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Thomas McGinn

Researcher at Hofstra University

Publications -  128
Citations -  12974

Thomas McGinn is an academic researcher from Hofstra University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Health care. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 123 publications receiving 10091 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas McGinn include Mount Sinai Hospital & Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.

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Putting Meaning into Meaningful Use: A Roadmap to Successful Integration of Evidence at the Point of Care

TL;DR: Why the incorporation of complex CDS tools into the EMR is equally complex and continues to challenge health service researchers and implementation scientists is investigated.
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Design and implementation of electronic health record integrated clinical prediction rules (iCPR): a randomized trial in diverse primary care settings

TL;DR: The iCPR study uses a strong user-centered design and builds on the previous initial study, to assess whether CPRs integrated in the electronic health record can change provider behavior and improve evidence-based care in a broad range of primary care clinics.
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Challenges and opportunities in academic hospital medicine: report from the Academic Hospital Medicine Summit.

TL;DR: Fostering academic hospital medicine will help address issues more effectively and will help the field while also attracting the next generation of generalists needed to care for an increasingly complex inpatient population.
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Mortality and Hospitalizations in Intensive Dialysis: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: Intensive HD regimens may be associated with reduced mortality and hospitalization compared with conventional HD or PD and the quality of supporting evidence is low, patients who place a high value on survival must be adequately advised and counseled of risks and benefits when choosing intensive dialysis.
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Validation and modification of streptococcal pharyngitis clinical prediction rules

TL;DR: A simplified version of the Walsh CPR is accurate for diagnosing streptococcal pharyngitis in an inner-city population and should provide clinicians more confidence in applying the CPR in similar clinical settings.