Jorge Chavarro

Jorge Chavarro

Harvard University

H-index: 87

North America-United States

About Jorge Chavarro

Jorge Chavarro, With an exceptional h-index of 87 and a recent h-index of 65 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Harvard University, specializes in the field of Reproductive Epidemiology, Nutritional Epidemiolgy.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

The diabetes care continuum in Venezuela: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses to evaluate engagement and retention in care

Associations between parental adherence to healthy lifestyles and cognitive performance in offspring: A prospective cohort study in China

Plasma metabolites of a healthy lifestyle in relation to mortality and longevity: Four prospective US cohort studies

Trajectories of Mental Distress Among US Women by Sexual Orientation and Racialized Group During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic

History of Infertility and Midlife Cardiovascular Health in Female Individuals

Sexual orientation-related disparities in perinatal mental health among a prospective cohort study

Fruits, vegetables, pesticide residues and health—a cause for concern?

Maternal One-Carbon Nutrient Intake and Risk of Being Overweight or Obese in Their Offspring—A Transgenerational Prospective Cohort Study

Jorge Chavarro Information

University

Harvard University

Position

and Harvard Medical School

Citations(all)

25311

Citations(since 2020)

17637

Cited By

13238

hIndex(all)

87

hIndex(since 2020)

65

i10Index(all)

280

i10Index(since 2020)

269

Email

University Profile Page

Harvard University

Jorge Chavarro Skills & Research Interests

Reproductive Epidemiology

Nutritional Epidemiolgy

Top articles of Jorge Chavarro

The diabetes care continuum in Venezuela: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses to evaluate engagement and retention in care

Authors

Dina Goodman-Palmer,Juan P González-Rivas,Lindsay M Jaacks,Maritza Duran,María Inés Marulanda,Eunice Ugel,Jorge E Chavarro,Goodarz Danaei,Ramfis Nieto-Martinez

Journal

PLOS Global Public Health

Published Date

2024/1/17

The impact of the humanitarian crisis in Venezuela on care for noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) such as diabetes is unknown. This study aims to document health system performance for diabetes management in Venezuela during the humanitarian crisis. This longitudinal study on NCDs is nationally representative at baseline (2014–2017) and has follow-up (2018–2020) data on 35% of participants. Separate analyses of the baseline population with diabetes (n = 585) and the longitudinal population with diabetes (n = 210) were conducted. Baseline analyses constructed a weighted care continuum: all diabetes; diagnosed; treated; achieved glycaemic control; achieved blood pressure, cholesterol, and glycaemic control; and achieved aforementioned control plus non-smoking. Weighted multinomial regression models controlling for region were used to estimate the association between socio-demographic characteristics and care continuum stage. Longitudinal analyses constructed an unweighted care continuum: all diabetes; diagnosed; treated; and achieved glycaemic control. Unweighted multinomial regression models controlling for region were used to estimate the association between socio-demographic characteristics and changes in care continuum stage. Among 585 participants with diabetes at baseline, 71% were diagnosed, 51% were on treatment, and 32% had achieved glycaemic control. Among 210 participants with diabetes in the longitudinal population, 50 (24%) participants’ diabetes management worsened, while 40 (19%) participants improved. Specifically, the proportion of those treated decreased (60% in 2014–2017 to 51 …

Associations between parental adherence to healthy lifestyles and cognitive performance in offspring: A prospective cohort study in China

Authors

Rongxia Lv,Yuhui Huang,Siyi Huang,Shiyi Wu,Siwen Wang,Guangyu Hu,Yanan Ma,Peige Song,Jorge E Chavarro,SV Subramanian,Chunling Lu,Zhihui Li,Changzheng Yuan

Journal

Chinese Medical Journal

Published Date

2024/3/20

Background Previous studies have reported associations of specific maternal and paternal lifestyle factors with offspring’s cognitive development during early childhood. This study aimed to investigate the prospective associations between overall parental lifestyle and offspring’s cognitive performance during adolescence and young adulthood in China. Methods We included 2531 adolescents aged 10-15 years at baseline in 2010 from the China Family Panel Studies. A healthy parental lifestyle score (ranged 0-5) was constructed based on the following five modifiable lifestyle factors: Smoking, drinking, exercise, sleep, and diet. Generalized estimating equation models were used to examine the association between baseline parental healthy lifestyle scores and offspring’s fluid and crystallized intelligence in subsequent years (2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018). Results Offspring in the top tertile of parental healthy …

