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Dive into the research topics where Gil Maduro is active.

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Featured researches published by Gil Maduro.


Preventing Chronic Disease | 2012

An intervention to improve cause-of-death reporting in New York City hospitals, 2009-2010.

Ann Madsen; Sayone Thihalolipavan; Gil Maduro; Regina Zimmerman; Ram Koppaka; Wenhui Li; Victoria Foster; Elizabeth M. Begier

Introduction Poor-quality cause-of-death reporting reduces reliability of mortality statistics used to direct public health efforts. Overreporting of heart disease has been documented in New York City (NYC) and nationwide. Our objective was to evaluate the immediate and longer-term effects of a cause-of-death (COD) educational program that NYC’s health department conducted at 8 hospitals on heart disease reporting and on average conditions per certificate, which are indicators of the quality of COD reporting. Methods From June 2009 through January 2010, we intervened at 8 hospitals that overreported heart disease deaths in 2008. We shared hospital-specific data on COD reporting, held conference calls with key hospital staff, and conducted in-service training. For deaths reported from January 2009 through June 2011, we compared the proportion of heart disease deaths and average number of conditions per death certificate before and after the intervention at both intervention and nonintervention hospitals. Results At intervention hospitals, the proportion of death certificates that reported heart disease as the cause of death decreased from 68.8% preintervention to 32.4% postintervention (P < .001). Individual hospital proportions ranged from 58.9% to 79.5% preintervention and 25.9% to 45.0% postintervention. At intervention hospitals the average number of conditions per death certificate increased from 2.4 conditions preintervention to 3.4 conditions postintervention (P < .001) and remained at 3.4 conditions a year later. At nonintervention hospitals, these measures remained relatively consistent across the intervention and postintervention period. Conclusion This NYC health department’s hospital-level intervention led to durable changes in COD reporting.


Preventing Chronic Disease | 2013

Impact of a hospital-level intervention to reduce heart disease overreporting on leading causes of death.

Teeb Al-Samarrai; Ann Madsen; Regina Zimmerman; Gil Maduro; Wenhui Li; Carolyn M. Greene; Elizabeth M. Begier

Introduction The quality of cause-of-death reporting on death certificates affects the usefulness of vital statistics for public health action. Heart disease deaths are overreported in the United States. We evaluated the impact of an intervention to reduce heart disease overreporting on other leading causes of death. Methods A multicomponent intervention comprising training and communication with hospital staff was implemented during July through December 2009 at 8 New York City hospitals reporting excessive heart disease deaths. We compared crude, age-adjusted, and race/ethnicity-adjusted proportions of leading, underlying causes of death reported during death certification by intervention and nonintervention hospitals during preintervention (January–June 2009) and postintervention (January–June 2010) periods. We also examined trends in leading causes of death for 2000 through 2010. Results At intervention hospitals, heart disease deaths declined by 54% postintervention; other leading causes of death (ie, malignant neoplasms, influenza and pneumonia, cerebrovascular disease, and chronic lower respiratory diseases) increased by 48% to 232%. Leading causes of death at nonintervention hospitals changed by 6% or less. In the preintervention period, differences in leading causes of death between intervention and nonintervention hospitals persisted after controlling for race/ethnicity and age; in the postintervention period, age accounted for most differences observed between intervention and nonintervention hospitals. Postintervention, malignant neoplasms became the leading cause of premature death (ie, deaths among patients aged 35–74 y) at intervention hospitals. Conclusion A hospital-level intervention to reduce heart disease overreporting led to substantial changes to other leading causes of death, changing the leading cause of premature death. Heart disease overreporting is likely obscuring the true levels of cause-specific mortality.


Health Affairs | 2013

Life Expectancy Among Non–High School Graduates

Beth Begier; Wenhui Li; Gil Maduro

without prior written permission from the Publisher. All rights reserved. or mechanical, including photocopying or by information storage or retrieval systems, may be reproduced, displayed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic States copyright law (Title 17, U.S. Code), no part of by Project HOPE The People-to-People Health Foundation. As provided by United Suite 600, Bethesda, MD 20814-6133. Copyright


American Journal of Public Health | 2013

A case study of the impact of inaccurate cause-of-death reporting on health disparity tracking: New York City premature cardiovascular mortality.

Lauren E. Johns; Ann Madsen; Gil Maduro; Regina Zimmerman; Kevin Konty; Elizabeth M. Begier

OBJECTIVES Heart disease death overreporting is problematic in New York City (NYC) and other US jurisdictions. We examined whether overreporting affects the premature (< 65 years) heart disease death rate disparity between non-Hispanic Blacks and non-Hispanic Whites in NYC. METHODS We identified overreporting hospitals and used counts of premature heart disease deaths at reference hospitals to estimate corrected counts. We then corrected citywide, age-adjusted premature heart disease death rates among Blacks and Whites and a White-Black premature heart disease death disparity. RESULTS At overreporting hospitals, 51% of the decedents were White compared with 25% at reference hospitals. Correcting the heart disease death counts at overreporting hospitals decreased the age-adjusted premature heart disease death rate 10.1% (from 41.5 to 37.3 per 100,000) among Whites compared with 4.2% (from 66.2 to 63.4 per 100,000) among Blacks. Correction increased the White-Black disparity 6.1% (from 24.6 to 26.1 per 100,000). CONCLUSIONS In 2008, NYCs White-Black premature heart disease death disparity was underestimated because of overreporting by hospitals serving larger proportions of Whites. Efforts to reduce overreporting may increase the observed disparity, potentially obscuring any programmatic or policy-driven advances.


