Katherine Tassiopoulos
Harvard University
80 Papers
220 Citations
Katherine Tassiopoulos is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 62 publications. Previous affiliations of Katherine Tassiopoulos include University of Washington & Boston University.
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Papers
Brief motivational intervention at a clinic visit reduces cocaine and heroin use.
Judith Bernstein,Edward Bernstein,Katherine Tassiopoulos,Timothy Heeren,Suzette Levenson,Ralph Hingson +5 more
TL;DR: Brief motivational intervention may help patients achieve abstinence from heroin and cocaine in inner-city teaching hospital outpatient clinics with 3 and 6 months follow-up by blinded observers.
357
Risk Factors for Weight Gain Following Switch to Integrase Inhibitor-Based Antiretroviral Therapy.
Jordan E. Lake,Kunling Wu,Sara H Bares,Paula Debroy,Catherine Godfrey,John R. Koethe,Grace A. McComsey,Frank J. Palella,Katherine Tassiopoulos,Kristine M. Erlandson +9 more
TL;DR: Yearly weight gain increased following switch to INSTI, particularly for women, blacks and persons age ≥60, and concomitant increases in waist circumference suggest that this weight gain is associated with an increase in fat mass.
166
Mental health functioning among children and adolescents with perinatal HIV infection and perinatal HIV exposure
Kathleen Malee,Katherine Tassiopoulos,Yanling Huo,George K. Siberry,Paige L. Williams,Rohan Hazra,Renee Smith,Susannah Allison,Patricia A. Garvie,Betsy Kammerer,Suad Kapetanovic,Sharon Nichols,Russell B. Van Dyke,George R. Seage,Claude A. Mellins +14 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that PHEU children are at high risk for MHPs, yet current models of care for these youth may not support early diagnosis and treatment.
145
Early viral suppression improves neurocognitive outcomes in HIV-infected children.
Claudia S. Crowell,Yanling Huo,Katherine Tassiopoulos,Kathleen Malee,Ram Yogev,Rohan Hazra,Richard M. Rutstein,Sharon Nichols,Renee Smith,Paige L. Williams,James Oleske,William J. Muller +11 more
TL;DR: Virologic suppression during infancy or early childhood is associated with improved neurocognitive outcomes in school-aged PHIV+ children, and CPE scores showed no association with neuroc cognitive outcomes.
Frailty is strongly associated with increased risk of recurrent falls among older HIV-infected adults.
Katherine Tassiopoulos,Mona Abdo,Kunling Wu,Susan L. Koletar,Frank J. Palella,Robert C. Kalayjian,Babafemi Taiwo,Kristine M. Erlandson +7 more
TL;DR: Aging HIV-infected pre-frail and frail individuals are at significantly increased risk of falls, and incorporation of frailty assessments or simple evaluations of walk speed or grip strength in clinical care may help identify individuals at greatest risk for falls.