Margaret Shandor Miles
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
116 Papers
1.4K Citations
Margaret Shandor Miles is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Intensive care. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 116 publications. Previous affiliations of Margaret Shandor Miles include University of Kansas & University of Nebraska Medical Center.
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Papers
Early Interactions Between Mothers and Their Medically Fragile Infants
TL;DR: As infants grew older, mothers spent less time feeding, involved, holding, in body contact, looking, rocking, gesturing, and touching, however, mothers talked more, and played more with older infants.
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Parents of children with chronic health problems: programs of nursing research and their relationship to developmental science.
TL;DR: The studies provided a sound base for continuing to build a developmentally sensitive body of knowledge related to parents and parenting of the child with chronic health problems and provide important insight into the responses of parents and their parenting of children with Chronic health problems.
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Community-Based HIV Clinical Trials: An Integrated Approach in Underserved, Rural, Minority Communities
TL;DR: The perspectives of rural community leaders, service providers, and PLWHA about bringing HIV-related research, including clinical trials, into rural communities suggest an integrated approach to HIV research that builds trust, meets community needs, and respects their values.
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Reciprocity and retaining African-American women with HIV in research.
TL;DR: It is postulate that developing reciprocity between research teams and participants may be helpful in retaining African-American women in research.
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Coping strategies in children with cancer undergoing bone marrow aspirations.
Susan Beaty Hamner,Margaret Shandor Miles +1 more
- 01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: ’ These studies, along with many clinical articles, indicate that bone marrow aspirations are one of the most painful and traumatic of all the procedures.
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