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American Board of Family Medicine

American Board of Family Medicine

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OtherIndices

Subject Index to Volume 33, 2020

The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine November 2020, 33 (6) 1044-1056;
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  • Abstracting and indexing, peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

  • Academies and institutes, intrinsically motivated learners, 33(5):S21–S23

  • Access to health care

    • addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

    • decline in pediatric care by family physicians, 33(2):314–321

    • HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Accountable care organizations, Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

  • Accreditation, clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

  • Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), impact of changes to residency requirements, 33(6):1033–1036

  • Acute pain, patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

  • Addictive behavior

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

  • Adenoidectomy, current indications for, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Administrative personnel, patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

  • Adolescents, stimulant use by, for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

  • Advance care planning, prognostic indices for, 33(2):322–338

  • Adverse drug events, inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Aftercare, initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

  • Aging

    • cognitive functioning, subjective vs. objective assessment, 33(3):417–425

    • elderly patients, prescribing inappropriate medications for, 33(4):561-568

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

    • usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Alcohol drinking, unhealthy, machine learning approach to, 33(3):397–406

  • Alcoholism, machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Allied health personnel, financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

  • Altruism, virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Ambulatory care, educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

  • Ambulatory care facilities

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

  • American Board of Family Medicine (ABFM)

    • celebrating 50 years of continuing transformation, 33(5):S69–S74

    • efforts to advance leadership and scholarship in family medicine, 33(1):156–159

    • Family Medicine Certification Longitudinal Assessment, after one year, 33(2):344–346

  • American Medical Association, buprenorphine prescribers for Medicare patients, 33(1):9–16

  • Amphetamines, marketing messages in continuing medical education on binge-eating disorder, 33(2):240–251

  • Anesthesiology, rethinking the purpose of MOC, 33(5):S15–S20

  • Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

  • Anti-HMGCR myopathy, from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Antibacterial drug resistance, educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

  • Antibiotics

    • misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

    • unnecessary, educating patients on, 33(6):969–977

  • Antidepressants

    • patient education level and, 33(1):80–90

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

  • Antihypertensive agents, medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

  • Antimicrobial stewardship, educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

  • Area under curve, machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Arizona, unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Asthma, care, in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

  • Atopic dermatitis, diagnosis and management, 33(4):626–635

  • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, stimulant use by young adults, 33(1):59–70

  • Automobile driving, opioid use and, among older adults, 33(4):521–528

  • Back pain

    • low, adults with, widespread pain in, 33(4):541–549

    • opioid prescriptions for, 33(1):138–142

  • Behavior therapy, obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

  • Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

  • Benzodiazepines

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

  • Binge-eating disorder, marketing messages in continuing medical education on, 33(2):240–251

  • Bioethics, managing patient requests for marijuana, 33(1):147–151

  • Biomedical technology assessment, clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

  • Biostatistics, peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

  • Blood glucose, social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

  • Blood pressure, practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

  • BRCA1 gene, BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

  • BRCA2 gene, BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

  • Breast cancer

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • screening

      • ▪ for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

      • ▪ and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

  • Built environment, for professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

  • Buprenorphine

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • prescribers, for Medicare patients, 33(1):9–16

    • prescribing, early-career physicians and, 33(1):7–8

    • prescribing by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

    • treating opioid use disorder in family medicine, 33(4):611–615

  • Burns, practical management of, 33(5):799–808

  • California

    • gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Canada, strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

  • Cannabis, managing patient requests for marijuana, 33(1):147–151

  • Capacity building, indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

  • Cardiovascular disease

    • anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

    • glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • screening for, in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

  • Case-control studies, cardiovascular screening and lipid management in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

  • Case report, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Catastrophization

    • and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):871–884

    • widespread pain in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Causality, HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

  • Central nervous system stimulants, use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

  • Certification

    • celebrating 50 years of continuing transformation, 33(5):S69–S74

    • continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

    • evolution of board certification, 33:(5)S1–S9

    • helping family physicians keep up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

    • measuring and improving quality in the US, 33(5):S28–S35

    • medical professionalism, 33(5):S62–S64, 33(5):S65–S68

    • quality improvement teams, 33(5):S42–S45

    • rethinking the purpose of MOC, 33(5):S15–S20

    • role of certifying boards in improving health, 33(5):S36–S41

  • Chi-square test, patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

  • Child health

    • asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • decline in pediatric care by family physicians, 33(2):314–321

    • virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • China, general practitioner job satisfaction, 33(3):456–459

  • Chondroitin, glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

  • Chronic disease

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • diagnosis and management of atopic dermatitis, 33(4):626–635

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation, 33(5):728–735

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)

    • improving symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

    • inhaled corticosteroid treatment, 33(2):289–302

  • Chronic pain

    • clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

    • management plans, changes to, 33(1):42–50

    • opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

  • Clinical decision-making

    • changes to chronic pain management plans, 33(1):42–50

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

    • support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Clinical decision rules, machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Clinical decision support systems, for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

  • Clinical medicine, practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

  • Clinical practice patterns, project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Cluster analysis, treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Cognitive dysfunction, subjective vs. objective assessment, 33(3):417–425

  • Cohort studies

    • glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

    • health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

  • Colonoscopy, in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Colorectal cancer

