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Tamera Coyne-Beasley

Researcher at University of Alabama at Birmingham

Publications -  147
Citations -  4745

Tamera Coyne-Beasley is an academic researcher from University of Alabama at Birmingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 126 publications receiving 3517 citations. Previous affiliations of Tamera Coyne-Beasley include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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Implicit Racial/Ethnic Bias Among Health Care Professionals and Its Influence on Health Care Outcomes: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: Although some associations between implicit bias and health care outcomes were nonsignificant, results showed that implicit bias was significantly related to patient-provider interactions, treatment decisions, treatment adherence, and patient health outcomes.
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Patient reminder and recall interventions to improve immunization rates

TL;DR: Evaluating the effectiveness of various types of patient reminder and recall interventions to improve receipt of immunizations in children, adolescents, and adults in 10 countries and presenting pooled results for randomized trials using the random-effects model.
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Heterosexually transmitted HIV infection among African Americans in North Carolina.

TL;DR: Although most heterosexually transmitted HIV infection among African Americans in the South is associated with established high-risk characteristics, poverty may be an underlying determinant of these behaviors and a contributor to infection risk even in people who do not have high- risk behaviors.
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Aligning the Goals of Community-Engaged Research: Why and How Academic Health Centers Can Successfully Engage With Communities to Improve Health

TL;DR: Five steps are suggested by the authors to assist academic health centers (AHCs) in learning how to better engage with their communities and build a CEnR agenda by suggesting five steps: defining community and identifying partners, learning the etiquette of CE, building a sustainable network of CenR researchers, recognizing that CEnr will require the development of new methodologies, and improving translation and dissemination plans.
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Unintentional injuries in the home in the United States: Part II: Morbidity

TL;DR: Specific home injury issues include falls among older adults, poisonings among middle-aged adults, fire/burn injuries among older adult and children, and inhalation/suffocation and drowning among young children.