L
Lucinda L. Bryant
Researcher at Anschutz Medical Campus
Publications - 55
Citations - 2483
Lucinda L. Bryant is an academic researcher from Anschutz Medical Campus. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health promotion & Public health. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 55 publications receiving 2216 citations. Previous affiliations of Lucinda L. Bryant include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & University of Colorado Denver.
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Journal ArticleDOI
In their own words: a model of healthy aging.
TL;DR: By reframing healthy aging in older people's own terms, this model encourages interdisciplinary support of their desired goals and outcomes rather than only medical approaches to deficits and challenges.
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Inappropriate prescribing in the hospitalized elderly patient: Defining the problem, evaluation tools, and possible solutions
TL;DR: Critical issues surrounding PIM prescribing in the acute care setting such as risk factors, screening tools, and potential strategies to minimize this significant public health problem are highlighted.
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Effects of the built environment on physical activity of adults living in rural settings
Stephanie S. Frost,R. Turner Goins,Rebecca H. Hunter,Steven P. Hooker,Lucinda L. Bryant,Judy Kruger,Delores M. Pluto +6 more
TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature to examine the influence of the built environment on the physical activity of adults in rural settings found associations among elements of the BE and PA among adults appear to differ between rural and urban areas.
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Effectiveness of a Group Outpatient Visit Model for Chronically Ill Older Health Maintenance Organization Members: A 2‐Year Randomized Trial of the Cooperative Health Care Clinic
John C. Scott,Douglas A. Conner,Ingrid Venohr,Glenn Gade,Marlene McKenzie,Andrew M. Kramer,Lucinda L. Bryant,Arne Beck +7 more
TL;DR: A group outpatient model for chronically ill, older health maintenance organization (HMO) patients with usual care is compared to usual care to compare the effectiveness of this model.
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Lower-body function, neighborhoods, and walking in an older population.
William A. Satariano,Susan L. Ivey,Elaine Kurtovich,Melissa Kealey,Alan Hubbard,Constance M. Bayles,Lucinda L. Bryant,Rebecca H. Hunter,Thomas R. Prohaska +8 more
TL;DR: Neighborhood type is associated with walking among older people, as it is among the general adult population, and in individuals with poor lower-body function, no association was found between residence in a less-compact area and walking.