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Don W. Bradley

Researcher at Duke University

Publications -  18
Citations -  461

Don W. Bradley is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Body mass index. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 17 publications receiving 387 citations. Previous affiliations of Don W. Bradley include Durham University.

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Weight management and physical activity throughout the cancer care continuum

TL;DR: In a recent National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine workshop entitled, "Incorporating Weight Management and Physical Activity Throughout the Cancer Care Continuum" as discussed by the authors, the authors summarized the key topics addressed in a recent NEMS workshop entitled "Weight management and physical activity throughout the cancer care continuum." Discussions related to body weight and PA among cancer survivors included: 1) current knowledge and gaps related to health outcomes; 2) effective intervention approaches; 3) addressing the needs of diverse populations of cancer survivors; 4) opportunities and challenges of workforce, care coordination,
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How disclosing HMO physician incentives affects trust.

TL;DR: Disclosing the positive and negative features of incentives and increasing knowledge of these incentives does not reduce trust in physicians or insurers and may have a mild positive impact on physician trust, perhaps as a consequence of displaying candor and increasing understanding of positive features.
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Centers of excellence in bariatric surgery: design, implementation, and one-year outcomes

TL;DR: The preliminary results are encouraging, with COE providers demonstrating reduced 30-day readmission rates and, surprisingly, overall reductions in the rate and number of procedures performed and the number of physicians performing them.
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Agglutination of Naegleria fowleri and Naegleria gruberi by antibodies in human serum.

TL;DR: The capability of serum samples from 423 human subjects to agglutinate rounded cells of Naegleria fowleri nN68 was assessed, and live or paraformaldehyde-killed cells could be used in the assay, but live N. gruberi cells returned to the amoeboid form, and these aggLutinated poorly.