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Joan Russo

Researcher at Harborview Medical Center

Publications -  7
Citations -  1699

Joan Russo is an academic researcher from Harborview Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Discriminant validity & Concurrent validity. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1685 citations.

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The MOS 36-Item Short Form Health Survey: reliability, validity, and preliminary findings in schizophrenic outpatients.

TL;DR: The validity of using the written form of the SF-36 on a sample of patients with chronic mental illness was demonstrated and appears to be an appropriate outcome measure for changes in physical and role functioning in consumers of outpatient mental health programs.
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Reevaluating the association between emergency department heart rate and the development of posttraumatic stress disorder: A public health approach

TL;DR: Emergency department HR > or = 95 beats per minute (BPM) was a significant independent predictor of PTSD symptoms in analyses that adjusted for relevant injury, clinical, and demographic characteristics.
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The effect of changes in depression on health related quality of life (HRQoL) in HIV infection.

TL;DR: HIV/AIDS patients with a major depressive disorder who completed the clinical trial demonstrated a reduction in depression with response to treatment and a significant improvement in HRQoL with the exception of work and financial functioning, suggesting that medications may not be required to affect HRZoL outcomes.
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A randomized trial of collaborative depression care in obstetrics and gynecology clinics: socioeconomic disadvantage and treatment response.

TL;DR: Collaborative depression care adapted to obstetrics-gynecology settings had a greater impact on depression outcomes for socially disadvantaged women with no insurance or with public coverage compared with women with commercial insurance.
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The relationship of patient-administered outcome assessments to quality of life and physician ratings: Validity of the BASIS-32

TL;DR: The reliability and validity of a patient-administered version of the Behavior and Symptom Identification Scale (BASIS-32) was compared to the original interviewer-administering version and it was revealed that functional and satisfaction QOLI indices were moderately related to the BASis-32 in the hypothesized directions.