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Featured researches published by Nolan Kline.


Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2010

Health Concerns of Migrant Backstretch Workers at Horse Racetracks

Heide Castañeda; Nolan Kline; Nathaniel Dickey

Background. Backstretch workers are part of an itinerant labor community that cares for horses at racetracks across the U.S. Since the 1970s, this workforce has increasingly been composed of migrants, especially from Mexico and Guatemala. No studies have focused systematic attention on health concerns of this population and how illness is influenced by unique working and living conditions. Methods. We administered a survey orally to 84 backstretch workers at a Florida racetrack to understand self-reported medical history and current major health concerns. Results. The most frequent responses related to musculoskeletal injury or pain. This was followed by gastrointestinal illnesses and other chronic conditions (e.g., hypertension, diabetes). Discussion. Health concerns reflected the interplay between occupation and structural factors of poverty, stress, poor living conditions, and diet. Future studies should further examine food security, substance use, and other high-risk behaviors. Our study provides a preliminary picture of major health concerns and points to the need for enhanced regulation.


Papillomavirus Research | 2017

The feminization of HPV: How science, politics, economics and gender norms shaped U.S. HPV vaccine implementation

Ellen M. Daley; Cheryl A. Vamos; Erika L. Thompson; Gregory D. Zimet; Zeev Rosberger; Laura Merrell; Nolan Kline

Human papillomavirus (HPV) can cause a number of anogenital cancers (i.e., cervical, penile, anal, vaginal, vulvar) and genital warts. A decade ago, the HPV vaccine was approved, and has been shown to be a public health achievement that can reduce the morbidity and mortality for HPV-associated diseases. Yet, the mistaken over-identification of HPV as a female-specific disease has resulted in the feminization of HPV and HPV vaccines. In this critical review, we trace the evolution of the intersection of science, politics, economics and gender norms during the original HPV vaccine approval, marketing era, and implementation. Given the focus on cervical cancer screening, women were identified as bearing the burden of HPV infection and its related illnesses, and the group responsible for prevention. We also describe the consequences of the feminization of HPV, which has resulted primarily in reduced protection from HPV-related illnesses for males. We propose a multilevel approach to normalizing HPV vaccines as an important aspect of overall health for both genders. This process must engage multiple stakeholders, including providers, parents, patients, professional organizations, public health agencies, policymakers, researchers, and community-based organizations.


Medical Anthropology | 2017

Pathogenic Policy: Immigrant Policing, Fear, and Parallel Medical Systems in the US South

Nolan Kline

ABSTRACT Medical anthropology has a vital role in identifying health-related impacts of policy. In the United States, increasingly harsh immigration policies have formed a multilayered immigrant policing regime comprising state and federal laws and local police practices, the effects of which demand ethnographic attention. In this article, I draw from ethnographic fieldwork in Atlanta, Georgia, to examine the biopolitics of immigrant policing. I underscore how immigrant policing directly impacts undocumented immigrants’ health by producing a type of fear based governance that alters immigrants’ health behaviors and sites for seeking health services. Ethnographic data further point to how immigrant policing sustains a need for an unequal, parallel medical system, reflecting broader social inequalities impacting vulnerable populations. Moreover, by focusing on immigrant policing, I demonstrate the analytical utility in examining the biopolitics of fear, which can reveal individual experiences and structural influents of health-related vulnerability.


Health Care for Women International | 2014

Transdisciplinary women's health: a call to action.

Rita D. DeBate; Ellen M. Daley; Cheryl A. Vamos; Nolan Kline; Laura Marsh; Sarah A. Smith

Various womens health concerns (e.g., hormonal changes, cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, immune deficiencies, respiratory diseases, eating disorders, substance use/abuse, sexually transmitted infections, stress, poverty, poor nutrition, and early childhood caries) are associated with oral–systemic etiologies that can either cause or form as a result of poor oral health. Nonetheless, the intersections of biological, social–behavioral, and structural factors that impact womens oral–systemic health are rarely examined. We argue for the need for transdisciplinary research, grounded in team science, for incorporating and transcending multiple discipline-specific frameworks and models to examine the complexity of womens health issues holistically across the lifespan.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2017

Rethinking Preconception Care: A Critical, Women’s Health Perspective

Erika L. Thompson; Coralia Vázquez-Otero; Cheryl A. Vamos; Stephanie L. Marhefka; Nolan Kline; Ellen M. Daley

Objectives Preconception care aims to provide care to reproductive aged individuals in order to improve pregnancy and birth outcomes. Given that preconception care is a public health priority, it is important to evaluate the evolution of this health paradigm and the promotion of preconception messages that are obtained by the public. We identified online preconception health messages, which were critically assessed through a women’s health perspective. Methods We searched for “preconception care” on three major search engines. Websites were included if they were U.S.-based, provided content in English, and mentioned preconception care. Blogs and journal articles were excluded. The final sample included 52 websites. Using a content analysis approach, we assessed the presence of gender bias and identified other emergent themes. Results The majority of websites focused on preconception care for women only (67%). The recommendations centered on: (1) health behaviors for women (e.g., folic acid, drinking, smoking); (2) visiting healthcare providers; and (3) evaluating medical risks. Moreover, most content implied that women desired, or should desire, pregnancy. Overall, the messages used biomedical language and rarely mentioned other important health topics, such as social support and violence. Conclusions The primary messages presented on preconception care websites emphasized biomedical aspects of women’s health. The current context of preconception care medicalizes this pre-pregnancy period by defining it as a biomedical condition requiring lifestyle changes and interventions. Additionally, the biases presented in these messages assumed women want and are capable of pregnancies and excluded an integral factor for heteronormative reproduction—men.


Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2016

Research and Practice Communications Between Oral Health Providers and Prenatal Health Providers: A Bibliometric Analysis

John Skvoretz; Karen E. Dyer; Ellen M. Daley; Rita D. DeBate; Cheryl A. Vamos; Nolan Kline; Erika L. Thompson

Objectives We aimed to examine scholarly collaboration between oral health and prenatal providers. Oral disease is a silent epidemic with significant public health implications for pregnant women. Evidence linking poor oral health during pregnancy to adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes requires oral health and prenatal providers to communicate on the prevention, treatment and co-management matters pertaining to oral health issues among their pregnant patients. The need for inter-professional collaboration is highlighted by guidelines co-endorsed by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the American Dental Association, stressing the importance of oral health care during pregnancy. Methods To assess if interdisciplinary communication occurs between oral health and prenatal disciplines, we conducted a network analysis of research on pregnancy-related periodontal disease. Results Social Network analysis allowed us to identify communication patterns between communities of oral health and prenatal professionals via scientific journals. Analysis of networks of citations linking journals in different fields reveals a core-periphery pattern dominated by oral health journals with some participation from medicine journals. However, an analysis of dyadic ties of citation reveals statistically significant “inbreeding” tendencies in the citation patterns: both medical and oral health journals tend to cite their own kind at greater-than-chance levels. Conclusions Despite evidence suggesting that professional collaboration benefits patients’ overall health, findings from this research imply that little collaboration occurs between these two professional groups. More collaboration may be useful in addressing women’s oral-systemic health concerns that result in adverse pregnancy outcomes.


Ethnicity & Health | 2018

Multi-level determinants to HPV vaccination among Hispanic farmworker families in Florida

Cheryl A. Vamos; Coralia Vázquez-Otero; Nolan Kline; Elizabeth Lockhart; Kristen J. Wells; Sara K. Proctor; Cathy D. Meade; Ellen M. Daley

BACKGROUND HPV vaccination is the primary prevention method for HPV-related cancers, although among Hispanic populations, migrant farmworkers may experience exacerbated challenges to HPV vaccination due to intersecting political, social, and personal contexts. This study explored multi-level determinants of HPV vaccination among Hispanic migrant farmworker families. METHODS Using a community-engaged approach and guided by the socio-ecological model, Intervention Mapping, and PRECEDE-PROCEED constructs, we recruited parents who had a daughter and/or son age 9-15 years from a rural, faith-based, community organization in Florida. Three focus groups (n = 13) were conducted in Spanish and constant comparison methods were used to analyze qualitative data. RESULTS Micro-level determinants included moderate HPV vaccine knowledge, desire for more HPV vaccine information, concerns about HPV vaccine completion, health/preventive motivations, past experiences with the healthcare system, and parental gender roles related to health care. Macro-level determinants included facilitators (e.g. transportation services, clinics open after work hours, governmental programs) and barriers (e.g. supervisor/employment inflexibility, long clinic wait times) to accessing health care and vaccination in general (including HPV vaccination). Participants shared their preferences for future interventions that would meet the needs of this community, and discussed potential content and mechanisms for receiving HPV information, as well as what might facilitate their overall access, uptake, and completion of the HPV vaccine series. DISCUSSION Determinants to HPV vaccination emerged and underscore the importance of addressing the multi-level factors when designing and delivering an HPV vaccine intervention for this Hispanic migrant farmworker population. Improving HPV vaccination rates requires responding to situational and structural hardships that disproportionately impact this group. Thus, community-tailored and culturally appropriate multi-level interventions are needed, while emphasizing existing knowledge assets and preferences favorable towards HPV vaccination, with the ultimate goal of the decreasing HPV-related disparities. Findings suggest interventions must reach beyond the individual level to account for this unique populations lived experiences.


Public Health | 2014

Prevention of HPV-related oral cancer: assessing dentists' readiness

Ellen M. Daley; Virginia J. Dodd; Rita D. DeBate; Cheryl A. Vamos; C. Wheldon; Nolan Kline; Sarah A. Smith; Rasheeta Chandler; Karen Dyer; Hannah Helmy; A. Driscoll


Social Science & Medicine | 2010

False hope: Effects of social class and health policy on oral health inequalities for migrant farmworker families

Heide Castañeda; Iraida V. Carrion; Nolan Kline; Dinorah Martinez Tyson


Social Work in Health Care | 2011

Barriers Impeding Access to Primary Oral Health Care Among Farmworker Families in Central Florida

Iraida V. Carrion; Heide Castañeda; Dinorah Martinez-Tyson; Nolan Kline

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Cheryl A. Vamos

University of South Florida

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Ellen M. Daley

University of South Florida

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Erika L. Thompson

University of South Florida

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Rita D. DeBate

University of South Florida

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Heide Castañeda

University of South Florida

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Laura Merrell

University of South Florida

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Stacey B. Griner

University of South Florida

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Iraida V. Carrion

University of South Florida

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