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Roger T. Anderson

Researcher at University of Virginia

Publications -  228
Citations -  10570

Roger T. Anderson is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health care. The author has an hindex of 51, co-authored 209 publications receiving 9567 citations. Previous affiliations of Roger T. Anderson include Research Triangle Park & Ohio State University.

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Pathophysiological characterization of isolated diastolic heart failure in comparison to systolic heart failure.

TL;DR: Patients with isolated DHF have similar though not as severe pathophysiologic characteristics compared with patients with typical SHF, including severely reduced exercise capacity, neuroendocrine activation, and impaired quality of life.
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Developing and evaluating cross-cultural instruments from minimum requirements to optimal models

TL;DR: Major approaches to developing international HRQL measures are reviewed, and various methods and criteria that have been recommended for evaluating measurement equivalence in comparisons of research across national and cultural contexts are discussed.
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Psychometric considerations in evaluating health-related quality of life measures.

TL;DR: Issues regarding the evaluation of reliability and validity (including responsiveness) in psychometric evaluation procedures applied to HRQL measures are discussed.
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Predictors of medication adherence and associated health care costs in an older population with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a longitudinal cohort study.

TL;DR: Adherence to anti-diabetic medications was a greater driver of cost reduction than other concurrent medications in this population of older adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus in a managed care setting.
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Willing to wait?: The influence of patient wait time on satisfaction with primary care

TL;DR: The time spent with the physician is a stronger predictor of patient satisfaction than is the time spent in the waiting room, and shortening patient waiting times at the expense of time spending with the patient to improve patient satisfaction scores would be counter-productive.