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I-Chan Huang

Researcher at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Publications -  148
Citations -  4661

I-Chan Huang is an academic researcher from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 117 publications receiving 3771 citations. Previous affiliations of I-Chan Huang include University of Florida & Johns Hopkins University.

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Measuring the Transition Readiness of Youth with Special Healthcare Needs: Validation of the TRAQ—Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire

TL;DR: The initial validation study suggests the TRAQ is a useful tool to assess transition readiness in YSHCN and to guide educational interventions by providers to support transition.
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Risk and Promotive Factors in Families, Schools, and Communities: A Contextual Model of Positive Youth Development in Adolescence

TL;DR: The results support the proposition that healthy adolescent development has roots in multiple contexts, and youth who were involved in contexts that provided positive resources from important others not only were less likely to exhibit negative outcomes, but also were more likely to show evidence of positive development.
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PROMIS(®) pediatric self-report scales distinguish subgroups of children within and across six common pediatric chronic health conditions

TL;DR: A comparative analysis of eight pediatric self-report scales from the National Institutes of Health's Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) in six pediatric chronic health conditions found significant differences in the expected directions for all PROMIS domains, except anger.
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Psychometric properties of the PROMIS ® pediatric scales: precision, stability, and comparison of different scoring and administration options

TL;DR: The study provides further information on the psychometric properties of the PROMIS pediatric scales and extends the previous IRT analyses to include precision estimates of dynamic versus static administration, test–retest reliability, and validity of administration across groups.
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Do the SF-36 and WHOQOL-BREF measure the same constructs? Evidence from the taiwan population

TL;DR: In this Taiwan population sample, the SF-36 and WHOQOL-BREF appear to measure different constructs: theSF-36 measures health-related QOL, while the WHOQ OLBREF measures global QOL.