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Dive into the research topics where Jessica Bondy is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica Bondy.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine | 2004

Analysis of text from injury reports improves understanding of construction falls

Hester J. Lipscomb; Judith E. Glazner; Jessica Bondy; Dennis Lezotte; Kenneth Guarini

Objective: We combined payroll data, coded workers’ compensation (WC) data, and text descriptions of injuries from the construction of Denver International Airport to create a more comprehensive picture of falls from height (FFH) than is typically available from WC data. Text descriptions were coded to identify circumstances surrounding falls. Slips/trips preceded one third of FFH, often involving motor vehicles or heavy equipment. Another third involved movement or collapse of work surfaces, usually ladders or scaffolds. Conclusions: The significant contribution of motor vehicles and heavy equipment to FFH, particularly those preceded by slips/trips, was not apparent from coded data. Heavy equipment engineering modifications are called for and workers in street/roadway construction/site development need fall protection training. Text analyses allow exploration of factors not identified at the time of data collection and better understanding of the context in which injuries occur.


American Journal of Industrial Medicine | 1999

Contractor safety practices and injury rates in construction of the Denver International Airport

Judith E. Glazner; Joleen Borgerding; Jessica Bondy; Jan T. Lowery; Dennis Lezotte; Kathleen Kreiss

BACKGROUND We sought to explain the variation in injury rates found for categories of companies and contracts involved in the construction of the Denver International Airport (DIA) by surveying contractors about company and contract-level safety practices. METHODS We conducted 213 telephone interviews (83% response) with representatives of contracts with payrolls of more than


Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association | 2014

Sharing behavioral data through a grid infrastructure using data standards.

Hua Min; Riki Ohira; Michael Collins; Jessica Bondy; Nancy E. Avis; Olga Tchuvatkina; Paul Courtney; Richard P. Moser; Abdul R. Shaikh; Bradford W. Hesse; Mary Cooper; Dianne Reeves; Bob Lanese; Cindy Helba; Suzanne M. Miller; Eric A. Ross

250,000. We investigated the bivariate relationship between safety actions reported in the survey and injury occurrence by calculating the aggregate injury rates (lost work-time (LWT) rates and non-LWT rates) for the group of respondent contracts reporting always taking the action and for the group not always taking the action. Using Poisson regression, we examined the association between contract injury rates and contract safety practices while controlling for variables previously shown to affect contract-level injury rates. RESULTS In Poisson regression, two actions, 1) disciplinary action always resulting when safety rules were violated and 2) always considering experience modification ratings when selecting subcontractors, were associated with lower LWT injury rates. Three actions or contract characteristics resulted in lower non-LWT rates: management always establishing goals for safety for supervisors, conducting drug testing at times other than badging or after an accident, and completing the DIA contract on budget, rather than over budget. Reportedly consistent use of a number of accepted safety practices was associated with significantly higher injury rates in bivariate and multivariate analyses. CONCLUSIONS The pattern of counterintuitive results found in this study suggests that questions reflecting agreed-upon safety practices, when asked of the person responsible for all on-site construction activities, are likely to elicit normative responses. Objective validation of reported safety practices is critical to evaluating their efficacy in reducing injury rates, along with measures of both time at risk and outcome and control for prevailing risk of the work performed.


American Heart Journal | 2008

The relationship between gender and clinical management after exercise stress testing.

Stacie L. Daugherty; Pamela N. Peterson; David J. Magid; P. Michael Ho; Jessica Bondy; John E. Hokanson; Colleen Ross; John S. Rumsfeld; Frederick A. Masoudi

OBJECTIVE In an effort to standardize behavioral measures and their data representation, the present study develops a methodology for incorporating measures found in the National Cancer Institutes (NCI) grid-enabled measures (GEM) portal, a repository for behavioral and social measures, into the cancer data standards registry and repository (caDSR). METHODS The methodology consists of four parts for curating GEM measures into the caDSR: (1) develop unified modeling language (UML) models for behavioral measures; (2) create common data elements (CDE) for UML components; (3) bind CDE with concepts from the NCI thesaurus; and (4) register CDE in the caDSR. RESULTS UML models have been developed for four GEM measures, which have been registered in the caDSR as CDE. New behavioral concepts related to these measures have been created and incorporated into the NCI thesaurus. Best practices for representing measures using UML models have been utilized in the practice (eg, caDSR). One dataset based on a GEM-curated measure is available for use by other systems and users connected to the grid. CONCLUSIONS Behavioral and population science data can be standardized by using and extending current standards. A new branch of CDE for behavioral science was developed for the caDSR. It expands the caDSR domain coverage beyond the clinical and biological areas. In addition, missing terms and concepts specific to the behavioral measures addressed in this paper were added to the NCI thesaurus. A methodology was developed and refined for curation of behavioral and population science data.


