C
Catherine Juillard
Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles
Publications - 108
Citations - 1782
Catherine Juillard is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 86 publications receiving 1256 citations. Previous affiliations of Catherine Juillard include University of California, San Francisco & Johns Hopkins University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Developing priorities for addressing surgical conditions globally: furthering the link between surgery and public health policy.
Charles Mock,Meena Cherian,Catherine Juillard,Peter Donkor,Stephen W. Bickler,Dean T. Jamison,Kelly McQueen +6 more
TL;DR: Preliminary ideas on how priorities for surgical care could be better defined are introduced, especially as regards the interface between the surgical and public health worlds.
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The burden of road traffic injuries in Nigeria: results of a population-based survey.
TL;DR: The road traffic injury rates found in this survey suggest that over 4 million people may be injured and as many as 200 000 potentially killed as the result of road traffic crashes annually in Nigeria.
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A decade of hospital-based violence intervention: Benefits and shortcomings.
Catherine Juillard,Laya Cooperman,Isabel E. Allen,Romain Pirracchio,Terrell Henderson,Ruben Marquez,Julia Orellana,Michael Texada,Rochelle A. Dicker +8 more
TL;DR: This evaluation of a VIP demonstrates sustained recidivism reduction and success in addressing client needs from a traditionally underserved population, and underscores the importance of increased integration of VIP into trauma centers nationally.
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Saving lives and saving money: hospital-based violence intervention is cost-effective.
Catherine Juillard,Randi N. Smith,Nancy Anaya,Arturo Garcia,James G. Kahn,Rochelle A. Dicker +5 more
TL;DR: VIP is effective and cost-effective and should be considered in any trauma center that takes care of violently injured patients, especially at anticipated program scale.
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Establishing the evidence base for trauma quality improvement: a collaborative WHO-IATSIC review.
TL;DR: Trauma QI programs are consistently shown to improve the process of care, decrease mortality, and decrease costs, and support the further development and promulgation of the WHO-IATSIC Guidelines for TraumaQI Programmes.