• Center on Health Equity & Access
  • Clinical
  • Health Care Cost
  • Health Care Delivery
  • Insurance
  • Policy
  • Technology
  • Value-Based Care

Authors


Pengxiang Li, PhD

Latest:

Reducing Out-of-Pocket Cost Barriers to Specialty Drug Use Under Medicare Part D: Addressing the Problem of "Too Much Too Soon"

Medicare claims analyses offer insight into how proposed policy changes would affect out-of-pocket prescription costs for Part D beneficiaries requiring specialty drugs.


Alice Noblin, PhD, RHIA, CCS

Latest:

Data Breach Locations, Types, and Associated Characteristics Among US Hospitals

Despite the high level of hospital adoption of electronic health records and the federal incentives to do so, the most common type of data breach in hospitals occurred with paper records and films.


William Shrank, MD

Latest:

Post-SNF Outcomes and Cost Comparison: Medicare Advantage vs Traditional Medicare

Patients enrolled in Medicare Advantage had better outcomes and lower cost following skilled nursing facility (SNF) discharge than patients enrolled in traditional fee-for-service Medicare.



Olga Yakusheva, PhD

Latest:

Access to Chiropractic Care and the Cost of Spine Conditions Among Older Adults

Among older adults who have a spine condition, access to chiropractic care may reduce medical spending on diagnostic services.




Deborah Peikes, PhD, MPA

Latest:

Patients' Perspectives of Care Management: A Qualitative Study

Risk-stratified care management is a cornerstone of patient-centered medical home models, but studies on patients’ perspectives of it are scarce. We explored patients’ experiences with care management, what they found useful, and what needs improvement.





Vineet Chopra, MD, MSc

Latest:

Addressing the Primary Care Workforce Crisis

As delivery system reforms increasingly rely on a strong primary care workforce, policies are needed to grow and strengthen this workforce.


Amy Linsky, MD, MSc

Latest:

Deprescribing in the Context of Multiple Providers: Understanding Patient Preferences

Deprescribing could reduce the risk of harm from inappropriate medications. Understanding patient attitudes regarding which clinicians can make deprescribing recommendations can facilitate effective design and implementation of interventions.




Joseph W. Y&#269

Latest:

Applying Weighting Methodologies to a Commercial Database to Project US Census Demographic Data

This study tests the feasibility of projecting commercial insurance demographic information to the US Census population, and creating the framework for a simple weighting scheme.


James F. Cawley, MPH, PA-C

Latest:

Physician Assistants/Associates at 6 Decades

This paper reviews the status of physician assistants/associates, an essential component of the US health care workforce. The evidence of their clinical performance and utilization trends are illustrated.


Dolores Yanagihara, MPH

Latest:

Gauging the Experiences of the Seriously Ill in California: Analyzing Serious Illness Beyond Medicare Fee-for-Service

Significant populations of seriously ill individuals are insured by all lines of business and have meaningfully different needs and medical histories in California.




Stephen P. Melek, FSA, MAAA

Latest:

The Role of Behavioral Health Services in Accountable Care Organizations

Data suggest that behavioral health providers and services must be included as core components of accountable care organizations to achieve desired health and cost outcomes.





Ann Albright, PhD, RD

Latest:

Prevention of Type 2 Diabetes Requires BOTH Intensive Lifestyle Interventions and Population-Wide Approaches

The CDC's director of the Division of Diabetes Translation discusses the scientific evidence that supports the need for both lifestyle interventions and population-level efforts to combat type 2 diabetes in the United States.



Sue Knudson, MA

Latest:

Tracking Spending Among Commercially Insured Beneficiaries Using a Distributed Data Model

The authors demonstrate the utility of distributed data models for reporting of local trends and variation in utilization, pricing, and spending for commercially insured beneficiaries.


Raquel Aparicio-Ugarriza, PhD

Latest:

The Association of Health Literacy Domains With Hospitalizations and Mortality

Despite previous research evidence, this study did not reveal an overall association of health literacy, numeracy, and graph literacy with all-cause hospitalizations or mortality.


Joanne E. Brady, PhD

Latest:

Hepatitis C Care Cascade Among Persons Born 1945-1965: 3 Medical Centers

In this analysis of patients with newly diagnosed hepatitis C, linkage to care was largely successful in the 1945-1965 birth cohort, but treatment initiation remained low. 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.


© 2024 MJH Life Sciences
AJMC®
All rights reserved.