date: 26.8.19 curriculum vitae 1. keshet prof.pdf · title of doctoral thesis: knowledge in the...
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Date: 26.8.19
Curriculum Vitae
1. Personal Data
Name in Hebrew: פרופ' יעל קשת יעל קשת
Name in English: Yael Keshet Yael Keshet Prof.
E-Mail: [email protected] [email protected]
2. Education Certificates and Degrees
Education Institute Department From - To
First Degree
Th
Ben Gurion
University
Dep. of Biology 1983-1986
Second Degree
University of Haifa Dep. of Sociology
and Anthropology
1997-2000
Third Degree University of Haifa Dep. of Sociology
and Anthropology
2001-2006
3. Title of Master's Thesis: Complementary medicine discourse as an
alternative culture
Supervisor: Prof. Nurit Bird-David
Title of Doctoral Thesis: Knowledge in the medical discourse: Healing and
therapeutic efficacy of complementary and alternative medicine
Supervisor: Prof. Yuval Yonay
4. Academic Ranks
Rank % Position From - To Institute
Associate Professor 100 07.06.2015 –
current
Western Galilee
College
Senior lecturer 100 01.02.2011–
07.06.2015
Western Galilee
College
5. Grants and Awards
Year Name of Grant/Award
2019 Award- excellence in research, Western Galilee Academic
College
2017 Award - excellence in research, Western Galilee Academic
College
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2015 Award - excellence in research, Western Galilee Academic
College
2013 Award - excellence in research, Western Galilee Academic
College
2012 Nominee for the SAGE Prize for Innovation and Excellence
2007 Excellent lecturer, Western Galilee Academic College
2003 Scholarship, University of Haifa
2002 Scholarship, University of Haifa
2001 Scholarship, University of Haifa
1999 Scholarship, University of Haifa
1986 Excellence Scholarship, Ben Gurion University
1985 Excellence Scholarship, Ben Gurion University
6. Research Grants
From-To Funding
Agency
Title of Research Amount Names of Research
Partners
Nov 2016
– May
2018
NIHP Policies that address
ethnic tensions and
racism directed at
Arab medical
personnel in health
organizations in
Israel
126,379
NIS
Dr. Ariela Popper-
Giveon
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7. Active Participation in Conferences (Only from 2001)
Member of the organizing committee, The Israeli Sociological Conference, 2015. Member of the scientific organizing committee, The Ninth Israeli Conference of
the Study of Contempotaty Spirituality, 2018.
8. Positions Held
From-To Institute Position % Position
Position 2018 -
current
Western Galilee
Academic College
Head of Sociology
department
2015 -
current
Western Galilee
Academic College
Assoc. Prof. 100%
2016 - 2017 University of Haifa Assoc. Prof. 20%
2015 -
current
The Max Stern
Academic College of
Emek Yezreel
Assoc. Prof. 30%
2011-2015 Western Galilee
Academic College
Senior lecturer 100%
2011-2015 The Max Stern
Academic College of
Emek Yezreel
Senior lecturer 25-40%
2010-current Western Galilee
Academic College
Head of division
2010-2011 Western Galilee
Academic College
Head of Information
Studies department
2007-2008 Western Galilee
Academic College
Acting head of
Sociology department
2004-2011 Western Galilee
Academic College
lecturer 100%
2004-2006 University of Haifa Lecturer 20%
2002-2011 The Max Stern
Academic College of
Emek Yezreel
lecturer 25-40%
9. Additional Professional Experience (Public Positions)
1985-1990 Researcher, Arava R&D, Research and Development, Southern
Arava, agriculture.
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10. Scientific Areas of Specialization
• Sociology of medicine
• Medical anthropology
• Qualitative research
• Sociology of medical organizations
• Sociology of medical knowledge
11. Miscellaneous
2017 – GCP – Good Clinical Practice training – Attended the course of Design,
performance and regulatory of clinical trials.
