S
Shivan J. Mehta
Researcher at University of Pennsylvania
Publications - 97
Citations - 1546
Shivan J. Mehta is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Randomized controlled trial. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 80 publications receiving 997 citations. Previous affiliations of Shivan J. Mehta include Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics & Veterans Health Administration.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Effectiveness of screening colonoscopy in reducing the risk of death from right and left colon cancer: a large community-based study.
Chyke A. Doubeni,Douglas A. Corley,Virginia P. Quinn,Christopher D. Jensen,Ann G. Zauber,Michael Goodman,Jill R. Johnson,Shivan J. Mehta,Tracy A Becerra,Wei K. Zhao,Joanne Schottinger,V. Paul Doria-Rose,Theodore R. Levin,Noel S. Weiss,Robert H. Fletcher +14 more
TL;DR: Screening colonoscopy was associated with a substantial and comparably decreased mortality risk for both right-sided and left-sided cancers within a large community-based population.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Electronic Reminders, Financial Incentives, and Social Support on Outcomes After Myocardial Infarction: The HeartStrong Randomized Clinical Trial
Kevin G. Volpp,Andrea B. Troxel,Andrea B. Troxel,Shivan J. Mehta,Laurie Norton,Jingsan Zhu,Raymond Lim,Wenli Wang,Noora Marcus,Christian Terwiesch,Kristen Caldarella,Tova Levin,Mike Relish,Nathan S. Negin,Aaron Smith-McLallen,Richard Snyder,Claire M. Spettell,Brian M. Drachman,Daniel M. Kolansky,David A. Asch +19 more
TL;DR: A compound intervention integrating wireless pill bottles, lottery-based incentives, and social support did not significantly improve medication adherence or vascular readmission outcomes for AMI survivors.
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Patient Satisfaction Reporting and Its Implications for Patient Care.
TL;DR: Although measures of patient satisfaction are being used to improve patients’ hospital experience, implementing incentives based on these measures may be premature and have unintended consequences for care delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Screening Across Healthcare Systems
Andrea N. Burnett-Hartman,Shivan J. Mehta,Yingye Zheng,Nirupa R. Ghai,Dale McLerran,Jessica Chubak,Virginia P. Quinn,Celette Sugg Skinner,Douglas A. Corley,John M. Inadomi,Chyke A. Doubeni +10 more
TL;DR: Racial/ethnic differences in CRC screening vary across healthcare systems, particularly for blacks, and may be more pronounced in systems with intensive CRC screening approaches.
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NCCN Guidelines Insights: Colorectal Cancer Screening, Version 2.2020.
Dawn Provenzale,Reid M. Ness,Xavier Llor,Jennifer M. Weiss,Benjamin Abbadessa,Gregory S. Cooper,Dayna S. Early,Mark Friedman,Francis M. Giardiello,Kathryn M. Glaser,Suryakanth R. Gurudu,Amy L. Halverson,Rachel B. Issaka,Rishi Jain,Priyanka Kanth,Trilokesh D. Kidambi,Audrey J. Lazenby,Lillias H. Maguire,Arnold J. Markowitz,Folasade P. May,Robert J. Mayer,Shivan J. Mehta,Swati G. Patel,Shajan Peter,Peter P. Stanich,Jonathan P. Terdiman,Jennifer Keller,Mary A. Dwyer,Ndiya Ogba +28 more
TL;DR: These NCCN Guidelines Insights focus on select recent updates to the N CCN Guidelines, including a section on primary and secondary CRC prevention, and provide context for the panel's recommendations regarding the age to initiate screening in average risk individuals and follow-up for low-risk adenomas.