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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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Diffusivity of gold in amorphous silicon measured by the artificial multilayer technique

TL;DR: In this article, the diffusivities over the temperature range 200 −260°C have an Arrhenius type temperature dependence with an activation enthalpy of about 1.3 eV, and are in agreement with the extrapolation of published higher temperature data.
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Impact of a cardiology data bank on physicians' prognostic estimates. Evidence that cardiology fellows change their estimates to become as accurate as the faculty.

TL;DR: To determine whether physicians would be influenced by the prognostic information in a large coronary artery disease data bank, cardiology faculty and fellows made initial estimates of the prognoses of their patients and then made revised final estimates after seeing the outcome of matched patients from the data bank.
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Using Stress Testing to Guide Primary Prevention of Coronary Heart Disease Among Intermediate-Risk Patients A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis

TL;DR: Noninvasive cardiac stress testing to target preventive medications is not cost effective unless it substantially improves adherence and stress electrocardiography could be cost effective in persons initially nonadherent to the treat-all strategy.
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Relation of peak creatine kinase levels during acute myocardial infarction to presence or absence of previous manifestations of myocardial ischemia (angina pectoris or healed myocardial infarction).

TL;DR: Patients with acute MI without previous angina or healed MI have substantially higher peak CK and CK-MB levels; this implies a larger MI than in patients with previousAngina or healable MI.