Member of Committees
2018 - current Western Galilee Academic
College Higher Academic Council
Member
2018 - current Western Galilee Academic
College
Ethics in Research committee
member
2016 - 2018 Western Galilee Academic
College
Teaching Committee advisor
member
2012 - 2018 Western Galilee Academic
College
Teaching Committee member
(Sociology department)
2012 - 2013 Western Galilee Academic
College
“Excellence in research”
committee member
2008 - 2011 Western Galilee Academic
College
Member of Research council
Member of professional associations
2015 – Current, Member of the European Sociological Association.
2015 – 2018, Member of Israeli Anthropological Society.
2007 – Current, Member of the Israeli Sociological Society.
2014 – Member of the European Society for Health and Medical Sociology.
2008 – 2014, Member of the Israeli Medical Association, the Israeli Society for
Complementary Medicine.
2012 – Member of the British Sociological Association.
I have peer reviewed articles for the following international journals
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Social Science and Medicine, Journal of Interprofessional Care, Health:
(London): An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and
Medicine, European Journal of Integrative Medicine, Complementary Therapies
in Medicine , Patient Education and Counseling , Journal of Immigrant and
Minority Health, Harefuah and more
I have peer reviewed doctoral research proposals and dissertations
University of Haifa 2014, 2018.
I have peer reviewed research proposals for the following international
research funds: BSF – United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation
12. Academic Profile
Research Activities
Throughout my academic career, my main interest and focus has been on taking
an interdisciplinary approach and addressing the interface between Natural and
Social Science; and more specifically, to focus on the social and cultural aspects
of health care. My undergraduate degree in biology established my area of
interest, and advanced degrees in anthropology and sociology have led me to
focus on the sociology of medicine.
I acquired my initial research skills after completing my undergraduate degree in
biology while spending several years working at the Southern Arava Research
and Development Institute. During my master's and doctoral studies, I specialized
in cultural and social qualitative research. My training both as a biologist and a
social scientist has drawn me toward the fields of medical anthropology and the
sociology of medicine. Since the completion of my doctoral dissertation thirteen
years ago, I have published some 50 papers in refereed journals, and have written
three chapters in scientific books and two books .
A major research topic of mine is integrative medicine, namely the integration of
complementary and alternative therapies in healthcare and health organizations. I
joined a group of physicians who work in hospitals and health maintenance
organizations, where they have introduced and are researching integrative
medicine. We have jointly conducted several studies at the Lin Medical Center
and Bnai-Zion hospital, funded by the respective health organizations .
A second major research project I conducted with a colleague (Dr. Ariela Popper-
Giveon) was the study of ethno-national tensions in health organizations between
Jews and Arabs, and the relevant ways to address it. We received a grant from
The Israel National Institute for Health Policy Research, and conducted a survey
and 50 in-depth interviews. Toward the end of the study we were invited by the
Ministry of Health to explain the results of the study and to recommend a policy
designed to address the problem. We have published a number of articles on the
research findings, and a book is due to be published this year. I endeavor to
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conduct research that not only contributes to scientific development, but that is
also applicable and contributes to patients’ welfare and to health-care
professionals by impacting health-care policy and students’ education.
I enjoy collaborating with other scholars and am aware of the advantages to be
gained by combining the different skills of colleagues. I have worked with
colleagues from Ben Gurion University, the Technion, Victoria University in
New Zealand, Western Galilee College, David Yellin College, Tel Hai College,
Jezreel Valley College, Nahariya Hospital, Bnai Zion Hospital and the Lin
Medical Center .
Teaching Activities
I teach diverse courses in the Sociology Department – from introductory courses
to research seminar courses. In recent years I have built and run a program that
specializes in the field of health and well-being as part of the existing sociology
program of undergraduate studies. Specialization in health and well-being
provides graduates with basic knowledge and practical experience in issues
relating to the social and cultural components of work in health and welfare
organizations .
The program seeks to provide students who work, or intend to work, in health and
welfare organizations with a sociological and anthropological education, and
endow them with applied skills of structural-social and cultural competence. It
seeks to promote the receptiveness, knowledge, and skills that make for cultural
competence. Cultural competence among practitioners facilitates a response that
is compatible with the applicant's culture. Studies have shown that treatment
given to a patient by a practitioner who is familiar with his or her culture and
customs is more effective and beneficial .
