E. Nicole Mitchell
4 Papers
14 Citations
E. Nicole Mitchell is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Perceptions of and barriers to cancer screening by the sexual and gender minority community: a glimpse into the health care disparity
J. Lombardo,Kevin Ko,Ayako Shimada,Nicolas Nelson,Christopher Wright,Jerry Chen,Alisha Maity,Marissa L. Ruggiero,Scott T. Richard,Dimitrios Papanagnou,E. Nicole Mitchell,Amy Leader,Nicole L. Simone +12 more
TL;DR: Gaps in cancer screening knowledge and emotional and financial distress may be responsible for the disparity of lower cancer screening rates for the Sexual and Gender Minority (SGM) population and the transgender population may be most at risk as discussed by the authors .
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Perceptions of and barriers to cancer screening by the sexual and gender minority community: a glimpse into the health care disparity
J. Lombardo,Kevin Ko,Ayako Shimada,Nicolas Nelson,Christopher M. Wright,Jerry Chen,Alisha Maity,Marissa L. Ruggiero,Scott T. Richard,Dimitrios Papanagnou,E. Nicole Mitchell,Amy Leader,Nicole L. Simone +12 more
TL;DR: Gaps in cancer screening knowledge and emotional and financial distress may be responsible for the disparity of lower cancer screening rates for the Sexual and Gender Minority (SGM) population and the transgender population may be most at risk as discussed by the authors .
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Lifestyle illicit drug seizures: A routine ESI–LC–MS method for the identification of sildenafil and vardenafil
TL;DR: An electrospray ionization-liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (ESI-LC-MS) method is developed that allows differentiation between sildenafil and vardenafil via in-source fragmentation in combination with an ion trap mass spectrometer.
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Abstract C092: Proximity to green space and inflammation among breast cancer patients
Taylor Micua,J. Lombardo,Alexandra Desjarlais,Benjamin C. Keating,Melissa Lazar,Charnita Zeigler-Johnson,Adeseye Adekeye,E. Nicole Mitchell,Russell K. McIntire,Nicole L. Simone +9 more
TL;DR: Micua et al. as discussed by the authors found an association of residential proximity to green spaces with decreased breast cancer incidence and increased systemic inflammation in women with diagnosis of invasive breast cancer and showed that increased inflammation is associated with increased risk for breast cancer development and progression.