1.Psychometric Properties of a Measure Assessing Attitudes and Norms as Determinants of Intention to Use Oral Contraceptives.
Jongwon LEE ; Mauricio CARVALLO ; Taehun LEE
Asian Nursing Research 2015;9(2):138-145
PURPOSE: Asian immigrant and Asian American women are less likely to use oral contraceptives (OCs) and tend to rely on low-efficacy methods of contraception. This contraceptive pattern remains poorly understood, in part, because no theory-driven measurement exists to assess psychosocial determinants essential in explaining behaviors related to OC use in this population. The current study aimed to evaluate the psychometric properties of a measure of attitudes and subjective norms toward OC use among Korean American women as a first step to determine whether the measure can be used in this population and, potentially, in other Asian ethnic groups. METHODS: The sample consisted of 329 Korean immigrant women living in New York City. The theory of reasoned action guided the development of the measure assessing attitudes and norms. Psychometric evaluation included item analysis, internal consistency estimates of reliability, and construct validity (i.e., factorial, discriminant, and predictive). RESULTS: All item-total correlations were above the recommendation of .30. The Cronbach's alpha for the attitudes and subjective norms measure was .88 and .86, respectively. Exploratory factor analyses revealed four interpretable factors, and confirmatory factor analyses confirmed that the factor structures derived from the exploratory factor analyses fit the data well. Discriminant and predictive validity of the measure were also established. CONCLUSIONS: The study provides support for the validity and reliability of the measure and its use for determining the degree to which Korean immigrant women intend to use OCs.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
*Contraceptives, Oral
;
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Emigrants and Immigrants/psychology
;
Female
;
*Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
;
Humans
;
*Intention
;
Korea/ethnology
;
Middle Aged
;
New York City
;
Psychometrics/*methods
;
Reproducibility of Results
;
Surveys and Questionnaires/*standards
;
Young Adult
2.Screening Colonoscopy among Uninsured and Underinsured Urban Minorities.
Tyson H COLLAZO ; Lina JANDORF ; Linda THELEMAQUE ; Kristen LEE ; Steven H ITZKOWITZ
Gut and Liver 2015;9(4):502-508
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Uninsured individuals have lower rates of screening colonoscopy (SC), and little is known regarding the pathology results obtained when they undergo colonoscopies. Since 2004, we have participated in a program that offers SC to uninsured New Yorkers; herein, we report our findings. METHODS: Uninsured, average-risk patients who were at least 50 years of age underwent SC at our institution between April 2004 and June 2011. We analyzed polyp pathology, location, size, incidence of adenomas, and incidence of adenomas with advanced pathology (AAP) with respect to ethnicity, gender, and age. RESULTS: Out of 493 referrals, 222 patients completed the colonoscopies. Polyps were identified in 21.2% of all patients; 14% had adenomas, and 4.5% had AAP. The rates of adenomas among African-Americans, Hispanics, and Whites were 24.3%, 12.1%, and 11.6%, respectively, and the corresponding rates of AAP were 10.8%, 3.5%, and 2.3%. Differences in the polyp type, location, and AAP did not reach statistical significance with respect to ethnicity or gender. Patients aged 60 and older were found to have a higher rate of advanced adenomas compared with younger patients (8.6% vs 2.6%, p=0.047). CONCLUSIONS: Further efforts to fund screening colonoscopies for uninsured individuals will likely result in the identification of advanced lesions of the colon before they progress to colorectal cancer.
Adenoma/diagnosis/epidemiology
;
African Americans/statistics & numerical data
;
Age Factors
;
Aged
;
Colon/pathology
;
Colonic Neoplasms/diagnosis/epidemiology
;
Colonic Polyps/diagnosis/epidemiology
;
Colonoscopy/*statistics & numerical data
;
European Continental Ancestry Group/statistics & numerical data
;
Female
;
Hispanic Americans/statistics & numerical data
;
Humans
;
Incidence
;
Male
;
Mass Screening/*statistics & numerical data
;
Medically Uninsured/*statistics & numerical data
;
Middle Aged
;
Minority Groups/*statistics & numerical data
;
New York City/epidemiology
;
Program Evaluation
;
*Urban Population
3.Five-Year Review of HIV-Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) Co-Infected Patients in a New York City AIDS Center.
