Inflammatory Bowel Disease Characteristics Among African Americans, Hispanics, and Non-Hispanic Whites: Characterization of a Large North American Cohort
Geoffrey C. Nguyen(Johns Hopkins Medicine), Mark S. Silverberg(Sinai Health System), Gillian Bromfield(University of Chicago), Judy H. Cho(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Federico Gregory(University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus), Huiying Yang(National Institutes for Food and Drug Control), Steven R. Brant(Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey), Joanne M. Stempak(Mount Sinai Hospital), Themistocles Dassopoulos(Cedars-Sinai Medical Center), Richard H. Duerr(University of Pittsburgh), Alain Bitton(McGill University Health Centre), Sunanda V. Kane(Mayo Clinic), Esther A. Torres(University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus), Maria Oliva‐Hemker(Johns Hopkins University), L. Philip Schumm(Chicago Department of Public Health), John D. Rioux(Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland), Anne M. Griffiths(University of Toronto), Gary Wild(Montreal General Hospital), A. Hillary Steinhart(Mount Sinai Hospital), Heather Kiraly Orkwis(University of Pittsburgh), Stephen B. Hanauer(Northwestern University), Mary L. Harris(Johns Hopkins University), Miguel Regueiro(Cleveland Clinic), Pierre Paré(Université Laval), Jennifer Hanson(University of Pittsburgh), Raymond Lahaie(Hôpital Saint-Luc)
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