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Authors


Rosa R. Baier, MPH

Latest:

Caregiver Presence and Patient Completion of a Transitional Care Intervention

Caregivers' presence during patient recruitment is associated with a greater rate of completion of a post hospital transitional care coaching intervention, particularly among men.


Brian Diaz, BS

Latest:

Quality Data: Simplify Data Governance, Advance Interoperability, and Improve Analytics

Data quality is foundational to accurate, complete analytics. The right data governance strategy can help healthcare organizations enrich their data to drive performance improvement.




John Malaty, MD

Latest:

Outpatient Referral Rates in Family Medicine

Referral patterns by family physicians affect numerous aspects of medical care. This study compares the outpatient referral rates of residents, residency faculty, and clinical faculty.



Mark L. Wahlqvist, MD

Latest:

Dietary Diversity Predicts Type of Medical Expenditure in Elders

Greater dietary diversity is associated with lower emergency and hospitalization utilization and expenditures, and identifies a policy direction for nutritionally disadvantaged groups.





JB Jones, PhD, MBA

Latest:

Characterizing Obesity in a Large Health Care Delivery System.

The prevalence of obesity in the Sutter Health system between 2015 and 2020 was 35%. Differences by race/ethnicity, health insurance, smoking status, and comorbidities were examined.


Juan J. Estrada, MSc, MBA

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.


Anne McGeary Snowden, MPH

Latest:

Patient Experience and Physician/Staff Satisfaction in Transforming Medical Homes

Becoming a medical home appears to increase physician and staff job satisfaction, but it also risks decreasing patient satisfaction with access to care.


Jerry Cade, MD

Latest:

Expert Panel: Access to Multiple Treatment Options Is Needed to Continue the Fight Against HIV

A multidisciplinary panel of HIV experts gathered in October 2016 to discuss the current state of HIV care and develop critical recommendations for Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P&T) committee members to consider when developing policies affecting their member populations who are living with HIV. This paper presents the panel’s discussion, consensus opinion, and conclusions.




David Laibson, PhD

Latest:

Testimonials Do Not Convert Patients From Brand to Generic Medication

We conducted a randomized controlled trial to assess whether adding a peer testimonial to a mailing increases conversion rates from brand name prescription medications to lower-cost equivalents.




Eric M. Maiese, PhD

Latest:

Increasing Pharmaceutical Copayments: Impact on Asthma Medication Utilization and Outcomes

Even small changes in average copayment for long-term controller asthma medications can result in significant reductions in medication use and increases in healthcare services.



Shreekant Parasuraman, PhD

Latest:

Economic Implications of Weight Change in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus

Modest weight loss (>3%) among metformin-treated patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus was associated with decreased costs, lower resource utilization, and lower rates of treatment discontinuation.


Tianna Tu, BA

Latest:

Accountable Care Organizations Are Increasingly Led by Physician Groups Rather Than Hospital Systems

Since 2015, the majority of new accountable care organizations (ACOs) have been led by physician groups rather than hospital systems. This shift requires policies that address the characteristic strengths and weaknesses of physician-led ACOs.


James B. Meigs, MD, MPH

Latest:

Food Insecurity, Healthcare Utilization, and High Cost: A Longitudinal Cohort Study

In a longitudinal study, the authors find that food insecurity is associated with greater emergency department visits, inpatient admissions, and length of stay. Check out our website’s new table/figure pop-up feature! Click on the name of a table or figure in the text to see it in your browser.


Nicole M. Engel-Nitz, PhD

Latest:

Service Setting Impact on Costs for Bevacizumab-Treated Oncology Patients

For patients with lung or colorectal cancer, bevacizumab treatment patterns and healthcare costs varied by the setting of treatment initiation (physician office vs hospital outpatient).


Claudio Gonzalez, MD

Latest:

Cost-Effectiveness of DPP-4 Inhibitor and SGLT2 Inhibitor Combination Therapy for Type 2 Diabetes

This study evaluates the long-term cost-effectiveness of treatment involving combination therapy with dipeptidyl peptidase 4 (DPP-4) inhibitors and sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors compared with an alternative with sulfonyureas prior to insulin initiation on a background of metformin.




Jakub P. Hlávka, PhD

Latest:

Outcome Measures for Oncology Alternative Payment Models: Practical Considerations and Recommendations

This review presents a set of evidence-based outcome measures for oncology alternative payment models, drawing on evidence from existing and proposed quality measures.


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