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Barbara DiCicco-Bloom
Researcher at City University of New York
Publications - 29
Citations - 6495
Barbara DiCicco-Bloom is an academic researcher from City University of New York. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Qualitative research. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 29 publications receiving 5908 citations. Previous affiliations of Barbara DiCicco-Bloom include The Graduate Center, CUNY & Rutgers University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The qualitative research interview
TL;DR: This work examines less structured interview strategies in which the person interviewed is more a participant in meaning making than a conduit from which information is retrieved.
Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding Healing Relationships in Primary Care
John G. Scott,Deborah J. Cohen,Barbara DiCicco-Bloom,William L. Miller,Kurt C. Stange,Benjamin F. Crabtree,Benjamin F. Crabtree +6 more
TL;DR: This conceptual model of clinician-patient healing relationships may be generalizable to other kinds of healing relationships and have an underlying structure and lead to important patient-centered outcomes.
Journal Article
Antibiotic use in acute respiratory infections and the ways patients pressure physicians for a prescription
John G. Scott,Deborah J. Cohen,Barbara DiCicco-Bloom,A. J. Orzano,Carlos Roberto Jaén,Benjamin F Crabtree +5 more
TL;DR: To decrease antibiotic use for ART infections, patients should be educated about the dangers and limited benefits of such use, and clinicians should consider appropriate responses to these different patient pressures to prescribe antibiotics.
Journal ArticleDOI
Social Network Analysis as an Analytic Tool for Interaction Patterns in Primary Care Practices
John G. Scott,Alfred F. Tallia,Jesse C. Crosson,A. John Orzano,Christine Stroebel,Barbara DiCicco-Bloom,Dena O’Malley,Eric Shaw,Benjamin F. Crabtree +8 more
TL;DR: SNA can be useful for quantitative analysis of interaction patterns that can distinguish differences among primary care practices, and potential uses of these measures for analysis ofPrimary care practices are described.