Authors


Deron Galusha, MS

Latest:

Process of Care Compliance Is Associated With Fewer Diabetes Complications

Adherence to process of care measures was associated with reduced risk of 2 diabetes complications or any of 4 complications in a national industrial cohort.


Robert A. Gabbay, MD, PhD, FACP

Latest:

Examining the Reality of What Insulin Costs Do to Patients

The editor-in-chief of Evidence-Based Diabetes Management™ introduces the special issue, Perspectives on Insulin Pricing, and shares that he has seen rationing among his own patients.



Somesh Nigam, PhD

Latest:

Reduced Medical Spending Associated With Integrated Pharmacy Benefits

Members covered by an integrated pharmacy benefit (as opposed to a pharmacy carve-out) experienced slower growth in medical spending.




Marie A. Hunsinger, RN, BSHS

Latest:

Factors Associated With Timeliness in Academic General Surgery Clinics: A Prospective Quality Assessment

The participation of residents and physician assistants significantly increased patient wait time without reducing the attending surgeon’s consultation length in outpatient surgery clinics.


Molly Billstein Leber, PharmD, BCPS, FASHP

Latest:

Formulary Considerations: The Past, Present, and Future

The hospital formulary system is an ongoing process that evaluates and selects the safest, most effective, and most economical care for hospitalized patients. As healthcare continues to change, so will the formulary management process.


Carlin Senter, MD

Latest:

Referring Wisely: Orthopedic Referral Guidelines at an Academic Institution

The authors used the modified Delphi method to develop local orthopedic referral guidelines, enabling detailed decision support and non—face-to-face consultation at the point of referral.


Su-Ying Liang, PhD

Latest:

Primary Care Physician Practice Styles and Quality, Cost, and Productivity

Primary care physicians who address multiple problems during acute care visits achieve better clinical scores, comparable patient experience, and lower annual cost.



M. Kate Bundorf, PhD

Latest:

Why Are Medicare and Commercial Insurance Spending Weakly Correlated?

The weak correlation between Medicare and commercial insurance spending is due to negative correlations between each sector's price and the other sector's volume.


Paul N. Pfeiffer, MD

Latest:

Depression Care Following Psychiatric Hospitalization in the Veterans Health Administration

Different patient characteristics predict adequate antidepressant treatment after hospitalization, received by 58.7% of patients, versus adequate psychotherapy, received by 12.9% of patients.


Christopher L. Bryson, MD, MS

Latest:

Massachusetts Health Reform and Veterans Affairs Health System Enrollment

Health reform increased Medicaid enrollment, but was not associated with Veterans Health Administration and private insurance enrollment among Massachusetts veterans.


Albert Wu, MD, MPH

Latest:

Critical Incident Stress Debriefing After Adverse Patient Safety Events

The authors explore the potential value of providing critical incident stress debriefing for health professionals involved in adverse patient safety events and the instances in which this could be routinely implemented.


Bonnie J. Addario

Latest:

Patient Engagement Is Mandatory at Our Table

The Bonnie Addario Lung Cancer Foundation has developed a registry that can serve as a repository for data on patients with lung cancer-a means to empower patients and assist care providers to deliver personalized medicine in a patient-centered manner.


Zhou Yang, PhD, MPH

Latest:

The Value of Virtual Physical Therapy for Musculoskeletal Care

This counterfactual simulation study on a nationally representative sample of the working population with musculoskeletal conditions estimated the value of patient-initiated virtual physical therapy.




Samuel Wagner, PhD

Latest:

An Expanded Portfolio of Survival Metrics for Assessing Anticancer Agents

A novel, simplified cost-value analysis tool was created to better differentiate the value of anticancer agents and further characterize the expected survival benefit of all patients.


Francois de Brantes

Latest:

Bending the Curve Through Health Reform Implementation

Authors from The Brookings Institution update their recommendations by focusing on 3 concrete objectives to slow spending and improve quality of care within the next 5 years.




Madhukar H. Trivedi, MD

Latest:

Voice Response System to Measure Healthcare Costs:A STAR*D Report

Moderate underreporting biases were found when patient responses to an interactive voice response system were compared with medical records in the STAR*D clinical trial.


Edward Przezdecki, MBA

Latest:

The Ingredients of Success in a Medicare Accountable Care Organization

For 2 successive years, the Hackensack Alliance Accountable Care Organization achieved cost savings and maintained quality by using physicians with patient-centered medical homes and nurse care coordinators focused on high-risk patients.


Emily A. Gadbois, PhD

Latest:

Medicare Advantage Plan Representatives’ Perspectives on Pay for Success

This study examined how Medicare Advantage plan representatives perceive the alternative financing model Pay for Success and its potential to address members’ social risk factors.




Brad Herring, PhD

Latest:

Provider-Owned Insurers in the Individual Market

Provider-owned insurers sell individual policies in areas that cover 62% of the US population and have premiums similar to policies of traditional insurers.


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