C
Cheri G. Smith
Researcher at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center
Publications - 9
Citations - 826
Cheri G. Smith is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: MEDLINE & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 776 citations. Previous affiliations of Cheri G. Smith include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine & Johns Hopkins University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Depression screening and patient outcomes in cardiovascular care : a systematic review
Brett D. Thombs,Peter de Jonge,James C. Coyne,Mary A. Whooley,Nancy Frasure-Smith,Nancy Frasure-Smith,Alex J. Mitchell,Marij Zuidersma,Chete Eze-Nliam,Bruno B Lima,Cheri G. Smith,Karl A. Soderlund,Roy C. Ziegelstein +12 more
TL;DR: Depression treatment with medication or cognitive behavioral therapy in patients with cardiovascular disease is associated with modest improvement in depressive symptoms but no improvement in cardiac outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI
A systematic review of resident research curricula
TL;DR: Reviewing curricula for training house officers in research found the most common curricular objectives were to increase house officers' research productivity and improve their critical appraisal skills.
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Depression screening and patient outcomes in pregnancy or postpartum: A systematic review
Brett D. Thombs,Erin Arthurs,Stephanie Coronado-Montoya,Stephanie Coronado-Montoya,Michelle Roseman,Vanessa C. Delisle,Vanessa C. Delisle,Allison Leavens,Brooke Levis,Brooke Levis,Laurent Azoulay,Cheri G. Smith,Luisa Ciofani,James C. Coyne,Nancy Feeley,Nancy Feeley,Simon Gilbody,Joy Schinazi,Donna E. Stewart,Donna E. Stewart,Phyllis Zelkowitz,Phyllis Zelkowitz +21 more
TL;DR: There is currently no evidence from any well-designed and conducted RCT that screening for depression would benefit women in pregnancy or postpartum, and existing guidelines that recommend depression screening during pregnancy orPostpartum should be re-considered.
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The association of depression with adherence to antihypertensive medications: a systematic review.
TL;DR: All studies reported statistically significant relationships between depression and poor adherence to antihypertensive medications, but definitive conclusions cannot be drawn because of substantial heterogeneity between studies with respect to the assessment of depression and adherence, as well as inconsistencies in results both within and between studies.
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Minimal Prevalence of Authorship Misrepresentation among Internal Medicine Residency Applicants: Do Previous Estimates of Misrepresentation Represent Insufficient Case Finding?
TL;DR: This study found that 45% of the applicants who were asked to interview for a competitive internal medicine residency position reported authorship of at least one article, and compared the search strategies used by previous authors with a more comprehensive strategy.