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Authors


Roland McDevitt, PhD

Latest:

Healthcare Spending and Preventive Care in High-Deductible and Consumer-Directed Health Plans

Enrollment in high-deductible health plans is associated with reduced spending on healthcare and with moderate reductions in the use of preventive care.


Hitinder S. Gurm, MD

Latest:

False Activation of the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory for Primary PCI

Between 2005 and 2011, rates of cardiac catheterization laboratory false activation doubled while mean door-to-balloon times for primary PCI declined.


Nathan L. Kleinman, PhD

Latest:

Absenteeism and Productivity Among Employees Being Treated for Hepatitis C

Employees with hepatitis C (HCV) who underwent existing treatments had more absences and higher indirect costs than HCVinfected employees who did not undergo treatment.


Michael O. Harhay, MPH

Latest:

The Effects of Federal Parity on Substance Use Disorder Treatment

Federal parity led to an increase in spending on substance use disorder treatment.



Rebecca W. Killion, MA

Latest:

Pharmacists as Healthcare Providers: Integration Into the Mainstream

On the second day of "Patient-Centered Diabetes Care: Putting Theory Into Practice," Jan Berger, MD, MJ, president of Health Intelligence Partners, moderated the panel discussion "Measuring the Impact of Pharmacists in Diabetes Patient Care."


Amir Khaliq, PhD

Latest:

Electronic Sharing of Diagnostic Information and Patient Outcomes

A study evaluating the association between hospital sharing of electronic health record diagnostic information and hospital quality using Hospital Compare scores.



John Santopietro, MD, DFAPA

Latest:

The Hidden Value of Behavioral Health

Carolinas HealthCare System created a behavioral health service line to drive transformation in value-based healthcare. Four projects are described, which demonstrate that modest investment in behavioral health pays dividends in reduced cost and increased quality and experience.



Ta-Liang Chen, MD, PhD

Latest:

How Comorbidities and Preoperative Expenditures Correlate With Postoperative Adverse Outcomes

Adjusting for patients' covariates, postoperative complications and mortality among geriatric surgical patients exhibited an age-dependent, illness-related, and preoperative medical expense“associated pattern under universal healthcare coverage.


Ronald E. Myers, PhD

Latest:

More Comprehensive Discussion of CRC Screening Associated With Higher Screening

More comprehensive discussion of colorectal screening by primary care physicians was associated with higher screening rates among adults aged 51 to 80 years who were overdue for screening.


Minal Patel, MD

Latest:

Variation in Fracture Risk Estimation Among East Asian Women

Fracture prediction tools for East Asian individuals vary by country. In the United States, the US-Asian Fracture Risk Assessment Tool provides hip fracture probabilities that correspond to observed estimates.


Seth Clancy, MPH

Latest:

The Unintended Consequences of Medicare’s Wage Index Adjustment on Device-Intensive Hospital Procedures

The authors found an association between Medicare’s wage index adjustment and the differential use of labor-intensive surgical procedures and medical device–intensive minimally invasive clinical procedures across the United States.



Jerry Avorn, MD

Latest:

Medication Adherence and Healthcare Disparities: Impact of Statin Co-Payment Reduction

This study examined patterns of medication adherence after a reduction in medication co-payment amount among privately insured patients living in racially diverse neighborhoods.


Gordon Sun, MD, MS

Latest:

Specialist Participation in Healthcare Delivery Transformation: Influence of Patient Self-Referral

Analyses of national trends indicate that a considerable proportion of new specialist visits among both Medicare and private insurance beneficiaries are self-referred.




Adam B. Cohen, MD

Latest:

Patient and Clinician Experiences With Telehealth for Patient Follow-up Care

Telemedicine visits may be used with established patients for follow-up care without a loss of patient satisfaction with communication with providers and with enhanced convenience and reduced travel time; a majority may be willing to pay standard co-pays or more for this convenience. Clinicians see value in this new mode of care to enhance connections with patients.


Laurel Milam, MA

Latest:

Mental Health and Diabetes Control Among Vulnerable Primary Care Patients

Only 19% of patients in this sample had good diabetes control based on their tested glycated hemoglobin levels. Patients diagnosed with mental health conditions in this study were more likely to have good diabetes control.


Vicki Chiappetta, RHIA, CTR

Latest:

The Oncology Medical Home - Beyond Clinical Pathways

Clinical pathways have been emphasized as a means to deliver efficient, quality care and to ensure better outcomes at lower costs. The Oncology Medical Home takes this to the next, more comprehensive, step of quantifying and improving quality and value in cancer care while lowering overall costs.


Patricia A. St Clair, ScB

Latest:

Dental Care Coverage Transitions

This study examines dental insurance transition dynamics in the context of changing employment and retirement status.


John J. Holland, BS

Latest:

Patient Experience During a Large Primary Care Practice Transformation Initiative

Four years of practice transformation toward comprehensive primary care had little effect on patient experience.



Martha Engelke, PhD

Latest:

Barriers to Transition of Obese Patients From Hospital to Community

This study explored barriers to the transition of obese patients from hospital to community as perceived by case managers, nursing home directors, and home health directors.


Rachel Scott, PharmD

Latest:

Pharmacogenetic-Guided Psychiatric Intervention Associated With Increased Adherence and Cost Savings

Pharmacy and medical claims data showed that patients whose clinicians had access to pharmacogenetic test results had increased adherence and overall cost savings.


Ashok Kondur, MD

Latest:

Six Sigma Approach to Reduce Door-to-Balloon Time for Patients With STEMI

Specific measures using a Six Sigma approach led to sustained reduction of door-to-balloon times among patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in a community setting.


Eric S. Meadows, PhD

Latest:

Persistence With Biologic Therapies in the Medicare Coverage Gap

For patients who reached the Medicare Part D coverage gap, discontinuation was more likely for patients taking osteoporosis medication.


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