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Dive into the research topics where Robin T. Higashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Robin T. Higashi.


Preventing Chronic Disease | 2016

Who is Food Insecure? Implications for Targeted Recruitment and Outreach, National health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2005-2010

Sandi L. Pruitt; Tammy Leonard; Lei Xuan; Richard Amory; Robin T. Higashi; Oanh Kieu Nguyen; Carla Pezzia; Stephanie Swales

Introduction Food insecurity is negatively associated with health; however, health needs may differ among people participating in food assistance programs. Our objectives were to characterize differences in health among people receiving different types of food assistance and summarize strategies for targeted recruitment and outreach of various food insecure populations. Methods We examined health status, behaviors, and health care access associated with food insecurity and receipt of food assistance among US adults aged 20 years or older using data from participants (N = 16,934) of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 2005 through 2010. Results Food insecurity affected 19.3% of US adults (95% confidence interval, 17.9%–20.7%). People who were food insecure reported poorer health and less health care access than those who were food secure (P < .001 for all). Among those who were food insecure, 58.0% received no assistance, 20.3% received only Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, 9.7% received only food bank assistance, and 12.0% received both SNAP and food bank assistance. We observed an inverse relationship between receipt of food assistance and health and health behaviors among the food insecure. Receipt of both (SNAP and food bank assistance) was associated with the poorest health; receiving no assistance was associated with the best health. For example, functional limitations were twice as prevalent among people receiving both types of food assistance than among those receiving none. Conclusion Receipt of food assistance is an overlooked factor associated with health and has the potential to shape future chronic disease prevention efforts among the food insecure.


Patient Education and Counseling | 2016

Characterizing safety-net providers’ HPV vaccine recommendations to undecided parents: A pilot study

L. Aubree Shay; Richard L. Street; Austin S. Baldwin; Emily G. Marks; Simon J. Craddock Lee; Robin T. Higashi; Celette Sugg Skinner; Sobha Fuller; Donna Persaud; Jasmin A. Tiro

OBJECTIVE Although provider recommendation is a key predictor of HPV vaccination, how providers verbalize recommendations particularly strong ones is unknown. We developed a tool to describe strength and content of provider recommendations. METHODS We used electronic health records to identify unvaccinated adolescents with appointments at six safety-net clinics in Dallas, Texas. Clinic visit audio-recordings were qualitatively analyzed to identify provider recommendation types (presumptive vs. participatory introduction; strong vs. weak), describe content communicated, and explore patterns between recommendation type and vaccination. RESULTS We analyzed 43 audio-recorded discussions between parents and 12 providers. Most providers used a participatory introduction (42 discussions) and made weak recommendations (24 discussions) by using passive voice or adding a qualification (e.g., not school required). Few providers (11 discussions) gave strong recommendations (clear, personally-owned endorsement). HPV vaccination was lowest for those receiving only weak recommendations and highest when providers coupled the recommendation with an adjacent rationale. CONCLUSION Our new tool provides initial evidence of how providers undercut their recommendations through qualifications or support them with a rationale. Most providers gave weak HPV vaccine recommendations and used a participatory introduction. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS Providers would benefit from communication skills training on how to make explicit recommendations with an evidence-based rationale.


Pain Medicine | 2016

Physical, Emotional, and Social Impacts of Restricting Back Pain in Older Adults: A Qualitative Study.

Una E. Makris; Robin T. Higashi; Emily G. Marks; Liana Fraenkel; Thomas M. Gill; Janna Friedly; M. Carrington Reid

Objective Back pain is the most common type of pain reported by older adults, yet current management strategies often do not address the multi-dimensional impacts on older adults who face unique challenges as compared with younger populations. The objective of this qualitative study was to assess the physical, psychological, and social impacts of back pain (severe enough to restrict activity, hereafter referred to as restricting back pain) on older adults. Design This was a qualitative study using semi-structured interviews and focus groups. Setting and Patients This study was comprised of a diverse sample of 93 community-living older adults (median age 83) with restricting back pain. Methods We used a semi-structured guide in 23 interviews and 16 focus groups to discuss the various ways that restricting back pain impacted participants. Transcripts were analyzed in an iterative process to develop thematic categories. Results Restricting back pain affected participants physically (inability to execute routine tasks, disruption of sleep and exercise), psychologically (feelings of sadness and irritability, fears about worsening health, loss of hope towards recovery or pain relief), and socially (experiences of isolation, inability to pursue hobbies). Conclusions These data inform which outcomes should be measured in studies evaluating treatments for older adults with restricting back pain.


