Authors



Masato Nakazawa, PhD

Latest:

Payer Source Influence on Effectiveness of Lifestyle Medicine Programs

The health benefits for participants of the Complete Health Improvement Program ("CHIP"), a lifestyle medicine program, are present regardless of the program tuition payment source.


S. Yousuf Zafar, MD, MHS

Latest:

The Utility of Cost Discussions Between Patients With Cancer and Oncologists

Many patients with cancer desire cost discussions with doctors, but those discussions are rare. Nevertheless, cost discussions may lower patient costs-usually without altering treatment.


Kirollos S. Hanna, PharmD, BCPS, BCOP

Latest:

ASCO 2024 Review and Needed Future Research in CDK4/6 inhibitors Early Breast Cancer

A panel of experts review ASCO 2024 and the need for future research in CDK4/6 inhibitors.


Timi Leslie, BS

Latest:

e-Consult Implementation Success: Lessons From 5 County-Based Delivery Systems

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.


Brent K. Hollenbeck, MD, MS

Latest:

Accountable Care Organizations and Use of Surgery Among Patients With Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias

The decision to pursue surgery in patients with Alzheimer disease and related dementias is challenging. Accountable care organizations may influence decisions to pursue surgery in this population.




Laurel Clayton Trantham, PhD

Latest:

The Effect of Narrow Network Plans on Out-of-Pocket Cost

The authors examined the effect of narrow network plan selection on beneficiaries’ outpatient visits and outpatient out-of-pocket expenditures in the 2014 nongroup health insurance market.



David H. Smith, PhD, RPh

Latest:

A Randomized, Pragmatic, Pharmacist-Led Intervention Reduced Opioids Following Orthopedic Surgery

This pharmacist-led, patient-directed intervention demonstrated a reduction in opioid dispensings in the 90 days following hip replacement but not knee replacement.




Richard Brumley, MD

Latest:

Physician Factors That Influence Patient Referrals to End-of-Life Care

This study used multivariate models to identify physician specialty and comfort with end-of-life discussions, both of which are associated with end-of-life referrals.



Roger Luckmann, MD

Latest:

Impact of Cardiac Telemetry on Patient Safety and Cost

Reducing inappropriate use of cardiac telemetry may improve the cost of care while maintaining patient safety.



Andrew Smith

Latest:

JDRF's Kowalski Sees Hope in Bipartisan Support for Insulin Pricing Reform

Aaron Kowalski, PhD, the new CEO of the JDRF, says in a discussion about insulin pricing that action is needed not only by Congress, but also by insulin makers, health plans, and the executive branch. The most important goal: ending a crosspayment scheme that many blame for potentially deadly price increases.




Chung-Yin Sherman, CRNP

Latest:

Predictive Factors of Discharge Navigation Lag Time

Examination of factors associated with discharge lag time and how this metric plays an important role in managing hospital throughput.


Melissa S. Hernandez, MD

Latest:

Shared Medical Appointments for Patients with Type 2 Diabetes

Glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes was improved through a shared medical appointment program focusing on lifestyle education and behavior change.


Gary Liska, BS

Latest:

STABLE Results: Warfarin Home Monitoring Achieves Excellent INR Control

Real-world retrospective analysis of over 29,000 patients performing INR home monitoring for warfarin therapy shows excellent time in therapeutic range.



John M. Fontanesi, PhD

Latest:

Delivering Vaccines: A Case Study of the Distribution System of Vaccines for Children

During implementation of the Vaccine Management Business Improvement Project, providers experienced longer delivery delays and a higher probability of a Vaccines for Children stockout.



Luis Rodriguez, MD

Latest:

Randomized Trial of an Electronic Asthma Monitoring System Among New York City Children

Children who used an electronic monitoring system had as many emergency department visits and hospitalizations for asthma as children who used a paper diary.




Cara L. McDermott, BA

Latest:

Colony-Stimulating Factor Prescribing Patterns in Patients Receiving Chemotherapy for Cancer

We linked health insurance records to cancer registry data to analyze colony-stimulating factor use, finding wide divergence from that recommended by practice guidelines.

AJMC Managed Markets Network Logo
CH LogoCenter for Biosimilars Logo