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CCC = COLORADO CONVENTION CENTER

HRD = HYATT REGENCY DENVER

TAB 3

3163.0

CCC, 406/407

Calculated Efforts: Using Data, Metrics, and

Surveillance to Build Better Programs—OHS

Roundtable

Moderator(s): Alfreda Holloway-Beth, PhD, MS,

Amber Mitchell, DrPH, MPH, CPH

Table 1 Classifying injury narratives of

large administrative databases for

surveillance— a practical approach

combining machine learning ensembles

and human review

—Helen R. Marucci-

Wellman, ScD

Table 2 Utilization of the New Hampshire

Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance

System (BRFSS) work related injury

data to better understand under-

reporting to the workers’ compensation

system—

Karla Armenti, MS, ScD

Table 3 Fatal falls in the construction industry:

Findings from the NIOSH FACE

reports—

Xiuwen Sue Dong, DrPH

Table 4 Shift Work and Safety: Using a meta-

analytic risk index model to predict

occupational injuries—

Dorothee Fischer,

PhD

Table 5 Design and Implementation of a Former

Worker Nationwide Medical Screening

Program—

Bill Stange, Ph.D.

Table 6 Developing a Career Cluster Specific

Personal Protective Equipment Training

Online for Teachers and Students based

on Incident (Injury) surveillance in New

Jersey secondary schools—

Alexa Patti,

BS, REHS, MPH (c)

Table 7 Initial screening findings from the

National Supplemental Screening

Program for former Department of

Energy Workers—

Natalie Schwatka,

PhD

Table 8 Patterns in employer-based work injury

recordkeeping errors and implications

for national occupational injury data—

Sara Wuellner, PhD

Table 9 Incident (Injury) surveillance among

youth/young workers in secondary

schools: Examining disparities by race/

ethnicity or SES and the efficacy of

new law-based online form—

Derek G.

Shendell, DEnv, MPH

Table 10 Trends in Oil and Gas Extraction

Incidents 2010-2014: An analysis of

Chemical Safety Board Incident Data—

Vidisha Parasram, MPH EOH

Table 11 Determinants of Osteoarthritis

Linked to Occupational Radiography –

Epidemiologic Surveillance: Preliminary

Results of the D.O.L.O.R.E.S. Pilot

Study—

Samuel R. Huntley, BS

Organized by: Occupational Health and Safety

Endorsed by: Applied Public Health Statistics, Vietnam

Caucus

3164.0

CCC, 502

Climate Change: The Hot Get Hotter and The

Dry Get Drier—OHS Full Session

Moderator(s): Elizabeth Carlton, PhD, MPH, Lee S.

Newman, MD, MA

10:30 a.m. Full session: Hot workplaces getting

hotter. Climate change, dehydration

and chronic kidney disease in Latin

American agricultural workers—

Elizabeth Carlton, PhD, MPH

10:35 a.m. Hot Get Hotter and The Dry Get Drier:

Grim Scenarios for the Mid-21st

Century—

Balaji Rajagopalan, Professor

10:49 a.m. An Epidemic of Chronic kidney disease

among workers linked to heat stress

and dehydration—

Richard Johnson, MD

11:03 a.m. From intervention to policy: Faster than

expected—

Jason Glaser, BA

11:17 a.m. Application of Total Worker Health®

Principles in Assessing Health

Promotion and Health Protection Needs

of Guatemalan Banana Plantation

Workers at Risk for Chronic Kidney

Disease of Non-Traditional Causes

(CKD-nT)—

Liliana Tenney, MPH

11:31 a.m. Effectiveness of a heat stress

intervention to prevent Chronic Kidney

Disease (CKD) in El Salvador—

David

Wegman, MD, MS

Organized by: Occupational Health and Safety

Endorsed by: Environment

3165.0

HRD, Centennial Ballroom D

Armed conflict: Industry, policy,

consequences

Moderator(s): Anna Grace Keller, CHW/P, CNA

10:30 a.m. Prevention of gun-related violence in

the United States—

Barry S. Levy, MD,

MPH

10:50 a.m. Beyond the “iron triangle”: The veterans’

health administration in an uncertain

policy environment—

Stephen Trynosky,

JD, MPH, MMAS, NREMT

11:10 a.m. Caring for Veterans in Civilian Primary

Care Facilities—

Ann Hirschman, RN-C,

FNP, MPH

11:30 a.m. Why the war in Vietnam may not be over

when it comes to Agent Orange—

Jean

Grassman, MS PHD CPH

Organized by: Peace Caucus

Endorsed by: APHA-Committee on Women’s Rights,

Black Caucus of Health Workers, International Health,

Socialist Caucus, Vietnam Caucus

3166.0 HRD, Centennial Ballroom G/H

Pharmacy SPIG Roundtables

Moderator(s): Barry A. Bleidt, PhD, PharmD, RPh,

FAPhA

Table 1 Evaluation of Patient-Directed

Medication Reconciliation Software:

