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Dive into the research topics where Vence L. Bonham is active.

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Featured researches published by Vence L. Bonham.


American Psychologist | 2005

Race and ethnicity in the genome era: The complexity of the constructs

Vence L. Bonham; Esther Warshauer-Baker; Francis S. Collins

The vast amount of biological information that is now available through the completion of the Human Genome Project presents opportunities and challenges. The genomic era has the potential to advance an understanding of human genetic variation and its role in human health and disease. A challenge for genomics research is to understand the relationships between genomics, race, and ethnicity and the implications of uncovering these relationships. Robust and scholarly discourse on the concept of race and ethnicity in genomic research should be expanded to include social and behavioral scientists. Interdisciplinary research teams are needed in which psychologists, as well as other social and behavioral scientists, work collaboratively with geneticists and other natural scientists.


American Journal of Hematology | 2012

Framing the research agenda for sickle cell trait: building on the current understanding of clinical events and their potential implications.

Jonathan C. Goldsmith; Vence L. Bonham; Clinton H. Joiner; Gregory J. Kato; Allan S. Noonan; Martin H. Steinberg

Sickle Cell Trait (HbAS), the heterozygous state for the sickle hemoglobin beta globin gene is carried by as many as 100 million individuals including up to 25% of the population in some regions of the world (World Health Organization, Provisional agenda item 4.8, EB117/34 (22 December 2005) or World Health Organization, Provisional agenda item 11.4 (24 April 2006)). Persons with HbAS have some resistance to falciparum malaria infection in early childhood (Piel FB, Patil AP, Howes RE, et al., Nat Commun 2010;1104:1-7 and Aidoo M, Terlouw DJ, Kolczak M, et al., Lancet 2002;359:1311-1312) and as a result individuals with HbAS living in malarial endemic regions of Africa have a survival advantage over individuals with HbAA. Reports from the US emphasize possible health risks for individuals with HbAS including increased incidence of renal failure and malignancy, thromboembolic disorders, splenic infarction as a high altitude complication, and exercise-related sudden death. The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health convened a workshop in Bethesda, Maryland on June 3-4, 2010, Framing the Research Agenda for Sickle Cell Trait, to review the clinical manifestations of HbAS, discuss the exercise-related sudden death reports in HbAS, and examine the public health, societal, and ethical implications of policies regarding HbAS. The goal of the workshop was to identify potential research questions to address knowledge gaps.


Health Education & Behavior | 2009

Effects of Racial Discrimination and Health Behaviors on Mental and Physical Health of Middle-Class African American Men

Sherrill L. Sellers; Vence L. Bonham; Harold W. Neighbors; James W. Amell

This research is an examination of the effects of racial discrimination and health-promoting behaviors on the physical and mental health of a sample of 399 well-educated African American men. One would think that the attainment of higher education would increase health-promoting behaviors and might decrease discriminatory experiences that impact health. However, regression analysis indicated a more complex picture. Health-promoting behaviors were positively related to mental health, whereas experiences of racial discrimination contributed to poorer mental health. Relationships between health-promoting behaviors and that of racial discrimination to physical health were found to be nonsignificant. In conclusion, the authors discuss the importance of culturally appropriate health-promotion efforts.


Genetics in Medicine | 2013

What does it mean to be genomically literate?: National Human Genome Research Institute Meeting Report

Belen Hurle; Toby Citrin; Jean Jenkins; Kimberly A. Kaphingst; Neil Lamb; Jo Ellen Roseman; Vence L. Bonham

Genomic discoveries will increasingly advance the science of medicine. Limited genomic literacy may adversely impact the public’s understanding and use of the power of genetics and genomics in health care and public health. In November 2011, a meeting was held by the National Human Genome Research Institute to examine the challenge of achieving genomic literacy for the general public, from kindergarten to grade 12 to adult education. The role of the media in disseminating scientific messages and in perpetuating or reducing misconceptions was also discussed. Workshop participants agreed that genomic literacy will be achieved only through active engagement between genomics experts and the varied constituencies that comprise the public. This report summarizes the background, content, and outcomes from this meeting, including recommendations for a research agenda to inform decisions about how to advance genomic literacy in our society.Genet Med 2013:15(8):658–663


American Journal of Public Health | 2004

John Henryism and Self-Reported Physical Health Among High–Socioeconomic Status African American Men

Vence L. Bonham; Sherrill L. Sellers; Harold W. Neighbors

We performed a cross-sectional survey of high-socioeconomic status (SES) African American men and their health to examine the relationship between John Henryism (the strong behavioral predisposition to directly confront barriers to upward social mobility) and self-reported physical health status. We found a positive association between John Henryism and better physical health among high-SES African American men. The study of social and behavioral implications of health of men of differing SES is required to develop strategies to improve the health of African American men.


Evaluation & the Health Professions | 2011

Effects of Incentives and Prenotification on Response Rates and Costs in a National Web Survey of Physicians

Jennifer Dykema; John Stevenson; Brendan Day; Sherrill L. Sellers; Vence L. Bonham

Little is known about what strategies are cost-effective in increasing participation among physicians in surveys that are conducted exclusively via the web. To assess the effects of incentives and prenotification on response rates and costs, general internists (N = 3,550) were randomly selected from the American Medical Association (AMA) Masterfile and assigned to experimental groups that varied in the amount of a promised incentive (none, entry into a


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Will Precision Medicine Move Us beyond Race

Vence L. Bonham; Shawneequa L. Callier; Charmaine Royal

200 lottery,


Personalized Medicine | 2013

National nursing workforce survey of nursing attitudes, knowledge and practice in genomics

Kathleen A. Calzone; Jean Jenkins; Stacey Culp; Vence L. Bonham; Laurie Badzek

50, or


Medical Decision Making | 2004

Decision Aids for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia: Applicability across Race and Education

David R. Rovner; Celia E. Wills; Vence L. Bonham; Gilbert A. Williams; Janet Lillie; Karen Kelly-Blake; Mark V. Williams; Margaret Holmes-Rovner

100) and prenotification (none, prenotification letter only, or prenotification letter containing a


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2017

Prioritizing diversity in human genomics research

Lucia A. Hindorff; Vence L. Bonham; Lawrence C. Brody; Margaret E. C. Ginoza; Carolyn M. Hutter; Teri A. Manolio; Eric D. Green

2 preincentive). Results indicated that the response rates were highest in the groups promised

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Jean Jenkins

National Institutes of Health

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David R. Rovner

Michigan State University

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Janet Lillie

Michigan State University

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