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Jessica M Beroes

Researcher at Veterans Health Administration

Publications -  44
Citations -  2315

Jessica M Beroes is an academic researcher from Veterans Health Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medical encyclopedia & Systematic review. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 44 publications receiving 1864 citations. Previous affiliations of Jessica M Beroes include University of California, Los Angeles & West Los Angeles College.

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Journal Article

Electronic Patient Portals: Evidence on Health Outcomes, Satisfaction, Efficiency, and Attitudes

TL;DR: Evidence that patient portals improve health outcomes, cost, or utilization is insufficient, and better understanding requires studies that include details about context, implementation factors, and cost.
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Electronic Patient Portals: Evidence on Health Outcomes, Satisfaction, Efficiency, and Attitudes: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature reporting the effect of patient portals on clinical care is presented in this article, where the authors focus on the effects of portals on patient outcomes, satisfaction, adherence, efficiency, utilization, attitudes, and patient characteristics.
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Mental Health Conditions Among Patients Seeking and Undergoing Bariatric Surgery: A Meta-analysis

TL;DR: Moderate-quality evidence supports an association between bariatric surgery and lower rates of depression postoperatively, and there is inconsistent evidence regarding the association between preoperative mental health conditions and postoperative weight loss.
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Association of Spinal Manipulative Therapy With Clinical Benefit and Harm for Acute Low Back Pain: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A systematic review of studies of the effectiveness and harms of spinal manipulative therapy (SMT) for acute (≤6 weeks) low back pain is presented in this paper. But the authors did not identify any serious adverse events such as increased pain, muscle stiffness and headache.
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Wrong-Site Surgery, Retained Surgical Items, and Surgical Fires : A Systematic Review of Surgical Never Events

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the incidence and root causes of and interventions to prevent wrong-site surgery, retained surgical items, and surgical fires in the era after the implementation of the Universal Protocol in 2004.