Plasma metabolites of a healthy lifestyle in relation to mortality and longevity: Four prospective US cohort studies

Authors

Anne-Julie Tessier,Fenglei Wang,Liming Liang,Clemens Wittenbecher,Danielle E Haslam,A Heather Eliassen,Deirdre K Tobias,Jun Li,Oana A Zeleznik,Alberto Ascherio,Qi Sun,Meir J Stampfer,Francine Grodstein,Kathryn M Rexrode,JoAnn E Manson,Raji Balasubramanian,Clary B Clish,Miguel A Martínez-González,Jorge E Chavarro,Frank B Hu,Marta Guasch-Ferré

Journal

Med

Published Date

2024/2/8

BackgroundA healthy lifestyle is associated with a lower premature mortality risk and with longer life expectancy. However, the metabolic pathways of a healthy lifestyle and how they relate to mortality and longevity are unclear. We aimed to identify and replicate a healthy lifestyle metabolomic signature and examine how it is related to total and cause-specific mortality risk and longevity.MethodsIn four large cohorts with 13,056 individuals and 28-year follow-up, we assessed five healthy lifestyle factors, used liquid chromatography mass spectrometry to profile plasma metabolites, and ascertained deaths with death certificates. The unique healthy lifestyle metabolomic signature was identified using an elastic regression. Multivariable Cox regressions were used to assess associations of the signature with mortality and longevity.FindingsThe identified healthy lifestyle metabolomic signature was reflective of lipid …

Trajectories of Mental Distress Among US Women by Sexual Orientation and Racialized Group During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic

Authors

Ariel L Beccia,Dougie Zubizarreta,S Bryn Austin,Julia R Raifman,Jorge E Chavarro,Brittany M Charlton

Journal

American Journal of Public Health

Published Date

2024/5

Objectives. To describe longitudinal trends in the prevalence of mental distress across the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic (April 2020‒April 2021) among US women at the intersection of sexual orientation and racialized group. Methods. Participants included 49 805 cisgender women and female-identified people from the COVID-19 Sub-Study, a cohort of US adults embedded within the Nurses’ Health Studies 2 and 3 and the Growing Up Today Study. We fit generalized estimating equation Poisson models to estimate trends in depressive and anxiety symptoms by sexual orientation (gay or lesbian, bisexual, mostly heterosexual, completely heterosexual); subsequent models explored further differences by racialized group (Asian, Black, Latine, White, other or unlisted). Results. Relative to completely heterosexual peers, gay or lesbian, bisexual, and mostly heterosexual women had a higher prevalence of …

History of Infertility and Midlife Cardiovascular Health in Female Individuals

Authors

Amy R Nichols,Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman,Karen M Switkowski,Mingyu Zhang,Jessica G Young,Marie-France Hivert,Jorge E Chavarro,Emily Oken

Journal

JAMA Network Open

Published Date

2024/1/2

ImportanceFertility status is a marker for future health, and infertility has been associated with risk for later cancer and diabetes, but associations with midlife cardiovascular health (CVH) in female individuals remain understudied.ObjectiveTo evaluate the association of infertility history with CVH at midlife (approximately age 50 years) among parous individuals.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsProject Viva is a prospective cohort study of pregnant participants enrolled between 1999 and 2002 who delivered a singleton live birth in the greater Boston, Massachusetts, area. Infertility history was collected at a midlife visit between 2017 and 2021, approximately 18 years after enrollment. Data analysis was performed from January to June 2023.ExposuresThe primary exposure was any lifetime history of infertility identified by self-report, medical record, diagnosis, or claims for infertility treatment.Main Outcomes and …

Sexual orientation-related disparities in perinatal mental health among a prospective cohort study

Authors

Kodiak RS Soled,Sarah McKetta,Payal Chakraborty,Colleen A Reynolds,S Bryn Austin,Jorge E Chavarro,A Heather Eliassen,Siwen Wang,Sebastien Haneuse,Brittany M Charlton

