406 results on '"Perloff J"'
Search Results
52. Adults with surgically treated congenital heart disease. Sequelae and residua
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Perloff, J. K., primary
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- 1983
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53. The heart in neuromuscular disease
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Perloff, J, primary
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- 1986
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54. Left ventricular geometry and function in adults with Ebstein's anomaly of the tricuspid valve.
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Benson, L N, primary, Child, J S, additional, Schwaiger, M, additional, Perloff, J K, additional, and Schelbert, H R, additional
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- 1987
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55. Mitral valve prolapse. Evolution and refinement of diagnostic techniques.
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Perloff, J K, primary and Child, J S, additional
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- 1989
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56. Dynamics of oxygen uptake during exercise in adults with cyanotic congenital heart disease.
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Sietsema, K E, primary, Cooper, D M, additional, Perloff, J K, additional, Rosove, M H, additional, Child, J S, additional, Canobbio, M M, additional, Whipp, B J, additional, and Wasserman, K, additional
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- 1986
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57. Control of ventilation during exercise in patients with central venous-to-systemic arterial shunts
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Sietsema, K. E., primary, Cooper, D. M., additional, Perloff, J. K., additional, Child, J. S., additional, Rosove, M. H., additional, Wasserman, K., additional, and Whipp, B. J., additional
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- 1988
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58. The Recognition of Strictly Posterior Myocardial Infarction by Conventional Electrocardiography
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Perloff, J K, primary
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- 1965
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59. Intravascular haemolysis and thrombocytopenia in left ventricular outflow obstruction.
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Jacobson, R J, primary, Rath, C E, additional, and Perloff, J K, additional
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- 1973
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60. Auscultatory and phonocardiographic manifestations of isolated stenosis of the pulmonary artery and its branches.
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Perloff, J K, primary and Lebauer, E J, additional
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- 1969
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61. Peripheral pulmonary artery murmur of atrial septal defect.
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Perloff, J K, primary, Caulfield, W H, additional, and de Leon, A C, additional
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- 1967
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62. Duchenneʼs Muscular Dystrophy
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Mann, O., primary, DeLeon, A. C., additional, Perloff, J. K., additional, Simanis, J., additional, and Horrigan, F. D., additional
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- 1968
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63. Metastatic adenocarcinoma of the prostate manifested as a sellar tumor.
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PERLOFF, JAN J., LeMAR JR., HOMER J., V. REDDY, B. VISHNU, CARTER, THOMAS E., McDERMOTT, MICHAEL T., Perloff, J J, LeMar, H J Jr, Reddy, B V, Carter, T E, and McDermott, M T
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- 1992
64. Hunger: its impact on children's health and mental health.
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Weinreb L, Wehler C, Perloff J, Scott R, Hosmer D, Sagor L, and Gundersen C
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- 2002
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65. The Recognition of Strictly Posterior Myocardial Infarction by Conventional Electrocardiography.
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Perloff, J K
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- 1965
66. Isolated Paradoxical Embolus to the Right Coronary Artery
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Gerber, R. S., Sherman, C. T., Sack, J. B., and Perloff, J. K.
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- 1992
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67. Pathogenesis of the glomerular abnormality in cyanotic congenital heart disease.
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Perloff, Joseph K., Latta, Harrison, Barsotti, Paola, Perloff, J K, Latta, H, and Barsotti, P
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KIDNEY glomerulus diseases , *CONGENITAL heart disease , *BIOPSY , *CELL division , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CYANOSIS , *KIDNEY glomerulus , *KIDNEY diseases , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *RENAL artery , *RESEARCH , *EVALUATION research , *SEVERITY of illness index , *RENAL veins , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
We present evidence of 2 distinct glomerular abnormalities in cyanotic congenital heart disease--vascular and nonvascular--each believed to reflect a distinct pathogenesis. Glomeruli from both kidneys were studied with light microscopy in 13 necropsied cyanotic patients and in 8 controls. The vascular study characterized hilar arteriolar dilatation, capillary diameter, glomerular diameter, and capillary engorgement with red blood cells. The nonvascular study characterized juxtaglomerular cellularity, mesangeal cellularity, mesangeal matrix, focal interstitial fibrosis, and megakaryocytic nuclei per cm2 of renal cortex. There was a significant increase in each of the above vascular and nonvascular items of interest relative to controls. Electron microscopy identified whole megakaryocytes with their cytoplasm in glomeruli. The vascular abnormality is believed to result from intraglomerular release of nitric oxide. The nonvascular abnormality is believed to result from platelet-derived growth factor and transforming growth factor-beta. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2000
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68. Prefazione alla terza edizione italiana [di 'Organizzazione industriale']
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Beccarello, Massimo, Mosconi Franco, Carlton, D W, Perloff, J M, Beccarello, M, and Mosconi, F
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SECS-P/06 - ECONOMIA APPLICATA ,economia industriale, economia - Published
- 2013
69. False negative bone scans in pediatric sepsis of the axial skeleton
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Perloff, J
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- 1988
70. Identification of Surgeon Outliers to Improve Cost Efficiency: A Novel Use of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Quality Payment Program.
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Parikh N, Woelber E, Bido J, Hobbs J, Perloff J, and Krueger CA
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- Humans, United States, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S., Cost-Benefit Analysis, Medicare economics, Surgeons economics, Male, Medicaid economics, Cost Savings, Female, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip economics, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee economics
- Abstract
Background: Bundled payment programs for total joint arthroplasty (TJA) have become popular among both private and public payers. Because these programs provide surgeons with financial incentives to decrease costs through reconciliation payments, there is an advantage to identifying and emulating cost-efficient surgeons. The objective of this study was to utilize the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Quality Payment Program (QPP) in combination with institutional data to identify cost-efficient surgeons within our region and, subsequently, identify cost-saving practice patterns., Methods: Data was obtained from the CMS QPP for total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and total hip arthroplasty (THA) surgeons within a large metropolitan area from January 2019 to December 2021. A simple linear regression determined the relationship between surgical volume and cost-efficiency. Internal practice financial data determined whether patients of identified surgeons differed with respect to x-ray visits, physical therapy visits, out-of-pocket payments to the practice, and whether surgery was done in hospital or surgical center settings., Results: There were 4 TKA and 3 THA surgeons who were cost-efficiency outliers within our area. Outliers and nonoutlier surgeons had patients who had similar body mass index, American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Status Score, and age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity Index scores. Patients of these surgeons had fewer x-ray visits for both TKA and THA (1.06 versus 1.11, P < .001; 0.94 versus 1.15, P < .001) and lower out-of-pocket costs ($86.10 versus $135.46, P < .001; $116.10 versus $177.40, P < .001). If all surgeons performing > 30 CMS cases annually within our practice achieved similar cost-efficiency, the savings to CMS would be $17.2 million for TKA alone ($75,802,705 versus $93,028,477)., Conclusions: The CMS QPP can be used to identify surgeons who perform cost-efficient surgeries. Practice patterns that result in cost savings can be emulated to decrease the cost curve, resulting in reconciliation payments to surgeons and institutions and cost savings to CMS., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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71. The quality of home-based primary care delivered by nurse practitioners: A national Medicare claims analysis.
