Meghan E. White

ORCID: 0009-0003-3069-4269
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare
  • Autoimmune and Inflammatory Disorders Research
  • Family and Disability Support Research
  • Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life
  • Family Support in Illness
  • Sex work and related issues
  • Intimate Partner and Family Violence
  • Diabetes Management and Education
  • Pharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes
  • Chronic Disease Management Strategies
  • Interprofessional Education and Collaboration
  • Child Abuse and Trauma

Virginia Department of Health
2024

Mount Sinai Hospital
2015

Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences
2012

Hospital for Sick Children
2012

SickKids Foundation
2012

Women's College Hospital
2012

To determine the feasibility of a 12-week Internet-based self-management program disease-specific information, strategies, and social support with telephone for youth juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) their parents, aimed at reducing physical emotional symptoms improving health-related quality life (HRQOL).A nonblind pilot randomized controlled trial (NCT01011179) was conducted to test "Teens Taking Charge: Managing Arthritis Online" Internet intervention across 4 tertiary-level centers in...

10.3899/jrheum.091327 article EN The Journal of Rheumatology 2010-07-01

We sought to gain insight into perspectives around core domains of adolescent development--romantic relationships, sexual and fertility--from the vantage point Canadian adolescents parents during after cancer treatment.Twenty (12-17 years old at interview) 20 (who may or not have had an interviewed) participated in this study. Using a semistructured guide, were interviewed separately. All interviews audio-recorded transcribed. Transcribed interview data independently coded according study...

10.1089/jayao.2014.0036 article EN Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology 2015-06-01

The objective of this article is to explore information needs children with juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) and their parents in order develop a web-based psychoeducational program aimed at improving quality life. A qualitative study design was used. purposive sample (n = 41; 8–11 years) JIA 48) participated parent–child interviews 29), four child-focus parent-focus group interviews. Transcribed data were organized into categories that reflected emerging themes. Findings uncovered three...

10.1177/1367493511430679 article EN Journal of Child Health Care 2012-02-03

Chronic care management is effective. Barriers to program durability include dependence on the provider–nurse duo carry out labor-intensive services and lack of a fiscally sustainable model. Between January October 2022, an expanded chronic team—consisting provider, nurse, community health worker, pharmacist—conducted four-month intervention in ambulatory setting. This intervention, using convenience sample 134 Medicare patients with uncontrolled type 2 diabetes or hypertension, demonstrated...

10.2105/ajph.2024.307886 article EN American Journal of Public Health 2024-11-21
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