Journal

SSM-Mental Health

Published Date

2024/2/5

Sexually minoritized women (SMW) may be at an increased risk of adverse perinatal mental health, though prior research is limited. We examined sexual orientation-related differences in perinatal mental health (i.e., stress and depression), and antidepressant utilization among those at different severities of clinically significant perinatal depressive symptoms.Nurses’ Health Study 3 participants with prospectively assessed pregnancies (N = 6,364) received pregnancy and postpartum questionnaires. Using weighted log-binomial generalized estimating equations, we examined differences in stress (Perceived Stress Scale 4 [PSS-4]), depression (the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale [EDPS] at four cut-off scores [≥7, ≥9, ≥11, ≥13]), and patterns of antidepressant utilization across five groups: completely heterosexual with no same-sex sexual partners (reference group; n = 5,178); heterosexual with same …

Fruits, vegetables, pesticide residues and health—a cause for concern?

Authors

Jorge E Chavarro,Makiko Mitsunami,Lidia Minguez-Alarcon

Journal

American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology

Published Date

2024/3/1

Based on a robust and consistent literature showing that regular consumption of fruits and vegetables is related to a substantial reduction of cardiovascular disease and premature mortality, multiple organizations and health agencies encourage the consumption of fruits and vegetables as core component of a healthy diet. There is also strong experimental evidence showing that exposure to several classes of pesticides results in major adverse health effects, some of which have been documented in humans in the context of occupational exposure–most notably the relations of glyphosate, malathion and diazinon with cancers of the prostate, lung and non-Hodgkin Lymphoma. Although only a small fraction of the general population is occupationally exposed to pesticides, more than 90% of adults in the United States have detectable levels of pesticides in their urine or blood. It is also estimated that the primary …

Maternal One-Carbon Nutrient Intake and Risk of Being Overweight or Obese in Their Offspring—A Transgenerational Prospective Cohort Study

Authors

Leonie H Bogl,Susanne Strohmaier,Frank B Hu,Walter C Willett,A Heather Eliassen,Jaime E Hart,Qi Sun,Jorge E Chavarro,Alison E Field,Eva S Schernhammer

Journal

Nutrients

Published Date

2024/4/19

We aimed to investigate the associations between maternal intake of folate, vitamin B12, B6, B2, methionine, choline, phosphatidylcholine and betaine during the period surrounding pregnancy and offspring weight outcomes from birth to early adulthood. These associations were examined among 2454 mother–child pairs from the Nurses’ Health Study II and Growing Up Today Study. Maternal energy-adjusted nutrient intakes were derived from food frequency questionnaires. Birth weight, body size at age 5 and repeated BMI measurements were considered. Overweight/obesity was defined according to the International Obesity Task Force (<18 years) and World Health Organization guidelines (18+ years). Among other estimands, we report relative risks (RRs) for offspring ever being overweight with corresponding 95% confidence intervals across quintiles of dietary factors, with the lowest quintile as the reference. In multivariate-adjusted models, higher maternal intakes of phosphatidylcholine were associated with a higher risk of offspring ever being overweight (RRQ5vsQ1 = 1.16 [1.01–1.33] p-trend: 0.003). The association was stronger among offspring born to mothers with high red meat intake (high red meat RRQ5vsQ1 = 1.50 [1.14–1.98], p-trend: 0.001; low red meat RRQ5vsQ1 = 1.05 [0.87–1.27], p-trend: 0.46; p-interaction = 0.13). Future studies confirming the association between a higher maternal phosphatidylcholine intake during pregnancy and offspring risk of being overweight or obese are needed.

Women's preconception psychological stress and birth outcomes in a fertility clinic: the EARTH study

Authors

Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón,Paige L Williams,Irene Souter,Jennifer B Ford,Russ Hauser,Jorge E Chavarro

Journal

Frontiers in Global Women's Health

Published Date

2024

BackgroundThe epidemiologic literature on women's perceived stress in relation to perinatal outcomes has been inconclusive and does not consider the preconception window of exposure.ObjectiveTo evaluate whether women's preconception perceived stress is related to live birth, gestational age, and birthweight in a cohort receiving fertility treatment.MethodsThis observational study included women seeking fertility care at the Massachusetts General Hospital (2004–2019). During preconception, women provided information on their psychological stress using the short version of the validated Perceived Stress Scale 4 (PSS-4). We used regression models to evaluate the associations of stress with live birth (N= 768 attempting to conceive) and perinatal outcomes (N= 413 live births) while adjusting for confounders. Stratified analyses by mode of conception [natural, intrauterine insemination (IUI), and IVF (in vitro …

