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Author: Matson, Pamela
Resulting in 2 citations.
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Marcell, Arik Van Eck, Kathryn Thakkar, Madhuli Y. Matson, Pamela Hao, Lingxin |
Latent Class Models For Adolescents' Routine Care Use: Evidence For Differences In Care Use By Sex And Cohort Starting In Childhood From A U.S. Panel Journal of Adolescent Health 64,2,Supplement (February 2019): S18-19. Also: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1054139X1830510X Cohort(s): Children of the NLSY79, NLSY79 Young Adult Publisher: Elsevier Keyword(s): Gender Differences; Health Care; Modeling, Latent Class Analysis/Latent Transition Analysis This study's goal was to describe prospective patterns of RCU (routine care use) from childhood through adolescence stratified by sex. |
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Bibliography Citation
Marcell, Arik, Kathryn Van Eck, Madhuli Y. Thakkar, Pamela Matson and Lingxin Hao. "Latent Class Models For Adolescents' Routine Care Use: Evidence For Differences In Care Use By Sex And Cohort Starting In Childhood From A U.S. Panel." Journal of Adolescent Health 64,2,Supplement (February 2019): S18-19.
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Van Eck, Kathryn Thakkar, Madhuli Y. Matson, Pamela Hao, Lingxin Marcell, Arik |
Adolescents' Patterns of Well-Care Use Over Time: Who Stays Connected American Journal of Preventive Medicine 60,5 (May 2021): e221-e229. Also: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0749379721000581 Cohort(s): Children of the NLSY79, NLSY79 Young Adult Publisher: Elsevier Keyword(s): Gender Differences; Health Care; Modeling, Latent Class Analysis/Latent Transition Analysis Well-care use can positively impact adolescents' current and future health. Understanding adolescents' longitudinal well-care use is critical to determine to whom and when to target engagement strategies to improve healthcare access. This study describes prospective well-care use patterns from childhood through adolescence stratified by sex. |
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Bibliography Citation
Van Eck, Kathryn, Madhuli Y. Thakkar, Pamela Matson, Lingxin Hao and Arik Marcell. "Adolescents' Patterns of Well-Care Use Over Time: Who Stays Connected." American Journal of Preventive Medicine 60,5 (May 2021): e221-e229.
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