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Lijing L Yan

Researcher at Duke University

Publications -  39
Citations -  28486

Lijing L Yan is an academic researcher from Duke University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 11 publications receiving 22518 citations.

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Health Professionals Perceptions of Disparities in Hypertension Control: a Mixed Methods Study.

TL;DR: This explorative study finds that health professionals predominantly attribute disparities in hypertension control to patient-level factors, while awareness of disparities was lower for more proximate healthcare settings.
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The association between self-rated health and all-cause mortality and explanatory factors in China’s oldest-old population

TL;DR: Self-rated health is significantly associated with all-cause mortality among the oldest old population in China, particularly among men and the educated, and is considerably explained by regular physical activity, leisure activity, ADL, and cognitive function.
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Strengthening urban primary healthcare service delivery using electronic health technologies: A qualitative study in urban Nepal

TL;DR: This qualitative study seeks to understand the perceived awareness, benefits, and determinants of electronic health uptake in Nepal, focusing on primary healthcare center-level non-communicable disease management.
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Family support and medication adherence among residents with hypertension in informal settlements of Nairobi, Kenya: a mixed-method study

TL;DR: The lack of health knowledge among this population may have contributed to a failure for family support to meaningfully translate into improvements in medication adherence, and the need for further research to improve hypertension control among this uniquely disadvantaged population is underscore.
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Environmental greenspace, subjective well-being, and all-cause mortality in elderly Chinese: Association and mediation study in a prospective cohort.

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors conducted a mediation analysis on greenspace and all-cause mortality through improving subjective well-being (SWB) in a prospective cohort of Chinese older adults.