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Susan L. Stewart

Researcher at University of California, Davis

Publications -  202
Citations -  9254

Susan L. Stewart is an academic researcher from University of California, Davis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Vietnamese. The author has an hindex of 47, co-authored 193 publications receiving 8395 citations. Previous affiliations of Susan L. Stewart include University of San Francisco & University of California.

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Cognitive Interviews of Vietnamese Americans on Healthy Eating and Physical Activity Health Educational Materials.

TL;DR: This is the first study to document that family eating style poses a challenge for estimating food intake among Vietnamese Americans and Cognitive interviewing is a useful method to improve comprehension, retention, and cultural appropriateness of health educational materials.
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Pediatric En Bloc Kidney Transplants: Clinical and Immediate Postoperative US Factors Associated with Vascular Thrombosis.

TL;DR: Clinical factors and immediate US findings can help stratify patients receiving pediatric en bloc kidneys into risk categories for vascular thrombosis that, if proven in prospective studies, could affect immediate postoperative treatment.
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Engaging limited English proficient and ethnically diverse low-income women in health research: A randomized trial of a patient navigator intervention.

TL;DR: Community-based navigators are a trusted, and therefore promising link between health research and low-income underserved communities, however, systemic barriers in health research infrastructures need to be addressed to include low income, LEP and immigrant populations.
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Preferences for Depression Help-Seeking Among Vietnamese American Adults.

TL;DR: This population-based study of Vietnamese Americans highlights promising channels to deliver education about depression and effective help-seeking resources, particularly the importance of family doctors and social networks.
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"There's Always Next Year": Primary Care Team and Parent Perspectives on the Human Papillomavirus Vaccine.

TL;DR: Clinician interventions to accelerate HPV vaccine uptake may benefit from a team-based approach where every member of the primary care team is delivering the same consistent messaging about the importance of timely HPV vaccination.