County-level racial disparities in prostate cancer–specific mortality from 2005 to 2020
Washington S, Fakunle M, Wang L, Braun A, Leapman M, Cowan J, Cooperberg M. County-level racial disparities in prostate cancer–specific mortality from 2005 to 2020. JNCI Cancer Spectrum 2024, 8: pkae109. PMID: 39495143, PMCID: PMC11631307, DOI: 10.1093/jncics/pkae109.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchNon-Hispanic blacksRacial disparitiesCancer-specific mortalityCancer outcomesAssociated with lower mortality riskProstate cancer-specific mortalityProstate cancer outcomesNon-Hispanic white patientsLinear mixed models evaluated associationsPrimary care providersSpecific mortalityRadiation oncologist densityLower mortality riskYear of deathBlack-white differencesRace-based disparitiesMortality disparitiesProvider densityCare providersCounty-level dataHospital bedsMortality riskData of menProstate cancer specific mortality riskWhite patientsPhysician and Practice Characteristics Influencing Telemedicine Uptake Among Frontline Clinicians in the Early COVID-19 Pandemic Response: National Survey Study
Hamline M, Xing G, Kravitz R, Miller M, Melnikow J. Physician and Practice Characteristics Influencing Telemedicine Uptake Among Frontline Clinicians in the Early COVID-19 Pandemic Response: National Survey Study. JMIR Formative Research 2024, 8: e50751. PMID: 39018095, PMCID: PMC11292149, DOI: 10.2196/50751.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchTelemedicine uptakeTelemedicine useFrontline cliniciansClinician genderCensus regionPhysician-reported usePandemic responseFuture public health emergenciesEmergency medicine physiciansNational stratified sampleWeighted Logistic RegressionEarly pandemic responseCritical care physiciansNational survey studyPrimary careCare physiciansClinician specialtyReduce burnoutFrontline physiciansPublic health emergencyAssociated with higher levelsCOVID-19 pandemic responseCounty-level dataMedicine physiciansLogistic regression
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