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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 1 - 7 of 7

  1. Hypothesis Generation During Foodborne-Illness Outbreak Investigations

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • Hypothesis generation is a critical, but challenging, step in a foodborne outbreak investigation. The pathogens that contaminate food have many diverse reservoirs, resulting in seemingly limitless potential vehicles. Identifying a vehicle is particularly challenging for clusters detected through national pathogen-specific surveillance, because cases can be geographically dispersed and lack an obvious epidemiologic link.

  2. Association Between Gestational Exposure to Toxicants and Autistic Behaviors Using Bayesian Quantile Regression

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • Autism spectrum disorder, which is characterized by impaired social communication and stereotypic behaviors, affects 1%–2% of children. Although prenatal exposure to toxicants has been associated with autistic behaviors, most studies have been focused on shifts in mean behavior scores. We used Bayesian quantile regression to assess the associations between log2-transformed toxicant concentrations and autistic behaviors across the distribution of behaviors.

      • Heavy Metals
      • Pesticide residues
      • Chemical contaminants
  3. Propensity Score Weighting and Trimming Strategies for Reducing Variance and Bias of Treatment Effect Estimates: A Simulation Study

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • To extend previous simulations on the performance of propensity score (PS) weighting and trimming methods to settings without and with unmeasured confounding, Poisson outcomes, and various strengths of treatment prediction (PS c statistic), we simulated studies with a binary intended treatment T as a function of 4 measured covariates.

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  4. Invited Commentary: Do Small Cause-of-Death Correlations Throw Into Question the Notion of a Collective “Deaths of Despair” Phenomenon?

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • Since the turn of the 21st century, during which White mortality has been rising, there has been a sharp increase in only 3 causes of death: drug use, alcohol use, and suicide. Because all 3 of these causes conjure notions of anguish and hopelessness, they have been conceptualized as a collective “deaths of despair” phenomenon. Simon and Masters (Am J Epidemiol. 2021;190(6)1169-1171) challenge this conceptualization by asking whether these 3 causes are empirically associated with each other.

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  5. Cadmium Exposure and Ovarian Reserve in Women Aged 35–49 Years: The Impact on Results From the Creatinine Adjustment Approach Used to Correct for Urinary Dilution

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • Cadmium is toxic to the ovaries in animal studies, but its association with diminished ovarian reserve in women is not established. We investigated urinary cadmium, a biomarker of long-term exposure, in relation to diminished ovarian reserve, as indicated by elevated serum follicle-stimulating hormone concentrations (≥10 IU/L), in women aged 35–49 years (unweighted n = 1,681).

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  6. Invited Commentary: Theoretical Considerations and Real-World Challenges for Research on Proxy Exposures and Ovarian Reserve

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • In this issue of the Journal, Upson et al. (Am J Epidemiol. 2021;190(1):116–124) assess urinary cadmium level as a potential environmental influence on ovarian reserve, as measured using serum follicle-stimulating hormone, in data from 1,681 US women (1988–1994). They compare 3 methods for modeling urinary proxy exposures—standardization, covariate adjustment, and covariate-adjusted standardization.

      • Heavy Metals
      • Chemical contaminants
  7. Substance Use and Suicide Attempts Among Adolescent Males Who Are Members of a Sexual Minority: A Comparison of Synthesized Substance-Use Measures

    • American Journal of Epidemiology
    • Adolescent sexual minority males (ASMM) are among the highest risk groups for suicide in the United States, with substance use as a significant risk factor. We tested for an association between substance use and suicidality among ASMM from the 2015 and 2017 Youth Risk Behavior Survey (n = 849).