The program furthermore seeks to impart awareness, knowledge, familiarity and
skills that promote structural-social competence. Structural-social competence is
a conceptual and applied framework for social factors that strongly influence the
health and the welfare of individuals, such as socioeconomic status and poverty,
environmental quality, stigmatization, sexual orientation, ethnic tensions, and
immigration. This approach places emphasis on recognition of the economic and
political conditions that generate social injustice and inequality in health .
These topics are becoming increasingly important and internationally recognized
as developments in epigenetics and neuroscience reveal the vital roles that social
contexts may play even in seemingly purely biological diseases. To the best of
my knowledge, our program is the only one in Israel that has been designed to
focus on sociological and anthropological perspectives on health and welfare.
Future Research Plans
My future research plan is to study decision making in healthcare, which is
essentially a social process since such decisions take interpersonal and social
contexts into account, and their outcomes impact others besides the patient(s)
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they address directly. Extensive research has been conducted on the processes
involved in decision making, but has largely neglected the relevant social context.
In the last few months I have started (with Dr. Ariela Popper-Giveon) a pilot
study that focuses on patients’ health-related decision-making processes (HDP),
concentrating on the sociological aspects of decisions made by ultra-orthodox
Jews (Haredim) regarding vaccination of their children. The findings will enable
us to pinpoint how, why, and when the social environment triggers and shapes
individual HDP. Furthermore, they will enable us to draw up a broader research
proposal using a mixed quantitative and qualitative research methodology that
will examine HDP among four different population groups in Israeli society. We
plan to submit this broader research proposal for external research funding.
As part of this plan, I and my colleague have joined a research network that will
take up the HORIZON 2020 call of “Addressing low vaccine uptake.” The call is
for proposals to analyze the causes and motives for people’s opposition and
hesitancy toward vaccination and to design and test interventions to improve
vaccine uptake. I believe that the issue of vaccine resistance, and particularly that
of vaccine hesitancy, is very relevant to health policies and offers an intriguing
opportunity to study the social and cultural context of health-related decision-
making processes. The research network comprises scholars from the UK,
Switzerland, the Czech Republic, Turkey, Estonia, Belgium, Italy, Finland, the
Netherlands, Spain, Poland, the Philippines, and our group from Israel.
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Publications
Prof. Yael Keshet
(*After the last promotion)
A. Scientific Books (Refereed)
Authored Books – Published
1. Keshet, Y. (2010). Complementary Medicine and the Reenchantment of the
World. Tel Aviv: Resling. [Hebrew].
Authored Books - Accepted for Publication
2. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y. Regardless of religion or race: Ethnic
tensions between Jews and Arabs in the Israeli health system. Jerusalem:
Carmel. [Hebrew].
B. Articles in Refereed Journals
Published
1. Keshet, Y. (2008). Knowledge construction about alternative medicine:
Consequences of the ability of shared medical decision-making and informed
consent. Social Issues in Israel, 5, 153-184. (Hebrew).
2. Ben-Arye, E., Keshet, Y., Shapira, C., Karkabi, S., Karkabi, K., & Frenkel,
M. (2009). Complementary Medicine in the Primary Care Setting: Results of a
Survey of Gender and Cultural Patterns in Israel. Gender Medicine, 6(2), 384-
397.
IF: 2.481, Q1, 48 citations.
3. Ben-Arye, E., Shapira, C., Keshet, Y., Hogerat I., & Karkabi, K. (2009).
Attitudes of Arab-Muslims towards integration of complementary medicine in
primary-care clinics in Israel: The Bedouin Mystery. Ethnicity and Health,
14(4), 379-391.
IF: 2.164, Q1, 12 citations.
4. Ben-Arye, E., Karkabi, K., Karkabi, S., Keshet, Y., Haddad, M., & Frenkel,
M. (2009). Attitudes of Arab and Jewish patients towards integration of
complementary medicine in primary care clinics in Israel: A Cross-cultural
study. Social Science and Medicine, 68(1), 177-182.
IF: 3.688, Q1, 46 citations.
5. Ben-Arye, E., Lev, E., Keshet, Y., & Schiff, E. (2009). Integration of herbal
medicine in primary care in Israel: A Jewish-Arab cross-cultural perspective.