Jong Hun KIM ; George PSEVDOS ; Victoria SHARP
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2012;27(7):830-833
A retrospective review of 4,721 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, followed at St. Luke's Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York City, was conducted from January 1, 2005 to December 31, 2009. HIV-Hepatitis B virus (HBV) co-infection rate was 218/4,721, 4.6%. Among co-infected patients, 19 patients (19/218, 8.7%) died; 13 patients (13/19, 68.4%) died from non-acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) defining including 2 patients with liver failure. More non-survivors (5 patients, 5/19, 26.3%) had liver cirrhosis than those who survived (8 patients, 8/199, 4.0%; P = 0.002). There were more patients with positive HBV e antigen (HBeAg) among non-survivors, (12 patients, 12/19, 63.2%) than among survivors (74 patients, 74/199, 37.2%; P = 0.047). HIV-HBV co-infection is associated with increased overall mortality. Therefore, use of dual active antiretrovirals, particularly, tenofovir (TDF) based regimen for optimal suppression of HIV-HBV and immune restoration with prevention of high risk behaviors may contribute to improved outcomes.
Adenine/analogs & derivatives/therapeutic use
;
Adult
;
Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use
;
Coinfection/drug therapy/mortality
;
Female
;
HIV Infections/complications/*diagnosis/drug therapy
;
Hepatitis B/complications/*diagnosis/drug therapy
;
Hepatitis B e Antigens/blood
;
Humans
;
Liver Cirrhosis/etiology
;
Male
;
Middle Aged
;
New York City
;
Organophosphonates/therapeutic use
;
Retrospective Studies
4.Dietary Habits and Taste Preferences of the Korean Americans According to Self Body Image Perception and Length of Residence in US.
Eunmi KWON ; Jihye KIM ; Minjung LEE ; Hongmie LEE
Korean Journal of Health Promotion 2012;12(3):146-152
BACKGROUND: Weight overestimation of Korean Americans may be associated with dietary habits and preferences for foods and tastes. METHODS: The subjects were 100 Korean Americans in New York City and LA and 100 Koreans in Seoul, who were 20-29 years old. Self-reported questionnaire consisted of age, height, weight, length of residence in US, preferences for 10 foods and 5 tastes, dietary habits and perception of self body image. Korean Americans were further divided into 3 groups according to length of residence in US. RESULTS: More Korean American women underestimated (27.3% vs. 5.8%), and less overestimated their body weights, than Korean women (31.8% vs. 53.8%, P=0.008). Korean Americans who overestimated their own body weights had significantly higher preference for salty taste and significantly lower dietary habit score regarding regular meals. CONCLUSIONS: Overestimation of self body size, rather than longer residence in US may be associated with the undesirable dietary habit and taste preference of Korean Americans, highlighting the importance of correct body image.
Asian Americans
;
Body Image
;
Body Size
;
Body Weight
;
Female
;
Food Habits
;
Food Preferences
;
Humans
;
New York City
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
5.A Study on Body Image Perception and Eating Disorders by Birth-Place and the Length of Residence in USA in Korean American College Students.
Ho Kyung RYU ; Isobel R CONTENTO
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2011;16(1):113-125
This study was conducted to compare the body image perception, weight control experiences and the eating disorders according to where they were born, and the length of residence in USA among Korean-American college students. Three hundred college students participated in the study: 144 males and 156 females, 122 America-born (AB) and 171 Korea-born (KB) who live in New York City and New Jersey. Subjects responded to a self-administered questionnaire. The results showed that the ratio of overweight (23.2%) and obesity (26.8%) of males was higher than females' (16.1% and 6.3%, respectively). There were no significant differences according to born-place or the length of residence in USA of KB. People who had tried to control their weight were 58%. The ratio of weight control experiences of females (72.4%) was higher than males' (42.4%) as well as people who were normal or underweight than who were overweight or obesity. There were no significant differences according to born-place or the length of the residence in the USA of KB. In body image perception, the subjects who were normal and underweight overestimated their body figure, and the subjects who were overweight and obese underestimated their body figure. The desired and ideal figure of female students was significantly thinner than the current figure and also that of male students. There were no significant differences according to born-place or the length of the residence in USA of KB. The ratio of eating disorder was 8.7%, and females had higher percentage than males. And shorter they lived in USA, the percentage of eating disorder was higher.
