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Stacy Sterling

Researcher at Kaiser Permanente

Publications -  120
Citations -  2038

Stacy Sterling is an academic researcher from Kaiser Permanente. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 99 publications receiving 1483 citations. Previous affiliations of Stacy Sterling include University of California, San Francisco.

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Journal Article

Integrating care for people with co-occurring alcohol and other drug, medical, and mental health conditions.

TL;DR: Although few studies have been done in this field, findings suggest that patients receiving integrated treatment may have improved outcomes, and barriers to the implementation of integrative models, such as one proposed by the Institute of Medicine, remain.
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Twelve-Step affiliation and 3-year substance use outcomes among adolescents: social support and religious service attendance as potential mediators

TL;DR: The findings suggest the importance of 12-Step affiliation in maintaining long-term recovery, and help to understand the mechanism through which it works among adolescents.
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Physician versus non-physician delivery of alcohol screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment in adult primary care: the ADVISe cluster randomized controlled implementation trial

TL;DR: Screening by MAs with intervention and referral by physicians as needed can be a feasible model for increasing the implementation of this critical and under-utilized preventive health service within currently predominant primary care models.
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Screening for adolescent alcohol and drug use in pediatric health-care settings: predictors and implications for practice and policy

TL;DR: Organizational factors, lack of training, and discomfort with AOD screening may impact adolescent substance-abuse screening and intervention, but organizational approaches may matter more than PCP or patient factors in determining screening.
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Peer influences on adolescent alcohol and other drug use outcomes.

TL;DR: Although family environment is an important factor in the development of AOD problems in adolescents, it did not play a significant role in treatment success, and the quality of adolescent peer networks did independently predict positive outcomes.