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Perloff J, Hoyt A, Srinivasan M, Alvarez M, Sobul S, and O'Reilly-Jacob M
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Background: As the US population ages, there is an increasing demand for home-based primary care (HBPC) by those with Alzheimer's/dementia, multiple chronic conditions, severe physical limitations, or those facing end-of life. Nurse practitioners (NPs) are increasingly providing HBPC, yet little is known about their quality of care in this unique setting., Methods: This observational study uses Medicare claims data from 2018 to assess the quality of care for high-intensity HBPC users (5 or more visits/year) based on provider type (NP-only, physician (MD)-only, or both NP and MDs). We employ 12 quality measures from 3 care domains: access and prevention, acute care utilization, and end-of-life. Analysis includes bivariate comparisons and logistic regression models that adjust for demographic, clinical, and geographic characteristics., Results: Among the 574,567 beneficiaries with 5 or more HBPC visits, 37% saw an NP, 37% saw a MD, and 27% saw both NPs and MDs. In multivariate models, those receiving HBPC from an NP or both NP-MD are significantly more likely to receive a flu shot than the MD-only group, but less likely to access preventive care. NP-only care is associated with more acute care hospitalizations, avoidable ED visits, and fall-related injuries, but significantly fewer avoidable admissions. For end-of-life care, those with NP-only or both NP-MD care are significantly more likely to have an advanced directive, be in hospice in the last 3 days of life, and more likely to die in hospice. The NP group is also more likely to die in the next year., Conclusions: HBPC patients are complex, with both palliative and curative needs. NPs provide almost half of HBPC in the Medicare program, to patients who are possibly sicker than those treated by physicians, with similar quality to MDs., (© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of the American Geriatrics Society published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The American Geriatrics Society.)
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- 2024
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72. Hospital-Skilled Nursing Facility Integration and Participation in a Bundled Payment Initiative.
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Buxbaum JD, de Brantes F, Grabowski DC, Hatfield LA, Koppel D, Mechanic RE, Perloff J, and Chernew ME
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- United States, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Patient Care Bundles economics, Hospitals statistics & numerical data, Reimbursement Mechanisms, Medicare economics, Skilled Nursing Facilities economics, Skilled Nursing Facilities statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Importance: Reduced institutional postacute care has been associated with savings in alternative payment models. However, organizations may avoid voluntary participation if participation could threaten their own revenues., Objective: To characterize the association between hospital-skilled nursing facility (SNF) integration and participation in Medicare's Bundled Payments for Care Improvement Advanced (BPCI-A) program., Design, Setting, and Participants: This is a cross-sectional analysis of hospital participation in BPCI-A beginning with its launch in 2018. Each SNF-integrated hospital was matched with 2 nonintegrated hospitals for each of 4 episode-specific analyses. Fifteen hospital-level variables were used for matching: beds, case mix index, days, area SNF beds, metropolitan location, ownership, region, system membership, and teaching status. Hospitals were also matched on episode-specific volume, target price, and the interaction of target price and case mix. Episode-specific logistic models were estimated regressing hospital participation on integration and the previously listed variables. The marginal effect of integration on participation was then calculated. Analysis took place from August 2022 to May 2024., Exposure: Hospital-SNF integration, as defined by common ownership and referral patterns and identified using cost reports, Medicare claims, and Provider Enrollment, Chain, and Ownership System records. Additional sources included records of target prices and participation, the Area Health Resources File, and the Compendium of US Health Systems., Main Outcomes and Measures: Participation in BPCI-A., Results: In total, 1524 hospitals met criteria for inclusion in the hip and femur (HFP) analysis, 1825 were included in the major joint replacement of the lower extremity (MJRLE) analysis, 2018 were included in the sepsis analysis, and 1564, were included in the stroke-specific analysis. Across episodes, 191 HFP-eligible hospitals (12.5% of HFP-eligible hospitals), 302 MJRLE-eligible hospitals (16.5%), 327 sepsis-eligible hospitals (16.2%), and 185 sepsis-eligible hospitals (11.8%) were SNF integrated. In total, 79 hospitals (5.2%) participated in the HFP episode, 128 (7.0%) participated in the MJRLE episode, 204 (10.1%) participated in the sepsis episode, and 141 (9.0%) participated in the stroke episode. Integration was associated with a 4.7-percentage point decrease (95% CI, 2.4 to 6.9 percentage points) in participation in the MJRLE episode. There was no association between integration and participation for HFP (0.5-percentage point increase in participation moving from nonintegrated to integrated; 95% CI, -2.9 to 3.8 percentage points), sepsis (1.0-percentage point increase; 95% CI, -2.2 to 4.2 percentage points), and stroke (0.3-percentage point decrease; 95% CI, -3.1 to 3.8 percentage points)., Conclusions and Relevance: In this cross-sectional study, there was an uneven association between hospital-SNF integration and participation in Medicare's BPCI-A program. Other factors may be more consistent determinants of selection into voluntary payment reform.
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- 2024
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73. An Evaluation of TransLife Care: A Locally Developed Structural HIV Prevention Intervention for Transgender Women in Chicago, Illinois.
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Kuhns LM, Perloff J, Johnson AK, Paul JL, Pleasant K, Evans K, Denson DJ, Gelaude DJ, Bessler PA, Cervantes M, Muldoon AL, Garofalo R, and Hotton AL
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- Humans, Female, Chicago, Adult, Male, Middle Aged, Adolescent, Young Adult, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis methods, Unsafe Sex statistics & numerical data, Program Evaluation, Condoms statistics & numerical data, Sexual Behavior, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Logistic Models, Transgender Persons psychology, Transgender Persons statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections prevention & control
- Abstract
Transgender women are disproportionately impacted by HIV infection. We report herein the findings of a pre-post evaluation of the TransLife Care (TLC) project in Chicago, Illinois, on behaviors associated with HIV transmission among transgender women. Participants who received any TLC component versus those who did not were compared using mixed-effects logistic regression with random intercepts across follow-up time points. Ninety-seven participants aged 18 to 59 (median age 24) enrolled; 76.3% were transgender women of color. There was a decrease in condomless sex without consistent PrEP use at 8 months, which was not significantly different between those who did and did not receive the TLC intervention, controlling for calendar time. Evidence does not indicate that the TLC reduces condomless sex without PrEP protection among urban transgender women. However, given the preponderance of evidence of the influence of structural barriers on condomless sex, future research should continue to test the efficacy of structural interventions.
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- 2024
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74. Accountable care organization initiatives to improve the cost and outcomes of specialty care.
