Nicole Theis-Mahon
University of Minnesota
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Featured researches published by Nicole Theis-Mahon.
Journal of The Medical Library Association | 2017
Caitlin Bakker; Jonathan Koffel; Nicole Theis-Mahon
Objectives Health literacy—the ability to obtain, process, and understand basic health information—is a major determinant of an individual’s overall health and health care utilization. In this project, the authors examined predictors of health literacy levels, including numeracy and graphic literacy, among an adult population in the Upper Midwest. Methods The research was conducted at the Minnesota State Fair. Three previously validated scales were used to assess health literacy: Newest Vital Sign, the General Health Numeracy Test, and questions from Galesic and Garcia-Retamero’s Graph Literacy Scale. Demographic information—such as age, educational attainment, zip code, and other potential predictors and modifiers—was collected. Multivariate linear regression was conducted to examine the independent effects of educational attainment, race, ethnicity, gender, and rural or urban location on overall health literacy and scores on each of the individual instruments. Results A total of 353 Upper Midwest residents completed the survey, with the majority being white, college-educated, and from an urban area. Having a graduate or professional degree or being under the age of 21 were associated with increased health literacy scores, while having a high school diploma or some high school education, being Asian American, or being American Indian/Alaska Native were associated with lower health literacy scores. Conclusion Advanced health literacy skills, including the ability to calculate and compare information, were problematic even in well-educated populations. Understanding numerical and graphical information was found to be particularly difficult, and more research is needed to understand these deficits and how best to address them.
Pain | 2018
E. J. Moana-Filho; Alberto Herrero Babiloni; Nicole Theis-Mahon
Abstract Abnormal endogenous pain modulation was suggested as a potential mechanism for chronic pain, ie, increased pain facilitation and/or impaired pain inhibition underlying symptoms manifestation. Endogenous pain modulation function can be tested using psychophysical methods such as temporal summation of pain (TSP) and conditioned pain modulation (CPM), which assess pain facilitation and inhibition, respectively. Several studies have investigated endogenous pain modulation function in patients with nonparoxysmal orofacial pain (OFP) and reported mixed results. This study aimed to provide, through a qualitative and quantitative synthesis of the available literature, overall estimates for TSP/CPM responses in patients with OFP relative to controls. MEDLINE, Embase, and the Cochrane databases were searched, and references were screened independently by 2 raters. Twenty-six studies were included for qualitative review, and 22 studies were included for meta-analysis. Traditional meta-analysis and robust variance estimation were used to synthesize overall estimates for standardized mean difference. The overall standardized estimate for TSP was 0.30 (95% confidence interval: 0.11-0.49; P = 0.002), with moderate between-study heterogeneity (Q [df = 17] = 41.8, P = 0.001; I2 = 70.2%). Conditioned pain modulations estimated overall effect size was large but above the significance threshold (estimate = 1.36; 95% confidence interval: −0.09 to 2.81; P = 0.066), with very large heterogeneity (Q [df = 8] = 108.3, P < 0.001; I2 = 98.0%). Sensitivity analyses did not affect the overall estimate for TSP; for CPM, the overall estimate became significant if specific random-effect models were used or if the most influential study was removed. Publication bias was not present for TSP studies, whereas it substantially influenced CPMs overall estimate. These results suggest increased pain facilitation and trend for pain inhibition impairment in patients with nonparoxysmal OFP.
Library Hi Tech News | 2007
Nicole Theis-Mahon
Purpose – To provide a conference report on the Fourth International Evidence Based Library and Information Practice conference.Design/methodology/approach – Conference report.Findings – Evidence Based Library and Information Practice once the domain of medical librarianship has expanded into a broader application base found in many library settings to promote different methods to achieve best practices and outcomes.Originality value – The reports the range of applications from clinical, theoretical, practical backgrounds that utilize evidence based information for informed decision‐making.
Journal of Evidence Based Dental Practice | 2018
Hina Mittal; Mike T. John; Stella Sekulić; Nicole Theis-Mahon; Ksenija Rener-Sitar
Archive | 2017
Irene Lubker; Elizabeth Stellrecht; Richard McGowan; Nena Schvaneveldt; Susan Arnold; Elisa Cortez; Rebecca Davis; Michael Kronenfield; Nicole Theis-Mahon
Medical Library Association Annual Meeting: Dream Dare Do | 2017
Nicole Theis-Mahon; Shanda L. Hunt; Nora Forbes
Joint meeting of the Midwest Chapter/MLA and the Michigan Health Sciences Libraries Association | 2017
Nicole Theis-Mahon; Elizabeth Weinfurter
International Association for Dental Research | 2017
Jana Sorensen; Mike T. John; Nicole Theis-Mahon; Swati Prodduturu
American Dental Education Association : Beyond Boundaries | 2017
Elizabeth Stellrecht; Richard McGowan; Irene Lubker; Nena Schvanveldt; Susan Arnold; Elisa Cortez; Rebecca Davis; Michael Kronenfeld; Nicole Theis-Mahon
Medical Library Association : Mosaic be part of the big picture | 2016
André J. Nault; Nicole Theis-Mahon