Translational behavioral medicine | 2017

County-level outcomes of a rural breast cancer screening outreach strategy: a decentralized hub-and-spoke model (BSPAN2)

Simon J. Craddock Lee; Robin T. Higashi; Stephen Inrig; Joanne M. Sanders; Hong Zhu; Keith E. Argenbright; Jasmin A. Tiro

Rural mammography screening remains suboptimal despite reimbursement programs for uninsured women. Networks linking non-clinical community organizations and clinical providers may overcome limited delivery infrastructure in rural areas. Little is known about how networks expand their service area. To evaluate a hub-and-spoke model to expand mammography services to 17 rural counties by assessing county-level delivery and local stakeholder conduct of outreach activities. We conducted a mixed-method evaluation using EMR data, systematic site visits (73 interviews, 51 organizations), 92 patient surveys, and 30 patient interviews. A two-sample t test compared the weighted monthly average of women served between hub- and spoke-led counties; nonparametric trend test evaluated time trend over the study period; Pearson chi-square compared sociodemographic data between hub- and spoke-led counties. From 2013 to 2014, the program screened 4603 underinsured women. Counties where local “spoke” organizations led outreach activities achieved comparable screening rates to hub-led counties (9.2 and 8.7, respectively, p = 0.984) and did not vary over time (p = 0.866). Qualitative analyses revealed influence of program champions, participant language preference, and stakeholders’ concerns about uncompensated care. A program that leverages local organizations’ ability to identify and reach rural underserved populations is a feasible approach for expanding preventive services delivery.


Clinical and Translational Science | 2015

Multiple Comorbidities and Interest in Research Participation Among Clients of a Nonprofit Food Distribution Site

Robin T. Higashi; Simon J. Craddock Lee; Tammy Leonard; Erica L. Cuate; Jay Cole; Sandi L. Pruitt

Persons accessing food from nonprofit distribution sites face numerous challenges and typically have significant unmet health needs. However, given limited and intermittent healthcare system engagement, this vulnerable population is underrepresented in clinical research. We sought to better understand the health needs of a nonclinical population to inform future research and interventions.


The Annals of Anthropological Practice | 2017

Family and Social Context Contributes to the Interplay of Economic Insecurity, Food Insecurity, and Health

Robin T. Higashi; Simon J. Craddock Lee; Carla Pezzia; Lisa Quirk; Tammy Leonard; Sandi L. Pruitt

In this study, we show how household health, economic instability, and food insecurity are inextricably linked; disruptions in individual health or income create cumulative and interdependent challenges faced by multiple household members. Drawing upon semi-structured focus groups with English- and Spanish-speaking clients of an urban food pantry, we demonstrate: (1) the impact of economic scarcity on health, (2) the impact of one household members health on the health and food security of all household members, and (3) food sharing behaviors among family and social networks, including multi-generational families and non-kin individuals. We identify the gap between household-level assessments of food insecurity and individual-level health reports, which may obscure poor health among other household members. Understanding the social and family context of health and food insecurity may inform future interventions that address the interrelated challenges of diverse and disadvantaged households and communities.


Preventive medicine reports | 2018

Identifying quality improvement targets to facilitate colorectal cancer screening completion

Simon J. Craddock Lee; Stephen Inrig; Bijal A. Balasubramanian; Celette Sugg Skinner; Robin T. Higashi; Katharine McCallister; Wendy Pechero Bishop; Noel O. Santini; Jasmin A. Tiro

The colorectal cancer (CRC) screening process involves multiple interfaces (communication exchanges and transfers of responsibility for specific actions) among primary care and gastroenterology providers, laboratory, and administrative staff. After a retrospective electronic health record (EHR) analysis discovered substantial clinic variation and low CRC screening prevalence overall in an urban, integrated safety-net system, we launched a qualitative analysis to identify potential quality improvement targets to enhance fecal immunochemical test (FIT) completion, the systems preferred screening modality. Here, we report examination of organization-, clinic-, and provider-level interfaces over a three-year period (December 2011–October 2014). We deployed in parallel 3 qualitative data collection methods: (1) structured observation (90+ hours, 10 sites); (2) document analysis (n > 100); and (3) semi-structured interviews (n = 41) and conducted iterative thematic analysis in which findings from each method cross-informed subsequent data collection. Thematic analysis was guided by a conceptual model and applied deductive and inductive codes. There was substantial variation in protocols for distributing and returning FIT kits both within and across clinics. Providers, clinic and laboratory staff had differing access to important data about FIT results based on clinical information system used and this affected results reporting. Communication and coordination during electronic referrals for diagnostic colonoscopy was suboptimal particularly for co-morbid patients needing anesthesia clearance. Our multi-level approach elucidated organizational deficiencies not evident by quantitative analysis alone. Findings indicate potential quality improvement intervention targets including: (1) best-practices implementation across clinics; (2) detailed communication to providers about FIT results; and (3) creation of EHR alerts to resolve pending colonoscopy referrals before they expire.


