J
Jeremy Snyder
Researcher at Simon Fraser University
Publications - 170
Citations - 3456
Jeremy Snyder is an academic researcher from Simon Fraser University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medical tourism & Health care. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 152 publications receiving 2946 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeremy Snyder include University of British Columbia & University of Alberta.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
P2.14-01 Clinical Utility of Reflex to Tissue-based Comprehensive Genomic Profiling (CGP) After Negative Liquid Biopsy (LBx) in NSCLC
Hatim Husain,Russell Madison,James Haberberger,Cheryl D. Cho-Phan,Jeremy Snyder,Tamara Snow,Richard Huang,G Li,Kalhed Tolba,Alexa B. Schrock,Ryon P. Graf,Geoffrey R. Oxnard +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used real-world evidence to quantify the utility of confirmatory tissue biopsy (TBx) testing after negative LBx and found that TBx has imperfect sensitivity for detecting driver alterations under certain circumstances.
Journal ArticleDOI
Altering consumer practices, facing uncertainties, and seeking stability: Canadian news media framings of international retirement migrants during the COVID‐19 pandemic
TL;DR: In this article , the authors propose a method to solve the problem of "uniformity" in the literature.en ǫ.ǫ,ǫ-ǫ
Journal Article
Interventions non eprouvees a l’etranger : Decoder les obligations ethiques et juridiques envers les patients.
Jeremy Snyder,Krystyna Adams,Yuchao Chen,Daniel W. Birch,Timothy Caulfield,I. Glenn Cohen,Valorie A. Crooks,Judy Illes,Amy Zarzeczny +8 more
TL;DR: Le tourisme medical, c’est-a-dire le fait de voyager a l’etranger pour avoir acces a des soins medicaux payes de sa poche, a suscite beaucoup d’interet dans les medias canadiens.
Journal Article
Guidelines for Reducing the Negative Public Health Impacts of Medical Tourism
Jeremy Snyder,Valorie A. Crooks +1 more
TL;DR: International travel for medical care, or medical tourism, creates ethical and safety concerns for patients and guidelines could be developed and distributed to help address these concerns, but they may at the same time appear to endorse this practice.
Journal ArticleDOI
Relational, community-based and practical: Support systems used by Canadian spousal caregivers living seasonally in the United States.
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore the transnational systems of support that Canadian international retirement migrant spousal caregivers draw upon to enable them to provide care while in the US, and highlight the benefits of close social relations enjoyed by international retirement migrants providing informal care to mitigate the lack of access to their established support networks at home.