    • screening, factors associated with, 33(5):779–784

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Combined modality therapy, office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • Commentary

    • The American Academy of Family Physician’s Approach to Developing and Supporting the Intrinsically Motivated Learner, 33(5):S21–S23

    • The Built Environment for Professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

    • The Changing Face of Primary Care Research and Practice-Based Research Networks (PBRNs) in Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic, 33(5):645–649

    • The Clinic is The Curriculum: Can Attention to the Clinical Learning Environment Enhance Improvement in Health Care Delivery and Outcomes?, 33(5):S46–S49

    • Complexities in Integrating Social Risk Assessment into Health Care Delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • Connecting Purpose and Performance: Rethinking the Purpose of Maintenance of Certification, 33(5):S15–S20

    • The Dilution of Family Medicine: Waning Numbers of Family Physicians Providing Pediatric Care, 33(6):828–829

    • Do Patients Want Help Addressing Social Risks?, 33(2):170–175

    • Family Medicine and the “New” Opioid Epidemic, 33(1):1–3

    • The Gender Penalty: Reasons for Differences in Reported Weekly Work Hours Among Male and Female Family Physicians, 33(5):650–652

    • Helping Family Physicians Keep Up to Date: A Next Step in the Pursuit of Mastery, 33(5):S24–S27

    • Medical Professionalism Is Like Pornography: You Know it When You See it, 33(5):S62–S64

    • Positive Professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

    • Primary Care Teams: Past, Present and Future, 33(4):495–498

    • Quality Improvement Teams: Moving from the Passionate Few to the Mandated Many, 33(5):S42–S45

    • The Role of Certifying Boards in Improving Health: The Example of the American Board of Pediatrics, 33(5):S36–S41

    • Trained and Ready, but Not Serving?—Family Physicians’ Role in Reproductive Health Care, 33(2):182–185

    • When and How Do We Need Permission to Help Patients Address Social Risk?, 33(2):176–178

    • Why Are Early Career Family Physicians Driving Increases in Buprenorphine Prescribing?, 33(1):4–6

    • Women’s Work: Why Are Women Physicians More Burned Out?, 33(3):351–354

  • Communication

    • breast cancer screening and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • patient interest in after-hours telemedicine, 33(5):765–773

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

  • Communication disorders, behavioral health problems and, 33(6):932–941

  • Community-based participatory research, project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Community health centers

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

  • Community health services, project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Community hospitals, volunteers, 33(3):481–483

  • Comorbidity

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • widespread pain in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Comparative effectiveness research, adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

  • Compassion fatigue, poem about asylum-seeker's torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Continuing medical education

    • continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

    • helping family physicians keep up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

    • intrinsically motivated learners, 33(5):S21–S23

    • marketing messages in, on binge-eating disorder, 33(2):240–251

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Continuity of patient care

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • primary care and a population health improvement strategy, 33(3):468–472

  • Contraception

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

  • Contracts

    • built environment for professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

  • Coronary artery disease, anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

  • Coronavirus

    • impact on primary care research and PBRNs, 33(5):645–649

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating, 33(5):774–778

    • rebuilding after, planning systems of care, 33(3):485–488

  • Correspondence

    • abnormally low hemoglobin A1c as harbinger of hemoglobinopathy, 33(2):342

    • addressing needs of transgender patients: the role of family physicians, 33(5):818

    • cervical spondylotic myelopathy: a guide to diagnosis and management, 33(6):1032

    • does prescription opioid misuse affect the level of health care satisfaction endorsed by patients on opioid therapy?, 33(3):484

    • identifying problematic substance use in a national sample of adolescents using frequency questions, 33(1):152

    • marketing messages in CME modules on binge-eating disorder, 33(5):816–818

    • new allopathic medical schools train fewer family physicians than older ones, 33(1):154–155

    • primary care practices’ implementation of patient-team partnership: findings from EvidenceNOW Southwest, 33(2):342–343

    • a successful walk-in psychiatric model for integrated care, 33(1):153–154

    • sugar-sweetened beverage intake in a rural family medicine clinic, 33(1):152–153

    • that clock is really big, 33(1):154

    • three simple rules in pectoral muscle’s trigger point treatment, which may be a cause of chest pain, 33(6):1031

  • Cost-benefit analysis, patient interest in after-hours telemedicine, 33(5):765–773

  • Cost savings, physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

  • Counseling

    • genetic, BRCA-related cancer, 33(6):885–893

    • gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain, 33(2):189–197

  • COVID-19

    • impact on primary care research and PBRNs, 33(5):645–649

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating, 33(5):774–778

    • rebuilding after, planning systems of care, 33(3):485–488

  • Creatinine, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Cross-over studies, opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

  • Cross-sectional studies

    • depression, rurality, and diabetes control, 33(6):913–922

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

    • stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

    • usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Cultural competency, addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

  • Curriculum, clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

  • Data accuracy, quality improvement teams, 33(5):S42–S45

  • Data analysis, thyroid hormone use in the United States, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

  • Decision making

    • breast cancer screening and, 33(3):473–480

    • changes to chronic pain management plans, 33(1):42–50

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Decision support techniques, designing a prediabetes shared decision aid, 33(2):262–270

  • Decision trees, machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Delivery of health care

    • built environment for professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • primary care and a population health improvement strategy, 33(3):468–472

    • social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

    • workforce support of large-scale practice improvement, 33(2):230–239

  • Dementia, subjective vs. objective assessment of cognitive functioning, 33(3):417–425

  • Demography, patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

  • Depersonalization

    • general practitioner job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Depression

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • and rurality, association with glycemic control in diabetes, 33(6):913–922

  • Dermatology, diagnosis and management of atopic dermatitis, 33(4):626–635

  • Dermoscopy, in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

  • Diabetes mellitus

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • control, association of depression and rurality with, 33(6):913–922

    • control measures, impact of social and clinical complexity on, 33(4):600–610

    • designing a prediabetes shared decision aid, 33(2):262–270

    • outcomes, physician-pharmacist collaboration on, 33(5):745–753.