Computers and Biomedical Research | 1988

Using smoothing splines to make inferences about the shape of gas-exchange curves

Ted D. Wade; Stewart J. Anderson; Jessica Bondy; V. A. Ramadevi; Roger Jones

BACKGROUND Controversy remains regarding whether gender differences exist in clinical management after exercise treadmill testing (ETT). METHODS We studied 7,506 patients (49.8% women) without documented coronary heart disease referred for ETT from July 2001 to June 2004 in a community-based setting. We assessed the relationship between gender and subsequent diagnostic testing (secondary stress testing or coronary angiography) within 6 months after ETT. Secondary outcomes included subsequent stress testing, coronary angiography, and new cardiology visits in the 6-month interval. Multivariable analyses assessed the relationship between gender and these outcomes adjusting for demographic, clinical, and stress test characteristics. In subsequent analyses, patients were stratified by Duke Treadmill Scores (Duke University, Durham, NC). RESULTS Compared with men, women referred for ETT were older, had a higher prevalence of some cardiac risk factors, achieved lower peak workloads, and, more often, experienced chest pain or ST-segment changes. After accounting for differences in clinical and ETT parameters, gender was not associated with any subsequent diagnostic testing in the 6 months after ETT (OR 1.0, 95% CI 0.85-1.18). In secondary analyses, women were less likely to undergo angiography (OR 0.63, 95% CI 0.47-0.83) with a trend toward more subsequent stress testing. Stratified analyses revealed less subsequent testing in high-to-intermediate Duke Treadmill Score women compared with men (OR 0.61, 95% CI 0.48-0.79). Women and men were equally likely to die (hazards ratio 0.93, 95% CI 0.61-1.44) in the adjusted survival analysis. CONCLUSIONS Overall, women and men equally underwent subsequent diagnostic testing after ETT. Although women were less likely to undergo angiography and higher-risk women were less likely to undergo subsequent testing, adverse events were not higher in women. Given these findings, assumptions regarding gender disparities in clinical management after ETT should be reevaluated in other settings.


Annals of Otology, Rhinology, and Laryngology | 2000

Surgical management of uncomplicated otitis media in a pediatric Medicaid population.

Stephen Berman; Patricia J. Byrns; Jessica Bondy; Dennis Lezotte

Respiratory gas-exchange data from progressive exercise tests are typically interpreted by visual inspection. Attempts to objectify such interpretation have applied particular parametric models which limit the measures which can be studied and the inferences which can be made. We use a known spline-smoothing procedure which fits a continuous curve to such data, yielding confidence intervals for the curve and for its first and second derivatives. Rules can be made which use the derivatives to infer features of a curves shape and to relate features from different curves in the same data set. In this way complex interpretations can be made objective, so that they may be adequately tested.


Pediatrics | 2004

Effects of Nurse Home-Visiting on Maternal Life Course and Child Development: Age 6 Follow-Up Results of a Randomized Trial

David L. Olds; Harriet Kitzman; Robert Cole; JoAnn Robinson; Kimberly Sidora; Dennis W. Luckey; Charles R. Henderson; Carole Hanks; Jessica Bondy; John Holmberg

The objective of this study was to document the frequency and timing of otitis media—related visits, audiological consultations, and surgical interventions following a new episode of otitis media. A retrospective descriptive study was performed on a Medicaid administrative database that follows individual patients over time. The study included 14,453 children enrolled in Medicaid during 1991 and 1992 who were 30 months of age or younger and had a “new” episode of otitis media. Among 14,321 patients with an uncomplicated episode of otitis media, there were 10,443 with additional otitis media visits. Audiological testing was performed in 1.134 (10.9%). The testing occurred within 2 months of the onset of otitis media in 52.2% of the children and within 3 months in 66.6%. Physicians referred 400 children (3.8%) to an otolaryngologist; 299 (75%) underwent 1 or more surgical procedures. These surgical interventions included placement of ventilating tubes in 296 children, adenoidectomy in 34 children (all of whom also had placement of ventilating tubes), mastoidectomy in 2 children, and tympanoplasty in 1 child. The proportion of children who underwent surgical placement of ventilating tubes who had prior audiological testing was 174 of 296 (58.8%). The overall surgical rate for ventilating tubes was 2.9%. Among children who underwent surgery, the procedure occurred within 2 months of the onset of otitis media in 21.4% of children. Attempts to rationalize the management of otitis media in early childhood must deal with the difficulties in distinguishing among the otitis media conditions. The findings of this study suggest a need to know whether insertions of ventilating tubes within 3 months after a new episode of otitis media are related to unresponsive or recurrent infections.


Pediatrics | 2007

Effects of nurse home visiting on maternal and child functioning: age-9 follow-up of a randomized trial.

David L. Olds; Harriet Kitzman; Carole Hanks; Robert Cole; Elizabeth Anson; Kimberly Sidora-Arcoleo; Dennis W. Luckey; Charles R. Henderson; John Holmberg; Robin A. Tutt; Amanda J. Stevenson; Jessica Bondy


JAMA | 2000

Enduring effects of nurse home visitation on maternal life course: a 3-year follow-up of a randomized trial.

Harriet Kitzman; David L. Olds; Kimberly Sidora; Charles R. Henderson; Carole Hanks; Robert Cole; Dennis W. Luckey; Jessica Bondy; Kimberly Cole; Judith E. Glazner


JAMA Pediatrics | 2010

Enduring Effects of Prenatal and Infancy Home Visiting by Nurses on Maternal Life Course and Government Spending: Follow-up of a Randomized Trial Among Children at Age 12 Years

David L. Olds; Harriet Kitzman; Robert Cole; Carole Hanks; Kimberly J. Arcoleo; Elizabeth Anson; Dennis W. Luckey; Michael D. Knudtson; Charles R. Henderson; Jessica Bondy; Amanda J. Stevenson

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Judith E. Glazner

University of Colorado Denver

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Dennis Lezotte

University of Colorado Denver

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Dennis W. Luckey

University of Colorado Denver

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David L. Olds

University of Colorado Denver

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Robert Cole

University of Rochester

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