Meghan Reading Turchioe

Orcid: 0000-0002-6264-6320

According to our database1, Meghan Reading Turchioe authored at least 47 papers between 2016 and 2024.

Collaborative distances:
  • Dijkstra number2 of four.
  • Erdős number3 of four.

Timeline

Legend:

Book 
In proceedings 
Article 
PhD thesis 
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Links

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2024
Visualizing machine learning-based predictions of postpartum depression risk for lay audiences.
J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc., January, 2024

2023
Who needs what (features) when? Personalizing engagement with data-driven self-management to improve health equity.
J. Biomed. Informatics, August, 2023

Returning study results to research participants: Data access, format, and sharing preferences.
Int. J. Medical Informatics, 2023

2022
Building trust in research through information and intent transparency with health information: representative cross-sectional survey of 502 US adults.
J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc., 2022

Designing for patient decision-making: Design challenges generated by patients with atrial fibrillation during evaluation of a decision aid prototype.
Frontiers Digit. Health, 2022

Developing a disease-specific symptom vocabulary for natural language processing.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Bioethics perspectives on the development of urgently needed informatics solutions to address rising maternal morbidity and mortality.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Experiences of care delays and telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic among socioeconomically diverse cardiovascular patients and clinicians in an urban hospital.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Returning Study Results to Research Participants: Data Access, Format, and Sharing Preferences.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Building Trust in Research Through Information and Intent Transparency with Health Information.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Putting the user back in user-centered design: Strategies for incorporating patient goals and values throughout the design of decision aids.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

Systematic Review of Mobile Integrated Health interventions to facilitate telehealth usage among older adults.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2022, 2022

2021
Cardiac patients' and healthcare providers' telehealth experiences during the COVID-19 pandemic in Queens, New York.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

To share or not to share: Exploring the ethical implications of sharing personal health data with patients and informal caregivers.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Using Mobile Integrated Health and Telehealth to Support Transitions of Care among Heart Failure Patients; MIGHTy Heart study protocol.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Impact of Social Determinants of Health on Predictive Models in 30-Day Hospital Readmission or Death for Patients with Severe Obesity.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Technology and Data Sharing Preferences in mHealth Research Interventions.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Addressing Challenges and Strategies for Virtual Recruitment for Longitudinal Studies.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Public Perspectives on the Ethical Collection and Sharing of Consumer-Generated Health Information.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Patient Preferences for Accessing, Communicating, and Sharing Health Information using Visualized Patient-Reported Outcomes.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

Effect of Abbreviation and Acronym Expansion on Patients' Comprehension of their Health Records: A Randomized Trial.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2021, American Medical Informatics Association Annual Symposium, San Diego, CA, USA, October 30, 2021, 2021

2020
Adapting the stage-based model of personal informatics for low-resource communities in the context of type 2 diabetes.
J. Biomed. Informatics, 2020

Visual analogies, not graphs, increase patients' comprehension of changes in their health status.
J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc., 2020

Review of Existing Mobile Apps for the Support of Cystic Fibrosis Self-Management Using the Mobile Application Rating Scale.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Sustaining engagement with patient-reported outcomes (PRO) monitoring among older adults.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Designing a window into the "black box": User-centered design for improving interpretability of predictive models.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Older Adults Can Successfully Monitor Symptoms Using an Inclusively Designed Mobile Application.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Evaluating Commercially Available Mobile Apps for Depression Self-Management.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Provider perspectives on the clinical utility of using a risk prediction tool for postpartum depression.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

A Structured Review of Commercially Available Cardiac Rehabilitation mHealth Applications Using the Mobile Application Rating Scale.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Effect of Abbreviation and Acronym Expansion on Patients' Comprehension of their Health Records: A Randomized Trial.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Visual Rating Scales for Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement: A National Validation Study.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Review of Existing mHealth Apps for Self-Management of Inflammatory Bowel Disease using the Mobile Application Rating Scale.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Data Sharing does not Equal Knowledge Sharing: Applying a Work Systems Perspective to Improve Communication of Health Data.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

Depression in the App Stores: A Review and Standardized Rating of Apps for Depression, including Postpartum Depression.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2020, 2020

2019
Designing for engagement with self-monitoring: A user-centered approach with low-income, Latino adults with Type 2 Diabetes.
Int. J. Medical Informatics, 2019

A Systematic Review of Patient-Facing Visualizations of Personal Health Data.
Appl. Clin. Inform., 2019

Modifications to the ISO 9186 Method for Testing Comprehension of Visualizations: Successes and Lessons Learned.
Proceedings of the 2019 IEEE Workshop on Visual Analytics in Healthcare, 2019

Visualizations to Communicate Risk in Patient Reported Outcomes.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2019, 2019

Systematic Review of Patient-Facing Visualizations of their Personal Health Data.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2019, 2019

Review of Mobile Applications for the Detection and Management of Atrial Fibrillation.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2019, 2019

Comprehension of Visualizations for Longitudinal Patient-Reported Outcomes.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2019, 2019

Review and Analysis of Current Mobile Apps for Depression.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2019, 2019

2018
Converging and diverging needs between patients and providers who are collecting and using patient-generated health data: an integrative review.
J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc., 2018

Factors Influencing Sustained Engagement with ECG Self-Monitoring: Perspectives from Patients and Health Care Providers.
Appl. Clin. Inform., 2018

Mobile Health Usage over Time among Adults with Atrial Fibrillation using ECG Technology for Self-Monitoring.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2018, 2018

2016
Review of Existing Mobile Apps to Support Symptom Management for Adults with Heart Failure Using the Mobile Application Rating Scale.
Proceedings of the AMIA 2016, 2016


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