J
Janet E. Pope
Researcher at University of Western Ontario
Publications - 593
Citations - 30332
Janet E. Pope is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rheumatoid arthritis & Population. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 557 publications receiving 25112 citations. Previous affiliations of Janet E. Pope include McGill University Health Centre & Jewish General Hospital.
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Journal Article
The minimally important difference (MID) for patient-reported outcomes including pain, fatigue, sleep and the health assessment questionnaire disability index (HAQ-DI) in primary Sjögren's syndrome.
George A,Janet E. Pope +1 more
TL;DR: The MID for pain and fatigue are greater for worsening than improvement in Sjögren's syndrome using a patient-reported overall health status anchor and a small change in the HAQ is detected as a change in status by the patient.
Journal Article
The relationship between NSAID use and osteoarthritis (OA) severity in patients with hip and knee OA: results of a case control study of NSAID use comparing those requiring hip and knee replacements to those in whom surgery was not recommended.
TL;DR: It is unable to support that some NSAIDs have negative cartilage effects from this study, and in fact, most NSAIDs were used in patients with less severe radiographic OA of the hip or knee.
Journal ArticleDOI
Experience with tofacitinib in Canada: patient characteristics and treatment patterns in rheumatoid arthritis over 3 years.
Janet E. Pope,Louis Bessette,Niall Jones,Lara Fallon,John Woolcott,David Gruben,Michael Crooks,David Gold,Boulos Haraoui +8 more
TL;DR: Likelihood of persistence increased for bDMARD-naïve (vs b DMARD-experienced) patients and those aged ⩾56 (vs ⩽45) years, and increased retention was associated with older age.
Journal ArticleDOI
Feminization of the Rheumatology Workforce: A Longitudinal Evaluation of Patient Volumes, Practice Sizes, and Physician Remuneration.
Jessica Widdifield,Jodi M. Gatley,Janet E. Pope,Claire E.H. Barber,Bindee Kuriya,Lihi Eder,Carter Thorne,Vicki Ling,J. Michael Paterson,Vandana Ahluwalia,Courtney Marks,Sasha Bernatsky +11 more
TL;DR: On average, female rheumatologists saw fewer patients and had fewer patient visits annually relative to males, resulting in lower earnings, and increasing feminization necessitates workforce planning to ensure populations’ needs are met.