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Mechanic RE, Secordel L, Sobul S, and Perloff J
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- United States, Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Quality Improvement, Specialization economics, Medicine, Accountable Care Organizations economics, Accountable Care Organizations statistics & numerical data, Accountable Care Organizations organization & administration, Medicare economics
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess initiatives to manage the cost and outcomes of specialty care in organizations that participate in Medicare accountable care organizations (ACOs)., Study Design: Cross-sectional analysis of 2023 ACO survey data., Methods: Analysis of responses to a 12-question web-based survey from 101 respondents representing 174 ACOs participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program or the Realizing Equity, Access, and Community Health ACO model in 2023., Results: Improving specialist alignment was a high priority for 62% of the 101 respondents and a medium priority for 34%. Only 11% reported that employed specialists were highly aligned and 7% reported that contracted specialists were highly aligned. A subset of ACOs reported major efforts to engage specialists in quality improvement projects (38%) and to convene specialists to develop evidence-based care pathways (30%). They also reported supporting primary care physicians through providing specialist directories (44%), specialist e-consults (23%), and sharing specialist cost data (20%). The most common challenges reported were the influence of fee-for-service payment on specialist behavior (58%), lack of data to evaluate specialist performance (53%), and insufficient bandwidth or ACO resources to address specialist alignment (49%)., Conclusions: Engaging specialists in accountable care is an emerging area for ACOs but one with numerous challenges. Making better data on specialist costs and outcomes available to Medicare ACOs is essential for accelerating progress.
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- 2024
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75. Surgical Episodes of Care for Price Transparency Using the Episode Grouper for Medicare.
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Perloff J, Hasley R, Kumar SS, Chapman J, Coffron M, and Opelka F
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- Aged, Humans, United States, Animals, Episode of Care, Medicare, Bass, Surgeons, Neoplasms
- Abstract
Objective: To explore the use of an episode grouper to more accurately identify the complete set of surgical services typically provided in a surgical episode of care and the corresponding range of prices, using colectomy for cancer as the example., Background: Price transparency is an important policy issue that will require surgeons to better understand the components and cost of care., Methods: This study uses the Episode Grouper for Medicare business logic to construct colectomy surgical episodes of care for cancer using Medicare claims data for the Boston Hospital Referral Region from 2012 to 2015. Descriptive statistics show the mean reimbursement based on patient severity and stage of surgery, along with the number of unique clinicians billing for care and the mix of services provided., Results: The Episode Grouper for Medicare episode grouper identified 3182 colectomies in Boston between 2012 and 2015, with 1607 done for cancer. The mean Medicare allowed amount per case is $29,954 and varies from $26,605 to $36,850 as you move from low to high-severity cases. The intrafacility stage is the most expensive ($23,175 on average) compared with the pre ($780) and post ($6,479) facility stages. There is tremendous heterogeneity in the service mix., Conclusions: Episode groupers are a potentially valuable tool for identifying variations in service mix and teaming patterns that correlate with a total price. By looking at patient care holistically, stakeholders can identify opportunities for price transparency and care redesign that have heretofore been hidden., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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76. Estimating the Primary Care Workforce for Medicare Beneficiaries Using an Activity-Based Approach.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Chapman J, Subbiah SV, and Perloff J
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- Humans, Aged, United States, Workforce, Fee-for-Service Plans, Primary Health Care, Medicare, Physicians
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Background: The enumeration of the primary care workforce relies on potentially inaccurate specialty designations sourced from licensure registries and clinician surveys., Objective: To use an activity-based measure of primary care to estimate the number of physicians, nurse practitioners (NPs), and physician assistants (PAs) providing primary care to Medicare beneficiaries., Design: Observational study using Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) claims data., Subjects: All clinicians in the US billing Medicare in 2019 and their fee-for-service Medicare patients., Main Measures: We construct three measures that together distinguish primary care from specialty clinicians: (1) presence of evaluation and management (E&M) services in a setting consistent with primary care, (2) the dispersion of clinical care across International Classification of Diseases-10 (ICD-10) chapters, and (3) the extent of provided services that are atypical of primary care (e.g., surgical procedure). We apply parameters to the measures to identify the clinicians likely providing primary care and compare the resulting classifications across provider type., Key Results: Of physicians with at least 50 Medicare beneficiaries, 19-22% provide primary care. Of medical generalists (i.e., family medicine, internal medicine) with at least 50 beneficiaries, 61-68% provide primary care. We estimate that 40-45% of NPs and 27-30% of PAs meeting the panel size threshold are primary care providers in FFS Medicare., Conclusions: Our findings suggest that based on a primary care practice style, the number of primary care physicians in FFS Medicare is likely smaller than conventional estimates. However, compared to prior estimates, the number of primary care NPs is larger and the number of PAs is similar., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Society of General Internal Medicine.)
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- 2023
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77. Challenges in predicting future high-cost patients for care management interventions.
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Crowley C, Perloff J, Stuck A, and Mechanic R
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- United States, Humans, Aged, Fee-for-Service Plans, Hospitalization, Medical Assistance, Medicare, Heart Failure diagnosis, Heart Failure therapy
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Background: To test the accuracy of a segmentation approach using claims data to predict Medicare beneficiaries most likely to be hospitalized in a subsequent year., Methods: This article uses a 100-percent sample of Medicare beneficiaries from 2017 to 2018. This analysis is designed to illustrate the actuarial limitations of person-centered risk segmentation by looking at the number and rate of hospitalizations for progressively narrower segments of heart failure patients and a national fee-for-service comparison group. Cohorts are defined using 2017 data and then 2018 hospitalization rates are shown graphically., Results: As the segments get narrower, the 2018 hospitalization rates increased, but the percentage of total Medicare FFS hospitalizations accounted for went down. In all three segments and the total Medicare FFS population, more than half of all patients did not have a hospitalization in 2018., Conclusions: With the difficulty of identifying future high utilizing beneficiaries, health systems should consider the addition of clinician input and 'light touch' monitoring activities to improve the prediction of high-need, high-cost cohorts. It may also be beneficial to develop systemic strategies to manage utilization and steer beneficiaries to efficient providers rather than targeting individual patients., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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78. Accountable Care Organizations, Skilled Nursing Facilities, and Nurse Practitioners: Moving From Broad Themes to Actionable Care Redesign.
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Perloff J
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- Humans, United States, Skilled Nursing Facilities, Patient Discharge, Accountable Care Organizations, Nurse Practitioners
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Competing Interests: The author declares no conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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79. State Variation in the Utilization of Nurse Practitioner-Provided Home-Based Primary Care: A Medicare Claims Analysis.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Perloff J, Srinivasan M, Alvarez M, and Hoyt A
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- Aged, Humans, United States, Primary Health Care, Insurance Claim Review, Medicare, Nurse Practitioners, Geriatric Nursing
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Nurse practitioners (NPs) provide an increasing proportion of home-based primary care, despite restrictive scope of practice laws in approximately one half of states. We examined the relationship between scope of practice laws and state volume of NP-provided home-based primary care by performing an analysis of 2018 to 2019 Medicare claims. For each state we calculated the proportion of total home-based primary care visits by NPs and the proportion of all NPs providing home-based primary care. We used the 2018 American Association of Nurse Practitioners classification of state practice environment. We performed chi-square tests to assess the significance between volume and practice environment. We found that 42% of home-based primary care is delivered by NPs nationally, but substantial variation exists across states. We did not find a discernible or statistically significant pattern of uptake of NP-provided home-based primary care across full, reduced, or restricted states. [ Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 49 (5), 11-17.].
