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Improving medication adherence in African-American women living with HIV/AIDS: Leveraging the provider role and peer involvement
Olihe Okoro
, Folakemi T. Odedina
Duluth Pharmacy Program
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
16
Scopus citations
Overview
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Dive into the research topics of 'Improving medication adherence in African-American women living with HIV/AIDS: Leveraging the provider role and peer involvement'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Medicine & Life Sciences
Medication Adherence
100%
African Americans
84%
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome
75%
Health Services Needs and Demand
67%
HIV
62%
Patient Care
46%
Case Managers
41%
Nurse Administrators
39%
Patient Care Team
35%
Patient-Centered Care
35%
Grounded Theory
35%
Patient Education
30%
Pharmacists
29%
Health Personnel
26%
Counseling
25%
Motivation
24%
Physicians
19%
Morbidity
17%
Mortality
15%
Therapeutics
4%
Social Sciences
medication
77%
AIDS
75%
American
70%
patient care
37%
case managers
23%
Healthcare Providers
21%
pharmacist
20%
intervention strategy
18%
morbidity
18%
grounded theory
16%
mortality
15%
counseling
14%
nurse
13%
physician
13%
educator
11%
experience
5%
education
5%
Group
5%