Evidence Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, Vol. 2011, Article
ID 401395, 8 pages. DOI: 10.1093/ecam/nep146.
IF: 2.140, Q1, 4 citations.
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6. Keshet, Y. (2009). The untenable boundaries of biomedical knowledge:
Epistemologies and rhetoric strategies in the debate over evaluating
complementary and alternative medicine. Health (London): An
Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine,
13(2), 131-155. IF: 1.396, Q1, 49 citations.
7. Keshet, Y. (2010). Hybrid Knowledge and Research on the Efficacy of
Alternative and Complementary Medicine Treatments. Social Epistemology, a
Journal of Knowledge. Social Epistemology, 24 (4), 331-347.
Q1, 15 citations.
8. Ben-Arye, E., Schiff, E., Karkabi, K., Keshet, Y., & Lev, E. (2011). Exploring
association of spiritual perspectives with complementary medicine use among
patients with type 2 diabetes in Israel. Ethnicity and Health, 16(1), 1-10.
IF: 2.164, Q1, 8 citations.
9. Keshet, Y. (2011). Classification systems in the light of sociology of
knowledge. Journal of Documentation, 67(1), 144-158.
IF: 1.333, Q1, 20 citations.
10. Keshet, Y. (2011). Energy Medicine and hybrid knowledge construction: the
formation of new cultural-epistemological rules of discourse. Cultural
Sociology, 5(4), 501-518.
IF: 0.391, Q1, 11 citations.
11. Ben-Arye, E., Schiff, E., Steiner, M., Keshet, Y., & Lavie, O. (2012).
Attitudes of Patients with Gynecological and Breast Cancer toward Integration
of Complementary Medicine in Cancer Care. International Journal of
Gynecological Cancer, 22(1), 146-153.
IF: 1.152, Q1, 32 citations.
12. Schiff, E., Ben Arye, E., Attias, S., & Keshet, Y. (2012). Perceiving
Integration of a Complementary Medicine Service within a General Surgery
Department through Documentation of Consultations: A Thematic Analysis.
PEC. Patient Education and Counseling, 89(3), 430-433.
IF: 2.933, Q1, 14 citations.
13. Keshet, Y., Arnon, Z., Ben Arye, E., Shmuel, A., Sroka, G., Matter, I., &
Schiff, E. (2012). The Perceived Impact of Integrative Medicine in a Surgical
Department. European Journal of Integrative Medicine, 4(1), e27-e35.
IF: 0.658, Q3, 5 citations.
14. Keshet, Y., Ben-Arye, E., & Schiff, E. (2012). Can holism be practiced while
integrating complementary medicine in a biomedical setting? A qualitative
study in a surgical department. Health (London): An Interdisciplinary Journal
for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 16(6), 585-601.
IF: 1.396, Q1, 16 citations.
15. Keshet, Y. (2012). Network gatekeeping: Complementary medicine
information on the websites of medical institutions. Health (London): An
Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine,
16(2), 151-168.
IF: 1.396, Q1, 6 citations.
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16. Keshet, Y., Ben-Arye, E., & Schiff, E. (2012). The use of boundary objects to
enhance interprofessional collaboration: integrating complementary medicine
in a hospital setting. Sociology of Health and Illness, 35(5), 666-681.
IF: 2.442, Q1, 34 citations.
17. Keshet, Y., & Popper-Giveon, A. (2013). Integrative health care in Israel and
traditional Arab herbal medicine: When health care interfaces with culture and
politics. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 27(3), 368-384.
IF: 1.818, Q1, 12 citations.
18. Keshet, Y., Attias, S., Ben Arye, E., Shaham, M., Grimberg, O., & Schiff, E.
(2013). Integrative complementary medicine for treatment of bariatric
perioperative symptoms: Patients' experiences and staff evaluations. Bariatric
Surgical Practice and Patient Care, 8(3), 108-112.
IF: 0.228, 2 citations.
19. Keshet, Y. (2013). Dual embedded agency: physicians implement integrative
medicine in healthcare organizations. Health (London): An Interdisciplinary
Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 17(6), 605-621.
IF:1.648, Q1, 18 citations.
