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Mahdi Mohammadi

Researcher at Yahoo!

Publications -  103
Citations -  868

Mahdi Mohammadi is an academic researcher from Yahoo!. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 85 publications receiving 633 citations.

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Survey of the Patient Safety Culture in the Clinics and Hospitals of Chabahar, Iran

TL;DR: Findings of the present study could help justify the establishment of a positive patient safety culture in the healthcare systems, and recruitment of capable managers, who are committed to eliminating medical errors, is required for implementing the patient safetyculture.
Journal Article

MRI findings in movement disorders and associated sleep disturbances.

TL;DR: In this paper , the role of MRI findings in movement disorders and sleep disturbances was examined. But the authors only looked at research that explored MRI modality together with movement problems, sleep disorders, and brain area involvement.
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Combined effects of the exposure to silver nanoparticles and noise on hearing function and cochlea structure of the male rats.

TL;DR: Sub-acute exposure to noise and Ag-NPs causes permanent damage to the hair cells that are in charge of high-frequency perception, according to the findings of this study.
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The Experiences of Mobile Populations About Malaria Control in Southeastern Iran Using the PEN-3 Cultural Model: A Qualitative Study

TL;DR: The experiences of mobile populations about malaria control in Southeastern Iran are investigated to examine the views and experiences of the participants about malaria during their travels and the cultural characteristics of immigrants are focused on.
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Effects of Personality Style, Negative Stressful Events, and Social Support on Quality of Life and Depression in Multiple Sclerosis Patients

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the impact of personality style, negative, stressful events, and social support on depression and the quality of life of MS patients, and found that the moderating effect was more significant in the sociotropic group than in the autonomous group.