Authors


Corinna Sorenson, PhD, MHSA, MPH

Latest:

Value-Based Arrangements May Be More Prevalent Than Assumed

We surveyed biopharmaceutical manufacturers and payers to understand the prevalence and characteristics of value-based payment arrangements, as well as their implementation obstacles and success factors.


Peter G. Ellis, MD

Latest:

Developing an Oncology Clinical Pathways Program - the UPMC Case Study

An overview of the oncology clinical pathways development program at the UPMC CancerCenter and how it led to the creation of Via Oncology, a clinical pathways vendor.


Samuel Cohen, MD

Latest:

Preventing Patient Absenteeism: Validation of a Predictive Overbooking Model

Electronic health record data can be used to predict patient absenteeism accurately. Predictive overbooking of missed appointments can significantly increase service utilization.


Daniel R. Tobin, MD

Latest:

Effectiveness of Care Coordination and Health Counseling in Advancing Illness

This prospective trial suggests that specialized care coordination and health counseling for patients coping with advanced stages of 4 life-limiting illnesses can be beneficial.


Mary Jo V. Pugh, 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.


Yamei Wang, PhD

Latest:

Economic Burden of Osteoporotic Fractures in US Managed Care Enrollees

Osteoporotic fractures are associated with a significant economic burden, including costs of rehabilitation services and a high total all-cause cost of care.



Ashok Reddy, MD, MSc

Latest:

Factors Associated With Primary Care Physician Turnover in the VA

This longitudinal observational study found higher team satisfaction with workload to be significantly associated with lower primary care physician turnover.


Krystal Hunter, MBA

Latest:

Impact of Weekly Feedback on Test Ordering Patterns

Providing a weekly feedback report significantly influences the test ordering behavior of internal medicine residents and reduces laboratory overutilization.



Jin Joo Shim, MS

Latest:

Reconsidering the Economic Value of Multiple Sclerosis Therapies

Availability of multiple sclerosis (MS) therapies provides substantial value to the currently healthy (who may contract MS in the future), particularly when treatment is fully covered by insurance.




Kim Saverno, PhD, RPh

Latest:

Molecular Testing Patterns in Metastatic Non—Small Cell Lung Cancer

Assessment of the timing of histologic and molecular testing indicates that testing occurred prior to treatment initiation for most patients with metastatic non—small cell lung cancer.




Elise H. Lawson, MD, MSHS

Latest:

Collection of Language Data and Services Provided by Health Plans

Health plans have made substantial progress in the collection of language data and many are offering options for language services.


Steve M. Asch, MD, MPH

Latest:

Development of a Tailored Survey to Evaluate a Patient-Centered Initiative

We developed short patient experience surveys that were sensitive to our broad quality initiative, were meaningful and acceptable to patients, and had good response rates.


Amanda M. Farr, MPH

Latest:

Real-World Impact of Comparative Effectiveness Research Findings on Clinical Practice

The authors found no consistent pattern in the concordance between CER evidence and subsequent utilization patterns.




Daniel Carey, MD, Secretary of Health

Latest:

Reducing Low-Value Care in Virginia

Virginia is currently focused on creating a collaborative, data-informed process to reduce the use of low-value services and care and better serve patients.





Donald E. Martin, MD

Latest:

Patients’ Expectations of Their Anesthesiologists

Understanding patients’ expectations, educating them about the role of an anesthesiologist, and involving them in decisions about their medical care can improve patient satisfaction.


Kazi Ahmed, PhD

Latest:

Low Screening and Follow-up for Unhealthy Alcohol Use Among Health Plan Beneficiaries

Screening and follow-up for unhealthy alcohol use are low among plan members. Use of standardized screening tools, documentation, and care for alcohol misuse need improvement.




Schelomo Marmor, PhD, MPH

Latest:

High-Risk Centers and the Benefits for Lower-Risk Transplants

There does not appear to be any comparative advantage for low-risk hematopoietic cell transplantation patients to seek care from high-risk centers.

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