N
Nanette Silverberg
Researcher at Mount Sinai Health System
Publications - 4
Citations - 936
Nanette Silverberg is an academic researcher from Mount Sinai Health System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Payment & Isotretinoin. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications receiving 631 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Guidelines of care for the management of acne vulgaris
Andrea L. Zaenglein,Arun L. Pathy,Bethanee J. Schlosser,Ali Alikhan,Hilary Baldwin,Diane Berson,Diane Berson,Whitney P. Bowe,Emmy M. Graber,Julie C Harper,Sewon Kang,Jonette E. Keri,James J. Leyden,Rachel V. Reynolds,Nanette Silverberg,Linda Stein Gold,Megha M. Tollefson,Jonathan S. Weiss,Nancy C. Dolan,Andrew A. Sagan,Mackenzie Stern,Kevin Boyer,Reva Bhushan +22 more
TL;DR: Issues from grading of acne to the topical and systemic management of the disease are reviewed and suggestions on use are provided based on available evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Concomitant atopic dermatitis and narcolepsy type 1: psychiatric implications and challenges in management
TL;DR: A case of a patient with concomitant refractory AD and NT1 is presented and the current research on their immunological relationship and the challenges in management relative to disease burden and psychiatric comorbidities are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical Safety and Pharmacokinetics of FMX101 4% Topical Minocycline Foam in Pediatric Patients for the Treatment of Moderate-to-Severe Acne Vulgaris
Lawrence Eichenfield,L. Stein Gold,Nanette Silverberg,Tooraj Joseph Raoof,Deirdre Hooper,Angela Yen Moore,Martin Zaiac,T Sullivan,Leon H Kircik,Edward Lain,Sunil Dhawan,T.A. Jones,Jonathan S. Weiss,Zoe Diana Draelos,Herman Ellman,T deVries,J Jankicevic,Iain Stuart +17 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to solve the problem of unstructured data. But it requires not available data sets, which is not available in this paper, and
Journal ArticleDOI
A cross-sectional survey on patient perception of subject payment for research
TL;DR: Differences in mind-set towards clinical trials demonstrate older patients and individuals without a high school education may have differing opinions with regards to financial incentives in clinical trials and sensitivity towards these attitudes may require alternative models of payment for future clinical trials.