When Spreng read a Journal of
General Internal Medicine study on elder abuse in New York that found more than half of financial exploitation is carried out by a person the victim knew, he wondered: Just how well are older adults navigating the complexities of their social environment?
Not exact matches
The
study, published online in the peer - reviewed Journal of
General Internal Medicine, also found no difference in completion of the form by race or ethnicity, suggesting wide acceptance of these orders among California's highly diverse population.
In an effort to find out, Stephen P. Juraschek, M.D., Ph.D., research and clinical fellow in
general internal medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, and his colleagues used data from the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) clinical trial, a widely popular and often - cited study whose results were first published
medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine, and his colleagues used data from the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) clinical trial, a widely popular and often - cited study whose results were first published
Medicine, and his colleagues used data from the DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) clinical trial, a widely popular and often - cited
study whose results were first published in 1997.
The new results, published in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, give the first objective evidence of a phenomenon that senior author Srijan Sen, M.D., Ph.D. and his colleagues have
studied for years.
The
study is published online this month in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
The findings of the
study were published online by the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
The
study, published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, analyzed biannual responses from 13,897 participants in the University of Michigan's Health and Retirement Study who were 54 or older and had at least one of the following chronic conditions: hypertension, diabetes, cancer, lung disease, heart disease or st
study, published in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, analyzed biannual responses from 13,897 participants in the University of Michigan's Health and Retirement
Study who were 54 or older and had at least one of the following chronic conditions: hypertension, diabetes, cancer, lung disease, heart disease or st
Study who were 54 or older and had at least one of the following chronic conditions: hypertension, diabetes, cancer, lung disease, heart disease or stroke.
«Our findings may tempt some to call for a rollback of Massachusetts or even national health reform,» said Nancy Kressin, PhD, head of the Health / care Disparities Research Program in the Department of
Medicine at the Boston University School of
Medicine, member of the section of
General Internal Medicine at Boston Medical Center, and senior author of the
study.
«This continuing gap is disappointing because improving racial and ethnic disparities in access was a key objective of the reform,» said Amresh Hanchate, PhD, of the section of
General Internal Medicine at Boston Medical Center, an assistant professor at the Boston University School of
Medicine, and a
study co-author.
In a
study that appears in the May issue of the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, researchers at Boston University School of
Medicine and Boston Medical Center have found that the majority of patients misusing drugs and alcohol have chronic pain and many are using these substances to «self - medicate» their pain.
«Prior research at Yale has demonstrated that buprenorphine treatment is highly effective in primary care, and this
study was designed in part to expand the reach of this treatment to this critical ED patient population,» said Dr. Patrick O'Connor, professor of
medicine and chief of general internal medicine at Yale School of M
medicine and chief of
general internal medicine at Yale School of M
medicine at Yale School of
MedicineMedicine.
Despite the wide availability of effective treatments for depression and a growing effort nationwide to detect and begin treating depression during primary care visits, only about one - third of individuals newly diagnosed with depression start treatment, according to a Kaiser Permanente
study published today in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
«Given the risks involved with alcohol use, strengthening effective alcohol policies could help prevent homicides,» said Timothy Naimi, MD, the
study's lead author who is a physician in
general internal medicine at BMC and researcher at BMC's Grayken Center for Addiction M
medicine at BMC and researcher at BMC's Grayken Center for Addiction
MedicineMedicine.
A new
study, published in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, establishes expert consensus about treatment approaches that should be implemented when these behaviors arise.
In a report published online in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine on Feb. 21, 2014, the experts say
studies have long shown that fragmented care, incomplete information «handoffs» and poor planning among community - based and home caregivers jeopardize health and safety.
The
study, reported online April 28, 2015, in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine, confirms past findings on the link between the widely prescribed drugs and diabetes risk.
A
study published April 12 in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine found that screening patients for diabetes based on only age and weight could be missing more than half of high - risk patients.
And the risk of long - term use increased with age, according to the
study published online Aug. 2 in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.
One
study found that patients were five times as likely to have an «adverse event» — any injury caused by medical care — when covered by a doctor who didn't know them, which happens when a shift changes, explains David Bates, MD, chief of the division of
general internal medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.
«No previous
studies have focused on how variants in women's genes may be linked with hot flashes, and these results were highly statistically significant,» said principal investigator Dr. Carolyn Crandall, a professor of
medicine in the division of
general internal medicine and health services research at UCLA.
Yes, vegetarians may lose more weight than meat - eaters, according to a recent review of
studies published in the Journal of
General Internal Medicine.