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Mohammad Shahsahebi

Assistant Professor in Family Medicine and Community Health
Family Medicine and Community Health, Family Medicine
2424 Erwin Rd, Ste 601, DUMC Box 2714, Durham, NC 27705

Selected Publications


Low-touch, team-based care for co-morbidity management in cancer patients: the ONE TEAM randomized controlled trial.

Journal Article BMC Fam Pract · November 18, 2021 BACKGROUND: As treatments for cancer have improved, more people are surviving cancer. However, compared to people without a history of cancer, cancer survivors are more likely to die of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Increased risk for CVD-related mortality ... Full text Link to item Cite

Evaluating the Effectiveness of Community and Hospital Medical Record Integration on Management of Behavioral Health in the Emergency Department.

Journal Article J Behav Health Serv Res · October 2018 This study evaluated the correlation of an emergency department embedded care coordinator with access to community and medical records in decreasing hospital and emergency department use in patients with behavioral health issues. This retrospective cohort ... Full text Link to item Cite

Mobile health devices: will patients actually use them?

Journal Article J Am Med Inform Assoc · May 2016 Although mobile health (mHealth) devices offer a unique opportunity to capture patient health data remotely, it is unclear whether patients will consistently use multiple devices simultaneously and/or if chronic disease affects adherence. Three healthy and ... Full text Open Access Link to item Cite

Timeliness of outpatient follow-up: an evidence-based approach for planning after hospital discharge.

Journal Article Ann Fam Med · March 2015 PURPOSE: Timely outpatient follow-up has been promoted as a key strategy to reduce hospital readmissions, though one-half of patients readmitted within 30 days of hospital discharge do not have follow-up before the readmission. Guidance is needed to identi ... Full text Link to item Cite

A rat model reproducing key pathological responses of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis

Journal Article American Journal of Physiology - Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology · 2007 Although alcohol abuse is the major cause of chronic pancreatitis, the pathogenesis of alcoholic chronic pancreatitis (ACP) remains obscure. A critical obstacle to understanding the mechanism of ACP is lack of animal models. Our objective was to develop on ... Full text Cite