Authors


Kimberly J. Rask, MD, PhD

Latest:

Impact of Electronic Information Exchange on Repeat Imaging During 30-Day Readmissions Among Medicare Beneficiaries

This analysis of Medicare data examines the relationships between fragmented readmission, health information exchange, and repeat imaging in older adults with and without Alzheimer disease.



Joseph T. Hanlon, PharmD, MS

Latest:

Medicare Part D and Potentially Inappropriate Medication Use in the Elderly

High-risk drug use increased slightly among seniors gaining Medicare Part D coverage; however, high-risk drugs account for a small share of total drug use.


Christopher Zacker, PhD

Latest:

Placement of Selected New FDA-Approved Drugs in Medicare Part D Formularies, 2009-2013

There is significant heterogeneity in formulary placement and restrictions on new drug approvals in the Part D marketplace.


Mamata Kene, MD, MPH

Latest:

Opioid Safety Initiative Associated With Decreased Emergency Department Opioid Prescribing

A scalable health system–wide emergency physician education and feedback initiative was associated with decreased opioid prescribing, in excess of background temporal decline.


Namita Mohta, MD

Latest:

Implementing a Hybrid Approach to Select Patients for Care Management: Variations Across Practices

Hybrid approaches allow for clinician input into case finding for care management, but training and monitoring is required to protect against unintentional biases.


François de Brantes, MS, MBA

Latest:

Contributor: When It Comes to Maternal Health, States Can Be Health Plans’ North Star

States are turning to alternative payment models to improve outcomes and reduce health care expenditures, representing a critical step forward specifically for the US maternal health crisis.


Pag&aacute

Latest:

Patient-Centered Medical Home Features and Expenditures by Medicare Beneficiaries

Analysis of the impact of individual features of the patient-centered medical home care model on future healthcare expenditures among Medicare beneficiaries.


Alyssa Dahl, MPH, CPH

Latest:

CMS Gets Ready to Release OCM Report Cards

Oncology care model (OCM) practices are awaiting CMS' release of the first performance period one true-up and performance period two initial reconciliation results.



Maude St-Onge, MD, PHD, FRCPC

Latest:

Using Guidelines: When Is It Appropriate?

This article aims to review guideline development methodology to inform users on key aspects to consider when judging if a practice should be adapted or changed.






Jennifer A. Webster, MS

Latest:

Utilization of HER2 Genetic Testing in a Multi-Institutional Observational Study

Evaluation of real-world implementation of HER2 testing showed that uptake was high (>90%) and trastuzumab treatment was targeted to patients with positive HER2 status.



Sungchul Park, PhD

Latest:

The Effect of Medicare Eligibility on Diagnosis of Chronic Conditions

Medicare coverage did not necessarily lead to increased diagnosis of chronic conditions.




Alison A. Galbraith, MD, MPH

Latest:

Preventive Drug Lists as Tools for Managing Asthma Medication Costs

Findings of this qualitative interview study suggest promise, but also challenges, with regard to using preventive drug lists to help families manage asthma medication costs.


D. Tony Yu, MD

Latest:

Effects of Documentation-Based Decision Support on Chronic Disease Management

A trial of electronic note–based decision support showed small effects on management of patients with heart disease and diabetes, mostly because it was infrequently used.






David Squires, MA

Latest:

Redefining and Reaffirming Managed Care for the 21st Century

Innovations are powering the evolution of patient-centered care, and health plans are at the center of this innovation story.



Jill Waalen, MD, MPH

Latest:

A Telephone-Based Intervention for Increasing the Use of Osteoporosis Medication: A Randomized Controlled Trial

In this randomized controlled trial, women receiving monthly telephone calls had significantly higher use of osteoporosis medication at 1 year versus women receiving usual care.


Donna M. Wilson, PhD, RN

Latest:

Are Chronically Ill Patients High Users of Homecare Services in Canada?

Assessments of self-care capacity and other measures were the most precise ways to identify individuals who could be classified as chronically ill, in their status as the highest users, both individually and collectively, of homecare services.

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