Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Joy M. Zakarian is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Joy M. Zakarian.


Chest | 1997

Reduction of environmental tobacco smoke exposure in asthmatic children. A 2-year follow-up.

Dennis R. Wahlgren; Melbourne F. Hovell; Susan B. Meltzer; C. Richard Hofstetter; Joy M. Zakarian

STUDY OBJECTIVE To examine the long-term maintenance of a previously reported behavioral counseling intervention to reduce asthmatic childrens exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). PARTICIPANTS Families of asthmatic children (6 to 17 years), including at least one parent who smoked in the home, recruited from four pediatric allergy clinics. DESIGN Participants were randomized to one of three groups: behavioral counseling to reduce ETS exposure, self-monitoring control, and usual medical care control. Counseling concluded at month 6, and the original trial ended at month 12. Two follow-up interviews occurred at months 20 and 30. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS The originally reported analysis of baseline to 12 months was reanalyzed with a more robust restricted maximum likelihood procedure. The 2-year follow-up period was analyzed similarly. Significantly greater change occurred in the counseling group than the control groups and was sustained throughout the 2 years of follow-up. Further exploratory analyses suggested that printed counseling materials given to all participants at month 12 (conclusion of the original study) were associated with decreased exposure in the control groups. CONCLUSION Such long-term maintenance of behavior change is highly unusual in the general behavioral science literature, let alone for addictive behaviors. We conclude that ETS exposure can be reduced and that a clinician-delivered treatment may provide substantial benefit.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2004

Tobacco use and acculturation among Californians of Korean descent: A behavioral epidemiological analysis

C. Richard Hofstetter; Melbourne F. Hovell; Jooeun Lee; Joy M. Zakarian; Haeryun Park; Hee-Young Paik; Veronica L. Irvin

This study presents population estimates of cigarette use among adults of Korean descent residing in California. Data were drawn from telephone interviews with adults (N=2,830) developed from a random sampling of listed persons in California with Korean surnames. A total of 86% of attempted interviews were completed, and 85% of the interviews were conducted in Korean. Less acculturated men and more acculturated women reported higher present and predicted future rates of smoking after multivariate statistical controls were applied. Sharply divergent rates of cigarette use were found between the genders. Although men did not smoke their first cigarette or smoke cigarettes regularly earlier than women, both groups began smoking later than adults born in the United States. To be effective, tobacco intervention efforts must be tailored specifically to cultures of each minority. Results suggest that acculturation processes influence tobacco use differentially by gender, and future research is needed to identify the implications of processes in tobacco initiation and cessation.


Chest | 1997

Clinical Investigations: AsthmaReduction of Environmental Tobacco Smoke Exposure in Asthmatic Children: A 2-Year Follow-up

Dennis R. Wahlgren; Melbourne F. Hovell; Susan B. Meltzer; C. Richard Hofstetter; Joy M. Zakarian

STUDY OBJECTIVE To examine the long-term maintenance of a previously reported behavioral counseling intervention to reduce asthmatic childrens exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS). PARTICIPANTS Families of asthmatic children (6 to 17 years), including at least one parent who smoked in the home, recruited from four pediatric allergy clinics. DESIGN Participants were randomized to one of three groups: behavioral counseling to reduce ETS exposure, self-monitoring control, and usual medical care control. Counseling concluded at month 6, and the original trial ended at month 12. Two follow-up interviews occurred at months 20 and 30. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS The originally reported analysis of baseline to 12 months was reanalyzed with a more robust restricted maximum likelihood procedure. The 2-year follow-up period was analyzed similarly. Significantly greater change occurred in the counseling group than the control groups and was sustained throughout the 2 years of follow-up. Further exploratory analyses suggested that printed counseling materials given to all participants at month 12 (conclusion of the original study) were associated with decreased exposure in the control groups. CONCLUSION Such long-term maintenance of behavior change is highly unusual in the general behavioral science literature, let alone for addictive behaviors. We conclude that ETS exposure can be reduced and that a clinician-delivered treatment may provide substantial benefit.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2007

The Variability of Urinary Cotinine Levels in Young Children: Implications for Measuring ETS Exposure

Georg E. Matt; Melbourne F. Hovell; Penelope J. E. Quintana; Joy M. Zakarian; Sandy Liles; Susan B. Meltzer; Neal L. Benowitz

