Quentin D. Young
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Publication
Featured researches published by Quentin D. Young.
JAMA | 1978
Lambert King; Quentin D. Young
In an effort to determine the prevalence of seizure disorders among persons confined to jails and prison, the prescription rates for anticonvulsant medications in ten Illinois correctional institutions were surveyed. The institutions housed 12,030 persons at the time of the survey. Analysis of the results of the survey suggests a point prevalence of seizure disorders of 1.9% among the Illinois prison and jail population. This estimated prevalence of seizure disorders is approximately three times higher than among middle-class nonprisoner populations on which previous epidemiologic studies of epilepsy have been based. Special programs and resources for the detection, treatment, and prevention of seizure disorders among prisoners appear necessary. Provisions to ensure continuity of care after release from incarceration are also needed.
International Journal of Health Services | 2002
Samuel S. Epstein; Nicholas A. Ashford; Brent Blackwelder; Barry I. Castleman; Gary Cohen; Edward Goldsmith; Anthony Mazzocchi; Quentin D. Young
The incidence of cancer in the United States and other major industrialized nations has escalated to epidemic proportions over recent decades, and greater increases are expected. While smoking is the single largest cause of cancer, the incidence of childhood cancers and a wide range of predominantly nonsmoking-related cancers in men and women has increased greatly. This modern epidemic does not reflect lack of resources of the U.S. cancer establishment, the National Cancer Institute and American Cancer Society; the NCI budget has increased 20-fold since passage of the 1971 National Cancer Act, while funding for research and public information on primary prevention remains minimal. The cancer establishment bears major responsibility for the cancer epidemic, due to its overwhelming fixation on damage control—screening, diagnosis, treatment, and related molecular research—and indifference to preventing a wide range of avoidable causes of cancer, other than faulty lifestyle, particularly smoking. This mindset is based on a discredited 1981 report by a prominent pro-industry epidemiologist, guesstimating that environmental and occupational exposures were responsible for only 5 percent of cancer mortality, even though a prior chemical industry report admitted that 20 percent was occupational in origin. This report still dominates public policy, despite overwhelming contrary scientific evidence on avoidable causes of cancer from involuntary exposures to a wide range of environmental carcinogens. Since 1998, the ACS has been planning to gain control of national cancer policy, now under federal authority. These plans, developed behind closed doors and under conditions of nontransparency, with recent well-intentioned but mistaken bipartisan Congressional support, pose a major and poorly reversible threat to cancer prevention and to winning the losing war against cancer.
JAMA | 2003
Steffie Woolhandler; David U. Himmelstein; Marcia Angell; Quentin D. Young
JAMA | 1994
Gordon D. Schiff; Andrew B. Bindman; Troyen A. Brennan; Schiff; Bindman; Thomas Bodenheimer; Brennan; Carolyn M. Clancy; Oliver Fein; Ida Hellander; David U. Himmelstein; Linda R. Murray; T. Donald Rucker; Ron Sable; Jeffrey Scavorn; Ronald Shansky; Ellen Shaffer; David Slobodkin; Steve Tarzynski; Steffie Woolhandler; Quentin D. Young
CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians | 1983
Arthur Hoffman; Quentin D. Young; Peter Bright‐Asare; Herand Abcarian; John J. Fitzpatrick; Eugene Lidow; Marilyn Farber; Jean Summerville; Cecilia Petani; Charles P. Orsay; Dennis Zai; Ronald Shansky
Public Health Reports | 2001
Gordon D. Schiff; Quentin D. Young
JAMA | 1990
Quentin D. Young; Eric Stover
International Journal of Health Services | 1993
Steffie Woolhandler; David U. Himmelstein; Quentin D. Young
Nation | 2009
David U. Himmelstein; Steffie Woolhandler; Sidney M. Wolfe; Quentin D. Young; Marcia Angell
Public Health | 2002
Gordon D. Schiff; Quentin D. Young