James Joseph Werner
Case Western Reserve University
25 Papers
61 Citations
James Joseph Werner is an academic researcher from Case Western Reserve University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Community engagement. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications.
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Papers
Static, dynamic, integrated, and contextualized: a framework for understanding mental health service utilization among young adults.
Michelle R. Munson,James Jaccard,Susan E. Smalling,Hyun Soo Kim,James Joseph Werner,Lionel D. Scott +5 more
TL;DR: Two major themes about mental health service use emerged from the findings, namely the changing nature of service use over time and characterizations of experiences associated with service use at a given point in time and links between broader theoretical frameworks of service utilization and social psychological models of decision making.
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Barriers to supplemental calcium use among women in suburban family practice: a report from the Cleveland Clinic Ambulatory Research Network (CleAR-eN).
Carl V. Tyler,James Joseph Werner,Vanessa Panaite,Sandra M. Snyder,Donald B. Ford,Jessica L. Conway,Christopher W. Young,Brenda L. Powell,Michael J. Smolak,Stephen J. Zyzanski +9 more
TL;DR: Many patient-identified barriers to calcium supplementation seem amenable to focused and brief office-based interventions that could increase the number of women meeting calcium intake guidelines.
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Practice-based Research Networks (PBRNs) Bridging the Gaps between Communities, Funders, and Policymakers.
TL;DR: This commentary proposes that practice-based research networks (PBRNs) engage with funders and policymakers by applying the same engagement strategies they have successfully used to build relationships with community stakeholders to achieve new funding streams.
Comparing Primary Care Physicians' Smoking Cessation Counseling Techniques to Motivational Interviewing
TL;DR: Physicians used both MI adherent and MI nonadherent behaviors in approximately equal proportions, suggesting a base of MI adherent smoking cessation counseling skills upon which additional MI skills can be built.
Opportunities for Improved Diabetes Care Among Patients of Safety Net Practices: A Safety Net Providers’ Strategic Alliance Study
TL;DR: Patients were less likely than clinicians to identify systemic and contextual factors contributing to poor diabetes care, and enabling patient self-management and systemic support is a target for improving diabetes care in safety net practices.
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