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Heather Cole-Lewis

Researcher at Yale University

Publications -  9
Citations -  1482

Heather Cole-Lewis is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Psychological intervention. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 6 publications receiving 1245 citations. Previous affiliations of Heather Cole-Lewis include Columbia University Medical Center.

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Text Messaging as a Tool for Behavior Change in Disease Prevention and Management

TL;DR: Evidence on behavior change and clinical outcomes was compiled from randomized or quasi-experimental controlled trials of text message interventions published in peer-reviewed journals by June 2009.
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Large Language Models Encode Clinical Knowledge

TL;DR: The authors proposed a human evaluation framework for model answers along multiple axes including factuality, comprehension, reasoning, possible harm and bias, and showed that comprehension, knowledge recall and reasoning improve with model scale and instruction prompt tuning, suggesting the potential utility of LLMs in medicine.
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Like Father, Like Son: The Intergenerational Cycle of Adolescent Fatherhood

TL;DR: Findings support the need for pregnancy prevention interventions specifically designed for young males who may be at high risk for continuing this cycle of adolescent fatherhood and suggest interventions that address multiple levels of risk will likely be most successful at reducing pregnancies among partners of young men.
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A brief questionnaire for assessing patient healthcare experiences in low-income settings

TL;DR: The I-PA HC on O-PAHC questionnaires can be useful in assessing patients' evaluations of care delivery in low-income settings and can be integrated into health systems strengthening efforts with the support of leadership at the health facility and the country levels.
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Pregnancy-specific stress, preterm birth, and gestational age among high-risk young women.

TL;DR: Findings emphasize the importance of measuring pregnancy-specific stress across pregnancy, as the longitudinal change from second to third trimester was significantly associated with length of gestation measured both as a dichotomous variable (preterm birth) and a continuous variable (gestational age).