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Albert Yeung

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  190
Citations -  6291

Albert Yeung is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Major depressive disorder. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 173 publications receiving 4357 citations. Previous affiliations of Albert Yeung include Brown University & Rhode Island Hospital.

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Clinical Outcomes in Measurement-based Treatment (Comet): a trial of depression monitoring and feedback to primary care physicians.

TL;DR: Clinical Outcomes in Measurement‐based Treatment (COMET) was designed to assess whether communicating patient‐reported depression symptom severity to primary care physicians affects patient outcomes at 6 months.
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Prevalence of major depressive disorder among Chinese-Americans in primary care.

TL;DR: The prevalence of major depressive disorder (MDD) among Asian-Americans in the primary care setting is comparable to or higher than those found in the U.S. nonminority populations.
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Spirometric patterns in childhood asthma: Peak flow compared with other indices

TL;DR: Results demonstrated that the FEF25–75 was the most specific and sensitive measure of airway obstruction, and it is appropriate for asthma education programs to recommend PEFR as an objective measure to guide in making therapeutic decisions.
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Tai chi treatment for depression in Chinese Americans: a pilot study.

TL;DR: A randomized controlled trial of tai chi is feasible and safe in Chinese American patients with major depressive disorder and trends toward improvement are observed, in positive treatment-response rate and remission rate, although the differences in the small sample did not reach statistical significance.
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Using online social media, Facebook, in screening for major depressive disorder among college students

TL;DR: In this paper, the feasibility of using Internet social networking media in an online program for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) screening and psycho education targeting college students was explored, and the use of Facebook to advertise for online screening for MDD required very little start-up time and the average cost was $11.45 per subject recruited.