Associations of Childhood Adiposity and Cardiometabolic Biomarkers With Adolescent PCOS

Authors

Rachel C Whooten,Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman,Wei Perng,Jorge E Chavarro,Elsie Taveras,Emily Oken,Marie-France Hivert

Journal

Pediatrics

Published Date

2024/4/18

OBJECTIVE Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) is common among females, with significant metabolic and reproductive comorbidities. We describe PCOS development in a pediatric population. METHODS We assessed cardiometabolic biomarkers and adiposity at the midchildhood (mean 7.9 y), early teen (mean 13.1 y), and midteen (mean 17.8 y) visits among 417 females in the prospective Project Viva cohort. We defined PCOS via self-reported diagnosis or ovulatory dysfunction with hyperandrogenism in midlate adolescence. We used multivariable logistic regression to assess associations of metabolic and adiposity markers at each visit with PCOS. RESULTS Adolescents with PCOS (n = 56, 13%) versus without had higher mean (SD) BMI z-score and truncal fat mass at the midchildhood (0.66 [0.99] vs 0.30 [1.04]; 3.5 kg [2.6] vs 2.7 [1.5]), early teen (0.88 [1 …

Prepregnancy plant-based diets and risk of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy

Authors

Makiko Mitsunami,Siwen Wang,Diana C Soria-Contreras,Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón,Eduardo Ortiz-Panozo,Jennifer J Stuart,Irene Souter,Janet W Rich-Edwards,Jorge E Chavarro

Journal

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology

Published Date

2024/3/1

BackgroundPlant-based diets have been associated with a lower risk of cardiovascular disease in nonpregnant adults, but specific evidence for their effects on risk of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy is scarce.ObjectiveThis study aimed to evaluate the prospective association between adherence to plant-based diets before pregnancy and the risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. We hypothesized that women with higher adherence to plant-based diets would have a lower risk for hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.Study DesignWe followed 11,459 parous women (16,780 singleton pregnancies) without chronic diseases, a history of preeclampsia, and cancers who participated in the Nurses’ Health Study II (1991–2009), which was a prospective cohort study. Diet was assessed every 4 years using a validated food frequency questionnaire from which we calculated the plant-based diet index (higher …

Food, nutrition, and fertility: from soil to fork

Authors

Melissa Maitin-Shepard,Erika F Werner,Larry A Feig,Jorge E Chavarro,Sunni L Mumford,Blair Wylie,Oliver J Rando,Audrey J Gaskins,Denny Sakkas,Manish Arora,Rashmi Kudesia,Marla E Lujan,Joseph Braun,Dariush Mozaffarian

Journal

The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Published Date

2024/2/1

Food and nutrition-related factors, including foods and nutrients consumed, dietary patterns, use of dietary supplements, adiposity, and exposure to food-related environmental contaminants, have the potential to impact semen quality and male and female fertility; obstetric, fetal, and birth outcomes; and the health of future generations, but gaps in evidence remain. On 9 November 2022, Tufts University’s Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy and the school's Food and Nutrition Innovation Institute hosted a 1-d meeting to explore the evidence and evidence gaps regarding the relationships between food, nutrition, and fertility. Topics addressed included male fertility, female fertility and gestation, and intergenerational effects. This meeting report summarizes the presentations and deliberations from the meeting.Regarding male fertility, a positive association exists with a healthy dietary pattern, with high …

Preconception Stress and Pregnancy Serum Glucose Levels Among Women Attending a Fertility Center

Authors

Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón,Olivia Chagnon,Aya Tanaka,Paige L Williams,Tamarra James-Todd,Jennifer B Ford,Irene Souter,Kathryn M Rexrode,Russ Hauser,Jorge E Chavarro

