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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: new + mailman + men  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Seattle Post Intelligencer
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Making this decision in advance relieved worry over possible disasters such as them getting loose in our new neighborhood while the moving men were coming ...
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Orlando: I was just the mailman that delivered the letter. I can?t take any credit other than singing the song. It?s the American people who turned it into ...
New Jewish Theatre in the 'Diaspora'
Jewish Theatre, Israel - Jul 22, 2008
The season opens on September 10 with ?Chaim?s Love Song,? a sweet and lovely story about retired Brooklyn mailman Chaim Shotsky, an American Tevye who ...

Canada.com
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Canada.com, Canada - Jul 22, 2008
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Widower, father adds new title: Priest in San Bernardino
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By SEAN NEALON On May 31, Eduardo Aguirre, a 62-year-old former mailman who was married and has a son, added a new title: priest. A month later, the Rev. ...
NYC First: Complex Aneurysm Treated Using New Fenestrated ...
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BuddyTV
Preview of New 'Heroes' Webisodes
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The first installment of the series, "A Nifty Trick," introduces a seemingly normal mailman named Echo DeMille. Like just about every character on Heroes, ...
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Source: Google News

Smoking and Lung Cancer Risk in American and Japanese Men: An International Case-Control Study -
SD Stellman, T Takezaki, L Wang, Y Chen, ML Citron … - Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, 2001 - AACR
... Risk in American and Japanese Men: An International ... 02115 [LW]; Department of
Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, New ...

Reliability of Self-Reports About Sexual Risk Behavior for HIV Among Homeless Men With Severe Mental … -
N Sohler, PW Colson, HFL Meyer-Bahlburg, E Susser - Psychiatric Services, 2000 - Am Psychiatric Assoc
... The sample included only men. ... with the division of epidemiology of the Joseph L.
Mailman School of Public Health of Columbia University in New York City. ...

Involving men in reproductive health: the Young Men's Clinic. -
B Armstrong, AT Cohall, RD Vaughan, M Scott, L … - American Journal of Public Health, 1999 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... JL Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Abstract. OBJECTIVES: This report describes the population of young men who ...

… seronegative young adult heroin-and cocaine-using men who have sex with men in New York City, 2000 … -
CM Fuller, J Absalon, DC Ompad, D Nash, B Koblin, … - Journal of Urban Health, 2005 - Springer
... Men who have sex with men (MSM) have been ... for Infectious Disease Epidemiologic Research,
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Beyond'MSM': Sexual Desire among Bisexually-Active Latino Men in New York City -
MA Muooz-Laboy - Sexualities, 2004 - sexualities.sagepub.com
... Miguel A. Mu?oz-Laboy Columbia University, USA Beyond ?MSM?:Sexual Desire Among
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… and Sexual Risk in a Prospective Cohort of HIV-Positive Men and Women in New York City, 1994?2002: … -
AA Aidala, G Lee, S Garbers, MA Chiasson - AIDS Education & Prevention, 2006 - Guilford Publications
... among men who had sex with men, and men sexually active ... Aidala and Gunjeong Lee are
with the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York. ...

… Sexual Behavior and Self-Reported Sexual Identity: A Population-Based Survey of New York City Men -
P Pathela, A Hajat, J Schillinger, S Blank, R Sell … - Annals of Internal Medicine, 2006 - Am Coll Physicians
... knowledge that a male patient has sex with other men could result in a ... From New York
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Gender Differences in Autoantibodies to Oxidative DNA Base Damage in Cigarette Smokers -
LVA Mooney, FP Perera, AM Van Bennekum, WS Blaner, … - Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, 2001 - AACR
... Environmental Health Sciences, Joseph L. Mailman School of ... State Psychiatric Institute,
New York, New York 10032 ... day (CPD; P = 0.002), although men smoked more ...

Prenatal Exposure to Wartime Famine and Development of Antisocial Personality Disorder in Early … -
R Neugebauer, HW Hoek, E Susser - Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey, 2000 - obgynsurvey.com
... and Division of Epidemiology, Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia
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Dose-Ranging Study of Indole-3-Carbinol for Breast Cancer Prevention -
GYC Wong, L Bradlow, D Sepkovic, S Mehl, J Mailman … - Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 1997 - doi.wiley.com
... Daniel Sepkovic, Stephanie Mehl, Joshua Mailman, and Michael P ... 57 women were from
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New Mailman School of PH study shows inevitability of men's infidelity across cultures

Marital sex single greatest HIV risk for women around the world

For a growing number of women in rural Mexico – and around the world – marital sex represents their single greatest risk for HIV infection. According to a new Mailman School of Public Health Study, because marital infidelity by men is so deeply ingrained across many cultures, existing HIV prevention programs are putting a growing number of women at risk of developing the HIV virus. The findings, indicating that globally, prevention programs that take a "just say no” approach and encourage men to be monogamous are unlikely to be effective, underline the need for programs that make extramarital sex safer, rather than—unrealistically—trying to eradicate it. These findings are published in the June 2007 issue of the American Journal of Public Health.

