Julia Chevan
Springfield College
30 Papers
127 Citations
Julia Chevan is an academic researcher from Springfield College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 27 publications. Previous affiliations of Julia Chevan include American Physical Therapy Association & Health Volunteers Overseas.
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Papers
Determinants of Utilization and Expenditures for Episodes of Ambulatory Physical Therapy Among Adults
TL;DR: Examination of longitudinal survey data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey panels 9, 10, and 11 found variation in the resource intensity of physical therapy episodes is influenced to some degree by nonclinical variables.
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The persistence of gender and racial disparities in vascular lower extremity amputation: an examination of HCUP-NIS data (2002-2011).
Kristin M. Lefebvre,Julia Chevan +1 more
TL;DR: Spreads in racial and gender disparities in the severity of lower extremity amputation among individuals with peripheral artery disease (PAD) over the period of a decade have not significantly changed over time, although overall rates of amputation have decreased.
67
Factors associated with care seeking from physicians, physical therapists, or chiropractors by persons with spinal pain: a population-based study.
Julia Chevan,Daniel L. Riddle +1 more
TL;DR: Sociodemographic and clinical factors are associated with those who get MD/PT care as compared to MD or DC care and population characteristics that both increase and reduce the likelihood of physical therapy service use are identified.
66
Do As I Do: Exercise Habits of Physical Therapists, Physical Therapist Assistants, and Student Physical Therapists
Julia Chevan,Esther M. Haskvitz +1 more
TL;DR: This study identified that physical therapists, physical therapist assistants, and student physical therapists are meeting CDC-ACSM physical activity guidelines at higher rates than the US adult population and health-diagnosing professionals, which exceed the physical activity targets set for adults in Healthy People 2010.
58
The Gender Gap in Peer-Reviewed Publications by Physical Therapy Faculty Members: A Productivity Puzzle
Regina R. Kaufman,Julia Chevan +1 more
TL;DR: The gender gap in peer-reviewed publishing productivity may have implications for individuals and the profession of physical therapy and should be subject to further exploration.