Authors


Lana Dykes

Latest:

Cannabis Improves Quality of Life in Women With Treatment-Resistant Fibromyalgia

Fibromyalgia is a common pain syndrome that affects women twice as much as men.


Angela Bazzell, DNP, APRN, FNP-BC, AOCNP

Latest:

Characteristics of Self-Triaged Emergency Department Visits by Adults With Cancer

Adults with cancer may have difficulty self-assessing the clinical severity of their acute care needs, yet they rarely use a telephone triage line available to them.


Richard D. Rothman, MD

Latest:

The Relationship Between the Follow-up to Discharge Ratio and Length of Stay

The objective was to evaluate the correlation between the follow-up to discharge ratio and average length of stay.


Andrew Miner, MD

Latest:

Service Line Care Delivery Model for COVID-19 Patient-Centric Care

The authors provide steps hospitals can take to align their care delivery model to effectively meet the demands of a public health crisis such as the current pandemic.


Gmerice Hammond, MD, MPH

Latest:

Hospitals’ Strategies to Reduce Costs and Improve Quality: Survey of Hospital Leaders

Hospitals pursue a broad range of efforts to improve quality, with those participating in bundled payments attempting to reduce postacute care to a greater degree than nonparticipants.


Jeffrey A. Rudolph, MD

Latest:

Consumer-Centric Approach to Enhance Access to Pediatric Specialty Care

The authors’ organization optimized scheduling techniques that improved patient access to pediatric specialists to within 7 calendar days for new patients.


Mahnum Shahzad, BA

Latest:

Changes in Use of Low-Value Services During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Use of low-value care services during COVID-19 exhibits substantial heterogeneity but, on average, shows declines similar to the use of high-value services; low-value care use lags behind high-value care use in the rebound phase.


Jacob Heidbrink, MS

Latest:

Increasing Medicare Annual Wellness Visits in Accountable Care Organizations

Through innovations increasing the ease of scheduling and the efficiency of conducting annual wellness visits (AWVs), a large Medicare accountable care organization has been able to increase AWV rates among eligible beneficiaries.


Ian J. Neeland, MD

Latest:

Health Impacts of Health System Implementation of a Food-as-Medicine Strategy

This article describes the reach of a Food-as-Medicine strategy implemented by a regional health care system and its impact on adult participants’ cardiometabolic risk factors.


Robert Green, PharmD, BCGP

Latest:

Pharmacist-Driven SMART Formulary Improves Pharmacoequity

A large academic medical center implemented a charitable care formulary with clinical pharmacist oversight, which resulted in more efficient usage of funds and fewer readmissions.


Snehal Gandhi, MD

Latest:

Discharge Before Noon: Is the Sun Half Up or Half Down?

Discharge before noon was associated with longer length of stay in patients with medical diagnoses and shorter length of stay in surgical patients.



Sanjay Doddamani, MD, MBA | Image Credit: Guidehealth
Sanjay Doddamani, MD, MBA

Latest:

AI Meets Medicare: Inside CMS’s WISeR Model With Sanjay Doddamani, MD, MBA, Part 2

In this second part of his interview with The American Journal of Managed Care®, Sanjay Doddamani, MD, MBA, a former senior advisor to CMMI and founder and CEO of Guidehealth, continues a dialogue on the future of value-based care and the promise—and limits—of AI-enabled innovation, reflecting on challenges like rising Medicare costs and patients’ growing financial burdens.


Carolyne Ma, PharmD

Latest:

Medicare Advantage Coverage Restrictions for the Costliest Physician-Administered Drugs

Four large Medicare Advantage insurers manage access to expensive physician-administered drugs with a combination of prior authorization, step therapy, and Part D formulary design.


Christopher Perkins, MS

Latest:

Cost Analysis of Self-Monitoring Blood Glucose in Nonintensively Managed Type 2 Diabetes

Analysis of claims data showed reduced utilization and costs among patients with nonintensively managed type 2 diabetes using self-monitoring of blood glucose compared with continuous glucose monitoring.


