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Kristin L. Nichol

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  146
Citations -  13612

Kristin L. Nichol is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Influenza vaccine. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 146 publications receiving 13040 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristin L. Nichol include HealthPartners & University of Maryland, Baltimore.

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High yield of chest radiography in walk-in clinic patients with chest symptoms

TL;DR: Adult patients similar to those described in this study who present to a walk-in clinic with a chief complaint of cough, dyspnea, or pleuritic chest pain have a high likelihood of having new clinically important abnormalities found on their chest radiographs.
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Innovative approaches for understanding seasonal influenza vaccine declination in healthcare personnel support development of new campaign strategies.

TL;DR: Results should guide interventions that tailor messages on the basis of particular reasons for declination in employees of a large integrated healthcare system and to identify underlying constructs that influence acceptance versus declination.
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Agreement between Internet-Based Self- and Proxy-Reported Health Care Resource Utilization and Administrative Health Care Claims

TL;DR: This study's agreement values suggest that Internet-based surveys are an effective method to collect self- and proxy-reported HCRU data and should increase confidence in the use of the Internet for evaluating disease burden.
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The effect of fish oil supplements on blood pressure

TL;DR: No significant changes from the pretreatment value in systolic or diastolic blood pressure with the use of fish oil supplements are found with the using of fish and safflower oil supplements.
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Safety of influenza vaccinations administered in nontraditional settings.

TL;DR: It is concluded that influenza vaccine administration in mass vaccination clinics is safe and adverse events after influenza vaccination in NTS are extremely low.