Felicia C. Madimenos
Queens College
42 Papers
140 Citations
Felicia C. Madimenos is an academic researcher from Queens College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biology. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 33 publications. Previous affiliations of Felicia C. Madimenos include University of Oregon & Ithaca College.
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Papers
Bringing the lab bench to the field: Point‐of‐care testing for enhancing health research and stakeholder engagement in rural/remote, indigenous, and resource‐limited contexts
Felicia C. Madimenos,Theresa E. Gildner,Geeta N. Eick,Lawrence S. Sugiyama,J. Josh Snodgrass +4 more
TL;DR: The immense opportunities of POCT for fostering collaborative research and enhancing access to health delivery and information and, by extension, helping to mitigate persistent global health inequities are emphasized.
Implications of market integration for cardiovascular and metabolic health among an indigenous Amazonian Ecuadorian population.
Melissa A. Liebert,J. Josh Snodgrass,Felicia C. Madimenos,Tara J. Cepon,Aaron D. Blackwell,Lawrence S. Sugiyama +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that MI among Shuar is not a uniformly negative process but instead produces complex cardiovascular and metabolic health outcomes.
An Evolutionary and Life-History Perspective on Osteoporosis
TL;DR: Osteoporosis is a systemic disease characterized by bone mass reductions and heightened fracture risk; its global prevalence rates are projected to increase precipitously over the next few decades.
Evidence for a peak shift in a humoral response to helminths: age profiles of IgE in the Shuar of Ecuador, the Tsimane of Bolivia, and the U.S. NHANES.
Aaron D. Blackwell,Michael Gurven,Lawrence S. Sugiyama,Felicia C. Madimenos,Melissa A. Liebert,Melanie Martin,Hillard Kaplan,J. Josh Snodgrass +7 more
TL;DR: The age-patterning suggests a peak shift in total IgE similar to that seen in helminth infections, particularly A. lumbricoides, which may have implications for understanding the effects of helminths on other health outcomes, such as allergy, growth, and response to childhood vaccination.
Childhood Daily Energy Expenditure Does Not Decrease with Market Integration and Is Not Related to Adiposity in Amazonia
Samuel S. Urlacher,Samuel S. Urlacher,J. Josh Snodgrass,Lara R. Dugas,Felicia C. Madimenos,Lawrence S. Sugiyama,Melissa A. Liebert,Cara Joyce,Enrique Teran,Herman Pontzer +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used gold-standard measurements of children's energy expenditure to investigate the changes that underlie childhood overweight and obesity and the nutrition/epidemiologic transition.