G
Giselle Corbie-Smith
Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publications - 204
Citations - 8532
Giselle Corbie-Smith is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Community-based participatory research & Health care. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 192 publications receiving 7217 citations. Previous affiliations of Giselle Corbie-Smith include University of Alabama at Birmingham & Emory University.
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Attitudes and Beliefs of African Americans Toward Participation in Medical Research
TL;DR: African-American participants in this study described distrust of the medical community as a prominent barrier to participation in clinical research.
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Distrust, Race, and Research
TL;DR: Race remained strongly associated with a higher distrust score and even after controlling for markers of social class, African Americans were less trusting than white Americans.
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Factors Associated With Decisions to Undergo Surgery Among Patients With Newly Diagnosed Early-Stage Lung Cancer
Samuel Cykert,Peggye Dilworth-Anderson,Michael H. Monroe,Paul R. Walker,Franklin R. McGuire,Giselle Corbie-Smith,Lloyd J. Edwards,Audrina Jones Bunton +7 more
TL;DR: A decision not to undergo surgery by patients with newly diagnosed lung cancer was independently associated with perceptions of communication and prognosis, older age, multiple comorbidities, and black race.
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The Continuing Legacy of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Considerations for Clinical Investigation
TL;DR: The Tuskegee Study, an observational study of over 400 sharecroppers with untreated syphilis, was conducted by the U.S. Public Health Service to document the course of the disease in blacks, and racial differences in the clinical manifestations of syphilis.
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Research expectations among African American church leaders in the PRAISE! project: a randomized trial guided by community-based participatory research.
Alice S. Ammerman,Giselle Corbie-Smith,Diane Marie M. St. George,Chanetta Washington,Beneta Weathers,Bethany Jackson-Christian +5 more
TL;DR: Satisfaction with the research partnership was high, but so was concern about the need for all research teams to establish trust with church partners, and an intervention study based on CBPR methods was able to meet most of these expectations.