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- 2023
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80. A cross-sectional analysis of psychosocial and structural barriers and facilitators associated with PrEP use among a sample of transgender women in Chicago, IL.
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Kuhns LM, Perloff J, Johnson AK, Paul JL, Pleasant K, Evans K, Denson DJ, Gelaude DJ, Bessler PA, Diskin R, Cervantes M, Garofalo R, and Hotton AL
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- Humans, Female, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Male, Chicago, Transgender Persons psychology, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis
- Abstract
Background: Expanding pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) among transgender women in the United States is an important strategy to meet national HIV prevention goals, however self-reported use of PrEP is low in this group., Methods: This study reports the findings of a cross-sectional analysis of the relationship of barriers as well as facilitators to recent PrEP use among transgender women enrolled in an evaluation of the TransLife Care project (Chicago, Illinois), a structural intervention designed to meet basic needs. We computed multivariable prevalence ratios for barriers, facilitators and recent PrEP use, controlling for demographics., Results: Findings suggest that psychosocial and structural barriers, including moderate/high alcohol use, stimulant use, and history of incarceration were all positively associated with recent PrEP use among urban transgender women. In addition, a psychosocial facilitator, gender affirmation, was positively associated with recent PrEP use, while, while collective self-esteem, a was negatively associated with it. Finally, common indications for PrEP have high sensitivity, but low specificity and predictive value for identifying those on PrEP., Conclusion: We conclude that despite a large gap in PrEP use among those with indications, individuals experiencing psychosocial and structural barriers are more likely to use PrEP, and facilitators, such as psychological sense of affirmed gender may support its use., Trial Registration: N/A., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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81. Early implementation of full-practice authority: A survey of Massachusetts nurse practitioners.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Zwilling J, Perloff J, Freeman P, Brown E, and Donelan K
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- Massachusetts, Nurse's Role, Surveys and Questionnaires, Nurse Practitioners, Scope of Practice
- Abstract
Background: In January 2021, Massachusetts granted nurse practitioners (NPs) full-practice authority (FPA). Little is known about how FPA changes the day-to-day work of NPs., Purpose: To examine changes in practice barriers and care delivery in the early stages of FPA., Methodology: Descriptive analysis of a web-based survey of clinically active NPs in Massachusetts from October to December 2021, using Fisher exact tests to examine the associations between the perception that FPA improved work and other variables., Results: Survey response rate was 50.3% ( N = 147). Overall, 79% of NPs believe that clinical work is unchanged by FPA. Practicing outside institutions is a significant predictor of FPA improving work ( p < .05). Larger proportions of respondents feel that efficiency (22%), patient centeredness (20%), and timeliness (20%) are improved by FPA compared with effectiveness (16%), equity (14%), and safety (10%). Almost half of those reporting that FPA improves overall care also report improved efficiency (50%, p < .0001), but only 22% report improved safety ( p < .05). Of those believing that FPA improved work, a minority no longer need physician review of new controlled substance prescriptions (29%, p < .01), a practice agreement (32%, p < .05), or physician signature on clinical documentation (22%, p < .05)., Conclusions: Almost 1 year after FPA was passed in Massachusetts, the large majority of NPs report no changes in their day-to-day work, suggesting that FPA implementation is slow., Implications: Concerted efforts by regulators, employers, and individual NPs are needed to ensure that legislated FPA is effectively implemented inside organizations and among payers., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 American Association of Nurse Practitioners.)
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- 2023
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82. Emergency Removal of Supervision Requirements for Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioners: A Mixed-Methods Survey.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Tierney M, Freeman P, and Perloff J
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- Humans, Mental Health, Pandemics, COVID-19, Psychiatry, Nurse Practitioners
- Abstract
Objective: Physician supervision of nurse practitioners (NPs) was temporarily waived in Massachusetts in response to a state of emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The authors examined the impact of the scope-of-practice changes and pandemic-related demands on psychiatric mental health NPs (PMHNPs) during the state's first COVID-19 surge., Methods: A mixed-methods Web-based survey was conducted in May and June of 2020. Fisher's exact test was used to compare associations across certification types, and inductive content analysis was applied to open-ended responses., Results: The survey response rate was 41% (N=389 of 958), consisting of 26 PMHNPs and 363 other NPs. Compared with other NPs, PMHNPs were significantly more likely to work in a telehealth setting (42% vs. 11%, p<0.001), to spend more time working during the initial surge (50% vs. 26%, p<0.05), and to believe that the waiver improved clinical work (52% vs. 25%, p<0.01). Content analysis of PMHNPs' open-ended responses identified four themes: the supervision waiver reduced burden on PMHNPs, collaboration and mentorship models persisted, the pandemic exacerbated the already high demand for psychiatric care, and telehealth helped meet the high demand for such care., Conclusions: PMHNPs may be more sensitive to the scope-of-practice changes and telehealth expansion than other NPs because of the constraints of the psychiatrist shortage and high relative uptake of telehealth in psychiatric care. The interactions of workforce supply, telehealth expansion, and scope-of-practice laws are important to consider in the development of policies to improve access to mental health care.
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- 2023
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83. Validation and Repeatability of the Epidermolysis Bullosa Eye Disease Index in Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa.
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Chen VM, Kumar VSS, Noh E, and Perloff J
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- Humans, Child, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Reproducibility of Results, Quality of Life, Activities of Daily Living, Epidermolysis Bullosa Dystrophica complications, Epidermolysis Bullosa Dystrophica diagnosis, Epidermolysis Bullosa complications, Eye Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (DEB) is a devastating condition that causes painful corneal abrasions and vision loss. Epidermolysis Bullosa Eye Disease Index (EB-EDI) for the first time captures and quantifies EB-specific assessment of ocular symptoms and activities of daily living scales. This survey will become critical in developing new interventions on patients' quality of life., Methods: Three-part set of the EB-EDI baseline, EB-EDI interval, and Ocular Surface Disease Index (OSDI) survey was distributed to 92 patients with DEB who previously reported eye symptoms on previous surveys. It was then posted online through several EB patient organizations. We compared the EB-EDI with the gold standard OSDI and examined the repeatability of the EB-EDI over a 7- to 15-day interval., Results: Of the 45 individuals who initially responded, 30 of 45 (67%) completed the surveys sent 7 to 15 days later. The age of participants ranged from 6 to 51 years (mean 21 ± 15 years), and 60% (18 of 30) of participants were younger than 18 years. The overall Cronbach alpha values for the subscales of EB-EDI baseline and interval tools presented a good internal consistency (≥0.7). From 2 visits, the domain scores of EB-EDI baseline (0.94) and interval tools (0.83) were shown to have excellent test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.8). By comparison, OSDI had the intraclass correlation coefficient score of 0.72 ± 0.11. The convergent validation analysis showed that correlations between the domain scores of EB-EDI baseline and interval tools and the subscales of the OSDI reached the hypothesized strength., Conclusions: Based on a 30-person repeated-measures study, we found that the EB-EDI has excellent reliability and validity specifically in patients with DEB., Competing Interests: V. M. Chen is a consultant for Phoenix Tissue Repair, Inc. The remaining authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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84. Rural-urban prescribing patterns by primary care and behavioral health providers in older adults with serious mental illness.
