Publications
"Is 28% good or bad?" Evaluability and preference reversals in health care decisions.
Choices of health care providers can become inconsistent when people lack sufficient context to assess the value of available information.
"It's like heart failure. It's chronic…and it will kill you": A qualitative analysis of burnout among hospice and palliative care clinicians.
Although prior surveys have identified rates of self-reported burnout among palliative care clinicians as high as 62%, limited data exist to elucidate the causes, ameliorators, and effects of this phenomenon.We explored burnout among palliative ca
"Job Lock" Among Long-term Survivors of Childhood Cancer: A Report From the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study.
Importance: Childhood cancer survivors may be reluctant to make changes in their employment because of access to health insurance.
"Join the club": effect of resident and attending social interactions on overall satisfaction among 4390 general surgery residents.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate which residents develop successful collegial relationships with attending physicians and to determine how social interactions affect residency satisfaction.
"Just do your job": technology, bureaucracy, and the eclipse of conscience in contemporary medicine.
Market metaphors have come to dominate discourse on medical practice.
"Keyhole" method for accelerating imaging of contrast agent uptake.
Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging methods with good spatial and contrast resolution are often too slow to follow the uptake of contrast agents with the desired temporal resolution.