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Dive into the research topics where Jessica P. Brown is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica P. Brown.


Cancer Causes & Control | 2008

Lesbians and cancer: an overlooked health disparity

Jessica P. Brown; J. Kathleen Tracy

ObjectiveTo evaluate the breast, cervical, ovarian, lung, and colorectal cancer literatures using a novel application of the cancer disparities grid to identify disparities along domains of the cancer continuum focusing on lesbians as a minority population.MethodsComputerized databases were searched for articles published from 1981 to present. Cumulative search results identified 51 articles related to lesbians and disparities, which were classified by domain.ResultsThe majority of articles identified were related to breast and cervical cancer screening. Barriers to adequate screening for both cancers include personal factors, poor patient-provider communication, and health care system factors. Tailored risk counseling has been successful in increasing lesbian’s mammography and Pap screening. Ovarian, lung, and colorectal cancer have been virtually unexplored in this population. An “Adjustment to Illness/Quality of Life” domain was added to capture literature on psychosocial aspects of cancer.ConclusionsThis review revealed a lack of research for specific cancers and for specific aspects of the cancer continuum. The limited number of studies identified focused on issues related to screening/prevention in cervical and breast cancers, with almost no attention to incidence, etiology, diagnosis, treatment, survival, morbidity, or mortality. We present implications for social and public health policy, research, and prevention.


Maturitas | 2009

Relations among Menopausal Symptoms, Sleep Disturbance and Depressive Symptoms in Midlife

Jessica P. Brown; Lisa Gallicchio; Jodi A. Flaws; J. Kathleen Tracy

OBJECTIVES To investigate the relations among hot flashes, other menopausal symptoms, sleep quality and depressive symptoms in midlife women. METHODS A large population-based cross-sectional study of 639 women (ages 45-54 years) consisting of a questionnaire including the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (CES-D) Scale, demographics, health behaviors, menstrual history, and menopausal symptoms. RESULTS After controlling for menopausal status, physical activity level, smoking status and current self-reported health status elevated CES-D score is associated with frequent nocturnal hot flashes, frequent trouble sleeping, experiencing hot flashes, nausea, headaches, weakness, visual problems, vaginal discharge, irritability, muscle stiffness, and incontinence. CONCLUSIONS The present study found significant links between depressive symptoms and several menopausal symptoms including hot flashes, sleep disturbance, irritability, muscle stiffness, and incontinence after controlling for covariates. These findings suggest that a potential mechanism in which bothersome menopausal symptoms may influence depressed mood during the midlife is through sleep disturbance.


Stroke | 2004

Stress-Induced Blood Pressure Reactivity and Silent Cerebrovascular Disease

Shari R. Waldstein; Eliot L. Siegel; David Lefkowitz; Karl J. Maier; Jessica P. Brown; Abraham Obuchowski; Leslie I. Katzel

Background and Purpose— Exaggerated blood pressure (BP) responses to mental stress, an index of autonomic dysregulation, have been related to enhanced risk for stroke. This study examined cross-sectional relations of stress-induced BP reactivity to silent cerebrovascular disease assessed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in healthy older adults. Methods— Sixty-seven nondemented, community-dwelling older adults (ages 55 to 81; 75% male) free of major medical, neurological, or psychiatric disease, engaged in: (1) clinical assessment of resting systolic and diastolic BP; (2) assessment of systolic and diastolic BP responses to 3 laboratory-based mental stressors; and (3) MRI. MRIs were rated for small silent infarcts (≥3 mm), infarct-like lesions (<3 mm), and periventricular and deep white matter hyperintensities (WMH). Results— After adjustment for age, gender, resting clinic BP, and fasting glucose levels, higher systolic BP reactivity was associated with an increased number of small silent infarcts (r2=0.14; P=0.004) and greater severity ratings of periventricular (r2=0.08; P<0.04) and deep WMH (r2=0.06; P<0.05). Higher diastolic BP reactivity was similarly associated with an increased number of small silent infarcts (r2=0.08; P<0.04), and greater severity ratings of periventricular (r2=0.08; P<0.04) and deep WMH (r2=0.11; P=0.009). Conclusions— These results indicate that greater stress-induced BP reactivity is associated with enhanced silent cerebrovascular disease on MRI in healthy asymptomatic older adults independent of resting BP levels. Exaggerated stress-induced BP reactivity warrants further examination as a potential biobehavioral risk factor for cerebrovascular disease.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2013

Delirium Outcomes in a Randomized Trial of Blood Transfusion Thresholds in Hospitalized Older Adults with Hip Fracture

