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Dorothy Y. Hung

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  16
Citations -  426

Dorothy Y. Hung is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Chinese americans. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 13 publications receiving 402 citations. Previous affiliations of Dorothy Y. Hung include University of California, San Francisco & Anschutz Medical Campus.

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Rethinking prevention in primary care: applying the chronic care model to address health risk behaviors.

TL;DR: Adaptation of the Chronic Care Model for preventive purposes may offer a useful framework for addressing important health risk behaviors.
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The chronic care model and relationships to patient health status and health-related quality of life.

TL;DR: A practice's implementation of the chronic care model was significantly related to patient health status and HRQOL, and Adapting the CCM for prevention may serve to reorient care delivery toward more proactive behavior change and improvements in patient health outcomes.
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Common measures, better outcomes (COMBO): a field test of brief health behavior measures in primary care.

TL;DR: A relatively brief set of behavioral measures used in primary care practice was usable in a variety of primary care settings with adults and adolescents, and yielded estimates of unhealthy behaviors consistent overall with what would be expected based on published population estimates.
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Multilevel analysis of the chronic care model and 5A services for treating tobacco use in urban primary care clinics.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the CCM facilitates provider adherence to the Public Health Service 5A clinical guideline, and that achieving the full benefits of systems change may require synergistic adoption of all model components.
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Practice-level approaches for behavioral counseling and patient health behaviors.

TL;DR: It is suggested that practice-level approaches may enable primary care practices to help patients improve physical activity, and these approaches may have different effects on different behaviors, and merit further research to determine if causal pathways exist and, if so, how they should be applied.