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • and periodontal disease, patients’ understanding of, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Diagnostic errors, misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

  • Direct-to-consumer advertising, prescription drug advertising and patient-provider interactions, 33(2):279–283

  • Disclosure, perpetration of intimate partner violence, 33(5):809–814

  • Disease management

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Distance education, project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Diverticulitis, misdiagnosis of, after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

  • Domestic violence, perpetration of intimate partner violence, 33(5):809–814

  • Down syndrome, heart disease in adults with, 33(6):923–931

  • Drug legislation, managing patient requests for marijuana, 33(1):147–151

  • Drug overdose, quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Duration of therapy, patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

  • Early detection of cancer

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • breast cancer screening and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Eczema, diagnosis and management of atopic dermatitis, 33(4):626–635

  • Editorial, Increasing Article Visibility: JABFM and Author Responsibilities and Possibilities, 33(2):168–169

  • Editorial Office News and Notes

    • Dr. Victoria Neale Retires as Deputy Editor of JABFM, 33(5):643–644

    • JABFM Welcomes a New Deputy Editor, 33(6):827

    • The Most Frequently Read Articles of 2019, 33(4):491–494

    • Peer Reviewers for the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine in 2019, 33(2):164–167

    • Welcome New Associate Editor for Reflections in Family Medicine, 33(3):350

  • Editors’ Notes

    • Many Family Medicine Successful Interventions and Clinical Reviews for Common Illnesses, 33(2):161–163

    • Medications, Medicating, and Medicated— When, Where, and How—Opioids and Others, 33(4):489–490

    • Must-Read Family Medicine Research-Glucosamine/Chondroitin Supplements and Mortality, Telomere Length and the Doctor-Patient Relationship, Reducing Opioid Use, and More, 33(6):823–826

    • Practical Family Medicine: After-Hours Video Telehealth, Office Procedures, Polyp Follow-up in Older Patients, Terminology for Domestic Violence Intervention, 33(5):641–642

    • Well-Being, New Technologies, and Clinical Evidence for Family Physicians, 33(3):347–349

  • Efficiency, team configurations and burnout, 33(3):368–377

  • Electronic health records

    • asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

    • clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • ethical questions raised by, 33(1): 106–117

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation, 33(5):728–735

    • practices reporting clinical quality measures, 33(4):620–625

    • prognostic indices for advance care planning, 33(2):322–338

    • proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

    • reminder and hepatitis C screening, 33(6):1016–1019

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

  • Electronic mail, modifying provider vitamin D screening behavior, 33(2):252–261

  • Emergency departments, co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

  • Emergency medicine, practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

  • Empathy, hospital volunteers, 33(3):481–483

  • Eosinophils, inhaled corticosteroid treatment in COPD, 33(2):289–302

  • Ethics

    • impact of the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • managing patient requests for marijuana, 33(1):147–151

  • Ethnic groups

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

    • successful follow-up of participants in a clinical trial, 33(3):431–439

  • Evidence-based medicine

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • current indications for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, 33(6):1025–1030

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

    • uptake of changes to clinical preventive guidelines, 33(2):271–278

  • Evidence-based practice

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • workforce support of large-scale practice improvement, 33(2):230–239

  • Faculty

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

  • Family medicine

    • celebrating 50 years of continuing transformation, 33(5):S69–S74

    • changes in ACGME standards for, 33(6):1033–1036

    • evolution of board certification, 33:(5)S1–S9

    • helping family physicians keep up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

    • initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

    • reflections

    •  hospital volunteers, 33(3):481–483

    •  poem, 33(5):815

    •  unexpected retirement, 33(2):339–341

    • residency training, family medicine, 33(4):636–640

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

  • Family Medicine Certification Longitudinal Assessment (FMCLA), after one year, 33(2):344–346

  • Family physicians

    • buprenorphine prescribing by, 33(1):118–123

    • burnout, and treating fibromyalgia, 33(3):386–396

    • decline in pediatric care by, 33(2):314–321

    • dermoscopy in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

    • early-career, and prescribing buprenorphine, 33(1):7–8

    • financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

    • gender and work hours among, 33(5):653–654

    • gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

    • help in keeping up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • intrinsically motivated learners, 33(5):S21–S23

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • number caring for children, 33(6):830–831

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • perpetration of intimate partner violence, 33(5):809–814

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role in addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

    • role in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

    • stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

    • team-based care, changes over time, 33(4):499–501

    • team configurations, efficiency, and burnout, 33(3):368–377

    • unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Fee-for-service plans

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • high volume portal usage impacts resources, 33(3):452–456

