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Ana G Rappold

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Articles 74
Citations 1272
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Recent Articles
1.
Keeler C, Cleland S, Hill K, Mazzella A, Cascio W, Rappold A, et al.
JACC Adv . 2025 Jan; 4(1):101463. PMID: 39759433
Background: Climate change is increasing the frequency of high heat and high humidity days. Whether these conditions can trigger ventricular arrhythmias [ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation, VT/VF] in susceptible persons is unknown....
2.
Wu L, Gao C, Yang S, Reich B, Rappold A
J R Stat Soc Ser C Appl Stat . 2024 Nov; 73(5):1242-1261. PMID: 39552750
Wildland fire smoke exposures are an increasing threat to public health, highlighting the need for studying the effects of protective behaviours on reducing health outcomes. Emerging smartphone applications provide unprecedented...
3.
OLenick C, Cleland S, Neas L, Turner M, Mcinroe E, Hill K, et al.
Ann Am Thorac Soc . 2024 Nov; 22(3):367-377. PMID: 39499766
Extreme heat exposure is a well-known cause of mortality among older adults. However, the impacts of exposure on respiratory morbidity across U.S. cities and population subgroups are not well understood....
4.
Xi Y, Wettstein Z, Kshirsagar A, Liu Y, Zhang D, Hang Y, et al.
Kidney Int Rep . 2024 Oct; 9(10):2946-2955. PMID: 39430197
Introduction: In many parts of the world, ambient temperatures have increased due to climate change. Due to loss of renal function, which impacts the regulation of thermoregulatory mechanisms, the ability...
5.
Jardel H, Rappazzo K, Luben T, Keeler C, Staley B, Ward-Caviness C, et al.
Environ Res Health . 2024 Sep; 2(4):045004. PMID: 39268508
As wildfire frequency and severity increases, smoke exposures will cause increasingly more adverse respiratory effects. While acute respiratory effects of smoke exposure have been documented in children, longer term sequelae...
6.
Coffman E, Rappold A, Nethery R, Anderton J, Amend M, Jackson M, et al.
Environ Health Perspect . 2024 Mar; 132(3):37003. PMID: 38445893
Background: Air pollution risk assessments do not generally quantify health impacts using multipollutant risk estimates, but instead use results from single-pollutant or copollutant models. Multipollutant epidemiological models account for pollutant...
7.
Turner M, Prathibha P, Holder A, Rappold A, Hassett-Sipple B, McCaughey B, et al.
Heliyon . 2024 Feb; 10(4):e25225. PMID: 38375293
Background: Smoke exposure from wildfires or residential wood burning for heat is a public health problem for many communities. Do-It-Yourself (DIY) portable air cleaners (PACs) are promoted as affordable alternatives...
8.
Fann N, Zanobetti A, Mork D, Steinhardt W, Rappold A
Environ Epidemiol . 2024 Feb; 8(1):e285. PMID: 38343733
Fine particle pollution is a well-established risk to human health. Observational epidemiology generally treats events as though they are independent of one another and so do not examine the role...
9.
Rai M, Breitner S, Zhang S, Rappold A, Schneider A
Front Epidemiol . 2023 Nov; 2:1-9. PMID: 37942471
Future projection of the temperature-related health burden, including mortality and hospital admissions, is a growing field of research. These studies aim to provide crucial information for decision-makers considering existing health...
10.
Jung J, Wilkins J, Schollaert C, Masuda Y, Flunker J, Connolly R, et al.
Sci Total Environ . 2023 Oct; 906:167834. PMID: 37839481
Wildland fire smoke risks are not uniformly distributed across people and places, and the most vulnerable communities are often disproportionately impacted. This study develops a county level community health vulnerability...