Journal

Journal of the Endocrine Society

Published Date

2024/1

Context The association between women's stress and pregnancy glucose levels remain unclear, specifically when considering the preconception period as a sensitive window of exposure. Objective We investigated whether preconception perceived stress was associated with glucose levels during pregnancy among women attending a fertility center (2004-2019). Methods Before conception, women completed a psychological stress survey using the short version of the validated Perceived Stress Scale 4 (PSS-4), and blood glucose was measured using a 50-gram glucose load test during late pregnancy as a part of screening for gestational diabetes. Linear and log-binomial regression models were used to assess associations of total PSS-4 scores with mean glucose levels and abnormal glucose levels ( ≥ 140 mg/dL), adjusting for age, body mass index …

Timing and duration of dog walking and dog owner’s chronotype in relation to incident depression risk among middle to older-aged female nurses

Authors

Magdalena Żebrowska,Susanne Strohmaier,Carri Westgarth,Curtis Huttenhower,Heather A Eliassen,Shahab Haghayegh,Tianyi Huang,Francine Laden,Jaime Hart,Bernard Rosner,Ichiro Kawachi,Jorge E Chavarro,Olivia I Okereke,Eva S Schernhammer

Journal

PloS one

Published Date

2024/1/31

Background We examined associations between dog ownership, morning dog walking and its timing and duration, and depression risk in female nurses, exploring effect modification by chronotype. We hypothesized that dog ownership and morning walking with the dog are associated with lower odds of depression, and that the latter is particularly beneficial for evening chronotypes by helping them to synchronize their biological clock with the solar system. Methods 26,169 depression-free US women aged 53–72 from the Nurses’ Health Study 2 (NHS2) were prospectively followed from 2017–2019. We used age- and multivariable-adjusted logistic regression models to estimate odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (95%CIs) for depression according to dog ownership, and morning dog walking, duration, and timing. Results Overall, there was no association between owning a dog (ORvs_no_pets = 1.12, 95%CI = 0.91–1.37), morning dog walking (ORvs_not = 0.87, 95%CI = 0.64–1.18), or the duration (OR>30min vs. ≤15mins = 0.68, 95%CI = 0.35–1.29) or timing of morning dog walks (ORafter9am vs. before7am = 1.06, 95%CI = 0.54–2.05) and depression. Chronotype of dog owners appeared to modify these associations. Compared to women of the same chronotype but without pets, dog owners with evening chronotypes had a significantly increased odds of depression (OR = 1.60, 95%CI = 1.12–2.29), whereas morning chronotypes did not (OR = 0.94, 95%CI = 0.71–1.23). Further, our data suggested that evening chronotypes benefited more from walking their dog themselves in the morning (OR = 0.75, 95%CI = 0.46–1.23, Pintx …

First trimester plasma PER-AND Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) and blood pressure trajectories across the second and third trimesters of pregnanacy

Authors

Jordan A Burdeau,Briana JK Stephenson,Izzuddin M Aris,Emma V Preston,Marie-France Hivert,Emily Oken,Shruthi Mahalingaiah,Jorge E Chavarro,Antonia M Calafat,Sheryl L Rifas-Shiman,Ami R Zota,Tamarra James-Todd

Journal

Environment International

Published Date

2024/4/3

BackgroundEvidence suggests that exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) increases risk of high blood pressure (BP) during pregnancy. Prior studies did not examine associations with BP trajectory parameters (i.e., overall magnitude and velocity) during pregnancy, which is linked to adverse pregnancy outcomes.ObjectivesTo estimate associations of multiple plasma PFAS in early pregnancy with BP trajectory parameters across the second and third trimesters. To assess potential effect modification by maternal age and parity.MethodsIn 1297 individuals, we quantified six PFAS in plasma collected during early pregnancy (median gestational age: 9.4 weeks). We abstracted from medical records systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) measurements, recorded from 12 weeks gestation until delivery. BP trajectory parameters were estimated via Super Imposition by Translation and Rotation …

Lifetime Duration of Breastfeeding and Cardiovascular Risk in Women With Type 2 Diabetes or a History of Gestational Diabetes: Findings From Two Large Prospective Cohorts

Authors

Anna Birukov,Marta Guasch-Ferré,Sylvia H Ley,Deirdre K Tobias,Fenglei Wang,Clemens Wittenbecher,Jiaxi Yang,JoAnn E Manson,Jorge E Chavarro,Frank B Hu,Cuilin Zhang

