Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Roger D. Vaughan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Roger D. Vaughan.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Pathological diagnosis of chronic hepatitis C: A multicenter comparative study with chronic hepatitis B

Jay H. Lefkowitch; Eugene R. Schiff; Gary L. Davis; Robert P. Perrillo; Karen L. Lindsay; Henry C. Bodenheimer; Luis A. Balart; Terryl J. Ortego; John A. Payne; Jules L. Dienstag; Alexandra L. Gibas; Ira M. Jacobson; Carlo H. Tamburro; William D. Carey; Christopher B. O'Brien; Sampliner Re; David H. Van Thiel; David Feit; Janice K. Albrecht; Carlton Meschievitz; Bharati Sanghvi; Roger D. Vaughan

BACKGROUND Hepatic histological responses described in hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection include bile duct damage, lymphoid follicles and/or aggregates in portal tracts, large- and small-droplet fat, Mallory body-like material in hepatocytes, liver cell dysplasia and multinucleation, and activation of sinusoidal inflammatory cells. The specificity of these lesions for HCV infection is uncertain. METHODS In two multicenter trials of recombinant interferon alfa therapy for chronic hepatitis C and B, the frequency of these eight lesions in pretherapy and posttherapy liver biopsy specimens was examined to determine the set of features, if any, that distinguishes HCV from hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. The lesions were scored in 317 HCV biopsy specimens and 299 HBV specimens. RESULTS Stepwise logistic regression determined a set of three features more likely to be seen in HCV than in HBV infection: bile duct damage [odds ratio (OR), 4.7; 95% confidence interval (Cl), 1.8-12.3], lymphoid follicles and/or aggregates (OR, 2.4; 95% Cl, 1.2-4.7), and large-droplet fat (OR, 2.4; 95% Cl, 1.4-4.1). A fourth lesion, Mallory body-like material, was seen only in HCV biopsy specimens (OR, 71.6; 95% Cl, 4.4-996.1). CONCLUSIONS These four histological lesions are useful pathological parameters in the diagnosis of liver disease caused by HCV.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1988

Modification of risk factors for coronary heart disease: Five-year results of a school-based intervention trial

Heather J. Walter; Albert Hofman; Roger D. Vaughan; Ernst L. Wynder

We conducted a study of the effectiveness of an educational intervention designed to modify risk factors associated with coronary heart disease among 3388 children in 37 schools in two demographically dissimilar areas (the Bronx and Westchester County) in and around New York City. Schools within each area were randomly assigned to either intervention or nonintervention groups. In schools targeted for intervention, children in the fourth through eighth grades were taught a teacher-delivered curriculum focusing on diet, physical activity, and cigarette smoking. Risk-factor levels were measured in all schools at base line and at four follow-up points. A total of 1769 of the children qualified for analysis of the intervention effect. After five years, the net mean change in plasma levels of total cholesterol was -1.7 mg per deciliter per year (-0.04 mmol per liter) (95 percent confidence interval, -2.7 to -0.7 mg per deciliter [-0.07 to -0.02 mmol per liter]) in the Westchester County schools, or -8.5 mg per deciliter (-0.22 mmol per liter) (5.1 percent) over a period of five years. In the schools in the Bronx, the net mean change was -1.0 mg per deciliter per year (-0.03 mmol per liter) (95 percent confidence interval, -2.3 to +0.3 mg per deciliter [-0.06 to +0.01 mmol per -2.3 to +0.3 mg per deciliter [-0.06 to +0.01 mmol per liter]), or -5.0 mg per deciliter (-0.13 mmol per liter) (2.9 percent) over a period of five years. Favorable trends in dietary intake and health knowledge were also observed, whereas the other targeted risk factors were not significantly altered. If these findings can be replicated, this will suggest that educational programs to modify coronary risk factors are feasible and may have a favorable (albeit small) effect on blood levels of cholesterol in children.


Health Education & Behavior | 1992

Self-Efficacy for AIDS Preventive Behaviors among Tenth Grade Students

Stephanie Kasen; Roger D. Vaughan; Heather J. Walter

To guide acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) prevention program planning, 181 tenth grade students residing in or near an AIDS epicenter completed a survey measuring past year involvement in sexual intercourse and condom use, beliefs about self-efficacy for AIDS preventive behaviors, and beliefs about susceptibility to and severity of AIDS, and outcome efficacy of AIDS preventive actions. A degree of uncertainty existed for all areas of self-efficacy surveyed: refusing sexual intercourse under a variety of circumstances, questioning sex partners about past risky behaviors, and correct and consistent condom use. Students were most uncertain of their ability to refuse sex with a desirable partner, under pressure, or after drinking alcohol or using marijuana; to purchase condoms, or use them consistently after drinking alcohol or using marijuana; and to question partners about past homosexual history. Those students with lower self-efficacy for refusing sex were twice as likely to have had sexual intercourse. Similarly, those students with lower self-efficacy for correct, consistent condom use were five times less likely to have used condoms consistently. These associations remained even after adjusting for the influence of other AIDS-related beliefs. Implications of these findings focus on exploiting the link between self-efficacy and behavior by building a prevention program that emphasizes skills-building rather than the traditional knowledge-only approach.


Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 1989

Social support and substance use in early adolescence.

Thomas A. Wills; Roger D. Vaughan

In data from two cohorts of urban adolescents, measures of coping through support-seeking from peers and adults were related to indices of cigarette smoking and alcohol use. Peer support was positively related to substance use, whereas parental and other adult support were inversely related to substance use. Peer support had interactive relationships (positively weighted) with peer smoking and alcohol use: support had no effect when there were no friends who smoked/drank but had an increasingly greater effect for higher levels of peer smoking/drinking. Adult support had a similar (negatively weighted) interactive effect in relation to peer smoking and alcohol use. Peer and adult support interacted, with an increasingly greater effect of peer support on substance use for subjects with lower levels of adult support. Interactions with gender indicated peer support more strongly related to substance use for females than males. Implications for the theory of social networks and the prevention of substance use are discussed.


American Journal of Public Health | 1992

Factors Associated with AIDS Risk Behaviors among High School Students in an AIDS Epicenter.

H J Walter; Roger D. Vaughan; M M Gladis; D F Ragin; S Kasen; Alwyn T. Cohall

BACKGROUND A greater understanding of the determinants of risky behaviors is an essential precursor to the development of successful AIDS prevention programs for adolescents. METHODS A survey measuring AIDS-related behaviors, beliefs, and knowledge was administered to a sample of 531 10th-grade students residing in an AIDS epicenter. RESULTS Of the 56.8% of students reporting past-year involvement in sexual intercourse, 67.3% reported unprotected intercourse with low-risk partners, 1.3% reported unprotected intercourse with high-risk partners, and 6.6% reported a past-year history of a sexually transmitted disease. Students whose friends had intercourse and never or inconsistently used condoms, who personally sanctioned intercourse involvement, who believed that the majority of their peers had intercourse, and who perceived low preventive action self-efficacy, were 5.1, 3.0, 2.1, 3.7, and 2.8 times more likely, respectively, to score in the riskier categories of an AIDS behavior index. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that addressing socioenvironmental influences on risky and preventive behaviors may prove to be the most effective AIDS prevention strategy among adolescents.


American Journal of Public Health | 2005

Addressing the Childhood Asthma Crisis in Harlem: The Harlem Children’s Zone Asthma Initiative

Stephen W. Nicholas; Betina Jean-Louis; Benjamin Ortiz; Mary E. Northridge; Katherine Shoemaker; Roger D. Vaughan; Michaela Rome; Geoffrey Canada; Vincent Hutchinson

OBJECTIVES We determined the prevalence of asthma and estimated baseline asthma symptoms and asthma management strategies among children aged 0-12 years in Central Harlem. METHODS The Harlem Childrens Zone Asthma Initiative is a longitudinal, community-based intervention designed for poor children with asthma. Children aged 0-12 years who live or go to school in the Harlem Childrens Zone Project or who participate in any Harlem Childrens Zone, Inc, program were screened for asthma. Children with asthma or asthma-like symptoms were invited to participate in an intensive intervention. RESULTS Of the 1982 children currently screened, 28.5% have been told by a doctor or nurse that they have asthma, and 30.3% have asthma or asthma-like symptoms. To date, 229 children are enrolled in the Harlem Childrens Zone Asthma Initiative; at baseline, 24.0% had missed school in the last 14 days because of asthma. CONCLUSION The high prevalence of asthma among children in the Harlem Childrens Zone Project is consistent with reports from other poor urban communities. Intensive efforts are under way to reduce childrens asthma symptoms and improve their asthma management strategies.


Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 1998

2-year tracking of children's fruit and vegetable intake.

