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Carol E. Golin

Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Publications -  242
Citations -  9917

Carol E. Golin is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 231 publications receiving 8905 citations.

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Barriers to accessing HIV/AIDS care in North Carolina: rural and urban differences.

TL;DR: It was revealed that rural case managers and case managers with more female clients reported a greater number of barriers, and barriers to these services must be identified and addressed, particularly in rural areas which may be highly underserved.
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How Well Do Clinicians Estimate Patients' Adherence to Combination Antiretroviral Therapy?

TL;DR: Clinicians tend to overestimate medication adherence, inadequately detect poor adherence, and may therefore miss important opportunities to intervene to improve antiretroviral adherence.
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Preferences for medical collaboration: patient-physician congruence and patient outcomes.

TL;DR: Results indicate that when patients and their doctors share similar beliefs about patient participation, patient outcomes tend to be more positive, with highest satisfaction found in cases in which both patient and physician desire more patient involvement.
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The Harms of Screening: A Proposed Taxonomy and Application to Lung Cancer Screening

TL;DR: This work categorized harms from several sources: systematic reviews of screening, other published literature, and informal discussions with clinicians and patients to create an initial taxonomy, which provides a systematic way to conceptualize harms as experienced by patients.
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Effect of release from prison and re-incarceration on the viral loads of HIV-infected individuals

TL;DR: Release from prison was associated with a deleterious effect on virological and immunological outcomes, and comprehensive discharge planning efforts are required to make certain that HIV-infected inmates receive access to quality care following incarceration.