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Susan D. Roseff
Researcher at Virginia Commonwealth University
Publications - 41
Citations - 2304
Susan D. Roseff is an academic researcher from Virginia Commonwealth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transfusion medicine & Anemia. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 39 publications receiving 2072 citations. Previous affiliations of Susan D. Roseff include SUNY Downstate Medical Center & University of Virginia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Daily Assessment of Pain in Adults with Sickle Cell Disease
Wally R. Smith,Lynne Penberthy,Viktor E. Bovbjerg,Donna K. McClish,John D. Roberts,Bassam Dahman,Imoigele P. Aisiku,James L. Levenson,Susan D. Roseff +8 more
TL;DR: The relationship among self-reported pain, crises, and health care utilization for pain in a cohort study of patients with sickle cell disease was examined, with particular emphasis on potentially mutable, causal, nonbiological variables.
Journal ArticleDOI
Health related quality of life in sickle cell patients: The PiSCES project
Donna K. McClish,Lynne Penberthy,Viktor E. Bovbjerg,John D. Roberts,Imoigele P. Aisiku,James L. Levenson,Susan D. Roseff,Wally R. Smith +7 more
TL;DR: Health related quality of life among adults with sickle cell disease is worse than the general population, and in general, their scores were most similar to patients undergoing hemodialysis.
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Depression and anxiety in adults with sickle cell disease: the PiSCES project.
James L. Levenson,Donna K. McClish,Bassam Dahman,Viktor E. Bovbjerg,Vanessa de Albuquerque Citero,Lynne Penberthy,Imoigele P. Aisiku,John D. Roberts,Susan D. Roseff,Wally R. Smith +9 more
TL;DR: Depression and anxiety predicted more daily pain and poorer physical and mental quality- of-life in adults with SCD, and accounted for more of the variance in all domains of quality-of-life than hemoglobin type.
Journal ArticleDOI
Guidelines for assessing appropriateness of pediatric transfusion
TL;DR: This paper has been written to help transfusion services and transfusion committees have a starting point to establish their own audit guidelines for neonatal transfusion, and to help generalists and generalists who direct the transfusion service but lack specific expertise initiate guideline development.