20. Keshet, Y., & Liberman, I. (2014). Seeking empowerment and spirituality in
the secular age: Secular and traditionalist Israelis consulting rabbis. Sociology,
48(1), 92-110.
IF: 2.161, Q1, 4 citations.
21. Keshet, Y., & Liberman, I. (2014). Coping with illness and threat: Why non-
religious Jews choose to consult rabbis on healthcare issues. Journal of
Religion and Health, 53(4), 1146-1160.
IF: 0.967, Q1, 6 citations.
22. Popper-Giveon, A., Liberman, I., & Keshet, Y. (2014). Workforce ethnic
diversity and culturally competent health care: The case of Arab physicians in
Israel. Ethnicity and Health, 19(6), 645-658.
IF: 2.164, Q1, 11 citations.
23. Keshet, Y., & Simchai, D. (2014). The 'gender puzzle' of alternative medicine
and holistic spirituality: A literature review. Social Science & Medicine, 113,
77-86.
IF: 3.688, Q1, 22 citations.
24. Keshet, Y., Schiff, E., Samuels, N., & Ben-Arye, E. (2015). Giving voice to
cancer patients: assessing non-specific effects of an integrative oncology
therapeutic program via short patient narratives. Psycho-oncology, 24(2):169-
74. IF: 4.044, Q1, 15 citations.
25. Popper Giveon, A. & Keshet, Y. (2015). Complementary Medicine as a Path
towards Empowerment of Arab-Palestinian Women in Israel. Health Care for
Women International, 36 (11), 1290-1307.
IF= 0.762, Q2,
26. *Keshet, Y., Popper Giveon, A. & Liberman, I. (2015). Intersectionality and
underrepresentation among health care workforce: The case of Arab
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physicians in Israel. Israel Journal of Health Policy Research, 4:18 (1-11).
DOI 10.1186/s13584-015-0004-0
IF= 1.25, Q2, 17 citations.
27. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y., Liberman, I. (2015). Arabs in health and
welfare professions in Israel: an ethnic and gender-oriented view of
representativeness and employment. Social Security, 97: 95-126. [Hebrew]
http://www.btl.gov.il/Publications/Social_Security/bitahon97/Pages/default.as
px
28. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y., Liberman, I. (2015). Increasing Gender and
Ethnic Diversity in the Healthcare Workforce: The Case of Arab Male Nurses
in Israel. Nursing Outlook, 63(6): 680-690.
IF: 2.056, Q1, 19 citations.
29. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y. (2015). “Everyone wants his son to be a
doctor”: External motives in choosing medicine as a career among an ethnic
minority. Medical teacher, 37 (4), 406-406.
IF= 1.909, Q1, 2 citations.
30. *Simchai, D., Keshet, Y. (2016). New-Age in Israel: formative ethos, identity
blindness, and implications on health-care. Health (London), 20 (6), 635-652.
IF=1.31, Q1,
31. *Ben-Arye, E., Keshet, Y., Miller Shahbar, I., Livne Aharonson, M., Preis, L.,
Agour, O., Schiff, E., Samuels, N. (2016). The kitchen as therapy: Qualitative
assessment of an integrative cuisine workshop for patients undergoing
chemotherapy. Supportive Care in Cancer, 24 (4), 1487-1495.
IF= 2.364, Q2, 4 citations.
32. *Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2016). Work experiences of ethnic minority
nurses: A qualitative study. Israel Journal of Health Policy Research, 5:18-28.
IF= 1.354, Q2, 4 citations.
33. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y. (2016). “It’s every family’s dream”: Choice
of a medical career among the Arab minority in Israel. Journal of Immigrant
and Minority Health, 18(5), 1148-1158.
IF=1.482, Q2, 9 citations.
34. *Popper-Giveon, A., Liberman, I. Keshet, Y., (2016). Nursing Careers for
Arab Men and Women in Israel. Social Issues in Israel, 22, 86-117. [Hebrew].
35. *Popper-Giveon, A., Liberman, I., Keshet, Y. (2016). Selective modernity as
an explanatory mechanism for the pattern of ethnic-gender employment in the
health professions among Arabs in Israel. Gadish, 16: 101-113. [Hebrew].