- Author
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Muench U, Jura M, Thomas CP, Perloff J, and Spetz J
- Subjects
- United States, Aged, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Medicare, Primary Health Care, Antipsychotic Agents therapeutic use, Bipolar Disorder, Depressive Disorder, Major
- Abstract
Background: Older adults with serious mental illness (SMI) often have multiple comorbidities and complex medication schedules. Shortages of behavioral health specialists (BHSs), especially in rural areas, frequently make primary care providers (PCPs) the only clinician managing this complex population. The aim of this study was to describe rural/urban psychiatric medication prescribing in older adults with SMI by PCPs and BHSs, and by clinician type., Methods: This retrospective descriptive analysis used 2018 Medicare data to identify individuals with a bipolar, major depression, schizophrenia, or psychosis diagnosis and examined medication claims for antianxiety, antidepressants, antipsychotics, hypnotics, and anticonvulsants. Descriptive statistics summarized percentage of medications provided by PCPs and BHSs stratified by rural and urban areas and by drug class. Additional analyses compared psychiatric prescribing patterns by physicians, advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs), and physician assistants (PAs)., Results: In urban areas, PCPs prescribed at least 50% of each psychiatric medication class, except antipsychotics, which was 45.2%. BHSs prescribed 40.7% of antipsychotics and less than 25% of all other classes. In rural areas, percentages of psychiatric medications from PCPs were over 70% for each medication class, except antipsychotics, which was 60.1%. Primary care physicians provided most psychiatric medications, between 36%-57% in urban areas and 47%-65% in rural areas. Primary care APRNs provided up to 13% of prescriptions in rural areas, which was more than the amount prescribed by BHS physicians, expect for antipsychotics. Psychiatric mental health APRNs provided up to 7.5% of antipsychotics in rural areas, but their prescribing contribution among other classes ranged between 1.1%-3.6%. PAs provided 2.5%-3.4% of medications in urban areas and this increased to 3.9%-5.1% in rural areas., Conclusions: Results highlight the extensive roles of PCPs, including APRNs, in managing psychiatric medications for older adults with SMI., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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85. Can clinician champions reduce potentially inappropriate medications in people living with dementia? Study protocol for a cluster randomized trial.
- Author
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Parchman ML, Perloff J, and Ritter G
- Subjects
- Accidental Falls prevention & control, Aged, Humans, Inappropriate Prescribing prevention & control, Medicare, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, United States, Dementia drug therapy, Potentially Inappropriate Medication List
- Abstract
Background: For people living with dementia (PLWD) the overuse of potentially inappropriate medications (PIMs) remains a persistent problem. De-prescribing trials in the elderly have mixed results. Clinician champions may be uniquely suited to lead efforts to address this challenge. Here we describe the study protocol for a 24-month embedded pragmatic cluster-randomized clinical trial within two accountable care organizations (ACOs) of such a clinician champion intervention. The specific aims are to (1) assess the effectiveness of a clinician champion on de-implementing PIMs in PLWD, (2) determine if the intervention is associated with a reduction in emergency department (ED) visits and hospitalizations attributed to a fall, and (3) examine five implementation outcomes: appropriateness, feasibility, fidelity, penetration, and equity., Methods/design: Two ACOs agreed to participate: United States Medical Management (USMM) and Oschner Health System. The unit of randomization will be the primary care clinic. A clinician champion will be recruited from each of the intervention clinics to participate in a 6-month training program and then work with clinicians and staff in their clinic for 12 months to reduce the use of PIMs in their PLWD population. For aims 1 and 2, Medicare claims data will be used to assess outcomes. The outcome for aim #1 will be medication possession rates per quarter, for the three therapeutic classes of PIMs among patients with dementia in intervention clinics versus control clinics. For aim #2, we will assess the incidence of falls using a previously validated algorithm. For both aims 1 and 2, we will construct hierarchical models with time period observations nested within patient using generalized estimating equations (GEE) with robust standard errors. The key variable of interest will be the treatment indicator assigned based on practice. For aim #3, we will conduct qualitative thematic analysis of documentation by the clinician champions in their project workbooks to evaluate the five implementation outcomes., Discussion: This embedded pragmatic trial will add to our existing knowledge regarding the effectiveness of a clinician champion strategy to de-prescribe potentially inappropriate medication among patients with dementia as well as its appropriateness, feasibility, fidelity, penetration, and equity., Trial Registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT05359679 , Registered May 4, 2022., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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86. Primary Care Nurse Practitioner Work Environments and Hospitalizations and ED Use Among Chronically Ill Medicare Beneficiaries.
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Poghosyan L, Liu J, Perloff J, D'Aunno T, Cato KD, Friedberg MW, and Martsolf G
- Subjects
- Aged, Chronic Disease, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Hospitalization, Humans, Primary Health Care, United States, Medicare, Nurse Practitioners
- Abstract
Background: Nurse practitioners (NPs) play a critical role in delivering primary care, particularly to chronically ill elderly. Yet, many NPs practice in poor work environments which may affect patient outcomes., Objective: We investigated the relationship between NP work environments in primary care practices and hospitalizations and emergency department (ED) use among chronically ill elderly., Research Design: We used a cross-sectional design to collect survey data from NPs about their practices. The survey data were merged with Medicare claims data., Subjects: In total, 979 primary care practices employing NPs and delivering care to chronically ill Medicare beneficiaries (n=452,931) from 6 US states were included., Measures: NPs completed the Nurse Practitioner-Primary Care Organizational Climate Questionnaire-a valid and reliable measure for work environment. Data on hospitalizations and ED use was obtained from Medicare claims. We used Cox regression models to estimate risk ratios., Results: After controlling for covariates, we found statistically significant associations between practice-level NP work environment and 3 outcomes: Ambulatory Care Sensitive (ACS) ED visits, all-cause ED visits, and all-cause hospitalizations. With a 1-unit increase in the work environment score, the risk of an ACS-ED visit decreased by 4.4% [risk ratio (RR)=0.956; 99% confidence interval (CI): 0.918-0.995; P=0.004], an ED visit by 3.5% (RR=0.965; 99% CI: 0.933-0.997; P=0.005), and a hospitalization by 4.0% (RR=0.960;99% CI: 0.928-0.993; P=0.002). There was no relationship between NP work environment and ACS hospitalizations., Conclusion: Favorable NP work environments are associated with lower hospital and ED utilization. Practice managers should focus on NP work environments in quality improvement strategies., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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87. Characteristics of home-based care provided by accountable care organizations.