This study examined the within-subject variability of urinary cotinine levels in young children (aged = 0.6-7.2 years) of smoking parents to determine the number of urine samples needed to provide accurate estimates of exposure to environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) for different time intervals. Secondary analyses were conducted of five independent studies (N = 376), in which multiple urinary cotinine measures had been collected over time periods up to 13 months. Over measurement periods of 4-15 days, the within-subject cotinine levels varied 3-5 times more than would be expected based on measurement error alone. Over 7-13 months, the within-subject variability was 10-20 times higher than would be expected based on the measurement error. Findings indicated that cotinine measures from single urine samples provided highly accurate estimates of only recent exposure (i.e., 2-3 days; rho = 0.99). To achieve similarly precise estimates of the mean cotinine level of an individual child over 4-15 days, up to nine urine samples may be necessary. Up to 12 urine samples may be required to achieve similarly precise estimates of ETS exposure over a 4- to 13-month period. Epidemiologic and clinical research on ETS exposure in children can benefit from multiple urine samples (a) to accurately measure average exposure at the level of the individual child, (b) to describe temporal patterns, (c) to detect incidences of peak exposure that would remain underrecognized if monitoring is limited to a single time point, and (d) to establish stable baseline levels and endpoints based on urine samples collected over clinically relevant time periods.


Journal of Asthma | 1997

Toward a simplified measure of asthma severity for applied research.

Dennis R. Wahlgren; Melbourne F. Hovell; Georg E. Matt; Susan B. Meltzer; Joy M. Zakarian; Eli O. Meltzer

There is no universally accepted and validated measure of asthma severity. For community research, clinical tests are too costly, and epidemiological assessments provide inadequate data on severity. Symptom measures may offer a practical alternative. This study assessed psychometric properties of symptom ratings of 91 asthmatic children. Reliability and validity of scales created from these items were examined. A sum scale of symptom ratings was internally consistent, reliable across time, and associated with concurrent health indices. This scale may be a practical measure of severity for use in community-based research.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2008

Fidelity issues in secondhand smoking interventions for children

Marilyn Johnson-Kozlow; Melbourne F. Hovell; Liza S. Rovniak; Laura Sirikulvadhana; Dennis R. Wahlgren; Joy M. Zakarian

This paper reviews methodological and theoretical fidelity of secondhand smoking (SHS) intervention studies (n = 29) that target protection of children in their home. In 2005, interventions were evaluated in terms of treatment fidelity according to guidelines provided by Borrelli et al. of the National Institutes of Health Behavior Change Consortium. The degree of fidelity was evaluated based on the percentage of criteria met; the inter-rater reliability based on percent agreement across independent raters was 0.78. Analysis indicated that studies with higher treatment fidelity were more likely to obtain statistically significant results (p = .003) with the average fidelity rating of 0.74 for statistically significant studies vs. 0.50 for statistically non-significant studies. Higher treatment fidelity was also significantly associated with being a more recent investigation (year 2000 or later), an efficacy as compared to effectiveness trial, more intensive as compared to less intensive intervention, a trial in the U.S. as compared to foreign nations, and having a theoretical basis. After taking all other variables into account, only treatment fidelity was significantly related to study outcome (p = .052). Ratings of treatment fidelity were ranked and compared to previous rankings based on 342 behavioral change interventions; the rank-ordered correlation between previous and current ratings was 0.84, although median fidelity ratings were 0.10 points lower in the previous than in the present study (0.52 vs. 0.62; intraclass correlation = 0.79). Improvements to the treatment fidelity evaluation guidelines were suggested, including the consideration of theoretical fidelity. Enhancing methodological and theoretical fidelity will speed identification of valid theoretical precepts that will, in turn, guide effective public health prevention programs.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2009

Parent quit attempts after counseling to reduce children's secondhand smoke exposure and promote cessation: Main and moderating relationships

Sandy Liles; Melbourne F. Hovell; Georg E. Matt; Joy M. Zakarian; Jennifer A. Jones

INTRODUCTION This study explored predictors of smoking quit attempts in a sample of low-income smoking mothers who participated in a randomized trial of a 6-month, 14-session counseling intervention to decrease their childrens secondhand smoke exposure (SHSe) and eliminate smoking. METHODS Measures were taken at baseline and at 3, 6, 12, and 18 months on 150 mothers who exposed their children (aged <4 years) to > or = 10 cigarettes/week in the home. Reported 7-day quits were verified by saliva cotinine or urine anabasine and anatabine levels. RESULTS There were few quits longer than 6 months. Mothers in the counseling group reported more 24-hr quits (p = .019) and more 7-day quits (p = .029) than controls. Multivariate modeling revealed that having quit for at least 24 hr in the year prior to baseline and the number of alternative cessation methods ever tried were predictive of the longest quit attempt during the 18-month study. Mothers in the counseling group who at baseline felt SHSe posed a health risk for their children or who at baseline had more permissive home smoking policies had longer quit attempts. DISCUSSION Results confirm that attempts to quit smoking predict additional quit attempts. This suggests that practice may be necessary for many people to quit smoking permanently. Findings of interaction analyses suggest that participant factors may alter the effects of treatment procedures. Failure to account for or employ such factors in the analysis or design of community trials could confound the results of intervention trials.


