Our Research Article Showcase
The final product of our research projects is publication in a nationally published peer-reviewed journals.
We proudly showcase our efforts below. Links are to free full-text PDF downloads unless otherwise noted:
Annals of Family Medicine (AFM) - Mar/Apr 2009 issue
‘They Don’t Ask
Me So I Don’t Tell Them’: Patient-Clinician Communication About
Traditional, Complementary, and Alternative Medicine
Annals of Family Medicine (AFM) - Sep/Oct 2008 issue
"'Be Gentle and
Be Sincere About It': A Story About Community-Based Primary Care
Research"
Archives of Internal Medicine (AIM) - Sep 2008 issue
"Signposts
Along the NIH Roadmap for Reengineering Clinical Research; Lessons From
the Clinical Research Networks Initiative
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine (JABFM) Jul/Aug 2008 issue "Self Determination Theory and Preventive Care Delivery: A Research Involving Outpatient Settings Network (RIOS Net) Study"
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine (JABFM)
Jul/Aug 2008 issue
"Practice-based Research Network Membership is
Associated with Retention of Clinicians in
Underserved Communities: A Research Involving
Outpatient Settings Network (RIOS Net) Study"
American Journal of Preventive Medicine (AJPM) -
Apr 2007 issue
"Obesity Counseling & Guidelines in Primary Care"
Annals of Family Medicine - May/Jun 2007 issue
"Acanthosis Nigricans
and Diabetes Risk Factors: Prevalence in Young Persons Seen in Southwestern US Primary Care Practices"
Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine (JABFM) Mar-Apr 2007 issue "Practice-based assessment of tobacco usage in Southwestern primary care patients: A Research Involving Outpatient Settings Network (RIOS Net) study".
Annals of Family Medicine - Jan/Feb 2007 issue
"Describing Primary Care Encounters: The Primary Care Network Survey and the National
Ambulatory Medical Care Survey".
Annals of Family Medicine - Jul/Aug 2006 issue
"The Art and Complexity of Primary Care Clinicians’ Preventive Counseling Decisions:
Obesity as a Case Study".
These insights are important, new understandings of primary care, and we think show some of the importance of participation in our network.