  • Fibromyalgia, treating, physician burnout and, 33(3):386–396

  • Financial models, for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

  • Focus groups

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

    • patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

  • Follow-up care, social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Follow-up studies, combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Formative feedback, rethinking the purpose of MOC, 33(5):S15–S20

  • Gait, cervical spondylotic myelopathy, 33(2):303–313

  • Gender identity, addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

  • General practitioners, job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

  • Genetic counseling, BRCA-related cancer, 33(6):885–893

  • Genetic predisposition, to BRCA-related cancers, 33(6):885–893

  • Georgia, opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • Geriatrics, prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Gestational diabetes

    • risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Gestational weight gain, gestational diabetes risk and, 33(2):189–197

  • Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD), inhaled corticosteroid treatment, 33(2):289–302

  • Glucosamine/chondroitin, and mortality, 33(6):842–847

  • Glycated hemoglobin A, diabetes control

    • association of depression and rurality with, 33(6):913–922

    • impact of social and clinical complexity on, 33(4):600–610

  • Glycosylated hemoglobin, physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

  • Goals, clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

  • Guideline adherence

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation, 33(5):728–735

  • Health behavior

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

    • patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Health care disparities

    • asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Health equity, social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients with, 33(2):176–178

  • Health expenditures

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • thyroid hormone use in the United States, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

  • Health information exchange

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

  • Health insurance, health care and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Health literacy

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

  • Health metrics, practices reporting clinical quality measures, 33(4):620–625

  • Health personnel

    • addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

    • financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

    • prescription drug advertising and patient-provider interactions, 33(2):279–283

    • strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

  • Health policy

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

    • modifying provider vitamin D screening behavior, 33(2):252–261

    • team-based care, changes over time, 33(4):499–501

  • Health promotion, educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

  • Health services accessibility

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

  • Health services research

    • thyroid hormone use in the United States, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

    • virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Health status, health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

  • Health surveys, health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

  • Healthy aging, usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Heart disease, in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

  • Hematology, co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

  • Hepatitis C

    • EHR reminder and hepatitis C screening, 33(6):1016–1019

    • screening interventions, models for, 33(3):407–416

  • Hispanic Americans, asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

  • Historically controlled study, gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

  • HIV infections, addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

  • HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Hobbies, gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

  • Holistic health, combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Hospital emergency service, initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

  • Hospitalization

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

  • House calls, eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

  • Humanities, poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Hydroxyurea, co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

  • Hyperglycemia, association of depression and rurality with glycemic control, 33(6):913–922

  • Hyperlipidemias

    • among breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Hypertension

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

  • Hypertrophy, current indications for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Hypothyroidism, thyroid hormone use in the United States, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

  • Illinois, gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

  • Implementation science

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • uptake of changes to clinical preventive guidelines, 33(2):271–278

  • Incidence

    • breast cancer screening and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

    • misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

  • Independent living, prognostic indices for advance care planning, 33(2):322–338

  • Information dissemination, PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

  • Information technology

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

  • Inhaled corticosteroids, treatment in COPD, 33(2):289–302

  • Inpatients, hospital volunteers, 33(3):481–483

  • Insulin resistance, psychological, strategies to overcome, 33(2):198–210

  • Insurance coverage, insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Interdisciplinary research, Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

  • Internal medicine, prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Internship and residency, patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

  • Interrupted time series analysis, modifying provider vitamin D screening behavior, 33(2):252–261

  • Intimate partner violence, perpetration of, 33(5):809–814

  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), diagnosis, misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after, 33(4):549–560

  • Job satisfaction

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • general practitioner, in China, 33(3):456–459

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

  • Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine (JABFM)

    • author responsibilities and possibilities, 33(2):168–169

    • most frequently read articles of 2019, 33(4):491–494

    • new deputy editor, 33(6):827

    • peer reviewers for, 33(2):164–167

    • retirement of deputy editor, 33(5):643–644

  • Lacerations, practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

  • Leadership, quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Learning

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • intrinsically motivated learners, 33(5):S21–S23

  • Leukocytes, usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Licensure

    • medical professionalism, 33(5):S62–S64

    • positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

  • Life expectancy, surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Lifestyle, opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • Limited English proficiency, barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

  • Linear models

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Lipid management, in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

  • Lisdexamfetamine, marketing messages in continuing medical education on binge-eating disorder, 33(2):240–251

  • Logistic models

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • buprenorphine prescribing by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

    • depression, rurality, and diabetes control, 33(6):913–922

    • gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

    • HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

    • machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Longitudinal studies, patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

  • Low back pain

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • widespread pain in adults with, 33(4):541–549

  • Low value care, clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

  • Lupus, reflections in family medicine, 33(2):339–341

  • Machine learning, approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Mammography, breast cancer screening

    • for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

  • Managed care programs, physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

  • Marijuana use, managing patient requests, 33(1):147–151

  • Maryland

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Mass screening, surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Medicaid

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Medical education

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

    • positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

  • Medical errors, continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

  • Medical ethics

    • built environment for professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • managing patient requests for marijuana, 33(1):147–151

    • poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Medical informatics

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

  • Medical marijuana, managing patient requests for, 33(1):147–151

  • Medical staff privileges, positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

