Authors


Thomas Graf, MD

Latest:

Unintended Consequences of a Quality Measure for Acute Bronchitis

A quality measure reduced antibiotic use for patients with acute bronchitis but led to use of an alternative diagnosis, offsetting most of the observed improvement.


Nnadozie Emechebe, MPH

Latest:

Passive Social Health Surveillance and Inpatient Readmissions

By collecting self-identified social needs and linking them to claims data, this study analysis reveals that social needs are associated with inpatient readmissions.



James A. Gartner, RPh, MBA

Latest:

Medication Adherence and Enrollment in a Consumer-Driven Health Plan

Medication adherence was lower for some drug classes among CDHP patients who enrolled in consumer-driven health plans compared with patients who continuously enrolled in traditional managed care plans.





Shereef M. Elnahal, BA

Latest:

Electronic Health Record Functions Differ Between Best and Worst Hospitals

Patterns of electronic health record adoption among highand low-quality hospitals indicated that high-quality institutions had far greater use of most electronic health record functions.


Robert C. Smallridge, MD

Latest:

Development of a Multidisciplinary, Multicampus Subspecialty Practice in Endocrine Cancers

The development of subspecialty tumor groups for uncommon malignancies represents an effective approach to building experience, increasing patient volumes and referrals, and fostering development of increased therapeutic options and clinical trials for patients afflicted with otherwise historically neglected cancers.



Tzipora Shochat, MSc

Latest:

Solid-Organ Transplant Recipients With Hyperglycemia on Admission Face Worse Outcomes

Elevated glucose levels are common in solid-organ transplant recipients and associated with short- and long-term mortality risks in hospitalized transplant recipients. This increased mortality risk was independent of age, gender, smoking, alcohol, or comorbidities.


Joyce B. Allen, MSW

Latest:

A Team Approach to Systematic Behavioral Screening and Intervention

Expanding primary care teams with trained and supported paraprofessionals enables systematic delivery of widely recommended, evidence-based, cost-saving alcohol, drug, and depression screening and intervention services.





B. Min Yun, PhD

Latest:

Baseline and Postfusion Opioid Burden for Patients With Low Back Pain

Patients with low back pain have a high opioid burden, which increases following spinal fusion surgery; 27% of fusion patients filled opioid prescriptions at least 12 months post surgery.



Amy K. Rosen, PhD

Latest:

How Pooling Fragmented Healthcare Encounter Data Affects Hospital Profiling

Incomplete records of patient history can bias hospital profiling. Completing health records for Medicare-covered patients in VA hospitals resulted in modest changes in hospital performance.



Beat D. Steiner, MD, MPH

Latest:

A Physician-Friendly Alternative to Prior Authorization for Prescription Drugs

A policy allowing prescribers to write prior authorization criteria directly on the prescription led to decreased gaps in therapy without diminishing drug cost savings.


Ross A. Baker, PhD

Latest:

Adjunctive Aripiprazole for Depression: Predictive Value of Early Assessment

In treatment of depression with adjunctive aripiprazole, early improvement (week 2) was a significant predictor of remission, and lack of improvement was associated with nonremission.



MPH, Paul Y. Takahashi, MD

Latest:

Simple Errors in Interpretation and Publication Can Be Costly

A recent AJMC study contained overstatements and small but importantly placed errors that have the potential to cause unwarranted on-the-ground cost problems.


Neil W. Wagle, MD, MBA

Latest:

Chronic Disease Outcomes From Primary Care Population Health Program Implementation

Patients in practices with central population health coordinators had greater improvement in short-term chronic disease outcome measures compared with patients in practices without central support.




Edward Baker, MD

Latest:

The Budget Impact of Cervical Cancer Screening Using HPV Primary Screening

This study assesses the clinical and economic implications from a payer perspective of human papillomavirus genotyping for cervical cancer screening in comparison with existing practices.



Nathaniel M. Schuster, BS

Latest:

Using Search Engine Query Data to Track Pharmaceutical Utilization: A Study of Statins

Google query data for 2 statins demonstrated association with temporal and geographic utilization benchmarks, suggesting that query data can be used to track real-time utilization.


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