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Yi, Michael MD
Division: General Internal Medicine
Title: Associate Professor
Education: University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, BA, 1990; Medical College of Virginia, Richmond, VA, MD, 1995; Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA, MSc, 2001
Training: Internal Medicine and Pediatrics, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Cincinnati Childrens Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH, 1999
Clinical Interests: Chronic illnesses affecting both children and adults
Research Interests: Health-related quality of life outcomes; transitional care of children with chronic illness or disability; relationships between health outcomes and mental health, sociological factors, spirituality, and religiosity; decision analysis; cost-effectiveness analysis
Recent Publications:
Street NJ, Yi MS, Bailey LA, Hopkin RJ. Title: Comparison of health-related quality of life between heterozygous women with Fabry disease, a healthy control population, and patients with other chronic disease. Genetics in Medicine, In Press.
Yi MS, Luckhaupt SE, Mrus JM, Mueller CV, Peterman AH, Puchalski CM, Tsevat J. Religion, spirituality, and depressive symptoms in primary care house officers. Ambulatory Pediatrics, 6(2):84-90, 2006.
Arrington-Sanders R, Yi MS, Tsevat J, Wilmott RW, Mrus JM, Britto MT. Gender differences in health-related quality of life of adolescents with cystic fibrosis. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 4(1): 5, 2006.
Mrus JM, Braun L, Yi MS, Linde-Zwirble WT, Johnston JA. Impact of HIV/AIDS on care and outcomes of severe sepsis. Critical Care, 9(6): R623-30, 2005.
Luckhaupt SE, Yi MS, Mueller CV, Mrus JM, Peterman AH, Puchalski CM, Tsevat J. Beliefs of primary care residents regarding spirituality and religion in clinical encounters. Academic Medicine, 80(6): 560-70, 2005.
Notes: Dr. Yi is the recipient of a K23 grant from the National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Child Health and Human Development for investigating determinants of health-related quality of life, health care perceptions, and health values in adolescents with chronic illness. His research interests center on outcomes of both children and adults living with persistent illness or disability. He has a special interest in the study of outcomes of children with chronic illness as they transition into and through young adulthood.
Email: michael.yi@uc.edu
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