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Dive into the research topics where Edward H. Wagner is active.

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Featured researches published by Edward H. Wagner.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1994

Diuretic Therapy for Hypertension and the Risk of Primary Cardiac Arrest

David S. Siscovick; Trivellore E. Raghunathan; Bruce M. Psaty; Thomas D. Koepsell; Kristine G. Wicklund; Xihong Lin; Leonard A. Cobb; Pentti M. Rautaharju; Michael K. Copass; Edward H. Wagner

Background The results of trials of the primary prevention of coronary heart disease have suggested that treating hypertension with high doses of thiazide diuretic drugs might increase the risk of sudden death from cardiac causes. In contrast, treatment with low doses of thiazide reduces the risk of coronary heart disease. Methods To examine the association between thiazide treatment for hypertension and the occurrence of primary cardiac arrest, we conducted a population-based case-control study among enrollees of a health maintenance organization. The case patients were 114 persons with hypertension who had a primary cardiac arrest from 1977 through 1990. The control patients were a stratified random sample of 535 persons with hypertension. The patients treatment was assessed with the use of a computerized pharmacy data base. Records of their ambulatory care were reviewed to determine other clinical characteristics. Results The risk of primary cardiac arrest among patients receiving combined thiazide an...


Preventive Medicine | 1991

Community-level comparisons between the grocery store environment and individual dietary practices

Allen Cheadle; Bruce M. Psaty; Susan J. Curry; Edward H. Wagner; Paula Diehr; Thomas D. Koepsell; Alan R. Kristal

BACKGROUNDnThis article examines the relationship at the community level between individual dietary practice and the grocery store environment.nnnMETHODSnIndividual dietary practice was measured in 12 communities using a telephone survey to obtain self-reported diet. A protocol was developed to measure two aspects of the grocery store environment in these same 12 communities: the relative availability of healthful (low-fat and high-fiber) products, and the amount of health-education information provided. Comparisons were made between individual and store-level measures at two levels of geographic aggregation: community (typically a county) and zip code within community (n = 34).nnnRESULTSnWe found positive and statistically significant correlations at both the community and the zip code level between the availability of healthful products in stores and the reported healthfulness of individual diets. Positive correlations were also found between measures of the amount of health-education material provided by stores and the healthfulness of individual diets, but these correlations did not reach statistical significance.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe results provide support for including measures of the grocery store environment as part of a community-level assessment of dietary behavior.


Epidemiology | 1994

PSYCHOACTIVE MEDICATIONS AND INJURIOUS MOTOR VEHICLE COLLISIONS INVOLVING OLDER DRIVERS

Suzanne G. Leveille; David M. Buchner; Thomas D. Koepsell; Lon W. McCloskey; Marsha E. Wolf; Edward H. Wagner

Older drivers have the second highest risk for motor vehicle collisions of any age group, after adolescents. Psychoactive medications may place older drivers at increased risk for injurious motor vehicle collisions. We conducted a population-based matched case-control study of older drivers who were involved in injurious crashes during 1987 and 1988. The 234 cases and 447 controls were members of a large Seattle-based health maintenance organization. Use of antidepressants and opioid analgesics by older drivers was associated with increased risk for injurious motor vehicle collisions. Compared with non-users, current users of cyclic antidepressants had an adjusted relative risk (RR) of 2.3 [95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1–4.8]. Opioid analgesic use was also associated with an elevated crash risk (adjusted RR = 1.8; 95% CI = 1.0–3.4). We found no evidence of a doserelated effect with either class of drug. Current use of benzodiazepines or sedating antihistamines had little association with increased risk for injurious collisions. (Epidemiology 1994;5:591–598)


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1994

Medical conditions and motor vehicle collision injuries in older adults

Thomas D. Koepsell; Marsha E. Wolf; Lon W. McCloskey; David M. Buchner; Douglas Louie; Edward H. Wagner; Robert S. Thompson

OBJECTIVE To determine whether medical conditions that can impair sensory, cognitive, or motor function increase the risk of injury due to motor vehicle collision in older drivers.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1990

Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation for Smoking Cessation.

Susan J. Curry; Edward H. Wagner; Louis C. Grothaus

An intrinsic-extrinsic model of motivation for smoking cessation was evaluated with 2 samples (ns = 1.217 and 151) of smokers who requested self-help materials for smoking cessation. Exploratory and confirmatory principal components analysis on a 36-item Reasons for Quitting (RFQ) scale supported the intrinsic-extrinsic motivation distinction. A 4-factor model, with 2 intrinsic dimensions (concerns about health and desire for self-control) and 2 extrinsic dimensions (immediate reinforcement and social influence), was defined by 20 of the 36 RFQ items. The 20-item measure demonstrated moderate to high levels of internal consistency and convergent and discriminant validity. Logistic regression analyses indicated that smokers with higher levels of intrinsic relative to extrinsic motivation were more likely to achieve abstinence from smoking.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1999

The Use of Automated Data to Identify Complications and Comorbidities of Diabetes: A Validation Study

Katherine M. Newton; Edward H. Wagner; Scott D. Ramsey; David K. McCulloch; Rhian Evans; Nirmala Sandhu; Connie Davis