Asian Americans
;
Body Image
;
Eating
;
Feeding and Eating Disorders
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
New Jersey
;
New York City
;
Obesity
;
Overweight
;
Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Thinness
;
Weight Perception
6.Links between the built environment, climate and population health: interdisciplinary environmental change research in New York City.
Joyce Klein ROSENTHAL ; Elliott D SCLAR ; Patrick L KINNEY ; Kim KNOWLTON ; Robert CRAUDERUEFF ; Paul W BRANDT-RAUF
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2007;36(10):834-846
Global climate change is expected to pose increasing challenges for cities in the following decades, placing greater stress and impacts on multiple social and biophysical systems, including population health, coastal development, urban infrastructure, energy demand, and water supplies. Simultaneously, a strong global trend towards urbanisation of poverty exists, with increased challenges for urban populations and local governance to protect and sustain the wellbeing of growing cities. In the context of these 2 overarching trends, interdisciplinary research at the city scale is prioritised for understanding the social impacts of climate change and variability and for the evaluation of strategies in the built environment that might serve as adaptive responses to climate change. This article discusses 2 recent initiatives of The Earth Institute at Columbia University (EI) as examples of research that integrates the methods and objectives of several disciplines, including environmental health science and urban planning, to understand the potential public health impacts of global climate change and mitigative measures for the more localised effects of the urban heat island in the New York City metropolitan region. These efforts embody 2 distinct research approaches. The New York Climate & Health Project created a new integrated modeling system to assess the public health impacts of climate and land use change in the metropolitan region. The Cool City Project aims for more applied policy-oriented research that incorporates the local knowledge of community residents to understand the costs and benefits of interventions in the built environment that might serve to mitigate the harmful impacts of climate change and variability, and protect urban populations from health stressors associated with summertime heat. Both types of research are potentially useful for understanding the impacts of environmental change at the urban scale, the policies needed to address these challenges, and to train scholars capable of collaborative approaches across the social and biophysical sciences.
City Planning
;
Environment
;
Environment Design
;
Greenhouse Effect
;
New York City
;
Research
;
Urban Health
7.Proportional mortality ratios among Korean immigrants to New York City, 1986-1990.
Yonsei Medical Journal 1996;37(1):31-37
BACKGROUND: About 13,000 people immigrated to New York City from the Republic of Korea between 1986 and 1990, creating an important ethnic minority. METHODS: Using US-born Whites as a reference, age-adjusted proportional mortality ratios were computed for 314 men and 248 women of Korean ancestry born abroad who died in New York City in 1986-90. RESULTS: Males had a significant excess of viral hepatitis, cancer, stroke, and external causes: accidents, suicide, and homicide. They had significantly reduced proportional rates of AIDS and heart disease. Mortality patterns were similar for Korean women, who had significantly increased proportional rates of stroke and accidents, and reduced heart disease. Stomach and liver cancers were significantly elevated in both sexes, while female breast cancer was low. There were two male and one female tuberculosis deaths (4 to 7 fold increase), and one Korean woman died of childbirth complications (59-fold increase). CONCLUSIONS: Except for violent deaths, these observations resemble known mortality patterns in Korea.
Adolescent
;
Adult
;
Aged
;
Child
;
Child, Preschool
;
*Emigration and Immigration
;
*Ethnic Groups
;
Female
;
Human
;
Infant
;
Korea/ethnology
;
Male
;
Middle Age
;
*Mortality
;
New York City/ethnology
;
Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

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