2024
Healthy immigrant community study protocol: A randomized controlled trial of a social network intervention for cardiovascular risk reduction among Hispanic and Somali adults
Wieland M, Molina L, Goodson M, Capetillo G, Osman A, Ahmed Y, Elmi H, Nur O, Iteghete S, Torres-Herbeck G, Dirie H, Clark M, Lohr A, Smith K, Zeratsky K, Rieck T, Herrin J, Valente T, Sia I. Healthy immigrant community study protocol: A randomized controlled trial of a social network intervention for cardiovascular risk reduction among Hispanic and Somali adults. Contemporary Clinical Trials 2024, 138: 107465. PMID: 38309526, PMCID: PMC10923143, DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2024.107465.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultCardiovascular DiseasesEmigrants and ImmigrantsHeart Disease Risk FactorsHispanic or LatinoHumansObesityRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicRisk FactorsSocial NetworkingUnited StatesConceptsLife's Simple 7Social network interventionsHealth promotionCardiovascular risk factorsCardiovascular risk reductionAmerican Heart Association's Life's Simple 7Health promotion interventionsPhysical activity levelsNetwork interventionsStepped wedge cluster randomized designReducing cardiovascular risk factorsCluster randomized trialStepped wedge cluster randomized trialNegative health behaviorsCluster randomized designRisk factorsHealthy weight lossRisk reductionRandomized controlled trialsImmigrant populationPromotion interventionsSomali adultsHealth behaviorsSomali immigrant communityWaist circumference
2014
A reanalysis of cluster randomized trials showed interrupted time-series studies were valuable in health system evaluation
Fretheim A, Zhang F, Ross-Degnan D, Oxman AD, Cheyne H, Foy R, Goodacre S, Herrin J, Kerse N, McKinlay RJ, Wright A, Soumerai SB. A reanalysis of cluster randomized trials showed interrupted time-series studies were valuable in health system evaluation. Journal Of Clinical Epidemiology 2014, 68: 324-333. PMID: 25499983, DOI: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2014.10.003.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCluster AnalysisData Interpretation, StatisticalHealth Services ResearchHumansInterrupted Time Series AnalysisQuality ImprovementRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicResearch DesignConceptsC-RCTsControl groupInterrupted time series studyConfidence intervalsConcurrent control groupHealth system interventionsHealth system evaluationControl arm dataInterrupted time series designIntervention armRandomized trialsControl group dataTrial dataTime-series studyTime series designHealth systemStudy designEffect estimatesTrialsInterventionSystem interventionsArm dataGroup dataRCTsGroup
2011
Framing of health information messages
Akl EA, Oxman AD, Herrin J, Vist GE, Terrenato I, Sperati F, Costiniuk C, Blank D, Schünemann H. Framing of health information messages. 2011, cd006777. PMID: 22161408, DOI: 10.1002/14651858.cd006777.pub2.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsComprehensionConsumer Health InformationHealth BehaviorHealth CommunicationHumansPerceptionPersuasive CommunicationRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicConceptsStandardized mean differenceHealth professionalsPre-planned subgroup analysisScreening testCochrane Central RegisterModerate-quality evidenceRelated systematic reviewsCross-over studyQuality of evidenceHealth information messagesChance of mortalityCentral RegisterGRADE approachControlled TrialsPrimary outcomeReview authorsDATA COLLECTIONAdverse outcomesLanguage restrictionsQuality evidenceSubgroup analysisReference listsSystematic reviewChances of survivalMean differenceUsing alternative statistical formats for presenting risks and risk reductions
Akl EA, Oxman AD, Herrin J, Vist GE, Terrenato I, Sperati F, Costiniuk C, Blank D, Schünemann H. Using alternative statistical formats for presenting risks and risk reductions. 2011, 2011: cd006776. PMID: 21412897, PMCID: PMC6464912, DOI: 10.1002/14651858.cd006776.pub2.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPolicy makersAbsolute risk reductionRelative risk reductionStatistical presentationStandardized mean differenceHigh quality comparisonsRisk reductionHealth professionalsMakersSensitivity analysisConsumersCochrane Central RegisterCross-over studyQuality of evidenceRisk of biasStatistical informationCentral RegisterGRADE approachControlled TrialsDATA COLLECTIONEvidence-based practiceSurrogate outcomesOvid MEDLINEOutcome effectsReference lists
2001
Continuing education meetings and workshops: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes
O'Brien M, Freemantle N, Oxman A, Wolfe F, Davis D, Herrin J. Continuing education meetings and workshops: effects on professional practice and health care outcomes. Cochrane Database Of Systematic Reviews 2001, cd003030. PMID: 11406063, DOI: 10.1002/14651858.cd003030.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsCongresses as TopicEducation, ContinuingHumansProcess Assessment, Health CareProfessional PracticeRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicConceptsHealth care outcomesCare outcomesHealth professionalsEducational meetingsCochrane Effective PracticeDevelopment Resource BaseEducation meetingsDATA COLLECTIONCare groupImproved health careBaseline complianceInclusion criteriaOutcome measuresReference listsClinical practiceQuasi-experimental studyDidactic presentationsHealth careInteractive workshopCommon typeContinuing Medical EducationDidactic sessionsInterventionOutcomesStudy data
2000
Implementing clinical guidelines in the treatment of hypertension.
Herrin J, Flottorp S. Implementing clinical guidelines in the treatment of hypertension. Scandinavian Journal Of Primary Health Care 2000, 18: 61-3. PMID: 10811048.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchGuideline AdherenceHumansHypertensionOutcome Assessment, Health CarePractice Guidelines as TopicRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicResearch Design