Emma Simmons
Brown University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emma Simmons.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2005
Curt G. Beckwith; Timothy P. Flanigan; Carlos del Rio; Emma Simmons; Edward J. Wing; Charles C. J. Carpenter; John G. Bartlett
Approximately one-quarter of a million persons in the United States who are infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) do not know it. To decrease the number of such persons, primary care providers should make HIV testing a routine component of health care. HIV testing should also be offered routinely in other settings, such as emergency departments, jails, and substance abuse treatment centers. Currently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Infectious Diseases Society of America recommend routine HIV testing only in settings where the prevalence of HIV infection is > or =1%; in settings where the prevalence of HIV infection is <1%, testing should be based on risk assessment. Because of the impracticality of strategies for testing that are based on estimates of prevalence, and because of the inaccuracy of risk assessment, we propose that HIV testing be routinely offered to any person who is sexually active. As an adjunct to the implementation of routine testing programs, counseling practices need to be streamlined, and rapid HIV testing needs to be implemented in the appropriate settings.
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2008
Loida E. Bonney; Jennifer G. Clarke; Emma Simmons; Jennifer S. Rose; Josiah D. Rich
Rates of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in women in U.S. corrections facilities are higher than rates in community samples. Research that combines behavioral correlates of STI with STI history by race/ethnicity has not been done in incarcerated women. The purpose of this study was to compare by race/ethnicity self-reported sexual risk behaviors with self-reported history of STI in an incarcerated sample. An interviewer administered a questionnaire to 428 incarcerated women. Blacks were more likely to report consistent condom use in the three months prior to incarceration (47% vs. 28%, p < 0.05), and Hispanics were less likely to report sex work than were whites (16% vs. 39%, p < 0.05). Whites were more likely than blacks to report having had an unplanned pregnancy (88% vs. 67%, p < 0.05). Despite having lower self-reported risk on several measures, Blacks were more likely to report history of STI (65% vs. 40%, p < 0.05). The correctional setting is an opportune place to better understand and address the complex issue of sexual health disparities.
American Journal of Public Health | 2009
Timothy P. Flanigan; Nanetta Payne; Emma Simmons; Jennifer Hyde; Kaye Sly; Caron Zlotnick
The Miriam Hospital, Brown Medical School, and Jackson State University developed a joint training program for predoctoral, Black psychology students under the auspices of a training grant funded by the National Institutes of Health. The students in the program at Jackson State University had unlimited access to the clinical research resources and mentoring expertise at Brown Medical School. This innovative program began in 2001 and addresses the need for Black leaders in clinical research and academia who will focus on HIV and other infections that disproportionately affect the Black community. This collaboration has served as a bridge between an Ivy League institution and a historically Black university for training in clinical research to develop successful minority academicians.
American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine | 2012
Emma Simmons; Jennifer G. Clarke; Joseph A. Diaz
HIV/AIDS is a serious, but preventable disease that can have improved outcomes with early diagnosis and treatment. Primary care providers are experts in prevention and early treatment. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that HIV testing be routinely incorporated into health care settings for patients aged 13 to 64 years. There has been much confusion and noncompliance with these recommendations. Primary care providers should understand the rationale behind these latest guidelines as well as their own states’/territories’ regulations and laws around HIV testing to embrace these latest recommendations in order to provide their patients with the best possible care.
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2005
Justin Smith; Emma Simmons; Kenneth H. Mayer
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2006
Nanetta Payne; Curt G. Beckwith; Melvin Davis; Timothy P. Flanigan; Emma Simmons; Kathy Crockett; Tanya M. Ratcliff; Larry K. Brown; Kaye Sly
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2011
Emma Simmons; Monique J. Brown; Kay Slye; Mindy Ma; Madeline Y. Sutton; Eleanor McLellan-Lemal
Aids Patient Care and Stds | 2006
Emma Simmons; Mary B. Roberts; Mindy Ma; Curt G. Beckwith; Charles C. J. Carpenter; Timothy P. Flanigan
Journal of The National Medical Association | 2005
Emma Simmons; Michelle L. Rogers; Georita M. Frierson; Curt G. Beckwith; Timothy P. Flanigan
Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2008
Robert Gramling; Jennifer G. Clarke; Emma Simmons