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Dive into the research topics where Haziel Laryea is active.

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Featured researches published by Haziel Laryea.


BMC Public Health | 2007

Recruitment and retention of low-income minority women in a behavioral intervention to reduce smoking, depression, and intimate partner violence during pregnancy

M. Nabil El-Khorazaty; Allan A. Johnson; Michele Kiely; Ayman Ae El-Mohandes; Shyam Subramanian; Haziel Laryea; Kennan B. Murray; Jutta S. Thornberry; Jill G. Joseph

BackgroundResearchers have frequently encountered difficulties in the recruitment and retention of minorities resulting in their under-representation in clinical trials. This report describes the successful strategies of recruitment and retention of African Americans and Latinos in a randomized clinical trial to reduce smoking, depression and intimate partner violence during pregnancy. Socio-demographic characteristics and risk profiles of retained vs. non-retained women and lost to follow-up vs. dropped-out women are presented. In addition, subgroups of pregnant women who are less (more) likely to be retained are identified.MethodsPregnant African American women and Latinas who were Washington, DC residents, aged 18 years or more, and of 28 weeks gestational age or less were recruited at six prenatal care clinics. Potentially eligible women were screened for socio-demographic eligibility and the presence of the selected behavioral and psychological risks using an Audio Computer-Assisted Self-Interview. Eligible women who consented to participate completed a baseline telephone evaluation after which they were enrolled in the study and randomly assigned to either the intervention or the usual care group.ResultsOf the 1,398 eligible women, 1,191 (85%) agreed to participate in the study. Of the 1,191 women agreeing to participate, 1,070 completed the baseline evaluation and were enrolled in the study and randomized, for a recruitment rate of 90%. Of those enrolled, 1,044 were African American women. A total of 849 women completed the study, for a retention rate of 79%. Five percent dropped out and 12% were lost-to-follow up. Women retained in the study and those not retained were not statistically different with regard to socio-demographic characteristics and the targeted risks. Retention strategies included financial and other incentives, regular updates of contact information which was tracked and monitored by a computerized data management system available to all project staff, and attention to cultural competence with implementation of study procedures by appropriately selected, trained, and supervised staff. Single, less educated, alcohol and drug users, non-working, and non-WIC women represent minority women with expected low retention rates.ConclusionWe conclude that with targeted recruitment and retention strategies, minority women will participate at high rates in behavioral clinical trials. We also found that women who drop out are different from women who are lost to follow-up, and require different strategies to optimize their completion of the study.


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Pica in an Urban Environment

Cecile H. Edwards; Allan A. Johnson; Enid M. Knight; Ura Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; Ouida E. Westney; Sidney Jones; Haziel Laryea; Lennox S. Westney

The practice of pica, the compulsive ingestion of nonfood substances over a sustained period of time, was studied in 553 African American women who were admitted to prenatal clinics in Washington, D.C. Dietary, biochemical, and psychosocial correlates of the pica practices of a subset of this urban population are presented in this paper. Geophagia, compulsive eating of clay or dirt, was not observed in these women; pagophagia, or the ingestion of large quantities of ice and freezer frost, was self reported in 8.1% of the women, who consumed 1/2 to 2 cups a day from 1 to 7 days per week. Serum ferritin concentrations of pica women were significantly lower during the second and third trimesters of pregnancy; the average values for three trimesters of pregnancy for both ferritin and mean corpuscular hemoglobin were significantly lower in pica women than their nonpica counterparts (P = 0.0001 and P = 0.017, respectively). Although not significantly different, the iron (66 vs. 84% RDA) and calcium (60 vs. 75% RDA) contents of the diets of pica women were less those of nonpica women. Gestational age, body length, and body weight were not different, but head circumferences of infants delivered to pica women who consumed freezer frost and/or ice were smaller than those of nonpica women (P = 0.012). The hypothesis is presented that pica in African American women may be a mediator of stress, acting through the immune system. The size of the social support network of pica women was significantly less than that of nonpica women.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Prenatal Substance Abuse and Pregnancy Outcomes Among African American Women

Ura Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; Allan A. Johnson; Enid M. Knight; Ouida E. Westney; Haziel Laryea; Gloria Hill; Elaine Cannon; Antoine K. Fomufod; Lennox S. Westney; Sidney Jones; Cecile H. Edwards

Subjects in this prospective observational study were 467 nulliparous women, ages 16-35, recruited at the prenatal clinics of a university hospital and a public hospital. Using a purposive sampling approach, and entry questionnaire and a series of psychosocial instruments were administered throughout the pregnancy course to assess stress, anxiety, body image, self-esteem, pregnancy symptoms, locus of control, and partners interaction. Several pregnancy outcome measures were determined after delivery. Brazelton neonatal behavioral assessments were performed two days after birth of infants delivered to the maternal subjects. Self-reported substance abuse data were obtained from the entry questionnaire and the medical intake records, with usage characterized in terms of occurrence prior to and/or during pregnancy. Illicit drug users during pregnancy had lower self-esteem, greater stress, more pregnancy symptoms, a more negative pre-pregnancy body image and less favorable interactions with their partners. T test results show that infants of smokers had smaller head circumferences, shorter body length, and less optimal Brazelton orientation performance. Infants of illicit drug users had smaller head circumferences and shorter body lengths.