Biomarkers | 2006

Evaluation of urinary trans-3?-hydroxycotinine as a biomarker of children's environmental tobacco smoke exposure

G. E. Matt; P. J. E. Quintana; Sandy Liles; Mel Hovell; Joy M. Zakarian; Peyton Jacob; Neal L. Benowitz

Abstract The utility of urinary trans-3′-hydroxy cotinine (3HC) as a biomarker of environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) exposure was investigated in comparison with urinary cotinine (COT), the sum (3HC + COT), and ratio of the two nicotine metabolites (3HC/COT). Participants were 150 ETS exposed children (aged 1–44 months) and their parents. Child urine samples were collected during 3weekly baseline assessments and at interviews administered 3, 6, 12, and 18 months after baseline. Findings indicate that 3HC and COT can be measured reliably (rho = 0.96, 0.88) and show equivalent levels of repeated measures stability (rho = 0.71, 0.75). COT, 3HC, and 3HC + COT showed equally strong associations with air nicotine levels, reported ETS contamination, and reported ETS exposure (r=0.60–0.70). The intraclass correlations of 3HC/COT were lower than those for COT or 3HC. Older children had a higher 3HC/COT ratio than younger children (3.5 versus 2.2), and non-Hispanic White children had a higher ratio than African-American children (3.2 versus 1.9). These findings suggest that COT, 3HC, and 3HC + COT are approximately equivalent and equally strong biomarkers of ETS exposure in children. Moreover, 3HC/COT may provide a useful indicator to investigate age- and race-related differences in the metabolism of COT and 3HC.


Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | 2006

Koreans' use of medical services in Seoul, Korea and California.

Linda L. Hill; C. Richard Hofstetter; Melbourne F. Hovell; Jooeun Lee; Veronica L. Irvin; Joy M. Zakarian

This study assessed the types of health care services used by Korean immigrants, and differences in use between different countries, genders, health insurance status, acculturation status, and cardiovascular risk. Participant selection used probability sampling to represent the adult populations of California, United States, and Seoul, Republic of Korea. A telephone survey was administered to 2830 adult Korean-Californians and 500 adult Koreans living in Seoul. Female gender was significantly associated with higher use of outpatient services, ER usage, and hospitalization. Californian residence was significantly associated with higher outpatient usage and lower hospitalization rates. Health insurance was associated with higher allopathic health care utilization, and lower traditional health care usage, and acculturation with lower traditional health care usage. Higher self-reported cardiac risk factors were associated with lower allopathic and higher traditional health care. This suggests barriers to allopathic health care, but not traditional health care, for Koreans living in California without health insurance.


Journal of Clinical Epidemiology | 2010

Adolescents validly report their exposure to secondhand smoke

Marilyn Johnson-Kozlow; Dennis R. Wahlgren; Melbourne F. Hovell; Danette M. Flores; Sandy Liles; C. Richard Hofstetter; Jennifer A. Zellner; Joy M. Zakarian

OBJECTIVE This study examined the validity of child-reported exposure to secondhand smoke (SHS) and investigated factors, such as childs age, which might affect accuracy of recall. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING Participants were drawn from a nonprobability sample of 380 families who completed baseline assessment as part of a randomized trial of an SHS reduction intervention conducted in an urban setting in Southern California. Parents and children (aged 8-13 years) retrospectively reported childs exposure to SHS using timeline followback methodology; reports were compared with childs urine cotinine. RESULTS Validity coefficients for parents and children were comparable (r=0.58 vs. r=0.53), but parents recalled three times more exposure than children (2.2 vs. 0.8 cigarettes per day; P<0.001). Regression models predicting cotinine indicated that including child in addition to parent reports resulted in better prediction than either alone. CONCLUSION When there is a choice, parent reports are preferable over child reports because of decreased underreporting. However, child-reported SHS exposure had adequate validity (r>0.50) and might be appropriate in some situations. Researchers might consider collecting both parent and child reports because each made a unique contribution to the prediction of cotinine.

Collaboration


Dive into the Joy M. Zakarian's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Georg E. Matt

San Diego State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Susan B. Meltzer

San Diego State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James L. Pirkle

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jennifer A. Emerson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sandy Liles

San Diego State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eli O. Meltzer

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge