Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 3 of 3 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS


Occurrence of Stigmatizing Documentation Among Hospital Medicine Encounters With Opioid-Related Diagnosis Codes: Cohort Study

Occurrence of Stigmatizing Documentation Among Hospital Medicine Encounters With Opioid-Related Diagnosis Codes: Cohort Study

Analyses were conducted using R software (version 3.4.1, R Foundation for Statistical Computing). This study was reviewed by the institutional review board of the University of California Davis and ruled to be not human participants research. Study data were securely stored on the institutional One Drive storage platform until data collection was complete, then all patient identifiers were removed for this secondary analysis. A total of 221 encounters met the inclusion criteria.

William S Bradford, Reed W R Bratches, Hollie Porras, David R Chen, Kelly W Gagnon, Simon B Ascher

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e53510

The Feasibility and Acceptability of Sharing Video Recordings of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Clinical Encounters With Patients and Their Caregivers: Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial

The Feasibility and Acceptability of Sharing Video Recordings of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Clinical Encounters With Patients and Their Caregivers: Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial

The randomization sequence was produced programmatically in R (version 3.4; R Core Team) by RWRB, and participants were randomly assigned upon completion of the baseline assessment. Participants were recruited from the Dartmouth Health Heater Road clinic. The MDC occurred each month, with clinicians rotating between rooms based on a preset clinician schedule with visit times approximating 30-40 minutes.

Reed W R Bratches, Jeffrey Cohen, Elizabeth Carpenter-Song, Lisa Mistler, Paul J Barr

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e57519

Patient Portal Use Among Family Caregivers of Individuals With Dementia and Cancer: Regression Analysis From the National Study of Caregiving

Patient Portal Use Among Family Caregivers of Individuals With Dementia and Cancer: Regression Analysis From the National Study of Caregiving

All analyses were conducted in R (version 3.4.1). NHATS and NSOC were approved by the Johns Hopkins Institutional Review Board [24]. Our analyses were approved by the University of Alabama at Birmingham institutional review board (IRB) as Not Human Subjects Research (IRB #300011796). We analyzed 463 responses representing 4,589,844 weighted family caregivers. Participants’ characteristics are summarized in Table 1. Participants’ characteristics.

Reed W R Bratches, Jaclyn A Wall, Frank Puga, Giovanna Pilonieta, Rita Jablonski, Marie Bakitas, David S Geldmacher, J Nicholas Odom

JMIR Aging 2023;6:e44166

Cookie Consent

We use our own cookies and third-party cookies so that we can show you this website and better understand how you use it, with a view to improving the services we offer. If you continue browsing, we consider that you have accepted the cookies.