Publications by authors named "J Colquitt"

Article Synopsis
  • Patients with urologic conditions, like Peyronie's disease, are increasingly seeking health information online despite having access to clinicians through electronic health records.
  • The study aimed to evaluate the quality, accuracy, and readability of information provided by four large language model (LLM) chatbots, particularly in response to specific patient queries about Peyronie's disease.
  • Results indicated that unprompted responses from LLMs were of moderate quality but improved to high quality when prompted; however, the reading level of responses was too complex for general understanding, averaging at a grade 12.9 level.
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Background: Lung cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in the United Kingdom. It is often diagnosed late. The 5-year survival rate for lung cancer is below 10%.

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Third parties have increasingly become the focus of research on mistreatment in organizations. Much of that work is grounded in deonance theory, which argues that third parties should react to the perpetrators of mistreatment with anger. Deonance theory is less explicit as to how third parties should react to the victims of mistreatment, though empirical work has pointed to empathy as one potential reaction.

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Context: The intrauterine device (IUD) is one type of long-acting reversible contraceptive that is becoming increasingly popular among patients and healthcare providers alike, though many are deterred from using this option due to pain or fear of pain with IUD insertion. While the IUD insertion process itself is standardized, the use of pain medication is not. There is a lack of research regarding provider preference in analgesic use for IUD insertion procedures, which analgesics are being provided to patients, and under which circumstances.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines the use of left atrial strain (LAS) in children with multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) and its relation to cardiac injury and inflammation.
  • Results showed that LAS parameters were significantly lower in MIS-C patients compared to healthy controls and those with cardiac injury had even more reduced LAS metrics.
  • The findings suggest that LAS could be a reliable diagnostic tool for detecting cardiac dysfunction in MIS-C and correlates with inflammatory markers, highlighting its potential use in clinical settings.
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