Homero Martinez
RAND Corporation
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Featured researches published by Homero Martinez.
PLOS Medicine | 2009
Olivier Fontaine; Margaret Kosek; Shinjini Bhatnagar; Cynthia Boschi-Pinto; Kit Yee Chan; Christopher Duggan; Homero Martinez; Hugo Ribeiro; Nigel C Rollins; Mohammed Abdus Salam; Mathuram Santosham; John D. Snyder; Alexander C. Tsai; Beth Vargas; Igor Rudan
Igor Rudan and colleagues report the results of their consensus building exercise that identified health research priorities to help reduce child mortality from pneumonia.
Preventive Medicine | 2010
Deborah A. Cohen; Terry Marsh; Stephanie Williamson; Kathryn Pitkin Derose; Homero Martinez; Claude Messan Setodji; Thomas L. McKenzie
OBJECTIVE To assess how park characteristics and demographic factors are associated with park use. METHODS We studied a diverse sample of parks in a Southern California metropolitan area in 2006-2008 representing a variety of racial and ethnic communities of different socioeconomic strata. We surveyed 51 park directors, 4257 park users and local residents, and observed 30 parks. We explored relationships among the number of people observed, the number of park programs offered, number of organized activities observed, park size, existence of park advisory board, perceptions of safety, and population density and characteristics. RESULTS The strongest correlates of the number of people using the park were the park size and the number of organized activities observed. Neighborhood population density, neighborhood poverty levels, perceptions of park safety, and the presence of a park advisory board were not associated with park use. CONCLUSION While perceptions of low safety have been considered a barrier to park use, perceptions of high safety do not appear to facilitate park use. Having events at the park, including sports competitions and other attractions, appears to be the strongest correlate of park use and community-level physical activity.
Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2000
Miguel Palafox; Héctor Guiscafré; Hortensia Reyes; Onofre Muñoz; Homero Martinez
OBJECTIVE To evaluate whether sensitivity and specificity of tachypnoea for the diagnosis of pneumonia change with age, nutritional status, or duration of disease. METHODS Diagnostic testing of 110 children with acute respiratory infection, 51 of whom presented with tachypnoea. The gold standard was a chest roentgenogram. Thirty five children had a radiological image of pneumonia; 75 were diagnosed as not having pneumonia. Sensitivity, specificity, and percentage of correct classification of tachypnoea, by itself or in combination with other clinical signs for all children, by age groups, nutritional status, and disease duration were calculated. RESULTS Tachypnoea as the sole clinical sign showed the highest sensitivity (74%) and a specificity of 67%; 69% of cases were classified correctly. Sensitivity was reduced when other clinical signs were combined with tachypnoea, and there was no significant increase in correct classification, although specificity increased to 84%. In children with a disease duration of less than three days, tachypnoea had a lower sensitivity and specificity (55% and 64%, respectively), and a lower percentage of correct classification (62%). In children with low weight for age (< 1 Z-score), tachypnoea had a sensitivity of 83%, a specificity of 48%, and 60% correct classification. Sensitivity and specificity did not vary with age groups. CONCLUSIONS Tachypnoea used as the only clinical sign is useful for identifying pneumonia in children, with no significant variations for age. In children with low weight for age, tachypnoea had higher sensitivity, but lower specificity. However, during the first three days of disease, the sensitivity, specificity, and percentage of correct classification were significantly lower.
Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 1997
Hortensia Reyes; Héctor Guiscafré; Onofre Muñoz; Ricardo Pérez-Cuevas; Homero Martinez; Gonzalo Gutiérrez
A prospective cohort study was conducted to analyze factors associated with antibiotic noncompliance and waste among patients suffering acute respiratory infection (ARI) and acute diarrhea (AD). The study took place in four primary health care clinics in Mexico City, two belonging to the Ministry of Health (MoH) and two to the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS). Two hundred twenty-two patients with ARI and 155 with AD were included. Data about study variables and the assessment of compliance were obtained through patient interviews and direct observation. Factors associated with noncompliance were assessed through a multiple logistic regression procedure. Noncompliance was 60% for ARI and 55.5% for AD in both health care systems. Prescription of an antibiotic was justified only in 13.5% of cases. Associated factors were: increased duration of illness (OR 2.95; 95% CI, 1.17-7.41); complexity of the treatment: 3 or more doses per day (OR 2.47; 95% CI, 1.56-3.92), and treatment for more than 7 days (OR 1.94; 95% CI, 1.16-3.26); younger age of patient (OR 1.89; 95% CI, 1.18-3.02); and an inadequate physician-patient relationship (OR 1.87; 95% CI, 1.16-3.02). Antibiotic waste was higher in IMSS (ARI 39.3%, AD 32.6%), than in the MoH (ARI 21.2%, AD 16.4%). Educational strategies to modify physician prescribing practices and strengthen physician-patient relationships might improve compliance and decrease drug waste.
