Richard L. Street
Texas A&M University
239 Papers
1.1K Citations
Richard L. Street is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Patient participation. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 216 publications. Previous affiliations of Richard L. Street include Baylor College of Medicine & Veterans Health Administration.
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Papers
Feasibility of a symptom management intervention for adolescents recovering from a hematopoietic stem cell transplant.
TL;DR: A mobile phone application is a feasible intervention to educate adolescents with symptom management strategies during HSCT recovery and acceptance remained high throughout the study, but use significantly decreased over time.
Differing Levels of Clinical Evidence: Exploring Communication Challenges in Shared Decision Making
TL;DR: The challenges of differing levels of evidence in promoting shared decisions and to propose strategies for going forward in addressing these challenges are explored in this special issue of Medical Care Research and Review.
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Physician activity during outpatient visits and subjective workload
Alan Calvitti,Harry Hochheiser,Shazia Ashfaq,Kristin Bell,Yunan Chen,Robert El Kareh,Mark T. Gabuzda,Lin Liu,Sara Mortensen,Braj Pandey,Steven Rick,Richard L. Street,Nadir Weibel,Charlene R. Weir,Zia Agha +14 more
TL;DR: It was found that visit activity was highly variable across individual physicians, and the observed activity metrics ranged widely as correlates to subjective work-load as measured by the task load survey.
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Symptom prevalence and physiologic biomarkers among adolescents using a mobile phone intervention following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.
TL;DR: Symptom prevalence was highest at hospital discharge and steadily declined; however, mean symptom distress scores remained stable, and weight and BMI significantly declined during HSCT recovery.
Portero versus portador: Spanish interpretation of genomic terminology during whole exome sequencing results disclosure.
Amanda M. Gutierrez,Jill O. Robinson,Emily E. Statham,Sarah Scollon,Sarah Scollon,Katie Bergstrom,Katie Bergstrom,Melody J. Slashinski,Donald W. Parsons,Donald W. Parsons,Sharon E. Plon,Sharon E. Plon,Amy L. McGuire,Richard L. Street,Richard L. Street,Richard L. Street +15 more
TL;DR: Modifications to genomic terminology made during interpretation highlight the need to standardize bilingual genomic lexicons.
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