Ken Resnicow; Matthew Smith; Tom Baranowski; Janice Baranowski; Roger D. Vaughan; Marsha Davis

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the tracking of childrens fruit and vegetable intake over 2 years. DESIGN Children in the control group from the Gimme 5 nutrition education intervention trial completed three 7-day food diaries once a year in 1994, 1995, and 1996, beginning when they were in third grade. SUBJECTS Five hundred sixty-one students from public elementary schools. STATISTICAL ANALYSES PERFORMED Tracking was examined through correlation of fruit and vegetable servings over the 2 years as well as the percent of subjects remaining in the same or adjacent quintiles of fruit and vegetable intake, using the kappa statistic. RESULTS Tracking of fruit and vegetable intake was fair to moderate over the 2 years. One-year correlations for total fruit and vegetable servings were .37 for boys and .46 for girls; 2-year correlations were .48 for boys and .40 for girls. kappa values for remaining in the same quintile generally exceeded chance rates only for the top and bottom quintiles. No values exceeded .50. APPLICATION/CONCLUSION: The drift in ranking may have been a result of true changes in fruit and vegetable intake or measurement error (i.e., inability to accurately assess actual intake). If this drift reflects true change, it may be difficult for nutrition education programs targeting this age group to demonstrate long-term behavioral effects on fruit and vegetable intake. If the drift is the result of measurement limitations, improved dietary assessment may yield stronger tracking.


Addictive Behaviors | 2000

The co-occurrence of smoking and binge drinking in adolescence.

Patrick B. Johnson; Sharon M. Boles; Roger D. Vaughan; Herbert D. Kleber

The present work sought to determine adolescent rates of smoking and binge-drinking co-occurrence. Secondary analyses were conducted on the interview responses of more than 4,000 adolescents between the ages of 13 and 18 who took part in the 1995 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. Results revealed that not only are adolescent smokers likely to be binge drinkers, but adolescent binge drinkers are also likely to be smokers. Conversely, those who abstain from involvement with one of these substances generally abstain from the other as well. The discussion highlighted race/ethnic and gender differences in co-occurrence rates as well as prevention and intervention implications.


American Journal of Public Health | 2012

Rapid Increases in Overweight and Obesity Among South African Adolescents: Comparison of Data From the South African National Youth Risk Behaviour Survey in 2002 and 2008

Sasiragha Priscilla Reddy; Ken Resnicow; Shamagonam James; Itumeleng N. Funani; Nilen S. Kambaran; Riyadh G. Omardien; Pardon Masuka; Ronel Sewpaul; Roger D. Vaughan; Anthony Mbewu

OBJECTIVES To aid future policy and intervention initiatives, we studied the prevalence and correlates of overweight and obesity among participants in the South African National Youth Risk Behaviour Survey in 2002 and 2008. METHODS The survey collected data from nationally representative cross-sectional samples of students in grades 8 through 11 (n = 9491 in 2002 and 9442 in 2008) by questionnaire and measurement of height and weight. We stratified data on overweight and obesity rates by age, socioeconomic status, and race/ethnicity. RESULTS Among male adolescents, overweight rates increased from 6.3% in 2002 to 11.0% in 2008 (P < .01); among female adolescents, overweight rates increased from 24.3% in 2002 to 29.0% in 2008 (P < .01). Obesity rates more than doubled among male adolescents from 1.6% in 2002 to 3.3% in 2008 (P < .01) and rose from 5.0% to 7.5% among female adolescents (P < .01). We observed a dose-response relationship in overweight and obesity rates across socioeconomic categories. Rates of overweight and obesity were significantly higher among urban youths than among rural youths (P < .01). CONCLUSIONS South Africa is experiencing a chronic disease risk transition. Further research is needed to better understand and effectively address this rapid change.


Health Education & Behavior | 1997

A Self-Help Smoking Cessation Program for Inner-City African Americans: Results from the Harlem Health Connection Project

Ken Resnicow; Roger D. Vaughan; Robert Futterman; Raymond Eric Weston; Jacqueline Royce; Clifford Parms; Marsha Davis Hearn; Matthew Smith; Harold P. Freeman; Mario A. Orlandi

The authors develop and test a culturally sensitive, low-intensity smoking cessation intervention for low-socioeconomic African Americans. African American adult smokers were randomly assigned to receive either a multicomponent smoking cessation intervention comprising a printed guide, a video, and a telephone booster call or health education materials not directly addressing tobacco use. The results of the study were mixed. Although no significant effects were observed for the entire treatment cohort, the results of post hoc analyses suggest that culturally sensitive self-help smoking cessation materials plus a single phone contact can produce short-term cessation rates similar to those reported for majority populations. This conclusion should be tempered by the low completion rate for the booster call and several design limitations of the study.

Collaboration


Dive into the Roger D. Vaughan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Heather J. Walter

Children's Memorial Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge