Influence of patient coaching on analgesic treatment adjustment: secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial.

[1]  Sabine Schenk,et al.  1 Concepts and Methodology , 2013 .

[2]  P. Veazie,et al.  A role for regulatory focus in explaining and combating clinical inertia. , 2011, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[3]  R. Kravitz,et al.  Cancer Health Empowerment for Living without Pain (Ca-HELP): effects of a tailored education and coaching intervention on pain and impairment , 2011, PAIN®.

[4]  R. Kravitz,et al.  Improving physician-patient communication about cancer pain with a tailored education-coaching intervention. , 2010, Patient education and counseling.

[5]  J. Selby,et al.  Patient Race/Ethnicity and Patient-Physician Race/Ethnicity Concordance in the Management of Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors for Patients With Diabetes , 2009, Diabetes Care.

[6]  A. Ferrara,et al.  The association of patient-physician gender concordance with cardiovascular disease risk factor control and treatment in diabetes. , 2009, Journal of women's health.

[7]  A. Zaslavsky,et al.  Clinical Inertia in Depression Treatment , 2009, Medical care.

[8]  C. Mangione,et al.  The Association of Patient Age with Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factor Treatment and Control in Diabetes , 2009, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[9]  M. Groenvold,et al.  Symptoms and problems in a nationally representative sample of advanced cancer patients , 2009, Palliative medicine.

[10]  Julie A Schmittdiel,et al.  The effectiveness of diabetes care management in managed care. , 2009, The American journal of managed care.

[11]  P. S. Sillevis Smitt,et al.  A systematic review on barriers hindering adequate cancer pain management and interventions to reduce them: a critical appraisal. , 2009, European journal of cancer.

[12]  S. Deandrea,et al.  Pattern and quality of care of cancer pain management. Results from the Cancer Pain Outcome Research Study Group , 2009, British Journal of Cancer.

[13]  Julie A Schmittdiel,et al.  Treatment Intensification and Risk Factor Control: Toward More Clinically Relevant Quality Measures , 2009, Medical care.

[14]  C. Møldrup,et al.  Patient-related barriers to cancer pain management: a systematic exploratory review. , 2009, Scandinavian journal of caring sciences.

[15]  S. Deandrea,et al.  Prevalence of undertreatment in cancer pain. A review of published literature. , 2008, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[16]  R. Kravitz,et al.  Beyond Gatekeeping: Enlisting Patients as Agents for Quality and Cost-Containment , 2008, Journal of general internal medicine.

[17]  S. Asch,et al.  Evidence-based standards for cancer pain management. , 2008, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[18]  Paul E. Johnson,et al.  Clinical Inertia and Outpatient Medical Errors , 2008 .

[19]  A. Karter,et al.  Why Don’t Diabetes Patients Achieve Recommended Risk Factor Targets? Poor Adherence versus Lack of Treatment Intensification , 2008, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[20]  Jeroan J. Allison,et al.  Reasons for Not Intensifying Medications: Differentiating “Clinical Inertia” from Appropriate Care , 2007, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[21]  Bruce Guthrie,et al.  Tackling therapeutic inertia: role of treatment data in quality indicators , 2007, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[22]  H C Schouten,et al.  Prevalence of pain in patients with cancer: a systematic review of the past 40 years. , 2007, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[23]  J. Meigs,et al.  Relationship Between Patient Medication Adherence and Subsequent Clinical Inertia in Type 2 Diabetes Glycemic Management , 2007 .

[24]  G. Breukelen ANCOVA versus change from baseline had more power in randomized studies and more bias in nonrandomized studies , 2006 .

[25]  M. Teixeira,et al.  The WHO analgesic ladder for cancer pain control, twenty years of use. How much pain relief does one get from using it? , 2006, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[26]  V. Durkalski,et al.  Therapeutic Inertia Is an Impediment to Achieving the Healthy People 2010 Blood Pressure Control Goals , 2006, Hypertension.

[27]  P. O’Connor Commentary--improving diabetes care by combating clinical inertia. , 2005, Health services research.

[28]  W. Breitbart,et al.  Desire for hastened death, cancer pain and depression: report of a longitudinal observational study. , 2005, Journal of pain and symptom management.

[29]  Rahman Azari,et al.  Influence of patients' requests for direct-to-consumer advertised antidepressants: a randomized controlled trial. , 2005, JAMA.

[30]  M. Maltoni,et al.  A validation study of the WHO analgesic ladder: a two-step vs three-step strategy , 2005, Supportive Care in Cancer.

[31]  K Henriksen,et al.  Advances in Patient Safety: From Research to Implementation (Volume 2: Concepts and Methodology) , 2005 .

[32]  J. Unützer,et al.  National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference Statement: Symptom Management in Cancer: Pain, Depression, and Fatigue, July 15-17, 2002. , 2003, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[33]  R. Kravitz,et al.  Direct observation of requests for clinical services in office practice: what do patients want and do they get it? , 2003, Archives of internal medicine.

[34]  G. Norman,et al.  Interpretation of Changes in Health-related Quality of Life: The Remarkable Universality of Half a Standard Deviation , 2003, Medical care.

[35]  R. Kravitz,et al.  Influence of direct to consumer pharmaceutical advertising and patients' requests on prescribing decisions: two site cross sectional survey , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[36]  Jeremy M. Grimshaw,et al.  Changing Provider Behavior: An Overview of Systematic Reviews of Interventions , 2001, Medical care.

[37]  G. A. Miller,et al.  Misunderstanding analysis of covariance. , 2001, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[38]  M. Sorbero,et al.  Physician referral rates: style without much substance? , 2000, Medical care.

[39]  M. Rogers,et al.  The ‘right kind’ of pain: talking about symptoms in outpatient oncology consultations , 2000, Palliative medicine.

[40]  A. Jadad,et al.  The WHO analgesic ladder for cancer pain management. Stepping up the quality of its evaluation. , 1995, JAMA.

[41]  G. Howard,et al.  Self-report: psychology's four-letter word. , 2010, American Journal of Psychology.

[42]  Gerard J P Van Breukelen,et al.  ANCOVA versus change from baseline: more power in randomized studies, more bias in nonrandomized studies [corrected]. , 2006, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[43]  J. Unützer,et al.  National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference Statement , 2005, Journal of palliative medicine.

[44]  J. Unützer,et al.  National Institutes of Health State-of-the-Science Conference Statement: Symptom management in cancer: pain, depression, and fatigue, July 15-17, 2002. , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs.

[45]  K C Stange,et al.  Competing demands of primary care: a model for the delivery of clinical preventive services. , 1994, The Journal of family practice.

[46]  A. Stewart,et al.  Measuring Functioning and Well-Being: The Medical Outcomes Study Approach , 1992 .