Authors


Elizabeth A. Bayliss, MD, MSPH

Latest:

Identifying Subgroups of Complex Patients With Cluster Analysis

Cluster analysis can aid in identifying subgroups of patients with similar patterns of comorbid conditions for targeted care management.



Diana S. Sandler, MD

Latest:

Understanding Vaccination Rates and Attitudes Among Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis

Patients with rheumatoid arthritis self-report a moderate rate of any previous pneumococcal vaccination (54%) and a very low rate of herpes zoster vaccination (8%).


Elizabeth Moss, PharmD, CDE, BCACP

Latest:

Impact of Clinical Pharmacy Services on Outcomes and Costs for Indigent Patients With Diabetes

Clinical pharmacy specialists impact patient care through improvements in clinical outcomes for diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidemia via clinical interventions and promotion of medication adherence.





Katherine L. Rosenblum, PhD

Latest:

Sustainable Lifelines: Supporting Integrated Behavioral Health Services for Children and Adolescents in the Accountable Care Era

A reimbursement strategy for collaborative care models is presented to enhance access to integrated behavioral healthcare for children and adolescents from underserved areas.


Hayden B. Bosworth, PhD

Latest:

The Need for a Serious Illness Digital Ecosystem (SIDE) to Improve Outcomes for Patients Receiving Palliative and Hospice Care

Palliative and hospice care services produce well-known benefits for patients living with serious illness and for their families. Benefits include improved quality of life and reduced symptom burden, spiritual and emotional distress, and caregiver distress.



Casey A. Dauw, MD

Latest:

Catheter Management After Benign Transurethral Prostate Surgery: RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Criteria

This manuscript synthesizes findings from a multidisciplinary panel following the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method to guide standardization of urinary catheter use after transurethral prostate surgery.


Jeff Wojtynek, PharmD

Latest:

Reports of the Demise of Chemotherapy Have Been Greatly Exaggerated

The expanding arsenal of targeted and immuno-oncology drugs has unalterably changed the landscape of systemic cancer treatment, but chemotherapy will remain critical for years if not decades to come.




Karen E. Hall, MD, PhD

Latest:

A Multidisciplinary Intervention for Reducing Readmissions Among Older Adults in a Patient-Centered Medical Home

A collaborative practice model to reduce hospital readmissions from an outpatient environment.


Meaghan Kim, BS, RN, CDE

Latest:

ACO Coalition Members Present Success Stories in Diabetes Management

As part of its mission to bring together stakeholders engaged in implementing the Affordable Care Act, The American Journal of Managed Care created the ACO and Emerging Healthcare Delivery Coalition, which gives participants opportunities to share best practices in using new reimbursement models. The final panel of "Patient-Centered Diabetes Care: Putting Theory Into Practice" invited ACO Coalition members to present insights on diabetes care.


Brandi E. Robinson, MPH

Latest:

Provider Type and Management of Common Visits in Primary Care

In primary care, nurse practitioners and physician assistants do not necessarily order more ancillary services, or more costly services among alternatives, than physicians.


Charles M. Balch, MD

Latest:

Recommendations for the Role of Clinical Pathways in an Era of Personalized Medicine

We offer recommendations for the development and design of clinical pathways in an effort to establish a set of normative criteria that creates trust and transparency.


Jennifer S. Haas, MD, MSc

Latest:

Medical Home Transformation and Breast Cancer Screening

Breast cancer screening may not improve in early medical home implementation.


Randi E. Foraker, PhD, MA

Latest:

Is Higher Patient Satisfaction Associated With Better Stroke Outcomes?

Global patient satisfaction was positively associated with quality of stroke care and higher discharge information satisfaction may be linked to worse outcomes. Additionally, improvements in satisfactions were linked to higher costs.


Peter J. Carek, MD, MS

Latest:

Outpatient Referral Rates in Family Medicine

Referral patterns by family physicians affect numerous aspects of medical care. This study compares the outpatient referral rates of residents, residency faculty, and clinical faculty.


Justin G. Trogdon, PhD

Latest:

Pervasiveness and Clinical Staff Perceptions of HPV Vaccination Feedback

This article used regression analyses to quantify how clinical staff perceive provider feedback to improve human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination rates and determine the prevalence of such feedback.



Purna K. Dhru, PharmD

Latest:

Identification of and Intervention to Address Therapeutic Gaps in Care

A program identifying and resolving care gaps involving community pharmacists resulted in increased adherence and omission gaps closure and fewer adherence gap reopenings.




Linda E. Love, LCSW, MA

Latest:

EHRs in Primary Care Practices: Benefits, Challenges, and Successful Strategies

Small primary care practices reap some organizational and quality of care improvements from electronic health records; however, challenges persist in achieving meaningful use standards.


Jack Hadley, PhD

Latest:

Physician Compensation Strategies and Quality of Care for Medicare Beneficiaries

Quality of care varies according to the compensation methods used in primary care, but the relationship between compensation methods and preventable hospital admissions is inconsistent.



Edward V. Nunes, MD

Latest:

Cost of Pharmacotherapy for Opioid Use Disorders Following Inpatient Detoxification

The mean 24-week cost per participant was $5416 for extended-release injectable naltrexone (57% detoxification, 37% medication, 6% provider/patient) and $4148 for buprenorphine-naloxone (64% detoxification, 12% medication, 24% provider/patient).

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