36. *Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2017). Neutrality in medicine and health
professionals from ethnic minority groups: The case of Arab health
professionals in Israel. Social Science and Medicine, 174:35-42.
IF=3.595, Q1, 4 citations.
37. *Zaidman, N., Keshet, Y., Janson, A. (2017). Power from Within’ and
Masculine Language – Does New Age Language Work at Work? Journal of
Management Inquiry, 27,4, 1056492617714893.
IF=0.943, Q1, 1 citation.
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38. *Keshet, Y., Raviv, B., Popper-Giveon, Strizhevski, A., and Abu-Hilu, A.
(2017). Tensions and coping strategies in ethnically mixed teams: findings
from a study in two emergency departments. Journal of Immigrant and
Minority Health, 20(4), 951-962.
IF=1.579, Q2,
39. *Popper-Giveon, A., Liberman, I., Keshet, Y. (2018). The white coat trap:
Pharmacy as an ethnic-dominated occupation in Israel. Ethnic and Racial
Studies, 41 (7), 1312-1331.
IF=1.425, Q1
40. *Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2018). Race-based experiences of ethnic
minority health professionals: Arab physicians and nurses in Israeli public
healthcare organizations. Ethnicity and Health, 23 (4), 442-459.
IF= 2.055, Q1
41. *Ben-Arye, E., Keshet, Y., Livas, M., Breitkreuz, T. (2018). Crossing the
death threshold: Experiencing multi-disciplinary end-of-life integrative
oncology training. Supportive Care in Cancer, 26 (7), 2251-2257.
IF=2.698, Q1
42. *Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2018). The undisciplined patient in a
neoliberal society: Conscious, informed and intuitive health behaviors. Health,
Risk & Society, 1-18.
IF=1.544, Q2
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13698575.2018.1432757
43. *Attias, S., Schiff, E., Arnon, Z., Ben-Arye, E., Keshet, Y., Sroka, G., Matter,
I., Keinan Boker, L. (2018). Development and validation of a tool to evaluate
Inpatient Beliefs, Expectations and Attitudes toward Reflexology (IBEAR-
16). Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 31, 96-103.
IF=2.013, Q1
44. *Popper-Giveon, A., Keshet, Y. (2018). The Secret Drama at the Patient’s
Bedside—Refusal of Treatment Because of the Practitioner’s Ethnic Identity:
The Medical Staff’s Point of View. Qualitative Health Research, 28 (5), 711-
720.
IF=2.036, Q2
45. *Arnon, Z., Steinberger, D., Attias, S., Grimberg, O., Peterfreund, I., Schiff.,
Keshet, Y. (2018). Nurses as boundary actors: promoting integrative medicine
in hospital wards. Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice, 31, 96-103.
IF=1.436, Q1
46. *Ben-Arye, E., River, Y., Keshet, Y., Lavie, O., Israeli, P., Samuels, N.
(2018). Effect of a complementary/integrative medicine treatment program on
taxane-induced peripheral neuropathy: A brief report. International Journal of
Gynecological Cancer, 28 (5), 1045-1049.
IF=2.369, Q2
47. *Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2018). Patient demands for ethnic-based
separation in public hospitals in Israel: Patients' and practitioners'
perspectives. Israel Journal of Health Policy Research, 7: 44-69.
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IF= 1.638, Q2
48. *Ben-Arye, E., Dahly, H., Keshet, Y., Dagash, J., Samuels, N. (2018).
Providing integrative care in the pre-chemotherapy setting: A pragmatic
controlled patient-centered trial with implications for supportive cancer care.
Journal of Cancer Research and Clinical Oncology, 144 (9), 1825-1833.
IF=3.282, Q1, 2 citations.
49. *Popper-Giveon, A., Israeli, T., Keshet, Y. (2019). Post-trauma: healthcare
practitioners use social media during times of political tension. Critical
Studies in Media Communication, 36:2, 184-199.
IF=0.789, Q2
50. *Arnon, Z., Attias, S., Keshet, Y., Schief, E. (2019). Integrating
Acupuncturists in an Israeli Western Hospital: A Qualitative Study.
Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice, 36, 164-169.