Clinical Cardiology | 2015

Diabetes and Ischemic Heart Disease Death in People Age 25–54: A Multiple-Cause-of-Death Analysis Based on Over 400 000 Deaths From 1990 to 2008 in New York City

Adriana Quinones; Iryna Lobach; Gil Maduro; Nathaniel R. Smilowitz; Harmony R. Reynolds

Over the past decade, ischemic heart disease (IHD) mortality trends have been less favorable among adults age 25–54 than age ≥55 years.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Adverse Trends in Ischemic Heart Disease Mortality among Young New Yorkers, Particularly Young Black Women

Nathaniel R. Smilowitz; Gil Maduro; Iryna Lobach; Yu Chen; Harmony R. Reynolds

Background Ischemic heart disease (IHD) mortality has been on the decline in the United States for decades. However, declines in IHD mortality have been slower in certain groups, including young women and black individuals. Hypothesis Trends in IHD vary by age, sex, and race in New York City (NYC). Young female minorities are a vulnerable group that may warrant renewed efforts to reduce IHD. Methods IHD mortality trends were assessed in NYC 1980–2008. NYC Vital Statistics data were obtained for analysis. Age-specific IHD mortality rates and confidence bounds were estimated. Trends in IHD mortality were compared by age and race/ethnicity using linear regression of log-transformed mortality rates. Rates and trends in IHD mortality rates were compared between subgroups defined by age, sex and race/ethnicity. Results The decline in IHD mortality rates slowed in 1999 among individuals aged 35–54 years but not ≥55. IHD mortality rates were higher among young men than women age 35–54, but annual declines in IHD mortality were slower for women. Black women age 35–54 had higher IHD mortality rates and slower declines in IHD mortality than women of other race/ethnicity groups. IHD mortality trends were similar in black and white men age 35–54. Conclusions The decline in IHD mortality rates has slowed in recent years among younger, but not older, individuals in NYC. There was an association between sex and race/ethnicity on IHD mortality rates and trends. Young black women may benefit from targeted medical and public health interventions to reduce IHD mortality.


Open Forum Infectious Diseases | 2018

Deaths From Pneumonia—New York City, 1999–2015

Evette Cordoba; Gil Maduro; Mary Huynh; Jay K. Varma; Neil M. Vora

Abstract Background “Pneumonia and influenza” are the third leading cause of death in New York City. Since 2012, pneumonia and influenza have been the only infectious diseases listed among the 10 leading causes of death in NYC. Most pneumonia and influenza deaths in NYC list pneumonia as the underlying cause of death, not influenza. We therefore analyzed death certificate data for pneumonia in NYC during 1999–2015. Methods We calculated annualized pneumonia death rates (overall and by sociodemographic subgroup) and examined the etiologic agent listed. Results There were 41 400 pneumonia deaths during the study period, corresponding to an annualized age-adjusted death rate of 29.7 per 100 000 population. Approximately 17.5% of pneumonia deaths specified an etiologic agent. Age-adjusted pneumonia death rate declined over the study period and across each borough. Males had an annualized age-adjusted pneumonia death rate 1.5 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5–1.5) times that of females. Non-Hispanic blacks had an annualized age-adjusted pneumonia death rate 1.2 (95% CI, 1.2–1.2) times that of non-Hispanic whites. The annualized pneumonia death rate increased with age group above 5–24 years and neighborhood-level poverty. Staten Island had an annualized age-adjusted pneumonia death rate 1.3 (95% CI, 1.2–1.3) times that of Manhattan. In the multivariable analysis, pneumonia deaths were more likely to occur among males, non-Hispanic blacks, persons aged ≥65 years, residents of neighborhoods with higher poverty levels, and in Staten Island. Conclusions While the accuracy of death certificates is unknown, investigation is needed to understand why certain populations are disproportionately recorded as dying from pneumonia in NYC.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2017

Neighborhood Inequalities in Hepatitis C Mortality: Spatial and Temporal Patterns and Associated Factors

Mary M. Ford; Payal Desai; Gil Maduro; Fabienne Laraque


Journal of Public Health Management and Practice | 2016

Increased Life Expectancy in New York City, 2001-2010: An Exploration by Cause of Death and Demographic Characteristics.

Wenhui Li; Gil Maduro; Elizabeth M. Begier


Archive | 2013

ACaseStudyoftheImpactofInaccurateCause-of-Death ReportingonHealthDisparityTracking:NewYorkCity PrematureCardiovascularMortality

Lauren E. Johns; Ann Madsen; Gil Maduro; Regina Zimmerman; Kevin Konty; Elizabeth M. Begier

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Elizabeth M. Begier

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Ann Madsen

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Regina Zimmerman

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Wenhui Li

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Iryna Lobach

University of California

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Kevin Konty

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Beth Begier

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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Carolyn M. Greene

New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

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