  • Medical students

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • hospital volunteers, 33(3):481–483

  • Medically underserved areas

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

  • Medicare

    • patients, buprenorphine prescribers for, 33(1):9–16

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

    • prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Memory, subjective vs. objective assessment of cognitive functioning, 33(3):417–425

  • Men’s health, HPV vaccination, 33(4):592–599

  • Mental health

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Mental health services, buprenorphine prescribing by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

  • Mental status and dementia tests, subjective vs. objective assessment, 33(3):417–425

  • Mentors, intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

  • Mexico, unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Military medicine

    • anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Military personnel, combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Minnesota, depression, rurality, and diabetes control, 33(6):913–922

  • Minority groups, successful follow-up of participants in a clinical trial, 33(3):431–439

  • Minority health, co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

  • Motivation

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • intrinsically motivated learners, 33(5):S21–S23

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

  • Multivariate analysis

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Muscle weakness, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Muscular diseases, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Myopathy, anti-HMGCR, from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Myositis, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Naltrexone, office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • Narcotic antagonists, office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • Native Americans, reflections in family medicine, 33(2):339–341

  • Neural networks (computer), machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Nevada, opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • North Carolina

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

  • Nutrition surveys

    • glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

    • machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

    • usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

  • Obesity

    • among breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • Observer variation, peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

  • Obstetrics, gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

  • Obstructive sleep apnea, current indications for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Occupational stress, general practitioner job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

  • Oklahoma, sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

  • Opiate substitution treatment, office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • Opioid epidemic, opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

  • Opioid-related disorders

    • buprenorphine prescribers for Medicare patients, 33(1):9–16

    • buprenorphine prescribing by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

    • clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

    • early-career physicians and prescribing buprenorphine, 33(1):7–8

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

    • opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

    • treating opioid use disorder in family medicine, 33(4):611–615

  • Opioids

    • changes to chronic pain management plans, 33(1):42–50

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • prescribing

    •  buprenorphine, by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

    •  buprenorphine, early-career physicians and, 33(1):7–8

    •  buprenorphine, for Medicare patients, 33(1):9–16

    •  protocol, risk-reduction tools and, 33(1):27–33

    •  quality improvement toolkit to improve, 33(1):17–26

    •  systematic approach to, 33(6):992–997

    • prescriptions

    •  expectations of, patient “catastrophizing” and, 33(6):858–870

    •  for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    •  recipients of, health care satisfaction among, 33(1):34–41

    • proposed tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

  • Oral hygiene, patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Oregon, project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Organizational innovation

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Osteoarthritis, glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

  • Otolaryngology, current indications for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Outcome measures, quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Outcomes assessment

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

    • opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

  • Outpatients

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

    • misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

  • Overuse, clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

  • Ownership, Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

  • Pain

    • health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

    • widespread, in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Pain management

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • plans, changes to, 33(1):42–50

    • proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Pandemics, PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

  • Papillomavirus infections, HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

  • Parents, virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Patient care

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • prescription drug advertising and patient-provider interactions, 33(2):279–283

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

  • Patient care team

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • changes over time, 33(4):499–501

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • social risk assessment

    •  integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    •  patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    •  permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

    • team configurations, efficiency, and burnout, 33(3):368–377

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Patient-centered care

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • high volume portal usage impacts resources, 33(3):452–456

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

    • physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

    • proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

    • strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

    • treating opioid use disorder in family medicine, 33(4):611–615

  • Patient discharge, initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

  • Patient health questionnaire, risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

  • Patient navigation, patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Patient participation

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

  • Patient portals

    • barriers to access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • high volume portal usage impacts resources, 33(3):452–456

    • physician factors and inbox message volume, 33(3):460–462

  • Patient preference

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • social risk assessment

    •  integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    •  patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    •  permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

  • Patient readmission, eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

  • Patient safety

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • in primary care, 33(5):754–764

    • stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

  • Patient satisfaction

    • after request denial, 33(1)51–58

    • with health care, among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

  • Pay for performance

    • measuring and improving quality in the US, 33(5):S28–S35

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

  • Pediatricians, decline in pediatric care by family physicians, 33(2):314–321

  • Pediatrics, role of certifying boards in improving health, 33(5):S36–S41

  • Peer review, of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

  • Periodontal disease, diabetes and, patients’ understanding of, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Personal health records, barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

  • Personal satisfaction

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

    • unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Personnel selection, financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

  • Personnel turnover

    • financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

  • Pharmacists, physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

  • Physician-patient relations

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

  • Physicians

    • continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

    • evolution of board certification, 33:(5)S1–S9

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

    • positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

    • quality improvement teams, 33(5):S42–S45

    • response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

  • Physicians’ practice patterns

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • opioid reduction protocol among rural patients, 33(4):502–511

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

  • Pilot studies, proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

  • Population health

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • modifying provider vitamin D screening behavior, 33(2):252–261

    • primary care and a population health improvement strategy, 33(3):468–472

    • social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

  • Potentially inappropriate medications, prescribing, for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

  • Poverty, asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

  • Practice-based research

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • asthma care in a multi-state network of low-income children, 33(5):707–715

