Joshua T. Anderson

Researcher

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

faculty

16 h-index 62 pubs 791 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Joshua T. Anderson's research focuses on patient-reported outcomes and factors influencing recovery and well-being across various medical interventions. He is currently serving as PI on a NIH/National Institute on Drug Abuse funded project to validate a survey tool assessing patient-reported outcomes for new medications aimed at treating methamphetamine use disorder. This grant totals $226,693.

Anderson's recent publications explore diverse clinical areas, including the impact of multidisciplinary transitional pain management programs on opioid dependence after total joint arthroplasty, challenges in extensor mechanism disruptions, and inconsistencies in ICD-10 coding for hip fractures. His work also investigates factors affecting return to work for patients undergoing carpal tunnel release and the role of antiseptic irrigation solutions in total joint arthroplasty. Additionally, he has examined the influence of smoking on workers' compensation patients receiving spinal cord stimulation.

His scholarship metrics include an h-index of 16, with 62 total publications and 791 total citations. Anderson has collaborated with several faculty members at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, including Benjamin M. Stronach, C. Lowry Barnes, Jeffery B. Stambough, and Simon C. Mears, co-authoring two publications with each.

Metrics

  • h-index: 16
  • Publications: 62
  • Citations: 791

Selected Publications

  • Inconsistency and Ambiguity Within the International Classification of Disease 10 Procedure Coding System for Hip Fractures (2023) DOI
  • Extensor Mechanism Disruption Remains a Challenging Problem (2023) DOI

Federal Grants 1 $226,693 total

NIH/National Institute on Drug Abuse Contact PI Sep 2024 - Aug 2026

Validation of a survey tool to evaluate patient-reported outcomes for new medications to treat methamphetamine use disorder: The PROMT Survey

National Institute on Drug Abuse $226,693 R21

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