Journal

Diabetes Care

Published Date

2024/2/20

OBJECTIVE Breastfeeding duration is inversely associated with risks of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and type 2 diabetes in parous women. However, the association among women at high risk, including women with type 2 diabetes or gestational diabetes (GDM) is unclear. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We included 15,146 parous women with type 2 diabetes from the Nurses’ Health Study I and II (NHS, NHS II) and 4,537 women with a history of GDM from NHS II. Participants reported history of breastfeeding via follow-up questionnaires. Incident CVD by 2017 comprised stroke or coronary heart disease (CHD: myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization). Adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) and 95% CIs were estimated using Cox models. RESULTS We documented 1,159 incident CVD cases among women with type 2 diabetes in both cohorts during …

The association between preconception cannabis use and gestational diabetes mellitus: The Preconception Period Analysis of Risks and Exposures Influencing health and …

Authors

Ke Pan,Anne Marie Jukic,Gita D Mishra,Sunni L Mumford,Lauren A Wise,Enrique F Schisterman,Sylvia H Ley,Brittany M Charlton,Jorge E Chavarro,Jaime E Hart,Stephen Sidney,Xu Xiong,Celestina Barbosa‐Leiker,Karen C Schliep,Jeffrey G Shaffer,Lydia A Bazzano,Emily W Harville

Journal

Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology

Published Date

2024/1

Background The metabolic changes that ultimately lead to gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) likely begin before pregnancy. Cannabis use might increase the risk of GDM by increasing appetite or promoting fat deposition and adipogenesis. Objectives We aimed to assess the association between preconception cannabis use and GDM incidence. Methods We analysed individual‐level data from eight prospective cohort studies. We identified the first, or index, pregnancy (lasting ≥20 weeks of gestation with GDM status) after cannabis use. In analyses of pooled individual‐level data, we used logistic regression to estimate study‐type‐specific odds ratios (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI), adjusting for potential confounders using random effect meta‐analysis to combine study‐type‐specific ORs and 95% CIs. Stratified analyses assessed potential effect modification by preconception tobacco use and pre …

Reproductive risk factors across the female lifecourse and later metabolic health

Authors

Amy R Nichols,Jorge E Chavarro,Emily Oken

Published Date

2024/1/23

Metabolic health is characterized by optimal blood glucose, lipids, cholesterol, blood pressure, and adiposity. Alterations in these characteristics may lead to the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus or dyslipidemia. Recent evidence suggests that female reproductive characteristics may be overlooked as risk factors that contribute to later metabolic dysfunction. These reproductive traits include the age at menarche, menstrual irregularity, the development of polycystic ovary syndrome, gestational weight change, gestational dysglycemia and dyslipidemia, and the severity and timing of menopausal symptoms. These risk factors may themselves be markers of future dysfunction or may be explained by shared underlying etiologies that promote long-term disease development. Disentangling underlying relationships and identifying potentially modifiable characteristics have an important bearing on therapeutic lifestyle …

Nurses' use of ‘wellness’ supplements during the COVID‐19 pandemic in the United States

Authors

Samantha L Turner,Ariel Beccia,Gwenneth Feeny,Amanda Raffoul,Destiny Jackson,Vishnudas Sarda,Janet Rich‐Edwards,Jorge Chavarro,Jaime E Hart,S Bryn Austin

Journal

Journal of Advanced Nursing

Published Date

2024/3/21

Aim Quantify disparities and identify correlates and predictors of ‘wellness’ supplement use among nurses during the first year of the pandemic. Design Longitudinal secondary analysis of Nurses' Health Studies 2 and 3 and Growing Up Today Study data. Methods Sample included 36,518 total participants, 12,044 of which were nurses, who completed surveys during the first year of the COVID‐19 pandemic (April 2020 to April 2021). Analyses were conducted in March 2023. Modified Poisson models were used to estimate disparities in ‘wellness’ supplement use between nurses and non‐healthcare workers and, among nurses only, to quantify associations with workplace‐related predictors (occupational discrimination, PPE access, workplace setting) and psychosocial predictors (depression/anxiety, county‐level COVID‐19 mortality). Models included race/ethnicity, gender identity, age and cohort as covariates …

