Artificial intelligence based on medical claims data outperforms traditional models in stratifying patient risk.
A private accountable care organization model with an embedded care coordinator and a list of recommended providers yields cost savings similar to initiatives with risk-based contracts.
This study evaluated the association between patient-reported and medical record–abstracted local adverse events and patient-reported and claims-based adherence to inhaled corticosteroid therapy.
Treating hospitalists effectively identify and efficiently address early postdischarge problems through a single, brief telephone encounter.
This paper describes a replicable process for standardizing disparate databases and methods to calculate cost and quality measures within and across states.
Cost is a common barrier to medication adherence. The authors discuss the potential role of medication rebates in patients’ out-of-pocket costs and medication adherence.
Among outpatients who were screened for alcohol use, those with unhealthy alcohol use, women, and those who were older, white, and of lower socioeconomic status were more likely to use benzodiazepines.
Self-empowering team resource management, when aided by information technology, appears to help reduce adverse drug events in primary care offices.
This case study of 5 county-based delivery systems finds that existing specialty care relationships and information technology integration are important differentiating factors for e-consult implementation success.
State-level estimates of the number of people treated for cancer and the average cost of their treatment by state from 2010 through 2020.
Treatment patterns and overall survival were similar regardless of site of care between patients receiving anticancer therapy in the hospital outpatient vs physician office setting.
This study demonstrates that variation reduction is an important, but not requisite, component of organizational success under orthopedic bundled payment.
Results of our pilot randomized controlled intervention involving emergency department (ED)-based care coordination and community health workers demonstrated a trend toward fewer ED visits, fewer hospitalizations, and lower costs among intervention patients.
We examined the effect of country of origin on HBV testing and chronic HBV infection prevalence among APIs using data from Kaiser Permanente Hawaii.