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Stephanie L. Mayne

Researcher at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Publications -  56
Citations -  1930

Stephanie L. Mayne is an academic researcher from Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Population. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1380 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephanie L. Mayne include Drexel University & University of Pennsylvania.

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Cervical cancer screening among immigrants and ethnic minorities: a systematic review using the Health Belief Model.

TL;DR: Culturally relevant screening strategies and programs that address sociocultural factors influencing cervical cancer screening among immigrant and ethnic minorities in the United States must be developed to address the growing disparity in cervical cancer burden among underserved, resource-poor populations.
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Impact of policy and built environment changes on obesity-related outcomes: a systematic review of naturally occurring experiments.

TL;DR: This systematic review examined the use of natural‐ or quasi‐experiments to evaluate the efficacy of policy and built environment changes on obesity‐related outcomes (body mass index, diet or physical activity) and found studies varied widely in the strength of their design.
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Effectiveness of Decision Support for Families, Clinicians, or Both on HPV Vaccine Receipt

TL;DR: A clinician- focused intervention was most effective for initiating the HPV vaccination series, whereas a family-focused intervention promoted completion.
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Parent-reported outcomes of a shared decision-making portal in asthma: a practice-based RCT.

TL;DR: Use of an EHR-linked asthma portal was feasible and acceptable to families and improved clinically meaningful outcomes, and parents reported that use improved their communication with the office, ability to manage asthma, and awareness of the importance of ongoing attention to treatment.
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COVID-19 and Changes in Child Obesity.

TL;DR: Jenssen et al. as discussed by the authors evaluated the shifting rates of obesity for patients attending visits and explored disparities based on age, race and ethnicity, insurance, and income of patients.