Bang Truong, PhD

Latest:

Use of Second-Generation Antidiabetic Medication Among a Nationally Representative Sample

Among individuals with a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes across the United States, income level, hemoglobin A1c, and comorbidity burden were the primary patient-level drivers of the use of newer antidiabetic agents.


Michael Korvink, MA

Latest:

A Novel Approach to Attribute Responsible Physicians Using Inpatient Claims

The authors propose a novel approach in which physicians’ responsibility for inpatient stays is expressed through physician-specific attribution ratios informed by patient characteristics.


Kasey Bond, MPH, NYU Langone
Kasey Bond, MPH

Latest:

Addressing Cancer Care Barriers Through Community Outreach and Support

February 4 is World Cancer Day, and in these interviews with our Strategic Alliance Partner, NYU Langone Health, we learn about the importance of forming strong relationships with the communities you are located in and with whom you work to optimize cancer-related outcomes.


Priscilla Wang, MD

Latest:

Improving Care Coordination and Reducing ED Utilization Through Patient Navigation

A navigation program demonstrated decreased odds of repeat emergency department (ED) visits in patients with low baseline ED utilization and increased odds of follow-up primary care appointments.


David Dingli, MD, PhD

Latest:

Financial Considerations Influencing Treatment Strategies in PNH Treatment Pathway

The panelists provide their final thoughts, highlighting financial considerations in PNH treatment.



Jorge J. Nieva, MD  | Image Credit: Keck School of Medicine
Jorge J. Nieva. MD

Latest:

Breaking Down Taletrectinib’s FDA Approval: Jorge J. Nieva, MD

In this interview with TRUST-I and TRUST-II trial investigator, Jorge J. Nieva, MD, USC Keck School of Medicine, he walks through the design of the trials, the results that supported the FDA approval, and taletrectinib’s potential to redefine first-line therapy.


Amy L. M. Lallier, MPH

Latest:

Geographic Variation in Medicare Home Health Expenditures

This study attempts to identify the sources of the significant 2.5-fold variation found in home health expenditures, a possible indicator of inefficiency and waste.


Ashley Harrell, LCSW

Latest:

Challenges Faced by Medicaid Managed Care Coordinators Working With Members With Substance Use Disorder

Accessing medical and social resources for patients, heavy administrative burden, and lack of data integration are barriers to Medicaid managed care organization care coordinators’ job performance.


Kenny J. Cole, MD, MS

Latest:

Additional Clinical Considerations for the Management of Obesity

Panelists discuss how reaching underserved populations requires proactive outreach, digital health tools with appropriate training, addressing health literacy barriers, and ensuring equitable access to diabetes technologies and treatments rather than waiting for patients to seek care.


Mikkael A. Sekeres, MD

Latest:

Treosulfan Approval Offers Novel Option for Allo-HSCT Conditioning in AML/MDS

Mikkael A. Sekeres, MD, Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, discusses the potential benefits of treosulfan, a newly approved agent for allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT) conditioning in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS).


Lisa Rotenstein, MD, MBA, MSc

Latest:

Advancing Team-Based Primary Care: The Importance and Challenges in 2023

This editorial describes several key lessons about the development of effective value-based care delivery.


Viroj Wiwanitkit, MD

Latest:

KAP Regarding ChatGPT Among Health Care Professionals: Correspondence

This letter discusses previously published research that paves the way for deeper exploration of the ethical and human aspects of artificial intelligence in health care.


Elaine Michelle Albertson, MPH

Latest:

Health Care Leader Perspectives on State Government–Sponsored Accountable Care for Public Employees

Qualitative interviews reveal health care leader perspectives on how state governments influenced payment reform by developing an accountable care program for public employees.


Michael McGuire, PharmaD

Latest:

Individuals With Mental Illness Continue to Face Barriers in Access to Care: Michael McGuire, PharmD

Individuals with mental illness in America continue to face socioeconomic barriers when it comes to accessing necessary care and treatment.

AJMC Managed Markets Network Logo
CH LogoCenter for Biosimilars Logo