S
Sarah Gehlert
Researcher at Washington University in St. Louis
Publications - 120
Citations - 4153
Sarah Gehlert is an academic researcher from Washington University in St. Louis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health equity & Population. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 115 publications receiving 3620 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Gehlert include University of Washington & University of Illinois at Chicago.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Approaching Health Disparities From a Population Perspective: The National Institutes of Health Centers for Population Health and Health Disparities
Richard B. Warnecke,April Oh,Nancy Breen,Sarah Gehlert,Electra D. Paskett,Electra D. Paskett,Katherine L. Tucker,Nicole Lurie,Timothy R. Rebbeck,James S. Goodwin,John M. Flack,Shobha Srinivasan,Jon Kerner,Suzanne Heurtin-Roberts,Ronald P. Abeles,Frederick L. Tyson,Georgeanne Patmios,Robert A. Hiatt +17 more
TL;DR: The National Institutes of Health-sponsored Centers for Population Health and Health Disparities are the first federal initiative to support transdisciplinary multilevel research on the determinants of health disparities.
Journal ArticleDOI
Symptom patterns of premenstrual dysphoric disorder as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV.
TL;DR: Variation was found across phases of cycle and groups, with five factors predominating: anger/irritability, depressed mood, anxiety/tension, decreased energy and interest with physical symptoms, and (5) eating problems.
Journal ArticleDOI
Targeting Health Disparities: A Model Linking Upstream Determinants To Downstream Interventions
Sarah Gehlert,Dana Sohmer,Tina K. Sacks,Charles Mininger,Martha K. McClintock,Olufunmilayo I. Olopade +5 more
TL;DR: This approach identifies how specific social environments "get under the skin" to cause disease, illustrated with the disparity in mortality from aggressive premenopausal breast cancer suffered by black women.
Journal ArticleDOI
Applying What We Know to Accelerate Cancer Prevention
TL;DR: To achieve maximal possible cancer prevention, better ways to implement what the authors know and improved infrastructure that will better incentivize and support transdisciplinary, multilevel research and successful intervention are needed.
Targeting Health Disparities: A Model Linking Upstream Determinants To Downstream
TL;DR: This paper presented a downward causal model, originating at the population level and ending at disease, with psychological and be- havioral responses linking the two, to identify how specific social environ- ments "get under the skin" to cause disease, illustrated with the disparity in mortality from aggressive premenopausal breast cancer suffered by black women.