Pooja A. Shah
University of California, San Francisco
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pooja A. Shah.
Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care | 2015
Oni J. Blackstock; Pooja A. Shah; Lorlette J. Haughton; Keith J. Horvath; Chinazo O. Cunningham
&NA; While the development and implementation of HIV‐related online interventions has expanded, few have been tailored for women or have leveraged Web 2.0s capabilities to provide social support. We conducted semi‐structured interviews with 27 women with HIV at an urban community health center to understand their perspectives on the potential role of the Internet and the use of an online group format to provide social support. Data were analyzed using the constant comparative method. We identified six themes: a need for groups and increased sense of connectedness, convenience and accessibility, trust as a precondition for participating, online groups as a potential facilitator or barrier to expression, limited digital access and literacy, and privacy concerns. Overall, women were highly supportive of online group‐based interventions but acknowledged the need for increased digital access and Internet navigation training. Hybrid (in‐person and online) interventions may be most useful for women with HIV.
International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care | 2015
Biren B. Kamdar; Pooja A. Shah; Sruthi Sakamuri; Bharat S. Kamdar; Jiwon Oh
OBJECTIVES Developing a search strategy for use in a systematic review is a time-consuming process requiring construction of detailed search strings using complicated syntax, followed by iterative fine-tuning and trial-and-error testing of these strings in online biomedical search engines. METHODS Building upon limitations of existing online-only search builders, a user-friendly computer-based tool was created to expedite search strategy development as part of production of a systematic review. RESULTS Search Builder 1.0 is a Microsoft Excel®-based tool that automatically assembles search strategy text strings for PubMed (www.pubmed.com) and Embase (www.embase.com), based on a list of user-defined search terms and preferences. With the click of a button, Search Builder 1.0 automatically populates the syntax needed for functional search strings, and copies the string to the clipboard for pasting into Pubmed or Embase. The offline file-based interface of Search Builder 1.0 also allows for searches to be easily shared and saved for future reference. CONCLUSIONS This novel, user-friendly tool can save considerable time and streamline a cumbersome step in the systematic review process.
Journal of Addiction Medicine | 2017
Pooja A. Shah; Chinazo O. Cunningham; Mia T. Brisbane; Joseph Deluca; Shadi Nahvi
Objectives: Provision of smoking-cessation treatment is limited in office-based buprenorphine maintenance treatment (BMT) settings. This study describes smoking and smoking-cessation behaviors among patients receiving office-based BMT. Methods: Cross-sectional study of patients receiving office-based BMT at a community health center in the Bronx, NY. We interviewed patients assessing sociodemographic, and substance use and tobacco use characteristics, including methods used for smoking cessation. We reported simple frequencies and explored associations of BMT characteristics with smoking behaviors. Results: Of 68 patients, 87.7% were current cigarette smokers, 7.9% were former smokers, and 4.4% had never smoked. Of lifetime smokers, 83.1% reported at least 1 prior quit attempt, and 78.5% had used medication (75.4% used nicotine replacement therapy, 29.2% varenicline, and 9.2% bupropion). Ten patients (15.4%) reported using electronic cigarettes to try to quit smoking. Stopping “cold turkey” (40.0%) and gradually decreasing the number of cigarettes smoked (32.3%) were nonpharmacological methods of quitting tried most often. Use of behavioral support, including stop-smoking programs and counseling, was low. Higher dose and longer duration of BMT was associated with greater smoking frequency. Conclusions: Patients receiving BMT have a high prevalence of cigarette smoking, though most have tried to quit, and have prior experience with pharmacotherapy for smoking cessation. Efforts to optimize smoking-cessation treatments among BMT patients are needed.
Case Reports | 2017
Pooja A. Shah; Merida Coj; Peter Rohloff
A 23-year-old indigenous Guatemalan man presented in 2016 to our clinic in Sololá, Guatemala, with 10 months of recurrent neck swelling, fevers, night sweats and weight loss. Previously, he had sought care in three different medical settings, including a private physician-run clinic, a tertiary private cancer treatment centre and, finally, a rural government health post. With assistance from our institution’s accompaniment staff, the patient was admitted to a public tertiary care hospital for work-up. Rifampin-susceptible tuberculosis was diagnosed, and appropriate treatment was begun. The case illustrates how low tuberculosis recognition among community health workers and health system segmentation creates obstacles to appropriate care, especially for patients with limited means. As a result, significant diagnostic and treatment delays can occur, increasing the public health burden of tuberculosis.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Kirsten Austad; Pooja A. Shah; Peter Rohloff
Objective In many low-resource settings around the world utilization of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) is low, in part due to access barriers. We sought to explore LARC utilization patterns as well as factors associated with LARC initiation by women seeking contraception in rural Guatemala from a program working to reduce contraception access barriers. Study design We analyzed data from a program that provides family planning in six remote, primarily indigenous, villages in Guatemala with limited access to alternative health services. Methods are free and delivered directly within villages by culturally competent providers. We conducted a retrospective chart review of all 288 women who initiated a contraceptive method over a 16-month period and conducted a logistic regression to obtain adjusted odds ratios (OR) for predictors of LARC uptake. Results Overall 79.2% of women elected a LARC method. More than half of women (49.8%) switched to LARC from short-acting hormonal methods. In the univariate analysis prior use of short-acting method (p = 0.014), number of prior methods (p = 0.049), and current contraceptive use (p<0.01) were significantly associated with choosing a LARC. In the logistic regression model current use of contraception remained significant (OR 3.29, 95% CI 1.67–8.04). Report of abnormal bleeding or other side effects from prior short-acting method use did not predict LARC uptake (p = 0.82 and p = 0.079). Conclusions Most women in this marginalized population opted for a LARC method. Implications Low utilization of LARCs may be related to service delivery factors. Further research is needed to validate these conclusions prospectively and in less selected populations.
American Journal of Critical Care | 2012
Biren B. Kamdar; Pooja A. Shah; Lauren M. King; Michelle E. Kho; Xiaowei Zhou; Elizabeth Colantuoni; Nancy A. Collop; Dale M. Needham
Substance Abuse | 2014
Aaron D. Fox; Pooja A. Shah; Nancy Sohler; Carolina M. Lopez; Joanna L. Starrels; Chinazo O. Cunningham
american thoracic society international conference | 2010
Biren B. Kamdar; Nancy A. Collop; Farah Rahman; Pooja A. Shah; Dale M. Needham
Archive | 2015
Oni J. Blackstock; Pooja A. Shah; J. Haughton; Keith J. Horvath; Chinazo O. Cunningham
american thoracic society international conference | 2012
Biren B. Kamdar; Lauren M. King; Sruthi Sakamuri; Pegah Touradji; Elizabeth Colantuoni; Karin J. Neufeld; O. J. Bienvenu; Annette M. Rowden; Amanda B. Le; Pooja A. Shah; Preeya Nandkumar; Melinda R. Christie; Farah Rahman; Nancy A. Collop; Dale M. Needham