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Cubby L. Gardner

Researcher at United States Department of the Army

Publications -  15
Citations -  97

Cubby L. Gardner is an academic researcher from United States Department of the Army. The author has contributed to research in topics: Military personnel & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 12 publications receiving 53 citations. Previous affiliations of Cubby L. Gardner include Joint Base San Antonio & Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

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Psychiatric Aeromedical Evacuations of Deployed Active Duty U.S. Military Personnel During Operations Enduring Freedom, Iraqi Freedom, and New Dawn.

TL;DR: The degree of clinical supervision and restraint of a service member during psychiatric aeromedical evacuation from deployment proved to be unrelated to subsequent service outcome, and an unexpected finding was that movement classification code was not predictive of subsequent reasons for separation from the military.
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STRONG STAR and the Consortium to Alleviate PTSD: Shaping the future of combat PTSD and related conditions in military and veteran populations.

Alan L. Peterson, +68 more
TL;DR: The STRONG STAR Consortium (South Texas Research Organizational Network Guiding Studies on Trauma and Resilience) and the Consortium to Alleviate PTSD are interdisciplinary and multi-institutional research consortia focused on the detection, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of combat-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and comorbid conditions in military personnel and veterans as mentioned in this paper.
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Electronic physiologic and subjective data acquisition in home-dwelling heart failure patients: An assessment of patient use and perception of usability.

TL;DR: This study is the first study to assess the use and usability of electronic objective and subjective data collection devices in heart failure patients' homes overnight and provides support for at-home patient-collected physiologic and subjective state data.
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Assessing the usability by clinicians of VISION: A hierarchical display of patient-collected physiological information to clinicians.

TL;DR: This is the first single-screen, parallel variable, temporal hierarchical display of both continuous and discrete information acquired by patients at home between clinic visits that presents clinically significant information at the point of care in a manner that is usable by clinicians.