Sandra Crouse Quinn

Sandra Crouse Quinn

University of Maryland

H-index: 54

North America-United States

About Sandra Crouse Quinn

Sandra Crouse Quinn, With an exceptional h-index of 54 and a recent h-index of 43 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Maryland, specializes in the field of public health, health disparities, vaccine acceptance in emergency and routine situations.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Correction: Twitter and Facebook posts about COVID-19 are less likely to spread misinformation compared to other health topics

Beliefs in COVID-19 vaccine misinformation among unvaccinated Black Americans: Prevalence, socio-psychological predictors, and consequences

Twitter and Facebook posts about COVID-19 are less likely to spread misinformation compared to other health topics (vol 17, e0261768, 2022)

The Additional Disease Burden Accompanying a Delayed Diagnosis of Multiple Myeloma: Utilising a Large Real-World Evidence Base

Understanding the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among Black Americans: implications for vaccine communication

Moral foundations predict COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: Evidence from a national survey of Black Americans

The science of trust: future directions, research gaps, and implications for health and risk communication

General and health-related social media use among adults with children in the household: Findings from a national survey in the United States

Sandra Crouse Quinn Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

13344

Citations(since 2020)

7632

Cited By

8225

hIndex(all)

54

hIndex(since 2020)

43

i10Index(all)

110

i10Index(since 2020)

83

Email

University Profile Page

University of Maryland

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

Sandra Crouse Quinn Skills & Research Interests

public health

health disparities

vaccine acceptance in emergency and routine situations

Top articles of Sandra Crouse Quinn

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Correction: Twitter and Facebook posts about COVID-19 are less likely to spread misinformation compared to other health topics

Plos one

David A Broniatowski

Daniel Kerchner

Fouzia Farooq

Xiaolei Huang

Amelia M Jamison

...

2024/2/12

Beliefs in COVID-19 vaccine misinformation among unvaccinated Black Americans: Prevalence, socio-psychological predictors, and consequences

Health Communication

Yuan Wang

Kathryn Thier

Shana O Ntiri

Sandra Crouse Quinn

Clement Adebamowo

...

2024/2/23

Twitter and Facebook posts about COVID-19 are less likely to spread misinformation compared to other health topics (vol 17, e0261768, 2022)

PloS one

David A Broniatowski

Daniel Kerchner

Fouzia Farooq

Xiaolei Huang

Amelia M Jamison

...

2022/1/12

The Additional Disease Burden Accompanying a Delayed Diagnosis of Multiple Myeloma: Utilising a Large Real-World Evidence Base

Blood

Sandra CM Quinn

Lauren Kelly

Tom Lewis

2023/11/28

Understanding the psychological antecedents of COVID-19 vaccine acceptance among Black Americans: implications for vaccine communication

Journal of Communication in Healthcare

Kathryn Thier

Yuan Wang

Clement Adebamowo

Shana O Ntiri

Sandra Crouse Quinn

...

2023/1/2

Moral foundations predict COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy: Evidence from a national survey of Black Americans

Journal of Health Communication

Xiaoli Nan

Yuan Wang

Kathryn Thier

Clement Adebamowo

Sandra Quinn

...

2022/12/2

The science of trust: future directions, research gaps, and implications for health and risk communication

Journal of Communication in Healthcare

Renata Schiavo

Gil Eyal

Rafael Obregon

Sandra C Quinn

Helen Riess

...

2022/10/2

General and health-related social media use among adults with children in the household: Findings from a national survey in the United States

Patient Education and Counseling

Yuki Lama

Xiaoli Nan

Sandra Crouse Quinn

2022/3/1

Social media use and human papillomavirus awareness and knowledge among adults with children in the household: examining the role of race, ethnicity, and gender

Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics

Yuki Lama

Sandra Crouse Quinn

Xiaoli Nan

Raul Cruz-Cano

2021/4/3

From interpersonal violence to institutionalized discrimination: documenting and assessing the impact of Islamophobia on Muslim American

Journal of Muslim mental health

Naheed Ahmed

Sandra C Quinn

Rupali J Limaye

Suleiman Khan

Sandra C Quinn

...

2021/12/15

COVID-19 VACCINE HESITANCY AND STRATEGIES FOR BUILDING VACCINE CONFIDENCE IN THE COVID-19 VACCINES

EMILY K BRUNSON

ALISON BUTTENHEIM

SAAD B OMER

SANDRA CROUSE QUINN

2021/2/19

Critical capability needs for reduction of transmission of SARS-CoV-2 indoors

Jayne B Morrow

Aaron I Packman

Kenneth F Martinez

Kevin Van Den Wymelenberg

Darla Goeres

...

2021/9/29

The public’s role in COVID-19 vaccination: Human-centered recommendations to enhance pandemic vaccine awareness, access, and acceptance in the United States

Vaccine

Monica Schoch-Spana

Emily K Brunson

Rex Long

Alexandra Ruth

Sanjana J Ravi

...

2021/9/24

Debunking the misinfodemic: Coronavirus social media contains more, not less, credible content

David A Broniatowski

Daniel Kerchner

Fouzia Farooq

Xiaolei Huang

Amelia M Jamison

...

2021/1/6

Addressing vaccine hesitancy in BIPOC communities—toward trustworthiness, partnership, and reciprocity

New England Journal of Medicine

Sandra C Quinn

Michele P Andrasik

2021/7/8

Willingness of Black and White adults to accept vaccines in development: An exploratory study using national survey data

American Journal of Health Promotion

Sandra Crouse Quinn

Yuki Lama

Amelia Jamison

Vicki Freimuth

Veeraj Shah

2021/5

Not just conspiracy theories: Vaccine opponents and proponents add to the COVID-19 ‘infodemic’on Twitter

Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review

Amelia M Jamison

David A Broniatowski

Mark Dredze

Anu Sangraula

Michael C Smith

...

2020/9

Measles outbreaks and public attitudes towards vaccine exemptions: some cautions and strategies for addressing vaccine hesitancy

Human vaccines & immunotherapeutics

Sandra Crouse Quinn

AM Jamison

VS Freimuth

2020/5/3

Providing tailored information and support through the Myeloma UK, Myeloma Infoline and Ask The Nurse services during the COVID‐19 pandemic

Psycho-oncology

Sandra CM Quinn

Ellen D Watters

Sarah L Dempsey

Kim S Dolman

Ira Laketic‐Ljubojevic

2020/9

Vaccine communication as weaponized identity politics

American journal of public health

David A Broniatowski

Sandra C Quinn

Mark Dredze

Amelia M Jamison

2020/5

See List of Professors in Sandra Crouse Quinn University(University of Maryland)