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Mechanic RE, Perloff J, Stuck AR, and Crowley C
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Humans, Medicare, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Accountable Care Organizations, Home Care Services
- Abstract
Objectives: To describe the use of home-based services in accountable care organizations (ACOs)., Study Design: Cross-sectional analysis of 2019 ACO survey., Methods: We analyzed surveys completed by 151 ACOs describing the characteristics of home-based care programs serving high-need, high-cost patients. We linked survey results to publicly available information about ACO characteristics, governance, and risk model participation., Results: Twenty-five percent of respondent ACOs had formal home-based care programs, 25% offered occasional home visits, and 17% were actively developing new programs. Home-based primary care was the most common program type. Half of programs were established within the past 3 years. The programs utilized multidisciplinary care teams, but two-thirds had fewer than 500 visits annually. Funding sources included direct billing for services, health system subsidies, and ACO shared savings. A majority of respondents expressed interest in expanding services but were concerned about their ability to demonstrate a return on investment (ROI), which was reported as a major or moderate challenge by three-quarters of respondents., Conclusions: ACOs deliver a diverse array of home-visit services including primary care, acute medical care, palliative care, care transitions, and interventions to address social determinants of health. Many services provided are not billable, and therefore ACO leaders are hesitant to fund expansions without strong evidence of ROI. Expanding Medicare ACO home-visit waivers to all risk-bearing ACOs and covering integrated telehealth services would improve the financial viability of these programs.
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- 2022
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88. Nurse practitioners' perception of temporary full practice authority during a COVID-19 surge: A qualitative study.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Perloff J, Sherafat-Kazemzadeh R, and Flanagan J
- Subjects
- Humans, Nurse's Role, Pandemics, Perception, SARS-CoV-2, United States, COVID-19, Nurse Practitioners
- Abstract
Background: At the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, 22 state governors temporarily waived physician supervision of nurse practitioners to expand access to health care during the state of emergency., Objective: We examined the nurse practitioner perception of the simultaneous scope of practice changes and the exigent pandemic demands during the initial COVID-19 surge in Massachusetts., Methods: Qualitative descriptive design using content analysis of open-ended responses to a web-based survey of Massachusetts nurse practitioners conducted in May & June 2020., Results: Survey response rate was 40.6 percent (N = 389). Content analysis identified four themes including: 1) State waivers enabled more control over practice and more expedited care, 2) State waiver did not change practice either because of pre-established independence or employers not changing policy, 3) Perception of nurse practitioner role as both versatile and disposable and 4) Telehealth increased access to care and created an autonomous setting., Conclusions: Although findings suggest fewer barriers in some areas, the temporary removal of state-level restrictions alone is not sufficient to achieve immediate full scope of practice for nurse practitioners. There is a need for regulatory frameworks that optimize the capacity of the advanced practice nursing workforce to respond to global health emergencies. US-based policymakers and healthcare organizations should revise outdated scope of practice policies and capitalize on telehealth technology to utilize the full extent of nurse practitioners. Likewise, nursing leaders should be a voice for nurse practitioners to more effectively and safely maximize the nurse practitioner contribution during emergency responses. In countries where the role is under development, regulators can leverage these findings to establish modernized nurse practitioner scope of practice policies from the outset., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest None., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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89. Incidence of and County Variation in Fall Injuries in US Residents Aged 65 Years or Older, 2016-2019.
- Author
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Hoffman G, Franco N, Perloff J, Lynn J, Okoye S, and Min L
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Forecasting, Geography, Humans, Incidence, Male, Population Forecast, United States, Accidental Falls statistics & numerical data, Local Government, Medicare statistics & numerical data, Medicare trends
- Published
- 2022
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90. Use of electronic health record systems in accountable care organizations.
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Perloff J and Sobul S
- Subjects
- Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Electronic Health Records, Humans, Income, Medicare, United States, Accountable Care Organizations
- Abstract
Objectives: To assess the ability of accountable care organizations (ACOs) to use electronic health record (EHR) data for quality., Study Design: Cross-sectional study of ACOs participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP)., Methods: A national survey of MSSP ACOs included questions on the number of EHR systems used across all providers in the ACO and barriers to reporting EHR-based quality measures., Results: Just 9% of ACOs use a single EHR system, whereas 77% use 6 or more EHR systems. The more EHR systems an ACO uses, the less likely it is to report having the infrastructure to aggregate EHR data and the more concerned it is about the short-term viability and accuracy of EHR-based quality measures., Conclusions: ACOs have diverse structures that often result in the usage of multiple EHR systems. This has the potential to cause serious delays when CMS begins requiring ACOs to report their quality measures through their EHRs in 2022.
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- 2022
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91. Evaluating Locally Developed Interventions to Promote PrEP Among Racially/Ethnically Diverse Transgender Women in the United States: A Unique CDC Initiative.
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Rhodes SD, Kuhns LM, Alexander J, Alonzo J, Bessler PA, Courtenay-Quirk C, Denson DJ, Evans K, Galindo CA, Garofalo R, Gelaude DJ, Hotton AL, Johnson AK, Mann-Jackson L, Muldoon A, Ortiz R, Paul JL, Perloff J, Pleasant K, Reboussin BA, Refugio Aviles L, Song EY, Tanner AE, and Trent S
- Subjects
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Female, Humans, United States, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections prevention & control, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis, Transgender Persons
- Abstract
In the United States, transgender women are disproportionately affected by HIV. However, few evidence-based prevention interventions exist for this key population. We describe two promising, locally developed interventions that are currently being implemented and evaluated through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Combination HIV Prevention for Transgender Women Project: (a) ChiCAS, designed to promote the uptake of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), condom use, and medically supervised hormone therapy among Spanish-speaking transgender Latinas, and (b) TransLife Care, designed to address the structural drivers of HIV risk through access to housing, employment, legal services, and medical services, including HIV preventive care (e.g., PrEP use) among racially/ethnically diverse urban transgender women. If the evaluation trials determine that these interventions are effective, they will be among the first such interventions for use with transgender women incorporating PrEP, thereby contributing to the evidence-based resources that may be used to reduce HIV risk among this population.
- Published
- 2021
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92. Nurse practitioner-owned practices and value-based payment.