BMC Public Health | 2007
Ximena Duque; Sergio Flores-Hernández; Samuel Flores-Huerta; Ignacio Méndez-Ramírez; Sergio Muñoz; Bernardo Turnbull; Gloria Martínez-Andrade; Rosa Isela Ramos; Marco González-Unzaga; María E Mendoza; Homero Martinez
BackgroundIn Mexico, as in other developing countries, micronutrient deficiencies are common in infants between 6 and 24 months of age and are an important public health problem. The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of anemia and of iron, folic acid, and zinc deficiencies in Mexican children under 2 years of age who use the health care services provided by the Mexican Institute for Social Security (IMSS).MethodsA nationwide survey was conducted with a representative sample of children younger than 2 years of age, beneficiaries, and users of health care services provided by IMSS through its regular regimen (located in urban populations) and its Oportunidades program (services offered in rural areas). A subsample of 4,955 clinically healthy children was studied to determine their micronutrient status. A venous blood sample was drawn to determine hemoglobin, serum ferritin, percent of transferrin saturation, zinc, and folic acid. Descriptive statistics include point estimates and 95% confidence intervals for the sample and projections for the larger population from which the sample was drawn.ResultsTwenty percent of children younger than 2 years of age had anemia, and 27.8% (rural) to 32.6% (urban) had iron deficiency; more than 50% of anemia was not associated with low ferritin concentrations. Iron stores were more depleted as age increased. Low serum zinc and folic acid deficiencies were 28% and 10%, respectively, in the urban areas, and 13% and 8%, respectively, in rural areas. The prevalence of simultaneous iron and zinc deficiencies was 9.2% and 2.7% in urban and rural areas. Children with anemia have higher percentages of folic acid deficiency than children with normal iron status.ConclusionIron and zinc deficiencies constitute the principal micronutrient deficiencies in Mexican children younger than 2 years old who use the health care services provided by IMSS. Anemia not associated with low ferritin values was more prevalent than iron-deficiency anemia. The presence of micronutrient deficiencies at this early age calls for effective preventive public nutrition programs to address them.
Archives of Medical Research | 2010
Ximena Duque; Segundo Moran; Robertino M. Mera; Mayela Medina; Homero Martinez; María E Mendoza; Javier Torres; Pelayo Correa
BACKGROUND AND AIMS We undertook this study to evaluate the effect of Helicobacter pylori eradication and iron supplementation on the iron nutritional status in children with iron deficiency. METHODS Seven hundred and one children from four public schools in Mexico City were screened to evaluate their iron status. Of them, 72 children with iron deficiency or with anemia were included in this study and were tested for H. pylori infection. Those infected were given eradication treatment and were randomly assigned to daily supplementation for 3 months with ferrous sulfate or placebo. Noninfected children received ferrous sulfate. At the end of the interventions, blood samples were drawn to evaluate their effects on the nutritional status of iron. RESULTS Thirty eight children with iron deficiency or anemia were infected by H. pylori at baseline. The eradication rate was 86.8%. Children in whom H. pylori eradication was achieved showed an increase of 0.37g/dL (95% CI -0.02, 0.75) on the hemoglobin mean concentration compared to the noninfected children. Children who achieved H. pylori eradication and received ferrous sulfate supplementation showed an increase of 0.47g/dL (95% CI 0.01-0.93) on the hemoglobin mean concentration compared to the noninfected children who received iron supplementation. Noninfected children supplemented with ferrous sulfate showed an increase in ferritin concentration of 11.26 ng/mL (95% CI 1.86-20.65) compared to those who were given the placebo. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that the eradication of H. pylori plus iron supplementation increases the pool of functional iron. Iron supplementation increases the storage of iron in school-age children with iron deficiency.