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Multiple factors as mediators of the reduced incidence of low birth weight in an urban clinic population.

Cecile H. Edwards; Enid M. Knight; Allan A. Johnson; Ura Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; Haziel Laryea; Ouida E. Westney; Lennox S. Westney

A five year prospective observational study was initiated in 1985 at Howard University to describe the nutritional, clinical, dietary, lifestyle, environmental, and socioeconomic characteristics of women who enrolled in the hospital prenatal clinic. The participants were nulliparous, between the ages of 18 and 35 years, free of diabetes and abnormal hemoglobins (sickle cell disease, thalassemia, and hemoglobin C), and had been admitted prior to the 29th week of gestation. During the three year period from 1985-1988, the incidence of low birth weight (LBW) in 239 deliveries to project participants was 8.3%, whereas that of women simultaneously enrolled in the prenatal clinic with the same eligibility requirements, but not recruited for the research project, was 21.9% (P = 0.001). The incidence of LBW in infants of African American women with these eligibility requirements who were delivered by private physicians but were not enrolled in the project, was 6.3%. The reduction in LBW of infants delivered to participants in this study is attributed to the enhanced social and psychological support by project staff during their pregnancies. The caring, sensitive demeanor of the research project staff may have empowered the participants to (a) give greater compliance (91 vs. 70%) in the ingestion of the routine physician-prescribed vitamin/mineral supplement, which provided nutrients low (less than 70% of the 1989 RDAs) in their customary diets, such as folate, pyridoxine, iron, zinc, and magnesium and (b) show greater accountability in keeping prenatal clinic appointments.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Nutrition Research | 1991

Hematologic and vitamin status of african american women and their relationships to pregnancy outcome

Enid M. Knight; Bernice G. Spurlock; Allan A. Johnson; U. Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; William L. West; Malcolm Manning; George Nolan; Duane Bonds; Haziel Laryea; Sidney Jones; Lennox Westhey; Cecile H. Edwards

Abstract A prospective observational study was conducted to investigate the effects of nutrition and related factors on the outcome of pregnancy in nulliparous African American women 16–35 years of age. Blood samples from a subset of these subjects were taken during the first (1st), second (2nd) and third (3rd) trimesters of pregnancy and at delivery. Cord blood samples were also collected at delivery. Levels of selected biochemical variables including serum ferritin, vitamin B 12 and folate as well as whole blood folate, and selected hematologic indices were determined and correlated with pregnancy outcome variables. During the second trimester of pregnancy, values for hematocrit and hemoglobin were less than 30% and 11 g/dL, respectively, in 16% and 30% of the participants, respectively. Serum and whole blood (WB) folate increased sequentially during pregnancy. Cord concentrations of serum folate were significantly higher than maternal concentrations at delivery (P 2 =0.21), while gestational age was inversely correlated with 3rd trimester vitamin B 12 (R 2 =0.34). These data suggest that vitamin B 12 and folate play an important role in the outcome of pregnancy in this population.


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Maternal Low Level Lead and Pregnancy Outcomes

William L. West; Enid M. Knight; Cecile H. Edwards; Malcolm Manning; Bernice G. Spurlock; Hutchinson James; Allan A. Johnson; Ura Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; Ouida E. Westney; Haziel Laryea; Sidney Jones; Lennox S. Westney


Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2007

Determinants of Inadequate Prenatal Care Utilization by African American Women

Allan A. Johnson; Barbara J. Hatcher; M. Nabil El-Khorazaty; Renee A. Milligan; Brinda Bhaskar; Margaret Rodan; Leslie Richards; Barbara K. Wingrove; Haziel Laryea


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Dietary Intakes, Anthropometric Measurements and Pregnancy Outcomes

Allan A. Johnson; Enid M. Knight; Cecile H. Edwards; Ura Jean Oyemade; O. Jackson Cole; Ouida E. Westney; Lennox S. Westney; Haziel Laryea; Sidney Jones


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

Maternal Stress and Pregnancy Outcomes in a Prenatal Clinic Population

Cecile H. Edwards; Cole Oj; Ura Jean Oyemade; Enid M. Knight; Allan A. Johnson; Ouida E. Westney; Haziel Laryea; William L. West; Sidney Jones; Lennox S. Westney


Journal of Nutrition | 1994

BIOCHEMICAL PROFILE OF AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN DURING THREE TRIMESTERS OF PREGNANCY AND AT DELIVERY

Enid M. Knight; Bernice G. Spurlock; Cecile H. Edwards; Allan A. Johnson; Ura Jean Oyemade; Cole Oj; William L. West; Malcolm Manning; Hutchinson James; Haziel Laryea

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Cecile H. Edwards

North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University

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