We evaluated the accuracy of administrative data for identifying complications and comorbidities of diabetes using International Classification of Diseases, 9th edition, Clinical Modification and Current Procedural Terminology codes. The records of 471 randomly selected diabetic patients were reviewed for complications from January 1, 1993 to December 31, 1995; chart data served to validate automated data. The complications with the highest sensitivity determined by a diagnosis in the medical records identified within +/-60 days of the database date were myocardial infarction (95.2%); amputation (94.4%); ischemic heart disease (90.3%); stroke (91.2%); osteomyelitis (79.2%); and retinal detachment, vitreous hemorrhage, and vitrectomy (73.5%). With the exception of amputation (82.9%), positive predictive value was low when based on a diagnosis identified within +/-60 days of the database date but increased with relaxation of the time constraints to include confirmation of the condition at any time during 1993-1995: ulcers (88.5%); amputation (85.4%); and retinal detachment, vitreous hemorrhage and vitrectomy (79.8%). Automated data are useful for ascertaining potential cases of some diabetic complications but require confirmatory evidence when they are to be used for research purposes.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1991

DATA ANALYSIS AND SAMPLE SIZE ISSUES IN EVALUATIONS OF COMMUNITY-BASED HEALTH PROMOTION AND DISEASE PREVENTION PROGRAMS: A MIXED-MODEL ANALYSIS OF VARIANCE APPROACH

Thomas D. Koepsell; Donald C. Martin; Paula Diehr; Bruce M. Psaty; Edward H. Wagner; Edward B. Perrin; Allen Cheadle

The growing interest in community-based approaches to health promotion and disease prevention (HP/DP) has been accompanied by a growing need to evaluate the effectiveness of such programs. Special issues that arise in these evaluation studies include (1) entire communities are assigned to intervention and control groups, (2) only a small number of communities can usually be studied, (3) the time course of changes in behavior and other outcomes is often of interest, and (4) surveys to measure such changes over time can be conducted with either repeated cross-sectional samples or with longitudinal samples. This paper shows how these issues can be addressed under a mixed-model analysis of variance approach. This approach serves to unify several ideas in the literature on evaluation of community studies, including use of time-series regression and the question of whether the individual or the community should be the unit of analysis. We also describe how the method can be used to estimate sample size requirements, statistical power, or minimum detectable program effect.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1993

The Seattle FICSIT/MoveIt study: the effect of exercise on gait and balance in older adults.

David M. Buchner; M. E. Cress; Edward H. Wagner; B. J. De Lateur; Robert Price; I. B. Abrass

While exercise is generally recommended for older adults, the specific role of exercise in preventing falls and frail health is unclear. The Seattle FICSIT/Movelt study is a population‐based, randomized, controlled trial comparing the effects of three 6‐month exercise interventions (endurance training, strength training, or combined endurance and strength training), and three 3‐month endurance training interventions (stationary cycle, walking, or aerobic movement). Primary study outcomes are aerobic capacity, strength, gait, balance, and physical functional status. The study enrolls adults age 68–85 who have leg weakness and impaired gait. It differs from most previous community‐based exercise studies in several respects: recruitment of subjects from a defined population; eligibility criteria based upon physiologic and functional status deficits; random assignment to exercise groups; assessment of both physiologic and functional status outcomes; follow‐up beyond the completion of supervised exercise; and a large sample size (Total N = 180).


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1993

Do communities differ in health behaviors

Paula Diehr; Thomas D. Koepsell; Allen Cheadle; Bruce M. Psaty; Edward H. Wagner; Susan J. Curry

Communities differ in the prevalence of various health behaviors, but it is not known to what extent these differences are due to different types of people living in them. We used data from the evaluation of the Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation Community Health Promotion Grant Program to study individual-level and community-level variation in health behaviors for 15 communities. Our results show (1) there was significant variation among these communities in prevalences of smoking, consumption of alcohol and dietary fat, and use of seatbelts; (2) these differences persisted after control for demographic, health status, and other health behavioral characteristics of the people in the communities; (3) the community effect on a particular persons behavior, as represented by R2, was very small (less than 1%); and (4) the adjusted differences in prevalences among communities were potentially large (for example, a 7 percentage point difference in the probability of smoking). Unique features of communities may influence health behaviors. These findings affirm the potential importance of contextual effects on individual health behavior and thus support the theory that changing the community environment may offer effective ways to change individual health behavior.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2003

Community exercise program use and changes in healthcare costs for older adults

Ronald T. Ackermann; Allen Cheadle; Nirmala Sandhu; Linda Madsen; Edward H. Wagner; James P. LoGerfo

BACKGROUNDnRegular exercise is associated with many health benefits. Community-based exercise programs may increase exercise participation, but little is known about cost implications.nnnMETHODnA retrospective, matched cohort study was conducted to determine if changes in healthcare costs for Medicare-eligible adults who choose to participate in a community-based exercise program were different from similar individuals who did not participate. Exercise program participants included 1114 adults aged > or = 65 years, who were continuously enrolled in Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound (GHC) between October 1, 1997 and December 31, 2000 and who participated in the Lifetime Fitness (exercise) Program Copyright (LFP) at least once; three GHC enrollees who never attended LFP were randomly selected as controls for each participant by matching on age and gender. Cost and utilization estimates from GHC administrative data for the time from LFP enrollment to December 31, 2000 were compared using multivariable regression models.nnnRESULTSnThe average increase in annual total healthcare costs was less in participants compared to controls (+642 dollars vs +1175 dollars; p=0.05). After adjusting for differences in age, gender, enrollment date, comorbidity index, and pre-exposure cost and utilization levels, total healthcare costs for participants were 94.1% (95% confidence interval [CI], 85.6%-103.5%) of control costs. However, for participants who attended the exercise program at an average rate of > or = 1 visit weekly, total adjusted follow-up costs were 79.3% (95% CI, 71.3%-88.2%) of controls.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIncluding a community exercise program as a health insurance benefit shows promise as a strategy for helping some Medicare-eligible adults to improve their health through exercise.

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Bruce M. Psaty

University of Washington

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Allen Cheadle

University of Washington

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Paula Diehr

University of Washington

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Susan J. Curry

Group Health Cooperative

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Alan R. Kristal

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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