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Annals of Family Medicine is a bimonthly peer-reviewed medical journal that was established in May/June 2003. It publishes original research from the clinical, biomedical, social and health services sciences, as well as contributions on methodology and theory, selected reviews, essays, and invited editorials. The editor-in-chief is Caroline Richardson (University of Michigan). In 2014, the journal had an impact factor of 5.434. The Annals published its first issue in 2003. The founding editor, who served as editor for 17 years through 2018, was Kurt Stange. The Annals was founded as an "unprecedented collaborative effort by 6 family medicine organizations coming together to support a forum for research and the intellectual development of the field [and is] overseen by an independent board of representatives from these 6 organizations: the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), the American Board of Family Practice (ABFP), the Society of Teachers of Family Medicine (STFM), the Association of Departments of Family Medicine (ADFM), the Association of Family Practice Residency Directors (AFPRD), and the North American Primary Care Research Group (NAPCRG)." Source: Wikipedia (en)
Editions published in Annals of Family Medicine 2441
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Comorbidity: implications for the importance of primary care in 'case' management
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Descriptions of Barriers to Self-Care by Persons with Comorbid Chronic Diseases
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A Native American community with a 7% cesarean delivery rate: does case mix, ethnicity, or labor management explain the low rate?
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Patient education for informed decision making about prostate cancer screening: a randomized controlled trial with 1-year follow-up
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Glycemic control in medical inpatients with type 2 diabetes mellitus receiving sliding scale insulin regimens versus routine diabetes medications: a multicenter randomized controlled trial
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Applying a risk-adjustment framework to primary care: can we improve on existing measures?
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Variation in the ecology of medical care
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Do HMOs affect educational disparities in health care?
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Who is caring for the underserved? A comparison of primary care physicians and nonphysician clinicians in California and Washington
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The effectiveness of primary care-based interventions to promote breastfeeding: systematic evidence review and meta-analysis for the US Preventive Services Task Force
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Cultural expressions of bodily awareness among chronically ill Filipino Americans
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Patient-provider racial and ethnic concordance and parent reports of the primary care experiences of children
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Provider continuity in family medicine: does it make a difference for total health care costs?
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Impact of provider continuity on quality of care for persons with diabetes mellitus
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Who first suggests the diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder?
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On being new to an insurance plan: health care use associated with the first years in a health insurance plan
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A journey to someplace better
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Continuity of primary care: to whom does it matter and when?
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Women's experiences of abnormal cervical cytology: illness representations, care processes, and outcomes
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Screening mammography and Pap tests among older American women 1996-2000: results from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) and Asset and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD).
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Chaperone use by family physicians during the collection of a Pap smear
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Periodic abstinence from Pap (PAP) smear study: women's perceptions of Pap smear screening
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Test-retest reproducibility of heart rate recovery after treadmill exercise
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Factors affecting the detection rate of human papillomavirus
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A randomized clinical trial of a care recommendation letter intervention for somatization in primary care
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Defining and measuring interpersonal continuity of care
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The face of cancer
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The Society of Teachers of Family Medicine presents its 2003 STFM Best Research Paper award to David Mehr, MD, MS.
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NAPCRG: the beginning
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Being successful with family medicine residency research: lessons learned from others.
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From turf wars to common ground: the shifting dynamics of medical student education.
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Meeting on patient safety takes different tack: ambulatory care.
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