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology | 2016
Adolfo Rubinstein; J. Jaime Miranda; Andrea Beratarrechea; Francisco Diez-Canseco; Rebecca Kanter; Laura Gutierrez; Antonio Bernabe-Ortiz; Vilma Irazola; Ariel Fernández; Paola Letona; Homero Martinez; Manuel Ramirez-Zea
BACKGROUND Poor diet and physical inactivity strongly affect the growing epidemic of cardiovascular disease worldwide. Mobile phone-based health interventions (mHealth) have been shown to help promote weight loss and increase physical activity and are an attractive approach for health-care systems with limited resources. We aimed to assess whether mHealth with advice for lifestyle improvements would reduce blood pressure, promote weight loss, and improve diet quality and physical activity in individuals with prehypertension living in low-resource urban settings in Latin America. METHODS In this parallel-group, randomised controlled trial, we recruited individuals (aged 30-60 years) with systolic blood pressure between 120 and 139 mm Hg, diastolic blood pressure between 80 and 89 mm Hg, or both from health-care centres, workplaces, and community centres in low-resource urban settings in Argentina, Guatemala, and Peru. Participants were randomly assigned to receive either monthly motivational counselling calls and weekly personalised text messages to their mobile phones about diet quality and physical activity for 12 months, or usual care. Randomisation was stratified by country, and we applied minimisation by sex and age groups. Study personnel collecting and analysing data were masked to group assignment. The primary outcomes were mean between-group differences in the changes in systolic and diastolic blood pressure from baseline to 12 months in an intention-to-treat analysis of all participants who completed assessments at 12 months. Secondary outcome measures were changes in bodyweight, waist circumference, and self-reported target behaviours from baseline to 12 months. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01295216. FINDINGS Between March 1, 2012, and Nov 30, 2012, we randomly assigned 637 participants to receive intervention (n=316) or usual care (n=321). 266 (84%) participants in the intervention group and 287 (89%) in the control group were assessed at 12 months. The intervention did not affect change in systolic blood pressure (mean net change -0·37 mm Hg [95% CI -2·15 to 1·40]; p=0·43) or diastolic blood pressure (0·01 mm Hg [-1·29 to 1·32]; p=0·99) compared with usual care. However, we noted a significant net reduction in bodyweight (-0·66 kg [-1·24 to -0·07]; p=0·04) and intake of high-fat and high-sugar foods (-0·75 [-1·30 to -0·20]; p=0·008) in the intervention group compared with the control group. In a prespecified subanalysis, we found that participants in the intervention group who received more than 75% of the calls (nine or more, from a maximum of 12) had a greater reduction of bodyweight (-4·85 [-8·21 to -1·48]) and waist circumference (-3·31 [-5·95 to -0·67]) than participants in the control group. Additionally, participants in the intervention group had an increase in the intake of fruits and vegetables and a decrease in diets high in sodium, fat, and simple sugars relative to participants in the control group. However, we found no changes in systolic blood pressure, diasatolic blood pressure, or physical activity in the group of participants who received more than 75% of the calls compared with the group who received less than 50% of the calls. INTERPRETATION Our mHealth-based intervention did not result in a change in blood pressure that differed from usual care, but was associated with a small reduction in bodyweight and an improvement in some dietary habits. We noted a dose-response effect, which signals potential opportunities for larger effects from similar interventions in low-resource settings. More research is needed on mHealth, particularly among people who are poor and disproportionally affected by the cardiovascular disease epidemic and who need effective and affordable interventions to help bridge the equity gap in the management of cardiometabolic risk factors. FUNDING National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (US National Institutes of Health) and the Medtronic Foundation.
