K
Knoll Larkin
Researcher at Wayne State University
Publications - 6
Citations - 203
Knoll Larkin is an academic researcher from Wayne State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Race and health & Rubric. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 123 citations. Previous affiliations of Knoll Larkin include University of Michigan.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Prevalence of and Factors Associated With Patient Nondisclosure of Medically Relevant Information to Clinicians.
Andrea Gurmankin Levy,Aaron M. Scherer,Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher,Knoll Larkin,Geoffrey D. Barnes,Angela Fagerlin +5 more
TL;DR: Patients commonly withhold medically relevant information from their clinicians, a pattern that likely inhibits the quality of patient care.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patient Reflections on Decision Making for Laryngeal Cancer Treatment
Andrew G. Shuman,Knoll Larkin,Dorothy Thomas,Frank L. Palmer,Joseph J. Fins,Shrujal S. Baxi,Nancy Y. Lee,Jatin P. Shah,Angela Fagerlin,Snehal G. Patel +9 more
TL;DR: Patients’ priorities and attitudes, coupled with functional outcomes and professional referral patterns, influence how patients reflect on their choices regarding management of laryngeal cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Impact of Numeracy on Verbatim Knowledge of the Longitudinal Risk for Prostate Cancer Recurrence following Radiation Therapy
Daniel A. Hamstra,Skyler B. Johnson,Stephanie Daignault,Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher,Jeremy M. G. Taylor,Knoll Larkin,Alexander Wood,Angela Fagerlin +7 more
TL;DR: For longitudinal presentation of risk, baseline numeracy was strongly prognostic for outcome, however, the addition of numbers to risk graphs improved only the delivery of verbatim knowledge for subjects with lower numeracy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of Patient Nondisclosures to Clinicians of Experiencing Imminent Threats.
Andrea Gurmankin Levy,Aaron M. Scherer,Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher,Knoll Larkin,Geoffrey D. Barnes,Angela Fagerlin +5 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that concerns about potential negative repercussions may lead many patients who experience imminent threats to avoid disclosing this information to their clinician.
Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding the Role of Message Frames on African-American Willingness to Participate in a Hypothetical Diabetes Prevention Study.
TL;DR: Highlighting race and health disparities in study recruitment materials may not be needed to increase interest among AAs, and factors beyond race appear to be stronger motivators for participation.