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Brent A. Bauer

Researcher at Mayo Clinic

Publications -  228
Citations -  6727

Brent A. Bauer is an academic researcher from Mayo Clinic. The author has contributed to research in topics: Massage & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 210 publications receiving 5839 citations. Previous affiliations of Brent A. Bauer include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & University of Rochester.

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Complementary and alternative medicine: use and disclosure in radiation oncology community practice

TL;DR: It was found that the majority of cancer patients used CAM treatments, and spiritual healing/prayer was the most commonly reported, followed by multivitamins.
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Efficacy of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Therapies in Relieving Cancer Pain: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: There is paucity of multi-institutional RCTs evaluating CAM interventions for cancer pain with adequate power, duration, and sham control; Hypnosis, imagery, support groups, acupuncture, and healing touch seem promising, particularly in the short term, but none can be recommended because of a paucities of rigorous trials.
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Pilot study of Panax quinquefolius (American ginseng) to improve cancer-related fatigue: a randomized, double-blind, dose-finding evaluation: NCCTG trial N03CA

TL;DR: There appears to be some activity and tolerable toxicity at 1,000–2,000 mg/day doses of American ginseng with regard to cancer-related fatigue with regard as well as over twice as many patients on gINSeng perceived a benefit and were satisfied with treatment over those on placebo.
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Evaluation of the Content Coverage of SNOMED CT: Ability of SNOMED Clinical Terms to Represent Clinical Problem Lists

TL;DR: SNOMED CT, when used as a compositional terminology, can exactly represent most of the terms used commonly in medical problem lists, and improvements to synonymy and adding missing modifiers would lead to greater coverage of common problem statements.
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Incidence and outcomes of asthma in the elderly. A population-based study in Rochester, Minnesota

TL;DR: Asthma is common in the elderly and following the diagnosis of asthma, a substantial proportion of these individuals required unscheduled ambulatory visits, emergency department visits, or hospitalizations, and long-term survival was not significantly different from expected survival.