ATS 2024 Final Program
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194
MONDAY • MAY 20
12:20 Assessing the Air Quality and Corresponding Ecological and Public Health Impacts of Wildland Fire Smoke 12:40 The Land Management Perspective of the Population Health Burden and Impact of Wildland Fire
12:30 PrecISE Cohort Population Strata 12:45 Discussion and Questions
NASA APPLIED SCIENCES PROGRAM MID-DAY SESSION
NHLBI, NIH MID-DAY SESSION
MD21 CONNECTING NASA EARTH SCIENCE APPLICATIONS WITH AIR QUALITY AND RESPIRATORY HEALTH 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. Marriott Marquis San Diego Marina Grand Ballroom 8-9 (Lobby Level, North Tower) Target Audience Physicians; nurses; allied health professionals; public health practitioners; community health educators; researchers who are interested in using Earth observation data for environmental and occupational health research applications Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • describe cross-cutting environmental health applications of the NASA Health and Air Quality Program, relevant for pulmonary clinicians and researchers. • notify clinicians and researchers about ongoing NASA projects and missions that examine pulmonary and cardiovascular disease risks and provide resources about local, state, national and international levels on air pollution and extreme heat. • evaluate at least three examples where NASA satellite data can be applied to air pollution or extreme heat as global health risks. Earth science data provide an in-depth view of how natural and anthropogenic phenomena impact public health, especially in our changing environmental world. This session will describe how NASA satellite data can strengthen cross-cutting environmental health research applications and valuable community stakeholder partnerships to address emerging risks like climate change. It will highlight a subset of current NASA projects and missions that assess potential health risks associated with poor air quality and extreme heat events, which can ultimately support clinical practice and policy decision-making within health and air quality sectors. 12:00 Linking Earth Science Applications to Understand Respiratory Health Risks: Updates from NASA Health and Air Quality Applications
MD20 AN UPDATE FROM THE PRECISION INTERVENTIONS FOR SEVERE AND/OR EXACERBATION-PRONE ASTHMA (PRECISE) NETWORK 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. Marriott Marquis San Diego Marina Grand Ballroom 2-4 (Lobby Level, North Tower) Target Audience Physician scientists, PhD researchers, trainees, students Objectives At the conclusion of this session, the participant will be able to: • apply how precision medicine-based adaptive trial platform designs can be used to evaluate novel interventions in chronic lung disease • describe key characteristics of a severe asthma cohort that is symptomatic in spite of current therapeutic regime • understand how biomarkers can be used to define patient subpopulations for stratified clinical trials The goal of the PrecISE Network is to accelerate the use of precision based treatment approaches for management and secondary prevention of asthma in well-phenotyped patients with severe and/or exacerbation-prone asthma to improve patient outcomes and potentially modify disease expression. As well, it is expected that new knowledge will be generated regarding phenotypes, predictive and monitoring biomarkers, trial outcomes, the natural history of disease, and therapeutic responsiveness. The PrecISE trial is currently enrolling nationwide, using an innovative adaptive platform design to test five novel interventions in severe asthma. In this session we will describe the demographics and clinical baseline characteristics of the study cohort, and provide an update on study progress. 12:00 PrecISE Protocol and Update Cohort and Baseline Characteristics 12:15 PrecISE Cohort Baseline Characteristics
ATS 2024 Conference Program • San Diego, CA
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