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The article’s lead author, Jennifer S. Hirsch, PhD, associate professor of Sociomedical Sciences at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, is principal investigator on a large comparative study showing that the inevitability of men’s infidelity in marriage is true across cultures. This was borne out in the research conducted in rural Mexico as well as in similar studies she is overseeing in rural New Guinea and southeastern Nigeria, which are published in the same issue of the American Journal of Public Health. Two additional studies underway, in Uganda and Vietnam, are expected to show similar results.

The Mexico study was based on six months of anthropological research, including participant observation, 20 marital case studies, 37 key informant interviews, and document analysis to explore the factors that shape HIV risk among married women in Degollado, one of the Mexico’s rural communities.

In rural Mexico, reputation is a critical aspect of sexual identity, and attention to reputation provides insight into why people act in ways that are socially safer, but physically risky. "What we found in our research was that culturally constructed notions of reputation in this community led to sexual behavior designed to minimize men’s social, rather than viral, risks,” said Dr. Hirsch. "We also saw that men’s desire for companionate intimacy actually increases women’s risk for HIV infection.”

A major factor in the study was that married men in the community left their homes to travel to the United States or large Mexican cities to find work. While away for long periods, they engaged in extra-marital and unsafe sex, which can lead to HIV infection. When men return home, they are said to be on honeymoon again, which includes resuming marital sexual relations.

"The result is that women are infected by their husbands, the very people with whom they are supposed to be having sex and, according to social conventions of Mexico, the only people with whom they are ever supposed to have sex,” said Dr. Hirsch. "This challenges existing approaches to HIV prevention. It renders abstinence impossible and unilateral monogamy ineffective. Marital condom use is also not a serious option, because of women’s deep, culturally supported commitment to the fiction of fidelity.”

In New Guinea, researchers also saw labor migration as a major contributor to infidelity. Moreover, many men did not view sexual fidelity as necessary for achieving a happy marriage, but they viewed drinking and "looking for women” as important for male friendships.

In the Nigerian study, the social organization of infidelity was shaped by economic inequality, aspirations for modern lifestyles, gender disparities, and contradictory moralities. There, it is men’s anxieties and ambivalence about masculinity, sexual morality, and social reputation in the context of seeking modern lifestyles – rather than immoral sexual behavior and traditional culture – that exacerbate the risks of HIV/AIDS.

According to Dr. Hirsch, the policy implications of these findings are clear. "This study has direct implications for the types of prevention programs we should be supporting,” she observes. "We might find men’s persistent and widespread participation extramarital sex to be troubling – but it’s a deeply rooted aspect of social organization, and one that is unlikely to be easily changed. Public health programs alone can’t stop extramarital sex, so we need to think about how to reduce the risk. Saying that ‘be faithful’ will protect married women is not true – unilateral monogamy is not an effective prevention strategy.”

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About the Mailman School of Public Health

The only accredited school of public health in New York City, and among the first in the nation, Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health provides instruction and research opportunities to more than 950 graduate students in pursuit of masters and doctoral degrees. Its students and more than 300 multi-disciplinary faculty engage in research and service in the city, nation, and around the world, concentrating on biostatistics, environmental health sciences, epidemiology, health policy and management, population and family health, and sociomedical sciences. ".mailman.hs.columbia.edu

 

Doctors Should Be Trained To Confront Parent Smoking

With the growing concerns of children's exposure to secondhand smoke, it has become more critical than ever to involve health care providers such as pediatricians in educating parents about the potential hazardous health consequences.

Almost 60 percent of U.S. children ages 3 to 11 -- approximately 22 million children --are exposed to secondhand smoke daily - with urban children suffering the highest rates of exposure in a U.S. Surgeon General report from June 2006.

However, minimal formal medical training exists regarding how pediatricians can effectively speak to their patients about secondhand smoke-related issues, according to an article in the May issue of The Journal of Pediatrics.

"Part of the issue is teaching medical residents (physicians in training) to advise smoking parents at every patient visit. Consider every message as a "dose" of advice that in the long run could promote lasting changes in parental smoking behavior and children's exposure," said Brad Collins, Ph.D, the lead author and assistant professor of public health at Temple University.

The Surgeon General's report also found secondhand smoke causes disease and death in children and nonsmoking adults. Breathing secondhand smoke can be harmful to children's health and can cause or contribute to asthma, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), bronchitis and pneumonia and ear infections.

The developing lungs of young children are severely affected by exposure to secondhand smoke for several reasons including that children are still developing physically, have higher breathing rates than adults, and have little control over their indoor environments.

Previous surveys by Collins' team found that over 40 percent of postpartum mothers were either currently smoking or reported smoking late in their pregnancy.

"The rates of postpartum smoking we found in North and West Philadelphia are consistent with other, lower income, urban communities across the country…It's alarming when considering the consequences children bear," Collins said.

Such data underscores the importance of programs like Philadelphia FRESH - a free health education program from Temple University -- that helps parents create a smoke-free home, and why we're interested in learning how to enhance pediatricians' role in the overall process in promoting clean home air environments, Collins said.