IF=1.587, Q1
51. * Keshet, Y., Popper-Giveon, A. (2019). Language practice and policy in
Israeli hospitals: The case of the Hebrew and Arabic languages. Israel Journal
of Health Policy Research, 8, 58, 1-11.
IF= 1.652, Q3
52. * Keshet, Y. (2019). Ethnic discordance: Why do some patients prefer to be
treated by physicians from other ethnic groups? Social Science & Medicine,
112358.
IF=3.595, Q1
https://ijhpr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13584-019-0331-7
C. Articles or Chapters in Scientific Books
1. Keshet, Y. (2006). Alternative and complementary medicine: Does it work?
In: I. Tavori (Ed.), Dancing in a Thorn Field: The New Age in Israel (pp. 60-
88). Tel- Aviv: Hakibbutz Hameuchad. (Hebrew).
2. Keshet, Y. (2012). Complementary and alternative medical information on
Israeli medical institutions' web sites 2009: the desirable vs. the available. In:
I. Theodor & E. Theodor (Eds.), Medical Ethics in Israel (pp. 207-215). Tel
Aviv: The Israeli Medical Association. (A Collection of Articles, republished,
Hebrew).
3. Keshet, Y., & Ben-Arye, E. (2012). Patients’ Views: Cultural and Healthcare
pluralism in Northern Israel. In: T. J. Shuval & E. Averbuch (Eds.),
Alternative and bio-medicine in Israel: Boundaries and bridges (pp. 199-218).
Boston: Academic Studies Press.
Also in: T. J. Shuval & E. Averbuch (Eds.) (2014), Can two walk together:
Complementary and Alternative Medicine and conventional medicine in Israel
(pp. 195-211). Tel Aviv: Resling. [Hebrew].
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D. Entries in Encyclopedia
1. Keshet, Y. (2016). Complementary and alternative medicine. In: N. A. Naples
(Ed.), The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies. John
Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/book/10.1002/9781118663219.
E. Other Scientific Publications
1. Persman, E., & Keshet, Y. (1986). Arava growing asparagus cover plastic
sheets useful for early yield and quality. Hassadeh, 66(10), 2040-2042.
[Hebrew].
2. Persman, E., Aviram, H., Zer, Y., & Keshet, Y. (1987). Winter Asparagus
harvesting and geothermic water. Hassadeh, 67(12), 2494-2495. [Hebrew].
3. Keshet, Y. (2009). Integrative physicians: We need to be the bridge.
Complementary Integrative Medicine, 38. [Hebrew].
4. Keshet, Y., Pressman, E., & Aviram, H., (1985/6). Effect of plastic tunnels
cover on asparagus yield (Arava). Summary leafy crops experiment, Ministry
of Agriculture, 76 pages.
http://www.library.moag.gov.il/titleDetails.asp?id=14273 [Hebrew].
5. Keshet, Y., Pressman, E., & Aviram, H., (1985/6). Examination of asparagus
varieties for early spring. Summary: leafy crops experiment, Ministry of
Agriculture. 82 pages.
http://www.library.moag.gov.il/titleDetails.asp?id=14277 [Hebrew].
6. Yaffe, O., Keshet, Y., Pressman, E., & Aviram, H. (1985/6). Treatment effect
of crop irrigation on the summer and autumn asparagus yield (Arava).
Summary: leafy crops experiment, Ministry of Agriculture, 81 pages.
http://www.library.moag.gov.il/titleDetails.asp?id=14276 [Hebrew].
7. Yaffe, O., Keshet, Y., & Aviram, H. (1985/6). Asparagus harvest and mowing
mow September October (Ein Yahav). Summary leafy crops experiment,
Ministry of Agriculture. 80 pages.
http://www.library.moag.gov.il/titleDetails.asp?id=14275 [Hebrew].
8. Aviram, H., Pressman, E., & Keshet, Y. (1985/6). Effect of hot geothermal
water and land cover with plastic tunnels on asparagus crop (Faran). Summary
leafy crops experiment, Ministry of Agriculture. 82 pages.
http://www.library.moag.gov.il/titleDetails.asp?id=14274 [Hebrew].