Ann L. Gruber-Baldini; Edward R. Marcantonio; Denise Orwig; Jay Magaziner; Michael L. Terrin; Erik Barr; Jessica P. Brown; Barbara Paris; Aleksandra Zagorin; Darren M. Roffey; Khwaja Zakriya; Mary-Rita Blute; J. Richard Hebel; Jeffrey L. Carson

To determine whether a higher blood transfusion threshold would prevent new or worsening delirium symptoms in the hospital after hip fracture surgery.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2015

Stability of Postoperative Delirium Psychomotor Subtypes in Individuals with Hip Fracture

Jennifer S. Albrecht; Edward R. Marcantonio; Darren M. Roffey; Denise Orwig; Jay Magaziner; Michael L. Terrin; Jeffrey L. Carson; Erik Barr; Jessica P. Brown; Emma G. Gentry; Ann L. Gruber-Baldini

To determine the stability of psychomotor subtypes of delirium over time and identify characteristics associated with delirium psychomotor subtypes in individuals undergoing surgical repair of hip fracture.


Health Psychology | 2009

Blood pressure reactivity and cognitive function in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging.

Jessica P. Brown; John J. Sollers; Julian F. Thayer; Alan B. Zonderman; Shari R. Waldstein

OBJECTIVE Several blood pressure indexes of autonomic dysregulation, including stress-induced blood pressure responses (i.e., reactivity), have been associated previously with stroke, silent cerebrovascular disease, and decreased cognitive function. DESIGN The authors examined the cross-sectional relations among systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) reactivity and cognitive function in a sample of stroke- and dementia-free older adults (n = 73, 53% male, 72% Caucasian, mean age = 70.14 years) from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Age, education, baseline, and reactive blood pressure levels were regressed on cognitive test scores measuring the domains of attention, learning and memory, verbal functions/language skills, and perceptuo-motor speed. A Bonferroni correction was employed and results significant at the standard p < .05 level are discussed as marginally significant. RESULTS After adjustment for age, education, and resting blood pressure, greater SBP reactivity was associated with poorer performance on Digits Forward (R2 = .110, p = .007) and greater DBP reactivity was associated with poorer performance on Digits Forward (R(2) = .124, p = .003) and the Boston Naming Test (R(2) = .118, p = .008); associations with DBP reactivity and Alpha Span (R(2) = .104; p = .019) and CVLT free recall short delay (R(2) = .066, p = .032) were marginally significant. CONCLUSIONS Greater BP reactivity was associated with poorer performance on tests of attention, verbal memory, and confrontation naming. BP reactivity may be a biobehavioral risk factor for lowered levels of cognitive performance.


International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2007

Silent Myocardial Ischemia and Cardiovascular Responses to Anger Provocation in Older Adults

Jessica P. Brown; Leslie I. Katzel; Serina A. Neumann; Shari R. Waldstein; Karl J. Maier

To determine if older, asymptomatic individuals with no prior history of coronary heart disease with exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia (SI) during graded exercise treadmill testing exhibit exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity to anger provocation, we compared 42 SI participants and 95 controls. Systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and heart rate (HR) changes from baseline to three tasks & #x2014;anger recall, speech role-play, and mental arithmetic with harassment & #x2014;were assessed. Compared to controls, SI displayed greater HR responses for the speech role-play task only. The SI group was significantly older, had higher levels of fasting glucose and triglycerides, and had lower HDL-cholesterol. In multiple regression analyses, after controlling for these differences, SI was significantly associated with greater HR responses to the speech role-play. In sum, the SI group had significantly exaggerated HR responses to the speech role-play task, whereas SBP and DBP reactivity were comparable between groups. This suggests minimally enhanced cardiovascular reactivity among older SI patients that may nonetheless increase risk for cardiac events.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2016

Lack of Patient Understanding of Hospital-Acquired Infection Data Published on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospital Compare Website.