Saliva, plasma, and multi-fluid metabolomic profiles of excess adiposity and their associations with diabetes progression among Puerto Ricans

Authors

Shilpa Bhupathiraju,Zicheng Wang,Danielle Haslam,Caleigh Sawicki,Liming Liang,David Wong,Kaumudi Joshipura,Sona Rivas-Tumanyan,Frank Hu,Jose Clemente,Jorge Chavarro

Published Date

2024/2/9

MethodsWe included 911 participants from the San Juan Overweight Adult Longitudinal Study, a 3-year prospective cohort of overweight Puerto Ricans. At baseline, using LC-MS, we quantified metabolites from saliva (n= 635) and plasma (n= 1,051). We used elastic net regression with 10-fold cross-validation to identify features from saliva, plasma, and saliva and plasma (multi-fluid) that were predictive of BMI and WC. We used Cox-proportional hazard models to evaluate associations between metabolomic profiles and diabetes progression, adjusting for age, sex, socioeconomic factors, lifestyle, and medication use.ResultsFor BMI metabolomic profiles, we identified 207 metabolites in plasma, 118 metabolites in saliva, and 225 in the multi-fluid profile. For WC, we identified 157, 89, and 210 metabolites for saliva, plasma, and multi-fluid profiles, respectively. Highly positively weighted metabolites across all BMI and WC metabolomic profiles included those in pathways of alanine and aspartate metabolism, purine metabolism, and sphingomyelins. Each SD increase in saliva, but not plasma or multi-fluid, metabolic profile of BMI was significantly associated with all stages of diabetes progression. Saliva, but not plasma or multi-fluid, metabolomic profile of WC was significantly associated with progression from pre-diabetes to T2D. All associations became stronger after further adjustment for anthropometric measures of BMI and WC.ConclusionSaliva is an underexplored and easily accessible biofluid to measure metabolites that are reflective of adiposity measures. Validation in future studies will confirm our findings that saliva, plasma, and multi-fluid …

See List of Professors in Jorge Chavarro University(Harvard University)

Jorge Chavarro FAQs

What is Jorge Chavarro's h-index at Harvard University?

The h-index of Jorge Chavarro has been 65 since 2020 and 87 in total.

What are Jorge Chavarro's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

The diabetes care continuum in Venezuela: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses to evaluate engagement and retention in care

Associations between parental adherence to healthy lifestyles and cognitive performance in offspring: A prospective cohort study in China

Plasma metabolites of a healthy lifestyle in relation to mortality and longevity: Four prospective US cohort studies

Trajectories of Mental Distress Among US Women by Sexual Orientation and Racialized Group During the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic

History of Infertility and Midlife Cardiovascular Health in Female Individuals

Sexual orientation-related disparities in perinatal mental health among a prospective cohort study

Fruits, vegetables, pesticide residues and health—a cause for concern?

Maternal One-Carbon Nutrient Intake and Risk of Being Overweight or Obese in Their Offspring—A Transgenerational Prospective Cohort Study

...

are the top articles of Jorge Chavarro at Harvard University.

What are Jorge Chavarro's research interests?

The research interests of Jorge Chavarro are: Reproductive Epidemiology, Nutritional Epidemiolgy

What is Jorge Chavarro's total number of citations?

Jorge Chavarro has 25,311 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Jorge Chavarro?

The co-authors of Jorge Chavarro are Frank B. Hu, Tobias Kurth, Wei Bao, Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón, PhD, MPH, BPharm, Jaime Mendiola, Sylvia Ley.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 311
    Frank B. Hu

    Frank B. Hu

    Harvard University

    H-index: 101
    Tobias Kurth

    Tobias Kurth

    Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin

    H-index: 63
    Wei Bao

    Wei Bao

    University of Iowa

    H-index: 41
    Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón, PhD, MPH, BPharm

    Lidia Mínguez-Alarcón, PhD, MPH, BPharm

    Harvard University

    H-index: 39
    Jaime Mendiola

    Jaime Mendiola

    Universidad de Murcia

    H-index: 36
    Sylvia Ley

    Sylvia Ley

    Tulane University

    academic-engine

    Useful Links