Authors


Maite L&oacute

Latest:

Managing Inappropriate Requests of Laboratory Tests: From Detection to Monitoring

This study shows automatic, practical, simple, and effective strategies designed in the laboratory, in consensus with requesting clinicians, to improve laboratory test appropriateness.


W. Scott Cluett III

Latest:

Early Experiences With the Acute Community Care Program in Eastern Massachusetts

The Acute Community Care Program uses paramedics to provide in-home urgent care after regular business hours, aiming to prevent unnecessary emergency department visits. Check out our website’s new table/figure pop-up feature! Click on the name of a table or figure in the text to see it in your browser.


Debra A. Antoon, BSPharm

Latest:

Comprehensive Health Management Pharmacist-Delivered Model: Impact on Healthcare Utilization and Costs

Pharmacist-provided comprehensive medication management led to a significant difference in emergency department visits and a cost savings of $2.10 to $2.60 for every $1.00 spent relative to a comparator group.




Howard H. Moffet, MPH

Latest:

Language Barriers and LDL-C/SBP Control Among Latinos With Diabetes

Among Latino patients with diabetes, ethnicity and language barriers were not associated with lipid and blood pressure control despite their associations with glycemic control in prior research. Check out our website’s new table/figure pop-up feature! Click on the name of a table or figure in the text to see it in your browser.



Jeah Jung, PhD, MPH

Latest:

Discontinuation of New Hepatitis C Drugs Among Medicare Patients

Real-world discontinuation of hepatitis C drugs was low, but it was 3 times more likely than in clinical trials and varied by patient characteristics.





M. Brian Riley, MA

Latest:

Improving Medication Understanding Among Latinos Through Illustrated Medication Lists

A randomized controlled trial found that plain-language, illustrated medication lists improved medication understanding among Latinos.



Glen L. Xiong, MD

Latest:

Real-Time Video Detection of Falls in Dementia Care Facility and Reduced Emergency Care

An artificial intelligence–enabled video fall detection system using visual science reduced emergency department visits by 80% in 6 communities over 3 months.


Jing Guo, PhD

Latest:

The Impact of Kaua'i Care Transition Intervention on Hospital Readmission Rates

By enrolling selected high-risk elderly patients into the intervention, then empowering and educating them, this study successfully reduced hospital readmission rates.


Aysegul Gozu, MD, MPH

Latest:

Patient Factors Associated With Following a Relocated Primary Care Provider Among Older Adults

There are differences between patients who elect to maintain continuity with their PCP versus those who choose to change their PCP for convenience.


Joseph A. Carrese, MD, MPH

Latest:

Patient Factors Associated With Following a Relocated Primary Care Provider Among Older Adults

There are differences between patients who elect to maintain continuity with their PCP versus those who choose to change their PCP for convenience.



Abby Swanson Kazley, PhD

Latest:

Association of Electronic Health Records With Cost Savings in a National Sample

The authors examine the association between advanced electronic health record (EHR) use and cost in hospitals. Patients treated in hospitals with advanced EHRs cost 9.66% less.


D. Tony Yu, MD, MPH

Latest:

Electronic Health Record Feedback to Improve Antibiotic Prescribing for Acute Respiratory Infections

An electronic health record–based feedback program, the Acute Respiratory Infection Quality Dashboard, did not lead to an overall change in antibiotic prescribing in primary care.


Ashley Flint, MPP

Latest:

Reducing Out-of-Pocket Cost Barriers to Specialty Drug Use Under Medicare Part D: Addressing the Problem of "Too Much Too Soon"

Medicare claims analyses offer insight into how proposed policy changes would affect out-of-pocket prescription costs for Part D beneficiaries requiring specialty drugs.



Carrie A. Miller, PhD, MPH

Latest:

Patients' Adoption of and Feature Access Within Electronic Patient Portals

We found race and age disparities not only in who adopted patient portal technology but also in which features were accessed by those who were adopters.


Timothy Hoff, PhD

Latest:

The Challenges of Consumerism for Primary Care Physicians

Implementation of retail health consumer tactics in primary care poses challenges for primary care doctors that must be recognized and addressed.


John M. Neff, MD

Latest:

Measures of ED Utilization in a National Cohort of Children

Through analysis of multistate Medicaid data, this study identifies differences in 2 commonly used measures of emergency department (ED) utilization, ED visit count and ED reliance.



Shana Montrose, MPH

Latest:

Employers Should Disband Employee Weight Control Programs

No corporate weight control program has ever reported savings or even sustained weight loss using valid metrics across a sizable population for 2 years or more, accounting for dropouts and nonparticipants. Further, these programs can harm morale and even the health of the employees themselves.


Donald R. Miller, ScD

Latest:

Overdose Risk for Veterans Receiving Opioids From Multiple Sources

Among veterans in Massachusetts, receipt of opioids from multiple sources, with or without benzodiazepines, was associated with worse opioid-related outcomes.



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