Max Masnick; Daniel J. Morgan; John D. Sorkin; Elizabeth Kim; Jessica P. Brown; Penny Rheingans; Anthony D. Harris

BACKGROUND Public reporting of hospital quality data is a key element of US healthcare reform. Data for hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) are especially complex. OBJECTIVE To assess interpretability of HAI data as presented on the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Hospital Compare website among patients who might benefit from access to these data. METHODS We randomly selected inpatients at a large tertiary referral hospital from June to September 2014. Participants performed 4 distinct tasks comparing hypothetical HAI data for 2 hospitals, and the accuracy of their comparisons was assessed. Data were presented using the same tabular formats used by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Demographic characteristics and healthcare experience data were also collected. RESULTS Participants (N=110) correctly identified the better of 2 hospitals when given written descriptions of the HAI measure in 72% of the responses (95% CI, 66%-79%). Adding the underlying numerical data (number of infections, patient-time, and standardized infection ratio) to the written descriptions reduced correct responses to 60% (55%-66%). When the written HAI measure description was not informative (identical for both hospitals), 50% answered correctly (42%-58%). When no written HAI measure description was provided and hospitals differed by denominator for infection rate, 38% answered correctly (31%-45%). CONCLUSIONS Current public HAI data presentation methods may be inadequate. When presented with numeric HAI data, study participants incorrectly compared hospitals on the basis of HAI data in more than 40% of the responses. Research is needed to identify better ways to convey these data to the public.


Menopause | 2015

A potentially functional variant in the serotonin transporter gene is associated with premenopausal and perimenopausal hot flashes

May E. Montasser; Ayelet Ziv-Gal; Jessica P. Brown; Jodi A. Flaws; Istvan Merchenthaler

ObjectiveAn increase in the use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and/or serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) to relieve menopausal hot flashes (HFs) has been observed recently. However, response to them has been heterogeneous. We hypothesized that this heterogeneity might be partially attributed to genetic variations in genes encoding the serotonin and/or norepinephrine transporters (SLC6A4 and SLC6A2). As a first step in testing the role of genetics in response to SSRIs/SNRIs, we examined the association between HFs and genetic variants within these two genes. MethodsWe tested 29 haplotype-tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms within SLC6A4 and SLC6A2 for their association with HFs separately for European-American (396 cases and 392 controls) and African-American (125 cases and 81 controls) premenopausal and perimenopausal women. ResultsWe found that the minor allele of SLC6A4_rs11080121 was associated with protection against HFs (odds ratio, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.60-0.94) only in European-American women. Bioinformatics analyses indicated that rs11080121 is fully correlated with rs1042173 in the 3′ untranslated region of SLC6A4. The minor allele of rs1042173 seems to disrupt a conserved binding site for hsa-miR-590-3p microRNA. ConclusionsDisruption of a microRNA binding site leads to higher expression of SLC6A4, higher expression of SLC6A4 leads to depletion of serotonin in synaptic clefts, and depletion of serotonin triggers the presynaptic autoreceptor feedback mechanism to produce more serotonin, which is protective against HFs. This is the first study to test the association between HFs in both European-American and African-American premenopausal and perimenopausal women and genetic variants in two neurotransmitter transporter genes, SLC6A2 and SLC6A4. This information can be used in tailoring the pharmaceutical use of SSRIs/SNRIs for HF relief.


Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 2017

Can National Healthcare-Associated Infections (HAIs) Data Differentiate Hospitals in the United States?

Max Masnick; Daniel J. Morgan; John D. Sorkin; Mark D. Macek; Jessica P. Brown; Penny Rheingans; Anthony D. Harris

OBJECTIVE To determine whether patients using the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Compare website (http://medicare.gov/hospitalcompare) can use nationally reported healthcare-associated infection (HAI) data to differentiate hospitals. DESIGN Secondary analysis of publicly available HAI data for calendar year 2013. METHODS We assessed the availability of HAI data for geographically proximate hospitals (ie, hospitals within the same referral region) and then analyzed these data to determine whether they are useful to differentiate hospitals. We assessed data for the 6 HAIs reported by hospitals to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). RESULTS Data were analyzed for 4,561 hospitals representing 88% of registered community and federal government hospitals in the United States. Healthcare-associated infection data are only useful for comparing hospitals if they are available for multiple hospitals within a geographic region. We found that data availability differed by HAI. Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) data were most available, with 82% of geographic regions (ie, hospital referral regions) having >50% of hospitals reporting them. In contrast, 4% of geographic regions had >50% of member hospitals reporting surgical site infections (SSI) for hysterectomies, which had the lowest availability. The ability of HAI data to differentiate hospitals differed by HAI: 72% of hospital referral regions had at least 1 pair of hospitals with statistically different risk-adjusted CDI rates (SIRs), compared to 9% for SSI (hysterectomy). CONCLUSIONS HAI data generally are reported by enough hospitals to meet minimal criteria for useful comparisons in many geographic locations, though this varies by type of HAI. CDI and catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) are more likely to differentiate hospitals than the other publicly reported HAIs. Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol 2017;38:1167-1171.

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Shari R. Waldstein

Eastern Virginia Medical School

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Emmanuel Oga

Battelle Memorial Institute

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