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Marshall H. Chin

Researcher at University of Chicago

Publications -  275
Citations -  28049

Marshall H. Chin is an academic researcher from University of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health equity. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 247 publications receiving 25804 citations. Previous affiliations of Marshall H. Chin include University of Illinois at Chicago & MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics.

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Utilization and dosing of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors for heart failure. Effect of physician specialty and patient characteristics.

TL;DR: To determine if physician specialty is associated with underutilization and underdosing of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors among patients with heart failure, charts of 214 outpatients with decreased systolic function at an urban academic medical center were reviewed.
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How is shared decision-making defined among African-Americans with diabetes?

TL;DR: Patients stressed the value of being able to "tell their story and be heard" by physicians, emphasized the importance of information sharing rather than decision-making sharing, and included an acceptable role for non-adherence as a mechanism to express control and act on treatment preferences.
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The Impact of Patient Preferences on the Cost-Effectiveness of Intensive Glucose Control in Older Patients With New-Onset Diabetes

TL;DR: The cost- effectiveness of intensive glucose control in older patients with new-onset diabetes is highly sensitive to assumptions regarding quality of life with treatments, and cost-effectiveness analyses of diabetes care should consider the sensitivity of results to alternative utility assumptions.
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Provider perceptions of limited health literacy in community health centers

TL;DR: Training in health literacy is associated with increased usage of evidence-based techniques to assist patients with LHL, and providers estimate LHL to be highly prevalent in their HCs, and use various techniques to assistance patients.
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How are religion and spirituality related to health? A study of physicians' perspectives.

TL;DR: Empirical evidence for a “faith-health connection” may have little influence on physicians’ conceptions of and approaches to religion in the patient encounter.