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Dive into the research topics where Eudice Goldberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Eudice Goldberg.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 1999

Toronto street youth and HIV/AIDS: prevalence, demographics, and risks

DeMatteo D; Carol Major; Block B; Coates R; Fearon M; Eudice Goldberg; King Sm; Millson M; O'Shaughnessy M; Stanley Read

PURPOSEnThe purposes of this study were: (a) to identify human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) prevalence in Toronto street youth through paired blood and saliva specimens; (b) to identify the HIV risk and prevention behaviors of street involved youth; and (c) to identify demographic or other factors that may contribute to the risk of street youth becoming infected with HIV/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the future.nnnMETHODSnThis was a cross-sectional convenience study of street-involved youth aged 14-25 years. The youth participated in interviews to identify HIV-related knowledge and personal risk and preventive behaviors. Following interviews, they were asked to provide a saliva sample, blood spot, or both. They could refuse one or both samples without jeopardizing their involvement or receiving an honorarium. Two males were the only participants who declined to provide a sample.nnnRESULTSnFifteen of 695 (2.2%) youth tested positive for HIV infection. All were male, ranging in age from 18 to 25 years. Same and opposite sex, intravenous (IV) drug use, prostitution, and incarceration were risk factors associated with positive HIV test results. The rate of HIV infection was seven times greater for the group 20 years of age and older (20-25) compared to the younger group aged 14-9 years. The proportion testing positive for HIV from small cities, towns, and rural communities in Ontario was 40%; yet, they represented 21% of the study population. Most (57%) youth had been on their own for no more than 3 years and had moved frequently. Nearly two thirds (60%) had stayed in hostels or homeless shelters in the previous 6 months.nnnCONCLUSIONnStreet youth in Canada are at high risk of HIV infection with their risk increasing with age. Unprotected (same and opposite) sex, IV drug use, prostitution and incarceration were linked to their HIV infections. The high level of mobility identified by street youth challenges governments, communities, and public health officials to develop appropriate prevention strategies and to carefully monitor the spread of HIV infection in this vulnerable population.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1988

Energy expenditure and body composition in patients with anorexia nervosa.

Nachum Vaisman; M Rossi; Eudice Goldberg; Lionel J. Dibden; Linda Wykes; Paul B. Pencharz

Blood biochemistry, body composition, and resting energy expenditure were studied in 25 patients with anorexia nervosa admitted to hospital during a period of 18 months. The patients ages ranged from 12.9 to 17.2 years, and the abnormal feeding history from 3 to 12 months. Blood chemistry values were in the normal range, but fat body mass and lean body mass were reduced and extracellular water volume was expanded beyond normal values. Resting energy expenditure was reduced to 49% to 91% of values predicted by the Harris-Benedict equations. Substrate use after overnight fast indicated an abnormally high use of carbohydrates. Significant correlations were found between extracellular water volume and triceps skin-fold thickness, mid-arm muscle circumference and lean body mass, and substrate use and weight loss as a percentage of initial weight. We suggest that these simple anthropometric measurements can be used to assess and monitor the refeeding of patients with anorexia nervosa.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2002

Substance use in female adolescents with eating disorders

Suzanne L Stock; Eudice Goldberg; Shannon Corbett; Debra K. Katzman

To determine the prevalence of substance use in adolescents with eating disorders, compare the results with a data set of Ontario high school students, and explore why adolescents with eating disorders do, or do not, use various substances. From January 1999 to March 2000, 101 female adolescents who met the DSM-IV criteria for an eating disorder were followed up in a tertiary care pediatric treatment center. They were asked to participate in a cross-sectional study using a self-administered questionnaire assessing substance use and investigating reasons for use and nonuse; 95 agreed to participate and 77 completed the questionnaire (mean age, 15.2 years). The patients were divided into two groups: 63 with restrictive symptoms only, 17 with purging symptoms. The rates of drug use between subjects and their comparison groups were compared by z-scores, with the level of significance set at.05. During the preceding year, restrictors used significantly less tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis than grade- and sex-matched comparison populations, and purgers used these substances at rates similar to those of comparison subjects. Other drugs seen frequently in the purgers included hallucinogens, tranquilizers, stimulants, LSD, PCP, cocaine, and ecstasy. Both groups used caffeine and laxatives, but few used diet pills. Restrictors said they did not use substances because they were bad for their health, tasted unpleasant, were contrary to their beliefs, and were too expensive. Purgers generally used substances to relax, relieve anger, avoid eating, and get away from problems. Female adolescents with eating disorders who have restrictive symptoms use substances less frequently than the general adolescent population but do not abstain from their use. Those with purging symptoms use substances with a similar frequency to that found in the general adolescent population. Because the sample size for the purging group was small, firm conclusions cannot be drawn from our analysis. Health care providers who treat adolescents with eating disorders are in a good position to identify those who use substances and may be at risk for substance abuse.


Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology | 1997

Assessment of brain function in adolescent anorexia nervosa before and after weight gain

Susan J. Bradley; Margot J. Taylor; Joanne Rovet; Eudice Goldberg; Jane Hood; Rod Wachsmuth; Maria Azcue; Paul B. Pencharz

This study assessed brain function in 20 adolescent females with anorexia nervosa (AN) and 20 controls using event-related potentials (ERPs) and a battery of neuropsychological tests. In the AN group, N4 latencies for a nonverbal memory task were significantly longer than for a verbal task, and P3 latencies for the verbal task were significantly longer among anorexics as compared to controls. On the nonverbal task, the AN group failed to show a right > left hemispheric asymmetry for P3 amplitudes which was observed for controls. These group differences for P3 latency and amplitude were particularly pronounced in the central-parietal region of the head. Body Mass Index (BMI) in the anorexic group significantly predicted N4 amplitudes for the verbal task in the left hemisphere and P3 amplitudes for the nonverbal task in the right hemisphere. The two groups did not differ on any of the tests used to assess neuropsychological functioning. Eight nutritionally recovered patients and their matched controls were retested using the same procedures. Anorexics showed larger P3 amplitudes for the verbal as compared to the nonverbal task at follow-up. These findings provide evidence for localized brain dysfunction in anorexia nervosa that only partially normalizes with weight gain.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 1988

Changes in body composition during refeeding of patients with anorexia nervosa

Nachum Vaisman; Mary Corey; M Rossi; Eudice Goldberg; Paul B. Pencharz

Changes in body composition were studied in 13 girls with anorexia nervosa before and during 2 months of refeeding. Fat body mass and fat-free body mass were derived from skin-fold measurements. Total body potassium was measured by whole body counter, and intracellular water was calculated from it. Extracellular water was measured as the bromide space after oral bromide administration. A gradual increase was noted in weight, fat body mass, fat-free body mass, and total body potassium during refeeding. Extracellular water was expanded on admission and increased in all patients in the first weeks of treatment; later it fell to normal. Most of the changes in fat-free body mass over the first weeks of refeeding could be accounted for by an expansion in extracellular water. Particular care must therefore be taken with fluid balance during the first few weeks of refeeding.


Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 1991

Hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency virus infection in street youths in Toronto, Canada.

Elaine Ee-Ling Wang; Susan King; Eudice Goldberg; Barbara Bock; Ruth Milner; Stanley Read

Hepatitis B and human immunodeficiency virus are transmitted by veneral contact or by the sharing of used needles during drug use. A questionnaire was administered to street youths admitting to prostitution and to a group denying prostitution, as well as to sexually active adolescents who lived with their family and were attending an adolescent medical clinic. The age, gender, race, number of sexual partners, condom use, illicit drug use, anal intercourse and admission to prostitution were recorded for each of the subjects. Serology was obtained for hepatitis B markers and human immunodeficiency virus antibody. Multiple regression analysis was performed to determine the factors which might predict hepatitis B serologic status. A single subject, who admitted to prostitution, was found to be human immunodeficiency virus.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 2001

Hospital-based adolescent substance abuse treatment: comorbidity, outcomes, and gender.

Stephen Rivers; Rachel L. Greenbaum; Eudice Goldberg

Positive change was demonstrated on a number of self-report scales administered to 129 adolescents at a hospital-based substance abuse program, of whom 72 were posttested after 8 weeks. Female subjects showed change on more measures than male subjects, and a greater number of female subjects went from the clinical to subclinical range. Based on number of sessions attended, subjects were grouped by dose into either hi-attenders or lo-attenders. A Trials (pretest/posttest) x Dose interaction revealed significant reduction in drug use at posttest for hi-attenders who were initially heavier users. Multiple regression analyses determined how well comorbidity predicted attendance and change in drug use. Although comorbidity failed to predict attendance consistently, male subjects who reported more internalizing symptomatology reduced their drug use to a greater extent than those low on this dimension, and female subjects who initially reported experiencing more family problems became more self-efficacious about future drug avoidance.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 2009

A Human Immunodeficiency Virus Risk Reduction Intervention for Incarcerated Youth: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Eudice Goldberg; Peggy Millson; Stephen Rivers; Stephanie Jeanneret Manning; Karen Leslie; Stanley Read; Caitlin Shipley; J. Charles Victor

