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Best Practices for Mixed Methods Research in Health Sciences: (566732013-001)

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The article was published on 2011-08-01. It has received 577 citations till now.

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A Community Conversation on Adolescent Pregnancy and Parenting Services: Networks of Support, Gatekeepers to Care, and Non-Compulsory Fathering in a Black Urban Community

TL;DR: In this article, the authors employed Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) methods to document needs and capacity around adolescent pregnancy and parenting in one predominately Black, low-income urban community.
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Increasing Retention and Student Satisfaction Utilizing an Online Peer Mentoring Program: Preliminary Results

TL;DR: An e-mentoring program could be a necessary component to foster relationships between excelling senior nursing students and junior nursing students, and allow for support in class load, coursework, school, and outside stressors.
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Predicting Cancer Mortality: Developing a New Cancer Care Variable Using Mixed Methods and the Quasi‐Statistical Approach

TL;DR: Statistical analysis of qualitative data is feasible and can identify new predictors with health services' implications associated with cancer mortality, and future studies should consider the value of testing coded qualitative variables in relation with key health care outcomes.

A qualitative phenomenological study which examines the relationship between positive educational outcomes of American Indian women serving in the pow wow princess role

Casey Fox
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the existence of a correlation between culture and education for American Indian women who served in the pow wow princess role, and found that there is a positive correlation between the powwow princess role and positive educational outcomes of American Indians serving in this role.
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