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Dive into the research topics where Wendy Shields is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendy Shields.


JAMA Internal Medicine | 2016

Medication Sharing, Storage, and Disposal Practices for Opioid Medications Among US Adults

Alene Kennedy-Hendricks; Andrea Carlson Gielen; Eileen M. McDonald; Emma E. McGinty; Wendy Shields; Colleen L. Barry

Author Contributions: Dr Oramasionwu had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Study concept and design: Oramasionwu, Cole, Dunlap, Zule. Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: Oramasionwu, Cole, Dixon, Blalock, Zarkin. Drafting of the manuscript: Oramasionwu, Cole. Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Oramasionwu, Cole, Dixon, Blalock, Zarkin, Dunlap, Zule. Statistical analysis: Oramasionwu, Cole, Dixon, Blalock. Obtained funding: Oramasionwu. Administrative, technical, or material support: Oramasionwu, Zarkin. Study supervision: Oramasionwu. Review of analytic output/results: Dunlap.


Pediatrics | 2006

Tipping the Scales: Obese Children and Child Safety Seats

Lara B. Trifiletti; Wendy Shields; David Bishai; Eileen M. McDonald; Florence Reynaud; Andrea Carlson Gielen

OBJECTIVE. To shed light on the extent to which childhood obesity affects the types of appropriate child safety seats for young children, by providing an estimate of the number of US children whose weight renders them unable to use safely the majority of child safety seat types currently available. METHODS. The types of appropriate child safety seats were assessed by using National Highway Traffic Safety Administration 2005 Child Safety Seat Ease of Use Ratings. Estimates of the numbers of children weighing above the maximal weight for those child safety seats were calculated by using the tabulations of growth curves based on National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999 to 2000 data that were assembled by the National Center for Health Statistics and the US Census for the year 2000. RESULTS. A total of 283305 children 1 to 6 years of age would have a difficult (if not impossible) time finding a safe child safety seat because of their age and weight. The vast majority of these children are 3 years of age and weigh >40 lb (182661 children). For these children, there are currently only 4 child safety seat types available, each of which costs between


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2013

Using the pediatric emergency department to deliver tailored safety messages: results of a randomized controlled trial

Wendy Shields; Eileen M. McDonald; Lara Beth McKenzie; Mei Cheng Wang; Allen Walker; Andrea Carlson Gielen

240 and


Injury Prevention | 2012

Proximity to vacant buildings is associated with increased fire risk in Baltimore, Maryland, homes

Stephen E. Schachterle; David Bishai; Wendy Shields; Rebecca L. Stepnitz; Andrea Carlson Gielen

270. CONCLUSIONS. This study determined that there is limited availability of child safety seat types for the ever-increasing number of obese young children. There are substantial numbers of children who weigh more than the upper weight limit for most currently available child safety seats. While we await reductions in the childhood obesity epidemic, options for maximizing the protection of obese children in automobiles must be identified.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2013

Enhancing fire department home visiting programs: results of a community intervention trial.

Andrea Carlson Gielen; Wendy Shields; Shannon Frattaroli; Eileen M. McDonald; Vanya C. Jones; David Bishai; Raymond O'Brocki; Elise Perry; Barbara Bates-Hopkins; Pat Tracey; Stephanie Parsons

Objective This study aimed to evaluate the impact of a computer kiosk intervention on parents’ self-reported safety knowledge as well as observed child safety seat, smoke alarm use, and safe poison storage and to compare self-reported versus observed behaviors. Methods A randomized controlled trial with 720 parents of young children (4 months to 5 years) was conducted in the pediatric emergency department of a level 1 pediatric trauma center. Enrolled parents received tailored safety information (intervention) or generic information (control) from a computer kiosk after completing a safety assessment. Parents were telephoned 4 to 6 months after the intervention to assess self-reported safety knowledge and behaviors; in-home observations were made 1 week after the telephone interview for a subset of 100 randomly selected participants. Positive and negative predictive values were compared between the intervention and control groups. Results The intervention group had significantly higher smoke alarm (82% vs 78%) and poison storage (83% vs 78%) knowledge scores. The intervention group was more likely to report correct child safety seat use (odds ratio, 1.36; 95% confidence interval, 1.05–1.77; P = 0.02). Observed safety behaviors were lower than self-reported use for both groups. No differences were found between groups for positive or negative predictive values. Conclusions These results add to the limited literature on the impact of computer tailoring home safety information. Knowledge gains were evident 4 months after intervention. Discrepancies between observed and self-reported behavior are concerning because the quality of a tailored intervention depends on the accuracy of participant self-reporting. Improved measures should be developed to encourage accurate reporting of safety behaviors.


Family & Community Health | 2009

Parental safety-related knowledge and practices associated with visiting a mobile safety center in a low-income urban population.

