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Emmeline Chuang

Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles

Publications -  82
Citations -  1591

Emmeline Chuang is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Population. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 74 publications receiving 1317 citations. Previous affiliations of Emmeline Chuang include Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior & Veterans Health Administration.

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Give unto others: genetically unrelated cotton-top tamarin monkeys preferentially give food to those who altruistically give food back

TL;DR: Overall, results show that tamarins altruistically give food to genetically unrelated conspecifics, discriminate between altruistic and selfish actions, and give more food to those who give food back.
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The role of inter-agency collaboration in facilitating receipt of behavioral health services for youth involved with child welfare and juvenile justice

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined associations for three dimensions of collaboration between local child welfare and juvenile justice agencies - jurisdiction, shared information systems, and overall connectivity - and youths' odds of receiving behavioral health services.
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User-centered design to improve clinical decision support in primary care.

TL;DR: This study used a regression model to evaluate the association between user-centered design practices and the perceived utility of clinical decision support, while accounting for other important factors at those clinics, including implementation climate, available resources, and structural characteristics.
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Collaboration, Competition, and Co-opetition: Interorganizational Dynamics Between Private Child Welfare Agencies and Child Serving Sectors

TL;DR: Logistic regression analyses indicate that co-opetition is likely to occur when private child welfare agencies have a good perceived relationship or a sub-contract with their partner, and has implications for how agency leaders manage partner relationships, and how public child welfare administrators structure contracts.
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A Configurational Approach to the Relationship between High-Performance Work Practices and Frontline Health Care Worker Outcomes

TL;DR: High-performance work practices that integrate FLWs in health care teams and provide FLWs with opportunities for participative decision making can positively influence job satisfaction and perceived quality of care, but only when implemented as bundles of complementary policies and practices.