Diagnostic Accuracy of a New

Technology—

Kathleen Adams, MPH

Table 2 Prescription Drug Costs: Does

Neighborhood Matter?—

Lisa

Lapeyrouse, PhD

Table 3 Irrational Dispensing of Antibiotics in

Egyptian Community Pharmacies: A

Mixed-Methods Study—

Mohamed Amin,

BSc.Pharm, PhD

Table 4 Assessment of the Adherence to

Hematinics Among Pregnant Women

Attending Selected Maternal and

CHILD Health Clinics in Dar ES

Salaam, Tanzania—

Mujuni Maliyamkono,

B-Pharm, MPH, PhD

Table 5 Medication meaning, adherence, and

relations with healthcare professional

s among college students—

Suneeta

Kercood, PhD, BCBA-D

Organized by: Pharmacy

CE Credits: CME, CHES, CNE, CPH

3167.0

HRD, Mineral Hall G

Getting Older, Yet Staying Active

Moderator(s): Kiley Tyler, M.S.

10:30 a.m. Leisure time physical activity reduces

total mortality also among the older

adults—

Noël Barengo, MD, MPH, PhD

10:50 a.m. Evaluation of physical, social and

emotional outcomes of Idaho’s Fit and

Fall Proof Program on older adults—

Elizabeth Lyon Hannah, DVM, MS, MPH

11:10 a.m. Racial Differences in Physical Activity

and Use of Neighborhood Resources

among Older Women Living in Urban

Neighborhoods—

Wenjun Li, PhD

11:30 a.m. Methods for developing and testing

an intervention facilitating clinical-

community linkages between physical

therapists and evidence-based exercise

programs for older adults—

Sarah

Fishleder, M.A., M.P.H., C.P.H.

Organized by: Physical Activity

Endorsed by: Aging & Public Health, APHA-Committee

on Women’s Rights, Injury Control and Emergency Health

Services, Public Health Education and Health Promotion,

Women’s Caucus

3168.0

CCC, Mile High Ballroom 3B

Invited Panel: Immediate Postpartum

Contraception: Clinical Considerations,

The Health Policy Landscape, and

Implementation in Real-World Settings

Moderator(s): Wayne Shields

Table 1 Immediate Postpartum Contraception:

Barriers and Facilitators in Real World

Settings—

Ellen Pliska, MHS, CPH

Table 2 Healthcare provider concerns about

immediate postpartum long-acting

reversible contraception (LARC)—

Emily

Olson

Table 3 Opportunities to Expand Access to Long

Acting Reversible Methods: Gaps in

Provider Practice—

Deborah Ehrenthal,

MD, MPH

Table 4 Prescribe, Refer, Educate: Integrating

Sexual and Reproductive Health

Services into Outpatient Psychiatric

Practice—

Silke von Esenwein, PhD

Table 5 Immediate Postpartum Contraception

in an Evolving Medicaid Payment

Landscape—

Usha Ranji, M.S.

Table 6 Immediate Postpartum Contraception

and Adolescents: A Proven, Patient-

Centered Strategy for Improving Health

Outcomes—

Tammy Chang, MD MPH MS

Table 7 Expanding Contraceptive Implant

Provision to the General Pediatric

Primary Care Clinic: A Promising

Opportunity for Teen Pregnancy

Prevention—

Kristine Schmitz, MD

Table 8 Clinical Need for Immediate

Postpartum Contraception—

Michelle

Moniz, MD MSc

Table 9 Immediate Postpartum Contraception

and Other Payers: A Case Study of

Medicaid MCOs—

Jennifer Moore, PhD,

RN

Table 10 Postpartum IUDs—

Clinical Guidelines

for Informed Consent and Insertion—

Katharine White, MD, MPH

Organized by: Population, Reproductive and Sexual

Health

Endorsed by: Women’s Caucus

10:30–12:00