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Charles B. Eaton

Researcher at Brown University

Publications -  527
Citations -  24833

Charles B. Eaton is an academic researcher from Brown University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Women's Health Initiative & Osteoarthritis. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 493 publications receiving 20933 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles B. Eaton include University of Manchester & Memorial Hospital of South Bend.

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Differences in Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factor Management in Primary Care by Sex of Physician and Patient

TL;DR: Quality of care as measured by patients meeting CVD risk factors treatment goals was similar regardless of the sex of the patient or physician, and selected differences were found in the style of CVDrisk factor management by sex of physician and patient.
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Individuals with incident accelerated knee osteoarthritis have greater pain than those with common knee osteoarthritis progression: data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative

TL;DR: Overall, individuals with AKOA had greater pain, functional disability, and global rating scale as well as slower chair-stand and walking pace compared with those with common KOA, and AKOA may be a painful and disabling phenotype that warrants more attention by clinicians and researchers.
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Can cartilage loss be detected in knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients with 3-6 months' observation using advanced image analysis of 3T MRI?

TL;DR: The small inconsistent compartment changes, and the relatively high variabilities in cartilage thickness changes seen over time in this study, provide no additional confidence for a 3- or 6-month PoC study using a patient population selected on the basis of risk for rapid progression with the MRI acquisition and analyses employed.
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Accuracy of self-reported weight in the Women's Health Initiative.

TL;DR: Assessing the extent of error present in self-reported weight data in the Women’s Health Initiative, variables that may be associated with error, and methods to reduce any identified error to improve the accuracy of assessment of obesity status in postmenopausal women are assessed.