Social Science & Medicine | 1991
Gretel H. Pelto; Jocelyn Urgello; Lindsay H. Allen; Adolfo Chávez; Homero Martinez; Luzmaria Meneses; Constance M. Capacchione; Jeffrey R Backstrand
Large household size is widely regarded as a risk factor for malnutrition in developing countries, particularly for infants and young children. This study examines the extent to which household size is related to nutritional status in school-age children in the Solis Valley in highland Mexico. The relationships of food intake, anthropometric measures, and household size are assessed in a sample of 110 children (7-9 years of age), who were followed longitudinally for a minimum of one year as part of the Collaborative Research Support Program on Food Intake and Human Function. Diets in the valley are characterized by very low intake of animal food products and are heavily dependent on maize, which is primarily home-produced. Growth faltering is pervasive; the mean Z score for height-for-age in the sample is--1.6 of the NCHS reference standard. Children from larger households are significantly shorter and consume diets of poorer quality, as assessed by intake of foods from animal sources. These relationships remain statistically significant in regression analyses that control for household economic status. It therefore appears that the resources available to households in the Solis Valley are inadequate to buffer children in even more advantaged households from the stresses of maintaining large families.
American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2008
Steven D. Stovitz; Jeffrey B. Schwimmer; Homero Martinez; Mary Story
Pediatric obesity in the United States has been steadily rising over the past few decades, and it is a clear risk factor for adult obesity and obesity-related morbidity and mortality. A review of the literature from three major national databases reveals that the prevalence rates of obesity within Latino male children and adolescents is, in general, higher than other major gender-ethnic groups. Additionally, obese Latino male youth seem to be especially prone to a variety of obesity-related morbidities. Given the rising percentage of Latinos among our nations youth, there is an urgency to develop and implement clinical and community research strategies to prevent and treat obesity within this high-risk gender-ethnic group. This article reviews the prevalence of pediatric obesity within the three largest databases in the U.S. with Latino representation. The paper then discusses unique issues in the etiology and ramifications of obesity within young Latino-American boys, reviews the few intervention studies that focus on Latino youth, and discusses potential strategies for further research.
Jmir mhealth and uhealth | 2015
Francisco Diez-Canseco; J. Alfredo Zavala-Loayza; Andrea Beratarrechea; Rebecca Kanter; Manuel Ramirez-Zea; Adolfo Rubinstein; Homero Martinez; J. Jaime Miranda
Background Mobile health (mHealth) has been posited to contribute to the reduction in health gaps and has shown fast and widespread growth in developing countries. This growth demands understanding of, and preparedness for, local cultural contexts. Objective To describe the design and validation of text messages (short message service, SMS) that will be used for an mHealth behavioral change intervention to prevent hypertension in three Latin American countries: Argentina, Guatemala, and Peru. Methods An initial set of 64 SMS text messages were designed to promote healthy lifestyles among individuals in different stages of behavior change, addressing four key domains: salt and sodium intake, fruit and vegetable intake, consumption of high fat and sugar foods, and physical activity. The 64 SMS text messages were organized into nine subsets for field validation. In each country 36 people were recruited, half of them being male. Of the participants, 4 per country evaluated each subset of SMS text messages, which contained between 6 and 8 SMS text messages regarding different key domains and stages of change. The understanding and appeal of each SMS text message was assessed using a 7-item questionnaire. The understanding and appeal ratings were used to reach a final set of 56 SMS text messages. Results Overall, each of the 64 SMS text messages received a total of 12 evaluations (4 per country). The majority of evaluations—742 out of a total of 767 (96.7%) valid responses—revealed an adequate understanding of the key idea contained in the SMS text message. On a scale from 1 to 10, the average appeal score was 8.7 points, with a range of 4 to 10 points. Based on their low scores, 8 SMS text messages per country were discarded. Once the final set of 56 SMS text messages was established, and based on feedback obtained in the field, wording and content of some SMS text messages were improved. Of the final set, 9, 8, and 16 of the SMS text messages were improved based on participant evaluations from Argentina, Guatemala, and Peru, respectively. Most SMS text messages selected for the final set (49/56, 88%) were the same in all countries, except for small wording differences. Conclusions The final set of SMS text messages produced had very high rates of understanding and appeal in three different Latin American countries. This study highlights the importance of developing and validating a package of simple, preventative SMS text messages, grounded in evidence and theory, across three different Latin American countries with active engagement of end users.