2024
Predictors of Health-Related Quality of Life Among Women Participating in an Appointment-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation Program.
Wright C, Fournier S, Deng Y, Meng C, Tucker K, Spatz E, Lichtman J, Zhu C, Dreyer R, Oen-Hsiao J. Predictors of Health-Related Quality of Life Among Women Participating in an Appointment-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation Program. The Journal Of Cardiovascular Nursing 2024 PMID: 38595128, DOI: 10.1097/jcn.0000000000001096.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHealth-related quality of lifeCR programSF-36 scoresSF-36Quality of lifeCardiac rehabilitationPredictors of health-related quality of lifeYale New Haven HealthShort-Form General Health SurveyCardiac rehabilitation programGeneral Health SurveyHealth-related qualityCardiovascular diseaseMultivariate linear regression modelChronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseMeasure HRQoL.CR adherenceCR entryPredictors of improvementRehabilitation programHealth outcomesHealth SurveyEvaluate sex differencesObstructive pulmonary diseaseSocioeconomic status
1999
Depressive and Disruptive Disorders and Mental Health Service Utilization in Children and Adolescents
WU P, HOVEN C, BIRD H, MOORE R, COHEN P, ALEGRIA M, DULCAN M, GOODMAN S, HORWITZ S, LICHTMAN J, NARROW W, RAE D, REGIER D, ROPER M. Depressive and Disruptive Disorders and Mental Health Service Utilization in Children and Adolescents. Journal Of The American Academy Of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 1999, 38: 1081-1090. PMID: 10504806, DOI: 10.1097/00004583-199909000-00010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMental health servicesMental health service utilizationHealth service utilizationDisruptive disordersHealth servicesService utilizationSchool-based servicesAdolescent Mental Disorders (MECA) StudyMental health service needsEpidemiology of ChildPotential confounding factorsMental Disorders StudyHealth service needsMental health professionalsNIMH MethodsDepressive disorderPsychiatric disordersHealth professionalsConfounding factorsDepressed childrenSocioeconomic statusDisordersType of disorderDisorders StudyDepression