Evaluation and Program Planning | 2017

Assessing local capacity to expand rural breast cancer screening and patient navigation: An iterative mixed-method tool.

Stephen Inrig; Robin T. Higashi; Jasmin A. Tiro; Keith E. Argenbright; Simon J. Craddock Lee

BACKGROUND Despite federal funding for breast cancer screening, fragmented infrastructure and limited organizational capacity hinder access to the full continuum of breast cancer screening and clinical follow-up procedures among rural-residing women. We proposed a regional hub-and-spoke model, partnering with local providers to expand access across North Texas. We describe development and application of an iterative, mixed-method tool to assess county capacity to conduct community outreach and/or patient navigation in a partnership model. METHODS Our tool combined publicly-available quantitative data with qualitative assessments during site visits and semi-structured interviews. RESULTS Application of our tool resulted in shifts in capacity designation in 10 of 17 county partners: 8 implemented local outreach with hub navigation; 9 relied on the hub for both outreach and navigation. Key factors influencing capacity: (1) formal linkages between partner organizations; (2) inter-organizational relationships; (3) existing clinical service protocols; (4) underserved populations. Qualitative data elucidate how our tool captured these capacity changes. CONCLUSIONS Our capacity assessment tool enabled the hub to establish partnerships with county organizations by tailoring support to local capacity and needs. Absent a vertically integrated provider network for preventive services in these rural counties, our tool facilitated a virtually integrated regional network to extend access to breast cancer screening to underserved women.


Pediatrics | 2018

Parent-Provider Communication of HPV Vaccine Hesitancy

Laura A. Shay; Austin S. Baldwin; Andrea C. Betts; Emily G. Marks; Robin T. Higashi; Richard L. Street; Donna Persaud; Jasmin A. Tiro

With our qualitative analysis of audio recordings, we suggest that engaging parents who express HPV vaccine hesitancy and addressing concerns may result in high rates of same-day vaccination. BrightcoveDefaultPlayer10.1542/6138653799001PEDS-VA_2017-2312 Video Abstract OBJECTIVES: To prevent human papillomavirus (HPV)–related cancers, providers must effectively communicate with HPV vaccine–hesitant parents. Here, we developed a typology characterizing parent-provider communication around HPV vaccine hesitancy. METHODS: We audio-recorded 43 visits with unvaccinated adolescents at 6 pediatric clinics in Dallas, Texas in which parents were undecided about HPV vaccination. We qualitatively coded how parents verbally expressed hesitancy (assertive response, asking a question, or expressing concern) and whether providers responded with acquiescence (agree to defer vaccination) and/or persistence (continue discussion). We described the frequency of parent and provider communication codes and same-day vaccination. RESULTS: Among the 43 visits, 37 parents expressed hesitancy ≥1 times in many ways. Assertive responses were most common (27 visits), followed by questions (16 visits), and concerns (12 visits). When the first expression of hesitancy was a question or concern, 71% and 75% of adolescents, respectively, received same-day vaccinations, whereas 33% of adolescents who received an initial assertive response were vaccinated. Providers responded with only persistence in 18 visits, a mix of acquiescence and persistence in 13 visits, and only acquiescence in 6 visits. When providers only used persistence, 17 of 18 adolescents were vaccinated; when providers responded with only acquiescence, no adolescents received the vaccine. CONCLUSIONS: Our exploratory analysis reveals that providers engaging hesitant parents and addressing their concerns can lead to same-day HPV vaccination. Data reveal that even parents making assertive statements are amenable to influence by providers. Our findings reveal an important missed opportunity when providers simply acquiesce to parental hesitation.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2018

The Influence of Financial Strain on Health Decision-Making

Oanh Kieu Nguyen; Robin T. Higashi; Anil N. Makam; Juan C. Mijares; Simon J. Craddock Lee

Author(s): Nguyen, Oanh Kieu; Higashi, Robin T; Makam, Anil N; Mijares, Juan C; Lee, Simon Craddock

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Simon J. Craddock Lee

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jasmin A. Tiro

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Stephen Inrig

Mount St. Mary's University

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Emily G. Marks

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Sandi L. Pruitt

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Keith E. Argenbright

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Austin S. Baldwin

Southern Methodist University

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Bijal A. Balasubramanian

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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