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

    • practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

    • virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Practice-based research networks (PBRNs), impact of COVID-19, 33(5):645–649

  • Practice facilitation, practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

  • Prediabetes

    • designing a prediabetes shared decision aid, 33(2):262–270

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • Prediabetic state, social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Pregnancy, social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Pregnancy complications, gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

  • Prescription drug monitoring programs, clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

  • Prescription drugs, advertising, patient-provider interactions and, 33(2):279–283

  • Prescriptions

    • early-career physicians and prescribing buprenorphine, 33(1):7–8

    • health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

  • Prevalence

    • cardiovascular disease in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • widespread pain in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Preventive health services

    • EHR reminder and hepatitis C screening, 33(6):1016–1019

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • sustainable, in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

    • workforce support of large-scale practice improvement, 33(2):230–239

  • Preventive medicine, uptake of changes to clinical preventive guidelines, 33(2):271–278

  • Primary care physicians

    • dermoscopy in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

  • Primary health care

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • breast cancer screening and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

    • built environment for professionalism, 33(5):S57–S61

    • buprenorphine prescribing, 33(1):118–123

    • changes to chronic pain management plans, 33(1):42–50

    • clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • decline in pediatric care by family physicians, 33(2):314–321

    • dermoscopy in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

    • designing a prediabetes shared decision aid, 33(2):262–270

    • diagnosis and management of atopic dermatitis, 33(4):626–635

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • improving COPD symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

    • misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

    • modifying provider vitamin D screening behavior, 33(2):252–261

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • patient interest in after-hours telemedicine, 33(5):765–773

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • patient safety in, 33(5):754–764

    • PBRN roadmap for evaluating COVID-19, 33(5):774–778

    • peer review of abstracts submitted to academic meetings, 33(6):986–991

    • perpetration of intimate partner violence, 33(5):809–814

    • physician factors and inbox message volume, 33(3):460–462

    • physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • population health improvement strategy, 33(3):468–472

    • practical management of common skin injuries, 33(5):799–808

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • practices reporting clinical quality measures, 33(4):620–625

    • prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

    • prognostic indices for advance care planning, 33(2):322–338

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

    • proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

    • quality improvement, barriers in, 33(5):655–664

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • subjective vs. objective assessment of cognitive functioning, 33(3):417–425

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

    • systematic approach to opioid prescribing, 33(6):992–997

    • team-based care, changes over time, 33(4):499–501

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

    • treating opioid use disorder in family medicine, 33(4):611–615

    • usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

    • workforce support of large-scale practice improvement, 33(2):230–239

  • Process measures, quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Professional autonomy, continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

  • Professional burnout

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • gender differences in addressing, 33(3):446–451

    • identifying remedial predictors of, 33(3):357–368

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • team configurations, efficiency, and burnout, 33(3):368–377

    • treating fibromyalgia and, 33(3):386–396

  • Professionalism

    • approach to monitoring and enhancing, 33(5):S62–S64

    • built environment for, 33(5):S57–S61

    • evaluation of, 33(5):S65–S68

    • evolution of board certification, 33:(5)S1–S9

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

  • Prognosis, indices for advance care planning, 33(2):322–338

  • Proportional hazards models

    • glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

  • Psychological distress, behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

  • Psychotherapy, office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • PTSD, poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Public health

    • buprenorphine prescribers for Medicare patients, 33(1):9–16

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • general practitioner job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

  • Public health surveillance, integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

  • Qualitative research

    • changes to chronic pain management plans, 33(1):42–50

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

    • patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

    • uptake of changes to clinical preventive guidelines, 33(2):271–278

    • workforce support of large-scale practice improvement, 33(2):230–239

  • Quality improvement

    • clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

    • eliminating barriers to, 33(2):220–229

    • evolution of board certification, 33:(5)S1–S9

    • improving COPD symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

    • initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

    • measuring, 33(5):S28–S35

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

    • positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

    • practice facilitation barriers in, 33(5):655–664

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • practices reporting clinical quality measures, 33(4):620–625

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

    • teams, 33(5):S42–S45

    • toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • workforce support of, 33(2):230–239

  • Quality of health care

    • clinical learning environment and health care delivery, 33(5):S46–S49

    • ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

    • measuring and improving quality in the US, 33(5):S28–S35

    • opioid prescriptions for new low back pain, 33(1):138–142

    • role of certifying boards in improving health, 33(5):S36–S41

  • Quality of life

    • diagnosis and management of atopic dermatitis, 33(4):626–635

    • goals, physicians’ response to, 33(1):71–79

    • marketing messages in continuing medical education on binge-eating disorder, 33(2):240–251

    • stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

    • widespread pain in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Racism, insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

  • Rare diseases, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Reductase, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Referral and consultation

    • patient safety in primary care, 33(5):754–764

    • perpetration of intimate partner violence, 33(5):809–814

  • Refugees, poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Registries

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • sustainable preventive services in rural counties, 33(5):698–706

    • widespread pain in adults with low back pain, 33(4):541–549

  • Regression analysis

    • general practitioner job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

    • models for hepatitis C screening interventions, 33(3):407–416

    • physician factors and inbox message volume, 33(3):460–462

    • practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

    • request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

  • Reproductive health

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role of family physicians, 33(2):182–185

