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Biology and Biochemistry

D-Index
81
Citations
35755
World Ranking
3798
National Ranking
1880

Research.com Recognitions

  • 1987 - Member of the National Academy of Sciences

Overview

Thomas S. Reese is affiliated with the National Institutes of Health in the United States. Their research work spans the fields of Medicine and Health Professions, with a focus on several subfields including General Health Professions, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Health Information Management, Surgery, and Epidemiology.

The main topics addressed in their work include:

  • Electronic Health Records Systems
  • Opioid Use Disorder Treatment
  • Pharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes
  • Healthcare Technology and Patient Monitoring
  • Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
  • Patient Safety and Medication Errors
  • Clinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills

Thomas S. Reese has frequently published in the following venues:

  • Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
  • JAMA Network Open
  • Applied Clinical Informatics
  • Translational Behavioral Medicine
  • Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience

Recent papers featuring their contributions include:

  • "Perspectives of Patients About Immediate Access to Test Results Through an Online Patient Portal," 2023, JAMA Network Open
  • "Inaccuracies in electronic health records smoking data and a potential approach to address resulting underestimation in determining lung cancer screening eligibility," 2022, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
  • "Evaluation of Revised US Preventive Services Task Force Lung Cancer Screening Guideline Among Women and Racial/Ethnic Minority Populations," 2021, JAMA Network Open
  • "Peanut-induced anaphylaxis in children and adolescents: Data from the European Anaphylaxis Registry," 2020, Allergy
  • "Establishing a multidisciplinary initiative for interoperable electronic health record innovations at an academic medical center," 2021, JAMIA Open

Co-authors frequently collaborating with Thomas S. Reese include:

  • Kensaku Kawamoto
  • Guilherme Del Fiol
  • Adam Wright
  • Bryan D. Steitz
  • Charlene Weir

Thomas S. Reese was recognized as a Member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1987.

Best Publications

  • FINE STRUCTURAL LOCALIZATION OF A BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER TO EXOGENOUS PEROXIDASE

    T. S. Reese;Morris J. Karnovsky

  • JUNCTIONS BETWEEN INTIMATELY APPOSED CELL MEMBRANES IN THE VERTEBRATE BRAIN

    M. W. Brightman;T. S. Reese

  • EVIDENCE FOR RECYCLING OF SYNAPTIC VESICLE MEMBRANE DURING TRANSMITTER RELEASE AT THE FROG NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION

    J. E. Heuser;T. S. Reese

  • Identification of a novel force-generating protein, kinesin, involved in microtubule-based motility

    Ronald D. Vale;Ronald D. Vale;Ronald D. Vale;Thomas S. Reese;Michael P. Sheetz;Michael P. Sheetz

  • Synaptic vesicle exocytosis captured by quick freezing and correlated with quantal transmitter release.

    J E Heuser;T S Reese;M J Dennis;Y Jan

  • Dendrodendritic synaptic pathway for inhibition in the olfactory bulb

    Wilfrid Rall;G.M. Shepherd;T.S. Reese;M.W. Brightman

  • Anaphylaxis in children and adolescents: The European Anaphylaxis Registry

    Linus B. Grabenhenrich;Sabine Dölle;Anne Moneret-Vautrin;Alice Köhli

  • Changes in membrane structure induced by electroporation as revealed by rapid-freezing electron microscopy

    D.C. Chang;T.S. Reese

  • Functional changes in frog neuromuscular junctions studied with freeze-fracture.

    J. E. Heuser;T. S. Reese;D. M. D. Landis

  • Different axoplasmic proteins generate movement in opposite directions along microtubules in vitro

    Ronald D. Vale;Bruce J. Schnapp;Tim Mitchison;Eric Steuer

  • Structural changes after transmitter release at the frog neuromuscular junction.

    J E Heuser;T S Reese

  • The blood-brain barrier to proteins under normal and pathological conditions.

    M.W Brightman;I Klatzo;Y Olsson;T.S Reese

  • Junctions in the meninges and marginal glia

    Sachio Nabeshima;T. S. Reese;Dennis M. D. Landis;M. W. Brightman

  • Dynein is the motor for retrograde axonal transport of organelles

    Bruce J. Schnapp;Thomas S. Reese

  • Organelle, bead, and microtubule translocations promoted by soluble factors from the squid giant axon.

    Ronald D. Vale;Ronald D. Vale;Bruce J. Schnapp;Thomas S. Reese;Michael P. Sheetz

  • Osmotic opening of tight junctions in cerebral endothelium.

    Milton W. Brightman;Masaharu Hori;Stanley I. Rapoport;Thomas S. Reese

  • Single microtubules from squid axoplasm support bidirectional movement of organelles

    Bruce J. Schnapp;Ronald D. Vale;Michael P. Sheetz;Thomas S. Reese

  • Are the presynaptic membrane particles the calcium channels

    D W Pumplin;T S Reese;R Llinás

  • The organization of cytoplasm at the presynaptic active zone of a central nervous system synapse

    Dennis M.D. Landis;Alison K. Hall;Lori A. Weinstein;Thomas S. Reese

  • OLFACTORY CILIA IN THE FROG

    T. S. Reese

Frequent Co-Authors

Ronald D. Vale
Ronald D. Vale University of California, San Francisco
John E. Heuser
John E. Heuser Washington University in St. Louis
Bechara Kachar
Bechara Kachar National Institutes of Health
Michael P. Sheetz
Michael P. Sheetz The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Margitta Worm
Margitta Worm Charité - University Medicine Berlin
Joshua Zimmerberg
Joshua Zimmerberg National Institutes of Health
Lucas Pozzo-Miller
Lucas Pozzo-Miller University of Alabama at Birmingham
Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos
Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Mark Terasaki
Mark Terasaki University of Connecticut Health Center
Jeffrey S. Diamond
Jeffrey S. Diamond National Institutes of Health

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