Chanjun S. Park
7 Papers
Chanjun S. Park is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Patient-centered outcomes. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Gender Affirming Surgery: A Comprehensive, Systematic Review of All Peer-Reviewed Literature and Methods of Assessing Patient-Centered Outcomes (Part 1: Breast/Chest, Face, and Voice).
Norah Oles,Halley Darrach,Wilmina N. Landford,Matthew Garza,Claire Twose,Chanjun S. Park,Phuong Tran,Loren S. Schechter,Brandyn D. Lau,Devin Coon +9 more
TL;DR: A systematic review of all available gender-affirming surgery publications across all procedures to assess both outcomes reported in the literature and the methods used for outcome assessment is presented in this article.
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Gender Affirming Surgery: A Comprehensive, Systematic Review of All Peer-reviewed Literature and Methods of Assessing Patient-centered Outcomes (Part 2 Genital Reconstruction)
Norah Oles,Halley Darrach,Wilmina N. Landford,Matthew Garza,Claire Twose,Chanjun S. Park,Phuong Tran,Loren S. Schechter,Brandyn D. Lau,Devin Coon +9 more
TL;DR: A first systematic review of all available GAS publications across all procedures to assess outcomes reported in the literature and the methods used for outcome assessment found high patient satisfaction for genital procedures but little concordance between study methods.
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Intervention during wait time: identification and referral of individuals non-adherent for colorectal cancer screening
Beau Abar,Chanjun S. Park,Preeti Dalawari,Howard A. Klausner,Chinwe Ogedegbe,Steven Valassis,Haran Koneswaran,David H. Adler,Keith Bradley +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated whether research associates in the emergency department (ED) can adequately assess patients' adherence with colorectal cancer screening recommendations, outlined by the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF), and provide referrals to individuals who are found to be non-adherent.
Intervention to increase colorectal cancer screening among emergency department patients: results from a randomised pilot study.
Beau Abar,Chanjun S. Park,Nancy Wood,Danielle Marino,K. Fiscella,David H. Adler +5 more
TL;DR: A pilot study found that a text-based intervention delivered through the emergency department can increase colorectal cancer screening rates.
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Primary Care and Emergency Department Utilization Patterns: Differences between White and Black Low-Acuity Patients.
TL;DR: In this article , the authors declare no conflicts of interest and declare that they have no plans to change their opinions about the work presented in this paper. But they do declare no conflict of interest