D
David E Willens
Researcher at Henry Ford Health System
Publications - 10
Citations - 396
David E Willens is an academic researcher from Henry Ford Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health literacy. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 9 publications receiving 339 citations. Previous affiliations of David E Willens include Veterans Health Administration.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Effectiveness-implementation hybrid designs: implications for quality improvement science
TL;DR: This article summarizes the three types of hybrid effectiveness-implementation designs and associated evaluation methods and proposes implications of hybrid designs for qual settings.
Journal ArticleDOI
Interdisciplinary Team Care for Diabetic Patients by Primary Care Physicians, Advanced Practice Nurses, and Clinical Pharmacists
TL;DR: Interdisciplinary efforts by primary care physicians, advanced practice nurses, and clinical pharmacists that can achieve improvements in clinical processes and outcomes at reasonable costs are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Implementing Routine Health Literacy Assessment in Hospital and Primary Care Patients
Courtney Cawthon,Lorraine C. Mion,Lorraine C. Mion,David E Willens,David E Willens,Christianne L. Roumie,Christianne L. Roumie,Sunil Kripalani,Sunil Kripalani +8 more
TL;DR: Although challenges exist, it is feasible to incorporate health literacy screening into clinical assessment and EHR documentation and next steps are to evaluate the association of health literacy with processes and outcomes of care across inpatient and outpatient populations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Association of brief health literacy screening and blood pressure in primary care.
David E Willens,Sunil Kripalani,Jonathan S. Schildcrout,Courtney Cawthon,Kenneth A. Wallston,Lorraine C. Mion,Corinne M Davis,Iona Danciu,Russell L. Rothman,Christianne L. Roumie +9 more
TL;DR: In this large primary care population of patients with hypertension, higher health literacy, as screened in clinical practice, was associated with a small increase in blood pressures.
Journal ArticleDOI
Benefits of integrated behavioral health services: The physician perspective.
Lisa R Miller-Matero,Kate Elizabeth Dykuis,Kamelia Albujoq,Kellie Martens,Brittany S. Fuller,Vanessa Robinson,David E Willens +6 more
TL;DR: Primary care physicians may be motivated to integrate behavioral health services into their clinics knowing that other physicians believe that it directly and indirectly improves patient care and physician stress.