PURPOSEnTo evaluate, by gender, the impact of a structured, comprehensive risk reduction intervention with and without boosters on human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) knowledge, attitudes and behaviors in incarcerated youth; and to determine predictors of increasing HIV knowledge and reducing high-risk attitudes and behaviors.nnnMETHODSnThis randomized controlled trial involved participants completing structured interviews at 1, 3, and 6 months. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to analyze changes over time. The study was conducted in secure custody facilities and in the community. The study sample comprising 391 incarcerated youth, 102 female and 289 male aged 12-18, formed the voluntary sample. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: education intervention; education intervention with booster; or no systematic intervention. The outcome and predictor measures included the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, Youth Self Report, Drug Use Inventory, and HIV Knowledge, Attitudes and Behavior Scale.nnnRESULTSnThe 6-month retention rate was 59.6%. At 6 months, males in the education and booster groups sustained increases in knowledge scores (p < 0.001). Females in these groups sustained increased condom attitude scores (p = 0.004). Males in the booster group sustained increased prevention attitude scores (p = 0.017). Females in the booster group reported more consistent condom use (odds ratio [OR] = 4.20; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.81, 9.77). Age, gender, drug use, and psychological profiles were predictive of outcome.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe intervention and boosters led to gender-specific improvements in knowledge, attitudes, and condom use. Result variations by gender underline the importance of gender issues in prevention interventions. Predictors of success were identified to inform future HIV education interventions.


Journal of Adolescent Health | 1994

Hypercarotenemia and transaminitis in female adolescents with eating disorders: A prospective, controlled study

Philip M. Sherman; Karen Leslie; Eudice Goldberg; Julietta Rybczynski; Patrick St. Louis

PURPOSEnHypercarotenemia and transaminitis are reported as laboratory features of anorexia nervosa. However, the specificity and sensitivity of an elevation in serum carotene and transaminase are not known. Therefore, a prospective study was undertaken to determine the clinical utility of these serum markers.nnnMETHODSnSerum carotene was measured in 46 female adolescents between 13 years and 18 years of age (21 anorexia nervosa, 17 bulimia nervosa, 8 unclassified eating disorders). Findings were compared to levels of carotene in serum samples obtained from similarly aged females with either chronic inflammatory bowel disease (22 Crohn disease, 11 ulcerative colitis) or acute medical symptoms not associated with undernutrition or intestinal inflammation (N = 26), and 21 children of either sex with dyspeptic symptoms.nnnRESULTSnSerum carotene was elevated in 6/46 (13.0%) females with eating disorders compared with only 2/80 (2.5%) children in the three comparison groups (p < 0.01). Hypercarotenemia was present in 4/21 girls with anorexia nervosa compared with 0/17 females with bulimia nervosa (p = 0.11). Transaminitis was present in 38.5% (AST) and 7.7% (ALT) of eating disorder patients. Liver enzyme abnormalities, however, did not correlate with hypercarotenemia. Transaminitis was also not specific for eating disorders since transaminitis was observed with comparable frequency in the three comparison groups.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese findings confirm that hypercarotenemia is a laboratory feature in some subjects with eating disorders, in particular, anorexia nervosa. The low sensitivity (13.0%) does not provide justification for its use as a screening test. However, in complicated diagnostic settings a serum carotene determination could prove useful because the specificity (97.5%), positive predictive value (75.0%), and negative predictive value (66.1%) of an elevated carotene were high. These data also show that elevated carotene levels are not associated with hepatic abnormalities. Although transaminitis is reported as a laboratory feature of eating disorders, the prevalence of such abnormalities in this study was not higher than in age-matched comparison groups.


International Journal of Eating Disorders | 2009

Second‐degree atrioventricular block (Mobitz Type I) in an adolescent with anorexia nervosa: Intrinsic or acquired conduction abnormality

Nuray Ö. Kanbur; Eudice Goldberg; Leora Pinhas; Robert M. Hamilton; Robin Clegg; Debra K. Katzman

Anorexia nervosa (AN) can cause both functional and structural cardiac complications, including a variety of different conduction abnormalities. This is the first case report of symptomatic diurnal second-degree atrioventricular (AV) block (Mobitz Type I) in an adolescent with AN. We present a 12-year-old girl with AN, restrictor sub-type who reported cardiac symptoms during weight gain, at the time of the initial diagnosis of AV block. Second-degree AV block (Mobitz Type I) is discussed as a possible complication of the AN, as well as being an intrinsic conduction system disease.

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M Rossi

University of Toronto

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