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Natalie A. Rivadeneira

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  21
Citations -  267

Natalie A. Rivadeneira is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications receiving 112 citations. Previous affiliations of Natalie A. Rivadeneira include Drexel University & San Francisco General Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Patient Engagement In Health Care Safety: An Overview Of Mixed-Quality Evidence

TL;DR: Robust evidence supporting patients' self-management of anticoagulation medications and mixed-quality evidence supporting patient engagement in medication and chronic disease self- management, adverse event reporting, and medical record accuracy are identified.
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Social Media as a Tool to Promote Health Awareness: Results from an Online Cervical Cancer Prevention Study.

TL;DR: It is found that HPV awareness can be increased through brief participation in an online social media platform and receipt of tailored health messages, and in response to whether participants had ever heard of HPV.
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Factors associated with biomedical research participation within community-based samples across 3 National Cancer Institute-designated cancer centers.

TL;DR: This study examined factors associated with an invitation to participate in biomedical research, intent to participateIn biomedical research in the future, and participation in biomedicalResearch and biospecimen donation among a diverse, multilingual, community‐based sample across 3 distinct geographic areas.
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Health Information-seeking Behaviors and Preferences of a Diverse, Multilingual Urban Cohort.

TL;DR: Among vulnerable populations, smartphone ownership and language preferences impact preferences for seeking and receiving health information and need to be considered in designing health messages.
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The Use of Technology for Communicating With Clinicians or Seeking Health Information in a Multilingual Urban Cohort: Cross-Sectional Survey.

TL;DR: No single factor was associated with higher odds of using technology for all health purposes; therefore, existing disparities in the use of digital health tools among diverse and vulnerable populations can only be addressed using a multipronged approach.