaster (drought, pest outbreak, etc.) to which they have no resistance. In contrast, a more biodiverse agricultural system could be more resilient to such disasters, thus better supporting human well-being. Recent research on the relationship between biodiversity and agricultural pest outbreaks highlights the importance of such interconnections (Lundgren and Fausti 2015).
Sociologia Ruralis | 2010
Michael M. Bell; Sarah E. Lloyd; Christine Vatovec
Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education | 2009
Christine Vatovec; Teri C. Balser
Journal of Environmental Management | 2017
Christine Vatovec; Emily Van Wagoner; Corey Evans
Critical Reviews in Eukaryotic Gene Expression | 2014
Christine Vatovec; Mujde Z. Erten; Jane Kolodinsky; Phil Brown; Marie Wood; Ted A. James; Brian L. Sprague