- Author
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Perloff J, Berkowitz S, and Bock L
- Subjects
- Delivery of Health Care, Humans, Models, Nursing, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Nurse Practitioners, Primary Health Care
- Abstract
Background: The United States is steadily shifting away from volume-based payments toward value-based payment for health care. The nursing model's emphasis on high-value care, such as disease prevention and health maintenance, ideally positions nurse practitioner (NP) practice owners to contribute to the goals of value-based care. However, little is known about NP participation in value-based care., Purpose: To better understand NP-owned practice participation in value-based care., Methodology: Using convenience sampling, we developed a registry of NP owned practices, which we used to conduct a web-based survey from November 2019 to February 2020., Results: Of the 47 NP-owner respondents, 40 practice in primary or specialty care. Practices are relatively small with a mean clinical staff of 4 full-time equivalent (FTE; range: 1-17), mean total staff of 7 FTE (1-28.5), and with a mean of 325 patient visits annually. A third participate in value-based payment arrangements, whereas a half are considering and three quarters are knowledgeable about value-based payment arrangements. Over 70% of practice owners report lack of knowledge, lack of financial protections, and lack of payer partnership as barriers to participation in value-based payment models., Conclusions: NP practice owners face many challenges to taking on risk, including insufficient patient volume., Implications: Joining together may allow small NP practices to participate in and thrive under value-based payment. Reducing the barriers and regulation of all NPs will enable the health care system to capitalize on the nursing model to meet the goals of value-based care., (Copyright © 2021 American Association of Nurse Practitioners.)
- Published
- 2021
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93. Evaluation of Translife Care: An Intervention to Address Social Determinants of Engagement in HIV Care Among Transgender Women of Color.
- Author
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Kuhns LM, Hotton AL, Perloff J, Paul J, Parker C, Muldoon AL, Johnson AK, and Garofalo R
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Social Determinants of Health, Viral Load, Male, Racial Groups, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections prevention & control, Transgender Persons
- Abstract
The TransLife Care (TLC) project was developed to address the structural factors that act as barriers to HIV care among transgender women of color. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and initial efficacy of the TLC project; primary HIV care outcomes included linkage to HIV care, engagement in care, retention in care, use of ART and viral suppression among N = 120 participants. In multivariable analysis, receipt of the intervention (versus none), was associated with any HIV care visit (aOR 2.05; 95% CI 1.25-3.37; p = 0.005), more total HIV care visits (aRR 1.45; 95% CI 1.09-1.94; p = 0.011), being retained in care (aOR 1.58; 95% CI 1.03-2.44; p = 0.038), and having a viral load test done (aOR 1.95; 95% CI 1.23-3.09; p = 0.004). We conclude that a structural intervention, designed and delivered by the focus population, that directly addresses social determinants, is feasible and efficacious to promote HIV care engagement among transgender women of color.
- Published
- 2021
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94. Low-Value Back Imaging in the Care of Medicare Beneficiaries: A Comparison of Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants.
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O'Reilly-Jacob M, Perloff J, and Buerhaus P
- Subjects
- Aged, Diagnostic Imaging, Humans, Medicare, Referral and Consultation, United States, Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants
- Abstract
Little is known about practice pattern differences between nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). We compared the rates of low-value back images ordered by NPs and PAs. For this comparison, we used 2012-2013 Medicare Part B claims for all beneficiaries in 18 hospital referral regions and a measure of low-value back imaging from the Choosing Wisely recommendations. Models included a random clinician effect and fixed effects for beneficiary age, disability, Elixhauser comorbidities, clinician type, the emergency department setting, and region. NPs ( N = 234) order low-value back images significantly less than PAs ( N = 204) (NPs 25.5% vs. PAs 39.2%, p < .0001). Controlling for relevant factors, NPs are 10.0 percentage points ( p < .0001) less likely to order a low-value back image than PAs. NPs and PAs have distinct patterns of low-value back imaging, which is likely a reflection of their different practice settings.
- Published
- 2021
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95. The Effect of Supervision Waivers on Practice: A Survey of Massachusetts Nurse Practitioners During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Author
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O'Reilly-Jacob M and Perloff J
- Subjects
- COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 epidemiology, Certification, Health Plan Implementation, Humans, Licensure, Massachusetts epidemiology, Nurse Practitioners legislation & jurisprudence, Practice Patterns, Nurses' legislation & jurisprudence, Primary Health Care legislation & jurisprudence, Professional Autonomy, Surveys and Questionnaires statistics & numerical data, Workforce legislation & jurisprudence, Workforce organization & administration, COVID-19 therapy, Nurse Practitioners organization & administration, Pandemics prevention & control, Practice Patterns, Nurses' organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Abstract
Background: While optimal utilization of the nurse practitioner (NP) workforce is an increasingly popular proposal to alleviate the growing primary care shortage, federal, state, and organizational scope of practice policies inhibit NPs from practicing to the full extent of their license and training. In March of 2020, NP state-specific supervisory requirements were temporarily waived to meet the demands of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in Massachusetts., Objective: The objective of this study was to examine the impact of temporarily waived state practice restrictions on NP perception of care delivery during the initial surge of the COVID-19 pandemic in Massachusetts., Research Design: Mixed methods descriptive analysis of a web-based survey of Massachusetts NPs (N=391), conducted in May and June 2020., Results: The vast majority (75%) of NPs believed the temporary removal of practice restriction did not perceptibly improve clinical work. Psychiatric mental health NPs were significantly more likely than other NP specialties to believe the waiver improved clinical work (odds ratio=6.68, P=0.001). NPs that experienced an increase in working hours during the pandemic surge were also more likely to report a positive effect of the waiver (odds ratio=2.56, P=0.000)., Conclusions: Temporary removal of state-level practice barriers alone is not sufficient to achieve immediate full scope of practice for NPs. The successful implementation of modernized scope of practice laws may require a collective effort to revise organizational and payer policies accordingly., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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96. Drivers of Cost Differences Between Nurse Practitioner and Physician Attributed Medicare Beneficiaries.
- Author
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Razavi M, O'Reilly-Jacob M, Perloff J, and Buerhaus P
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Health Care Costs classification, Humans, Insurance Benefits statistics & numerical data, Medicare statistics & numerical data, Nurse Practitioners statistics & numerical data, Physicians statistics & numerical data, Primary Health Care economics, Primary Health Care statistics & numerical data, United States, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Insurance Benefits economics, Medicare classification, Nurse Practitioners economics, Physicians economics
- Abstract
Background: Although recent research suggests that primary care provided by nurse practitioners costs less than primary care provided by physicians, little is known about underlying drivers of these cost differences., Research Objective: Identify the drivers of cost differences between Medicare beneficiaries attributed to primary care nurse practitioners (PCNPs) and primary care physicians (PCMDs)., Study Design: Cross-sectional cost decomposition analysis using 2009-2010 Medicare administrative claims for beneficiaries attributed to PCNPs and PCMDs with risk stratification to control for beneficiary severity. Cost differences between PCNPs and PCMDs were decomposed into payment, service volume, and service mix within low-risk, moderate-risk and high-risk strata., Results: Overall, the average PCMD cost of care is 34% higher than PCNP care in the low-risk stratum, and 28% and 21% higher in the medium-risk and high-risk stratum. In the low-risk stratum, the difference is comprised of 24% service volume, 6% payment, and 4% service mix. In the high-risk stratum, the difference is composed of 7% service volume, 9% payment, and 4% service mix. The cost difference between PCNP and PCMD attributed beneficiaries is persistent and significant, but narrows as risk increases. Across the strata, PCNPs use fewer and less expensive services than PCMDs. In the low-risk stratum, PCNPs use markedly fewer services than PCMDs., Conclusions: There are differences in the costs of primary care of Medicare beneficiaries provided by nurse practitioners and MDs. Especially in low-risk populations, the lower cost of PCNP provided care is primarily driven by lower service volume., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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97. The Impact of Tai Chi Exercise on Health Care Utilization and Imputed Cost in Residents of Low-Income Senior Housing.
