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Jennifer A. Campbell

Researcher at Medical College of Wisconsin

Publications -  81
Citations -  1679

Jennifer A. Campbell is an academic researcher from Medical College of Wisconsin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 55 publications receiving 1107 citations. Previous affiliations of Jennifer A. Campbell include University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee & Medical University of South Carolina.

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Associations Between Adverse Childhood Experiences, High-Risk Behaviors, and Morbidity in Adulthood

TL;DR: In addition to having a cumulative effect, individual ACE components have differential relationships with risky behaviors, morbidity, and disability in adulthood after controlling for important confounders.
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Impact of social determinants of health on outcomes for type 2 diabetes: a systematic review

TL;DR: Based on the studies reviewed, social determinants have an impact on glycemic control, LDL, and blood pressure to varying degrees, and the impact on cost and quality of life was not often measured, but when quality oflife was investigated, it did show significance.
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Diabetes Empowerment, Medication Adherence and Self-Care Behaviors in Adults with Type 2 Diabetes

TL;DR: In this sample, diabetes empowerment was related to better diabetes knowledge, medication adherence and improved self-care behaviors and is relevant to improve outcomes in the management of diabetes.
Journal Article

Effect of diabetes self-efficacy on glycemic control, medication adherence, self-care behaviors, and quality of life in a predominantly low-income, minority population.

TL;DR: Higher self-efficacy was associated with improved glycemic control, medication adherence, self-care behavior and mental health related quality of life.
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Effect of diabetes fatalism on medication adherence and self-care behaviors in adults with diabetes

TL;DR: The association between diabetes fatalism and medication adherence, diabetes knowledge and diabetes self-care behaviors did not change significantly when depression was added to the models, suggesting that the associations are independent of depression.