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Lee Goldman

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  194
Citations -  27928

Lee Goldman is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cost effectiveness & Myocardial infarction. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 191 publications receiving 27129 citations. Previous affiliations of Lee Goldman include University of California, Berkeley & Brigham and Women's Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of perioperative cardiac risk.

TL;DR: About 10 percent of the U.S. population undergoes noncardiac surgery each year, and the risk of a perioperative myocardial infarction with major surgery is higher in those who are older or have cardiovascular disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Noncardiac Surgery in Patients Receiving Propranolol: Case Reports and a Recommended Approach

Lee Goldman
TL;DR: Continuation of propranolol up to the time of surgery appears safe from an anesthetic standpoint and may also help to postpone the risk of the withdrawal rebound syndrome until after oral propr ethanol therapy can be reinstituted.
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Is Experience a Good Teacher? How Interns and Attending Physicians Understand Patients' Choices for End-of-life Care

TL;DR: Attending physicians should not assume that they can infer patients' preferences any better than the interns caring for these hospitalized patients, and neither medical interns nor their attending physicians were consistently accurate in assessing Patients' preferences.
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Cost-Effectiveness of Dual-Chamber Pacing Compared With Ventricular Pacing for Sinus Node Dysfunction

TL;DR: For patients with sick sinus syndrome requiring pacing, dual-chamber pacing increases quality-adjusted life expectancy at a cost that is generally considered acceptable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of physician experience on triage of emergency room patients with acute chest pain at three teaching hospitals.

TL;DR: As the experience of the physician who performed the initial evaluation increased, there was a lower threshold for admitting all patients with and without AMI, AIHD, or major complications to the CCU and hospital without a detectable improvement in diagnostic accuracy.