  • Residency

    • early-career physicians and prescribing buprenorphine, 33(1):7–8

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • requirements, impact of ACGME’s June 2019 changes in, 33(6):1033–1036

    • risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

    • training, family medicine, future of, 33(4):636–640

  • Retirement

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Retrospective studies

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • cardiovascular screening and lipid management in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • financial cost of medical assistant turnover, 33(3):426–430

    • financial model for opioid use disorder, 33(1):124–128

    • heart disease in adult Down syndrome, 33(6):923–931

    • improving COPD symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

    • misdiagnosis of diverticulitis after IBS diagnosis, 33(4):549–560

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • patient retention in opioid medication-assisted treatment, 33(6):848–857

    • physician-pharmacist collaboration on diabetes outcomes, 33(5):745–753

    • prescribing inappropriate medications for elderly patients, 33(4):561–568

    • successful follow-up of participants in a clinical trial, 33(3):431–439

  • Risk assessment

    • breast cancer screening and shared decision making, 33(3):473–480

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • surveillance colonoscopies in older adults with prior adenomas, 33(5):796–798

  • Risk factors

    • cardiovascular disease among breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • depression, rurality, and diabetes control, 33(6):913–922

    • models for hepatitis C screening interventions, 33(3):407–416

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Risk-reduction tools, and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

  • Risk taking, HPV vaccination among adult males, 33(4):592–599

  • Rural health

    • buprenorphine prescribing by family physicians, 33(1):118–123

    • and depression, association with glycemic control, 33(6):913–922

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

    • opioid reduction protocol, 33(4):502–511

    • sustainable preventive services, 33(5):698–706

  • Screening

    • cardiovascular, in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

    • for colorectal cancer, factors associated with, 33(5):779–784

    • hepatitis C

    • EHR reminder and, 33(6):1016–1019

    • models for screening interventions, 33(3):407–416

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Self care, combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Self-management

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

    • patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

  • Self report, request denial and subsequent patient satisfaction, 33(1)51–58

  • Sexual and gender minorities, addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

  • Sexual health

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

  • Shared decision making

    • breast cancer screening and, 33(3):473–480

    • initiative to reduce avoidable hospital admissions, 33(6):1011–1015

  • Shared medical appointments, diabetes, 33(5):716–727

  • Sickle-cell anemia, co-management for, 33(1):91–105

  • Skin cancer, dermoscopy in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

  • Skin diseases, atopic dermatitis, diagnosis and management, 33(4):626–635

  • Smokers, improving COPD symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

  • Social determinants of health

    • integrating data to assess patient risks, 33(3):463–467

    • models for hepatitis C screening interventions, 33(3):407–416

    • primary care and a population health improvement strategy, 33(3):468–472

    • social and clinical complexity on diabetes control, 33(4):600–610

    • social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

  • Social justice

    • medicine’s social contract, 33(5):S50–S56

    • poem about asylum-seeker’s torture, 33(5):815–815

  • Social responsibility, continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

  • Social support, opportunities to partner with patients living with diabetes, 33(2):211–219

  • Social work

    • social risk assessment

    • integrating into health care delivery, 33(2):179–181

    • patient desire for assistance, 33(2):170–175

    • permission to help patients, 33(2):176–178

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Socioeconomic status, physician factors and inbox message volume, 33(3):460–462

  • Software, proposed opioid tapering tool, 33(6):1020–1021

  • Special communications

    • A Change Management Case Study for Safe Opioid Prescribing and Opioid Use Disorder Treatment, 33(1):129–137

    • How We Talk About “Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence” Matters, 33(5):809–814

    • Integrating Community and Clinical Data to Assess Patient Risks with A Population Health Assessment Engine (PHATE), 33(3):463–467

    • Primary Care Is an Essential Ingredient to a Successful Population Health Improvement Strategy, 33(3):468–472

  • Specialization, continuing board certification, 33(5):S10–S14

  • Specialty boards

    • celebrating 50 years of continuing transformation, 33(5):S69–S74

    • helping family physicians keep up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

    • positive professionalism, 33(5):S65–S68

  • Speech, behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

  • Spinal cord diseases, cervical spondylotic myelopathy, 33(2):303–313

  • Spondylosis, cervical spondylotic myelopathy, 33(2):303–313

  • Spouse abuse, 33(5):809–814

  • Stakeholder participation

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Statins

    • anti-HMGCR myopathy from, 33(5):785–788

    • lipid management in breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

  • Streptococcal infections, current indications for tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Substance-related disorders

    • addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

  • Support vector machine, machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

  • Surveys and questionnaires

    • adapting diabetes shared medical appointments, 33(5):716–727

    • anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • behavioral health problems and communication disabilities, 33(6):932–941

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

    • dermoscopy in the primary care setting, 33(6):1022–1024

    • designing a prediabetes shared decision aid, 33(2):262–270

    • educating patients on unnecessary antibiotics, 33(6):969–977

    • eliminating barriers to improve quality of care, 33(2):220–229

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

    • general practitioner job satisfaction in China, 33(3):456–459

    • health care satisfaction among opioid recipients, 33(1):34–41

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • insurance, health care, and discrimination, 33(4):580–591