For The Journal of Pediatrics article, Collins and his co-authors surveyed physician training needs and attitudes towards improving secondhand smoke reduction efforts at a Philadelphia hospital.

Sixty-six residents across all years of training and twenty-seven preceptors (resident supervisors) responded to the survey. Most pediatricians surveyed believed second-hand smoke exposure was a serious health concern for children, but they also believed they were not equipped to help. Almost all respondents (93 percent) reported that they received less than two hours of smoking cessation training during residency.

Survey participants cited key barriers to addressing patients' second-hand smoke exposure, including lack of training, time, confidence in their tobacco intervention skills, and knowledge about appropriate tobacco intervention resources.

A recent large scale analysis from the Cochrane Collaboration showed that brief physician advice provided in primary care, hospital wards, and outpatient clinics significantly increased the odds of quitting smoking by approximately 2.5 percent compared to no advice. While the analysis called this a "a small effect on cessation rates," a 2.5 percent annual improvement in promoting parental smoking cessation would result in the improved health of tens if not hundreds of thousands of children each year from a public health perspective, Collins said.

Linking brief physician advice and follow-up with more intensive behavioral smoking treatment programs, like Philadelphia FRESH, would improve the impact of physician advice more dramatically, he added.

As a result of this study, the co-authors have made recommendations for tobacco intervention training for pediatric medical residents. These include classroom lecture, strategies for problem-solving with smoking parents, patient education materials, and clinical reminders for guideline adherence.

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Other authors on this paper are Dr. Kenneth P. Levin from Children's Community Pediatrics - South Hills Pediatric Associates and Dr. Tyra Bryant-Stephens Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. This survey was funded by a National Institutes of Health grant that Collins received to test treatments to reduce postpartum smoking and children's secondhand smoke exposure.

Collins, a clinical psychologist by training, is a health behavior and public health researcher and director of the Health Behavior Research Clinic at Temple University. The clinic currently offers free smoking treatments including Philadelphia FRESH, a program designed to help smoking mothers reduce their children's exposure to tobacco smoke, and Quit 4 Good, a smoking relapse prevention treatment that includes medication to help smokers quit and stay quit for good.

Contact: Anna Nguyen
Temple University
 
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Brain Lesions In Seniors Associated With Higher Calcium And Vitamin D Intakes

Elderly men and women who consumed higher levels of calcium and vitamin D are significantly more likely to have greater volumes of brain lesions, regions of damage that can increase risk of cognitive impairment, dementia, depression and stroke.

Duke University scientist Dr. Martha Payne reported this finding at Experimental Biology 2007, in Washington, DC. Her presentation is part of the scientific program of the American Society for Nutrition.

Dr. Payne and her co-investigators from Duke and the University of North Carolina examined magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans from 232 men and women (79 men, 153 women) between the ages of 60 and 86 (average age 71). All the subjects had at least some brain lesions of varying sizes, including the extremely miniscule ones often seen in even healthy older persons, but those who reported consuming more calcium and vitamin D were markedly more likely to have higher total volume of brain lesions as measured across numerous MRI scans.

Age, hypertension, and other medical conditions - all factors related to the presence of brain lesions - were taken into account during statistical analysis (were controlled for) and were found not to account for the strong relationship between total lesion volume and high intake of calcium and vitamin D. Since the calcium/vitamin D research was part of a longitudinal study of late-life depression, almost half the subjects had been diagnosed with depression. However, the presence or absence of depression also did not appear to influence of relationship between calcium, vitamin D, and brain lesions.

In earlier studies, Dr. Payne's team had found that individuals who consumed more high-fat dairy products had more brain lesions than those who did not follow such a diet but that fat intake in general was not a significant factor. If not the fat, the researchers asked, what was it about a high fat dairy diet that accounts for the positive correlation with brain lesions? This new study points the finger to a prominent component of dairy - namely calcium - and the Vitamin D that is found in many dairy products and vitamin D-fortified foods.

In addition to its well-known function in bone health, calcium is important to the functioning of nerve and muscle cells. But when too much calcium is taken up into blood vessel walls, the calcium becomes incorporated into bone-like deposits that can lead to loss of elasticity and narrowing of the blood vessels. Vitamin D helps regulate calcium retention and activity, which may further enhance this arterial calcification. If blood vessels in the brain are affected, damage could lead to brain lesions.

"At this point," says Dr. Payne, "we do not know if high calcium and vitamin D intake are involved with the causation of brain lesions, but the study provides support to the growing number of researchers who are concerned about the effects of too much calcium, particularly among older adults, given the current emphasis on promoting high intakes of calcium and vitamin D."

Dr. Payne and her colleagues are continuing to investigate the effect and significance of high calcium and vitamin D intakes on brain lesions, including possible causality, in older patients with and without late-life depression. This research was funded by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health. MRI brain scans of a person with lesions are available to reporters, courtesy of Duke University's Neuropsychiatric Imaging Research Laboratory.

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Contact: Sylvia Wrobel
Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
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