Family Strengthening Services at Family Health Centers at NYU Langone | NYU Langone Health
Family strengthening services are provided through Family Health Centers at NYU Langone’s Community-Based Programs.
Family Studies Program | NYU Langone Health
The Child Study Center, part of Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone, provides mental health services for the entire family.
Family Therapy for Eating Disorders in Children & Adolescents | NYU Langone Health
Specialists at Hassenfeld Children’s Hospital at NYU Langone offer family-based therapy for children and teens with eating disorders.
Family Travel Medicine Center at NYU Langone Hospital—Long Island | NYU Langone Health
Infectious disease specialists at the Family Travel Medicine Center at NYU Langone Hospital—Long Island prepare you to travel safely.
Family Travel Medicine Center at NYU Langone Hospital—Long Island Doctors | NYU Langone Health
Find a doctor at Family Travel Medicine Center at NYU Langone Hospital—Long Island.
Faster and more accurate diagnosis through digital pathology | NYU Langone Health
NYU Langone’s digital pathology laboratory means that patients can be diagnosed more quickly, and it’s easier for our team to collaborate.
Faster Stroke Care | NYU Langone Health
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Feasibility of a Hearing Program in Primary Care for Underserved Older Adults
During a primary care visit, we will screen and identify participants with hearing loss and then randomize to a) counseling on accessible assistive listening devices (n = 120) or b) referral to traditional audiology care pathway alone (n = 120). Feasibility measures will demonstrate our ability to screen patients, randomize them to interventions and complete the follow up in preparation for a larger efficacy trial on the impact of this program on hearing and communication. We will ensure understanding of the recommendations and follow up on subsequent actions participants have taken using a 3-month follow-up survey to assess the impact of the intervention on hearing and communication; we will also elicit additional feedback from providers and participants.
Feasibility of Using Wearable Sensors and Artificial Intelligence for Carbohydrate Counting in Chinese Americans with Type 2 Diabetes
Chinese Americans are one of the fastest growing racial/ethnic groups in the United States. Compared with non-Hispanic White, Chinese Americans have a higher incidence of type 2 diabetes (T2D) with lower body mass index, poor health status, worse glycemic control, and less compliance with dietary guidelines. With increases in the prevalence of T2D and unhealthy eating in Chinese Americans, strategies to improve dietary management in this population are critically needed. Carbohydrate counting (CC) is effective for reducing caloric intake, weight loss, and, glycemic control; however, the current approaches for CC are inaccurate, burdensome, and challenging. The cultural foods that Chinese Americans eat further complicate CC. A wearable imaging device (i.e., eButton) requires no volitional effort for food measuring, recording, or nutrient calculating, which helps to overcomes CC challenges for Chinese Americans. We will conduct a one-group pilot study (N=20) to evaluate the accuracy and acceptability of using eButton with a closed-loop feedback system for CC in Chinese Americans with T2D. The eButton will automatically record food data by taking food pictures during a meal. The recorded food picture data are processed by the artificial intelligence (AI) to determine food names, volume/portion size, and nutrient value (e.g., carbohydrate grams). We will use the eButton with a closed-loop feedback system, in which continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) will be applied to provide powerful feedback to evaluate CC, aiming to reduce the error and bias of estimation of carbohydrate grams. Aim 1 will evaluate the accuracy of CC using eButton for Chinese Americans by comparing its results with weighing food by registered dietitian nutritionist (“gold standard”) and food diary by participants. Aim 2 will examine the acceptability of using eButton for CC in Chinese Americans with T2D, which will be assessed by rate of use, surveys, and individual interviews. This study is of great importance because it targets a high-risk, rapidly growing, yet understudied minority population in the United States. If found to be feasible and acceptable, using a wearable imaging device, AI algorithms, and CGM-device enabled closed-loop control to automatically estimate carbohydrate grams will potentially also benefit other groups of adults with type 2 diabetes and aid in reducing their burden of dietary management. The proposed approach will advance dietary management in clinical practice. The findings will provide preliminary data for the subsequent R01 application for NIH/NIDDK R01s for PA-19-056 or PAS-20-160.
Feasibility study of the pilot implementation of the Video Interaction Project in Brazil
Early exposure to poverty is associated with adverse impacts on long-term educational achievement. Support of positive parenting is a key strategy to prevent emergence of socioeconomic disparities in child development. This study will assess the feasibility of the pilot implementation of an evidence-based parenting program designed to prevent disparities in child development, the Video Interaction Project (VIP), in Brazil, as an exemplar low- and middle-income country (LMIC), and explore changes in parenting and child outcomes after participation in the program.