    • nutrition surveys

    •  glucosamine/chondroitin and mortality, 33(6):842–847

    •  machine learning approach to unhealthy drinking, 33(3):397–406

    •  usual source of care and longer telomere length, 33(6):832–841

    • opioid use and driving among older adults, 33(4):521–528

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • patient “catastrophizing” and expectations of opioid prescriptions, 33(6):858–870

    • patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

    • patient interest in after-hours telemedicine, 33(5):765–773

    • patient-provider teach-back communication with diabetic outcomes, 33(6):903–912

    • patients’ understanding of diabetes and periodontal disease, 33(6):1004–1010

    • physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

    • practice transformation support and cardiovascular care, 33(5):675–686

    • practices reporting clinical quality measures, 33(4):620–625

    • prescription drug advertising and patient-provider interactions, 33(2):279–283

    • quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

    • stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

    • strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

    • subjective vs. objective assessment of cognitive functioning, 33(3):417–425

    • team-based care, changes over time, 33(4):499–501

    • team configurations, efficiency, and burnout, 33(3):368–377

    • virtual Parent Panel for pediatric research network, 33(5):665–674

  • Survivorship, cardiovascular disease among breast cancer survivors, 33(6):894–902

  • Telemedicine

    • after-hours, patient interest in, 33(5):765–773

    • barriers to patient portal access and use, 33(6):953–968

    • project ECHO integrated within the ORPRN, 33(5):789–795

  • Telomere length, longer, and usual source of care, 33(6):832–841

  • Tertiary care centers, ethical questions raised by the EHR, 33(1): 106–117

  • Thiazides, anti-hypertensive medication combinations, 33(1):143–146

  • Thyroid hormones, use in the United States, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

  • Time series algorithms, practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

  • Tonsillectomy, current indications for, 33(6):1025–1030

  • Torture, asylum-seeker’s, poem about, 33(5):815–815

  • Training support, helping family physicians keep up to date, 33(5):S24–S27

  • Tramadol, risk-reduction tools and an opioid-prescribing protocol, 33(1):27–33

  • Translational medical research, clinical decision support for opioid prescribing, 33(4):529–540

  • Treatment outcome, treating opioid use disorder in family medicine, 33(4):611–615

  • Trensgender persons, addressing needs of, 33(2):314–321

  • Type 2 diabetes

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • opportunities to partner with patients living with, 33(2):211–219

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

    • strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

  • Uncertainty, clinical care and nonindicated vitamin D testing, 33(4):569–579

  • United States

    • strategies to overcome psychological insulin resistance, 33(2):198–210

    • thyroid hormone use, 1997–2016, 33(2):284–288

  • United States Indian Health Service, unexpected career retirement, 33(2):339–341

  • Universities, stimulant use by young adults for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

  • Urology, medical professionalism, 33(5):S62–S64

  • Value-based purchasing, measuring and improving quality in the US, 33(5):S28–S35

  • Variance analysis, patient education level and antidepressants, 33(1):80–90

  • Veterans health, anti-HMGCR myopathy from statins, 33(5):785–788

  • Video recording, physicians’ response to quality-of-life goals, 33(1):71–79

  • Violence, addressing needs of transgender patients, 33(2):314–321

  • Virginia

    • indicators of workplace burnout, 33(3):378–385

    • intervention supports diabetes registry implementation: from ACORN, 33(5):728–735

    • Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act, 33(6):942–952

    • office-based opioid treatment models, 33(4):512–521

  • Vitamin D

    • provider screening behavior, modifying, 33(2):252–261

    • testing, nonindicated, clinical care and, 33(4):569–579

  • Volunteers, hospital, 33(3):481–483

  • Vulnerable populations

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • co-management for sickle cell disease, 33(1):91–105

    • factors associated with colorectal cancer screening, 33(5):779–784

  • Weight loss

    • marketing messages in continuing medical education on binge-eating disorder, 33(2):240–251

    • obesity intervention trial, participation of rural clinicians, 33(5):736–744

  • West Virginia, improving COPD symptoms using team-based approach, 33(6):978–985

  • Women physicians

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • gender differences in addressing burnout, 33(3):446–451

  • Women’s health

    • BRCA-related cancer genetic counseling, 33(6):885–893

    • gestational diabetes risk and prenatal weight gain counseling, 33(2):189–197

    • mammography screening for average-risk women, 33(6):871–884

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

    • services provided by family physicians, 33(2):186–188

    • social service touchpoints for diabetes screening, 33(4):616–619

  • Work engagement, practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

  • Workflow, quality improvement toolkit to improve opioid prescribing, 33(1):17–26

  • Workforce

    • gender and work hours among family physicians, 33(5):653–654

    • identifying remedial predictors of burnout, 33(3):357–368

    • OUD education and waiver provision during residency, 33(6):998–1003

    • physicians providing women’s health care services, 33(2):186–188

    • practice facilitation barriers in quality improvement, 33(5):655–664

    • role of family physicians in reproductive health care, 33(2):182–185

  • Workload

    • physician factors and inbox message volume, 33(3):460–462

    • treating fibromyalgia and physician burnout, 33(3):386–396

  • Workplace

    • burnout, indicators of, 33(3):378–385

    • combating burnout in US Army health care, 33(3):440–445

  • Young adults, stimulant use by, for ADHD, 33(1):59–70

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The Journal of the American Board of Family     Medicine: 33 (6)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine
Vol. 33, Issue 6
November-December 2020
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