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Steven R. Erickson

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  126
Citations -  3711

Steven R. Erickson is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Pharmacy. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 121 publications receiving 3374 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven R. Erickson include Taipei Medical University & Ferris State University.

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The concordance of self-report with other measures of medication adherence: a summary of the literature.

TL;DR: The concordance of self-report and other measures of medication adherence varies widely based on the type of measures used, and questionnaires and diaries tend to have moderate-to-high concordant with other measuresof medication adherence.
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Suboptimal Statin Adherence and Discontinuation in Primary and Secondary Prevention Populations

TL;DR: Incremental efforts, including those that decrease out-of-pocket pharmaceutical expenditures, should focus on improving adherence in high-risk populations most likely to benefit from statin use.
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Chlorthalidone Reduces Cardiovascular Events Compared With Hydrochlorothiazide: A Retrospective Cohort Analysis

TL;DR: Both HCTZ and CTD reduce CVEs compared with neither drug, suggesting that CTD may be the preferred thiazide-type diuretic for hypertension in patients at high risk of CVEs.
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Pharmacists' Ability to Influence Outcomes of Hypertension Therapy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured the impact of pharmaceutical care on outcomes of antihypertensive therapy for patients with elevated baseline blood pressures who were attending an urban university-affiliated internal medicine clinic.
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Compliance from Self-Reported versus Pharmacy Claims Data with Metered-Dose Inhalers

TL;DR: This study demonstrated a moderate correlation between self-reported asthma compliance and the compliance ratio determined using claims data, suggesting the questionnaire may be useful as a screening tool to detect noncompliant behavior in populations or individual patients with asthma.