- Author
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Perloff J, Thomas CP, Macklin E, Gagnon P, Tsai T, Isaza I, Wayne PM, and Lipsitz L
- Abstract
Background/objectives: This study was designed to test the impact of Tai Chi (TC) on healthcare utilization and cost in older adults living in low-income senior housing. We hypothesized that TC would improve overall health enough to reduce the use of emergency department (ED) and inpatient services., Design: Cluster randomized controlled trial with randomization at the housing site level., Setting: Greater Boston, Massachusetts., Participants: The study includes 6 sites with 75 individuals in the TC treatment condition and 6 sites with 67 individuals in the health education control condition., Intervention: Members of the treatment group received up to a year-long intervention with twice weekly, in-person TC exercise sessions along with video-directed exercises that could be done independently at home. The comparison group received monthly, in-person healthy aging education classes (HE). Study recruitment took place between August, 2015 and October, 2017. Key outcomes included acute care utilization (inpatient stays, observation stays and emergency department visits). In addition, the cost of utilization was estimated using the age, sex and race adjusted allowed amount from Medicare claims for a geographically similar population aged ≥ 65., Results: The results suggested a possible reduction in the rate of ED visits in the TC group vs. controls (rate ratio = 0.476, p-value = 0.06), but no findings achieved statistical significance. Adjusted estimates of imputed costs of ED and hospital care were similar between TC and HE, averaging approximately $3,000 in each group., Conclusion: ED utilization tended to be lower over 6 to 12 months of TC exercises compared to HE in older adults living in low-income housing, although estimated costs of care were similar., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared the following potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Peter Wayne is the founder and sole owner of the Tree of Life Tai Chi Center. His interests were reviewed and managed by the Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Partner’s HealthCare in accordance with their conflict of interest policies. The other authors declare no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
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98. Inpatient rehabilitation facilities' hospital readmission rates for medicare beneficiaries treated following a stroke.
- Author
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Daras LC, Deutsch A, Ingber MJ, Hefele JG, and Perloff J
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Discharge, Risk Factors, United States, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Inpatients statistics & numerical data, Medicare statistics & numerical data, Patient Readmission statistics & numerical data, Rehabilitation Centers statistics & numerical data, Stroke therapy, Stroke Rehabilitation methods
- Abstract
Background: Stroke is the leading cause for admission to the nearly 1,200 Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (IRFs) nationally in the US. For many patients, post-acute care is an important component of their rehabilitation. Several quality measures have been publicly reported for post-acute care providers, including hospital readmissions. However, to date none have focused on specific medical conditions, limiting the usability for patients and quality improvement., Objective: To assess hospital readmission rates for Medicare patients receiving inpatient rehabilitation following stroke and to identify risk factors in order to evaluate the feasibility of a stroke-specific hospital readmission measure., Methods: Observational study analyzing national Medicare inpatient claims and administrative data to assess hospital readmissions. Using logistic regression, we calculated unadjusted and risk-standardized readmission rates, which adjusted for patient characteristics, including type of stroke and admission function, to capture stroke severity., Results: Our national study included 116,073 fee-for-service Medicare beneficiary discharged from IRFs in 2013-2014 following stroke from 1,162 IRFs nationally. The observed hospital readmission rate among IRF patients following stroke was 11.6% and varied by patients' admission motor function. Patients with greater functional dependence had higher readmission rates on average. Lower admission function, hemorrhagic and other stroke types (relative to ischemic) were significantly associated with higher odds of hospital readmission., Conclusion: Results suggest it is feasible to assess hospital readmission rates among a stroke-cohort treated in IRFs. Stroke-focused quality measures would be useful to patients in selecting a provider and for providers in evaluating their stroke rehabilitation program outcomes. Secondary results suggest that admission function (FIM) capture stroke severity, a limitation with other claims-based stroke measures.
- Published
- 2021
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99. Patterns of Exposure to Socio-structural Stressors and HIV Care Engagement Among Transgender Women of Color.
- Author
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Hotton AL, Perloff J, Paul J, Parker C, Ducheny K, Holloway T, Johnson AK, Garofalo R, Swartz J, and Kuhns LM
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, HIV Infections ethnology, HIV Infections psychology, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Latent Class Analysis, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Transgender Persons statistics & numerical data, Viral Load, Black or African American psychology, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Continuity of Patient Care statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections drug therapy, Social Stigma, Transgender Persons psychology
- Abstract
Transgender women are disproportionately affected by HIV and experiences of social adversity that may interfere with engagement in care and viral suppression. We used latent class analysis to examine patterns of social adversity and their impact on HIV care continuum outcomes in an urban sample of transgender women of color. Participants (n = 224) were median age 29 and 86% non-Hispanic Black. Lack of resources, unemployment, and housing instability were reported by over 50%, and 41% reported history of incarceration. Latent class analysis identified 2 distinct classes representing higher and lower levels of social adversity. In latent class regression, membership in the higher social adversity class was associated with statistically significantly lower odds of viral suppression and HIV care engagement in univariate analysis; when adjusted for age, race, and recruitment site the association remained statistically significant for viral suppression (aOR 0.38, 95% CI 0.18-0.79; chi-square = 6.681, d.f. = 1, p = 0.010), though not for HIV care engagement. Our findings highlight the impact of socio-structural barriers on engagement in the HIV care continuum among transgender women.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. National Quality Forum Guidelines for Evaluating the Scientific Acceptability of Risk-adjusted Clinical Outcome Measures: A Report From the National Quality Forum Scientific Methods Panel.
- Author
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Glance LG, Joynt Maddox K, Johnson K, Nerenz D, Cella D, Borah B, Kunisch J, Kurlansky P, Perloff J, Stoto M, Walters R, White S, and Lin Z
- Subjects
- Humans, Guidelines as Topic standards, Quality Improvement, Quality of Health Care standards, Societies, Medical
- Abstract
: Quality measurement is at the heart of efforts to achieve high-quality surgical and medical care at a lower cost. Without accurate quality measures, it is not possible to appropriately align incentives with quality. The aim of these National Quality Forum (NQF) guidelines is to provide measure developers and other stakeholders with guidance on the standards used by the NQF to evaluate the scientific acceptability of performance measures. Using a methodologically rigorous and transparent process for evaluating health care quality measures is the best insurance that alternative payment plans will truly reward and promote higher quality care. Performance measures need to be credible in order for physicians and hospitals to willingly partner with payers in efforts to improve population outcomes. Our goal in creating this position paper is to promote the transparency of NQF evaluations, improve the quality of performance measurements, and engage surgeons and all other stakeholders to work together to advance the science of performance measurement.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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