Catherine Deamant
Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science
6 Papers
25 Citations
Catherine Deamant is an academic researcher from Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science. The author has contributed to research in topics: Workforce & Palliative care. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Training the Workforce: Description of a Longitudinal Interdisciplinary Education and Mentoring Program in Palliative Care
Stacie Levine,Sean O'Mahony,Aliza Baron,Aziz Ansari,Catherine Deamant,Joel Frader,Ileana Leyva,Michael Marschke,Michael Preodor +8 more
TL;DR: This interdisciplinary PC training model addressed local workforce issues by increasing the number of clinicians capable of providing PC and program development skills and frequency performing these skills.
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Palliative Workforce Development and a Regional Training Program
Sean O'Mahony,Stacie Levine,Aliza Baron,Tricia J. Johnson,Aziz Ansari,Ileana Leyva,Michael Marschke,Eytan Szmuilowicz,Catherine Deamant +8 more
TL;DR: Given the shortage of palliative medicine specialist providers more emphasis should be placed on training other clinicians to provide primary level palliatives care while addressing the need to hire sufficient workforce to care for seriously ill patients.
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Expanding the Interdisciplinary Palliative Medicine Workforce: A Longitudinal Education and Mentoring Program for Practicing Clinicians.
Sean O'Mahony,Aliza Baron,Aziz Ansari,Catherine Deamant,Holly Nelson-Becker,Holly Nelson-Becker,George Fitchett,Stacie Levine +7 more
TL;DR: Teaching palliative care and program development knowledge and skills to an interdisciplinary, regional cohort of practicing clinicians yielded improvements in clinical skills, implementation of practice change projects, and a sense of belonging to a supportive professional network.
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Health perceptions and symptom burden in primary care: measuring health using audio computer-assisted self-interviews
TL;DR: Success with collecting PROMs in a resource-limited clinical setting demonstrates that the implementation of ACASI technology is feasible, andSymptom burden was less correlated with GSRH than with other measures of poor health perception.
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