T
Thomas K. Greenfield
Researcher at University of California, San Francisco
Publications - 278
Citations - 15673
Thomas K. Greenfield is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Population. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 268 publications receiving 14272 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas K. Greenfield include University of Toronto & California Pacific Medical Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Quality of life and satisfaction with outcome among prostate-cancer survivors.
Martin G. Sanda,Rodney L. Dunn,Jeff M. Michalski,Howard M. Sandler,Laurel L. Northouse,Larry Hembroff,Xihong Lin,Thomas K. Greenfield,Mark S. Litwin,Mark S. Litwin,Christopher S. Saigal,Arul Mahadevan,Eric A. Klein,Adam S. Kibel,Louis L. Pisters,Deborah A. Kuban,Irving D. Kaplan,Darien Wood,Jay P. Ciezki,Nikhil L. Shah,John T. Wei +20 more
TL;DR: Each prostate-cancer treatment was associated with a distinct pattern of change in quality-of-life domains related to urinary, sexual, bowel, and hormonal function, and these changes influenced satisfaction with treatment outcomes among patients and their spouses or partners.
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Gender differences in alcohol consumption and adverse drinking consequences: cross‐cultural patterns
Richard W. Wilsnack,Nancy D. Vogeltanz,Sharon C. Wilsnack,T R Harris,Salme Ahlström,Susan J. Bondy,Ladislav Csémy,R Ferrence,Jason Ferris,Jillian Fleming,Kathryn Graham,Thomas K. Greenfield,L Guyon,E Haavio-Mannila,F Kellner,Ronald A. Knibbe,Luděk Kubička,M Loukomskaia,H Mustonen,L Nadeau,A Narusk,Rudie J. M. Neve,Giora Rahav,Meir Teichman,K Trocki,I Webster,S Weiss +26 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that gender roles may amplify biological differences in reactions to alcohol, and that gender differences in drinking behavior may be modified by macrosocial factors that modify gender role contrasts.
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Screening for depression in primary care clinics: the CES-D and the BDI.
TL;DR: Results suggested that either the CES-D or BDI might assist physicians in reliably detecting depressed patients, without an overload of false positives, and compared with those from other studies suggest that depression screening instruments may be particularly helpful with older primary care patients.
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The more you drink, the harder you fall: A systematic review and meta-analysis of how acute alcohol consumption and injury or collision risk increase together
Bruce Taylor,Hyacinth Irving,Fotis Kanteres,Robin Room,Robin Room,Guilherme Borges,Cheryl J. Cherpitel,Thomas K. Greenfield,Jürgen Rehm +8 more
TL;DR: No level of consumption is safe when driving and less than 2 drinks per occasion should be encouraged to reduce the risk of injury, and efforts to reduce drinking both on an individual level and a population level are important.
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Alcohol measurement methodology in epidemiology: recent advances and opportunities.
TL;DR: Cognitive studies suggest inherent limitations in the measurement enterprise, yet diary studies show promise of broadly validating methods that assess a range of drinking amounts per occasion; improvements in survey measures of drinking in the life course are indicated.