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Richard A. Brown

Researcher at University of Texas at Austin

Publications -  307
Citations -  18169

Richard A. Brown is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Smoking cessation & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 287 publications receiving 16860 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard A. Brown include University of Dundee & Oregon Research Institute.

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Primary Care Physicians’ Beliefs and Practices Regarding E-Cigarette Use by Patients Who Smoke: A Qualitative Assessment

TL;DR: Findings suggest that some PCPs are currently recommending e-cigarettes to their patients for smoking cessation and relative harm reduction, often personalizing recommendations based on the patient’s perceived addiction level and current health status.
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Recurrent Event Analysis of Lapse and Recovery in a Smoking Cessation Clinical Trial Using Bupropion

TL;DR: In this article, a reanalysis of data from a prior study describing the event history of quitting smoking aided by bupropion, using recurrent-event models to determine the effect of the drug on occurrence of lapses and recoveries from lapse (resumption of abstinence).
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Marital Violence Victimization and Perpetration Among Women Substance Abusers A Descriptive Study

TL;DR: Overall, the study suggests that marital violence victimization and perpetration by female patients and their male partners declined following the females' substance abuse treatment.
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Sleep disturbances in the rotenone animal model of Parkinson disease.

TL;DR: The RT-PD rat model is associated with large long-term sleep disruption, however, the vehicle, DMSO/PEG had as large an effect as RT on sleep, thus changes in sleep cannot be ascribed to loss of dopaminergic cells.
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Development of a question prompt list as a communication intervention to reduce racial disparities in cancer treatment.

TL;DR: A question prompt list (QPL) is developed, a simple tool that can be used to improve communication, and thus treatment, during clinical interactions in which oncologists and Black patients discuss chemotherapy.