Maria T. Bulzacchelli; Andrea Carlson Gielen; Wendy Shields; Eileen M. McDonald; Shannon Frattaroli

Background Fires and burns are a leading cause of unintentional injury death in the USA. Although it has been anecdotally reported that vacant dwellings are at a higher risk for fire, the association between vacancy and fire risk at the individual household level has not been empirically measured. Methods In this cross-sectional study, geocoded residential vacant properties (VP) and fire events are analysed in Baltimore City at the census tract level and the individual household level. Results On average, a 10% increase in the proportion of vacancies in a census tract was associated with a 9.9% increase in fires (95% CI: 5% to 15%). Random-effects Poisson models, controlling for housing and neighbourhood conditions, found contagion effects. The risk of fire in an occupied dwelling increased by 8% (95% CI: 1% to 10%) for every vacant structure within 10 m, and the risk of fire decreased by half (95% CI: 45% to 62%) for every km between an occupied dwelling and vacant building. Close proximity to VP was associated with trash fires within dwellings (p=0.039) and structure fires (p=0.012). Conclusions We believe that this is the first study to demonstrate increased risk posed by nearby VP at the household level, confirming earlier ecological analyses of the role of VP as strong correlates of home fires. Measurement of this risk can motivate property owners, policy makers and insurers to invest in risk reduction measures that include building maintenance and trash removal.


Injury Prevention | 2017

A systematic review of technology-based interventions for unintentional injury prevention education and behaviour change.

Elise Omaki; Nicholas Rizzutti; Wendy Shields; Jeffrey Zhu; Eileen M. McDonald; Martha W. Stevens; Andrea Carlson Gielen

This study evaluates the impact of an enhanced fire department home visiting program on community participation and installation of smoke alarms, and describes the rate of fire and burn hazards observed in homes. Communities were randomly assigned to receive either a standard or enhanced home visiting program. Before implementing the program, 603 household surveys were completed to determine comparability between the communities. During a 1-year intervention period, 171 home visits took place with 8080 homes. At baseline, 60% of homes did not have working smoke alarms on every level, 44% had unsafe water temperatures, and 72% did not have carbon monoxide alarms. Residents in the enhanced community relative to those in the standard community were significantly more likely to let the fire fighters into their homes (75 vs 62%). Among entered homes, those in the enhanced community were significantly more likely to agree to have smoke alarms installed (95 vs 92%), to be left with a working smoke alarm on every level of the home (84 vs 78%), and to have more smoke alarms installed per home visited (1.89 vs 1.74). The high baseline rates of home hazards suggest that fire department home visiting programs should take an “all hazards” approach. Community health workers and community partnerships can be effective in promoting fire departments’ fire and life safety goals. Public health academic centers should partner with the fire service to help generate evidence on program effectiveness that can inform decision making about resource allocation for prevention.


Annual Review of Public Health | 2015

Unintentional Home Injuries Across the Life Span: Problems and Solutions

Andrea Carlson Gielen; Eileen M. McDonald; Wendy Shields

A mobile safety center (MSC) provided education and reduced-cost safety products to low-income urban families. We evaluated uptake of this service under 3 different conditions, and safety-related knowledge and behavior associated with visiting the MSC among 210 families. Utilization varied widely under the 3 different conditions. At follow-up, MSC visitors scored slightly higher on a knowledge test than nonvisitors and improved more in reported car safety seat use, but did not differ in observed safety product use. This study provides very modest evidence of a positive impact of the MSC when its services are provided at a community health center.


Pediatrics | 2012

Home Safety and Low-Income Urban Housing Quality

Andrea Carlson Gielen; Wendy Shields; Eileen M. McDonald; Shannon Frattaroli; David Bishai; Xia Ma

Objective The aims of this literature review are to (1) summarise how computer and mobile technology-based health behaviour change applications have been evaluated in unintentional injury prevention, (2) describe how these successes can be applied to injury-prevention programmes in the future and (3) identify research gaps. Methods Studies included in this systematic review were education and behaviour change intervention trials and programme evaluations in which the intervention was delivered by either a computer or mobile technology and addressed an unintentional injury prevention topic. Articles were limited to those published in English and after 1990. Results Among the 44 technology-based injury-prevention studies included in this review, 16 studies evaluated locally hosted software programmes, 4 studies offered kiosk-based programmes, 11 evaluated remotely hosted internet programmes, 2 studies used mobile technology or portable devices and 11 studies evaluated virtual-reality interventions. Locally hosted software programmes and remotely hosted internet programmes consistently increased knowledge and behaviours. Kiosk programmes showed evidence of modest knowledge and behaviour gains. Both programmes using mobile technology improved behaviours. Virtual-reality programmes consistently improved behaviours, but there were little gains in knowledge. No studies evaluated text-messaging programmes dedicated to injury prevention. Conclusions There is much potential for computer-based programmes to be used for injury-prevention behaviour change. The reviewed studies provide evidence that computer-based communication is effective in conveying information and influencing how participants think about an injury topic and adopt safety behaviours.


Pediatrics | 2017

Safe Storage of Opioid Pain Relievers Among Adults Living in Households With Children

Eileen M. McDonald; Alene Kennedy-Hendricks; Emma E. McGinty; Wendy Shields; Colleen L. Barry; Andrea Carlson Gielen

Home injuries cause more than 30,000 deaths and 12 million nonfatal injuries annually in the United States. They generate an estimated

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Elise Omaki

Johns Hopkins University

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David Bishai

Johns Hopkins University

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Elise Perry

Johns Hopkins University

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Vanya C. Jones

Johns Hopkins University

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Mary E. Aitken

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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