• Uses a dataset that covers inpatient hospital admissions of a population of commercially insured patients under age 65 from California during 2003-2012, this dissertation makes contributions to the knowledge gap in the literature. (rand.org)
  • Adverse drug events (ADEs) remain one of the most common types of inpatient errors, affecting almost 5% of hospitalized patients, and lead to hundreds of thousands of emergency department visits and hospitalizations every year. (ahrq.gov)
  • BACKGROUND: Academic medical centers have expanded their inpatient medicine services with advanced practice clinicians (APCs) or nonteaching hospitalists in response to patient volumes, residency work hour restrictions, and recently, COVID-19. (bvsalud.org)
  • SUBJECTS: Patients 18 years or older discharged from an inpatient medicine service between July 2015 and July 2018 (N = 12,716). (bvsalud.org)
  • Design, Setting and, Participants Serial cross-sectional analysis of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries aged 65 years or older between 1999 and 2019 using Medicare denominator and inpatient files. (medrxiv.org)
  • FRIDAY, Jan. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) - Nearly 5 percent of older Medicare beneficiaries seen in the emergency department have a hospital inpatient admission within seven days after discharge, according to a study published in the January issue of the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society . (ehealth-news.com)
  • There was no evidence of changes to inpatient use or mortality. (va.gov)
  • All-Payer Model for hospitals, which shifted the state's hospital payment structure from an all-payer hospital rate setting system to an all-payer global hospital budget that encompasses inpatient and outpatient hospital services. (who.int)
  • In October 2019, Medicare, which spends $30 billion on 2.4 million skilled nursing facility (SNF) stays annually, began reimbursing facilities using the Patient-Driven Payment Model (PDPM). (ajmc.com)
  • John Fahrenbach et al, Neighborhood Disadvantage and Hospital Quality Ratings in the Medicare Hospital Compare Program, Medical Care (2019). (medicalxpress.com)
  • Across all subgroups, Black adults had the highest hospitalization rate in 2019, and there was a significant increase in the differences in hospitalizations between Blacks and Whites from 1999 to 2019. (medrxiv.org)
  • Conclusions and Relevance Among Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries aged 65 years or older, hospitalization rates for hypertensive emergencies increased substantially and significantly from 1999 to 2019. (medrxiv.org)
  • Question How have hospitalization rate for hypertensive emergencies among US adults aged 65 years and older changed between 1999 and 2019 and are there any differences across demographic and geographical subgroups? (medrxiv.org)
  • Findings In this serial cross-sectional study that included 397,238 individual Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries, there was a marked increase in hospitalization rates for hypertensive emergencies from 1999 to 2019, and this increase was most pronounced among Black adults across age, sex, race, and dual-eligible strata. (medrxiv.org)
  • Medicare Advantage beneficiaries use less home health than do their Fee-for-Service counterparts, but there is marked regional variation in use by both groups. (rand.org)
  • Together, MedPAC estimates these reforms can provide $1.5 billion a year in savings to Medicare and beneficiaries. (crfb.org)
  • Additionally, it studies care coordination for dual eligibles (beneficiaries eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid), noting that federally qualified health centers and community health centers may be uniquely positioned to coordinate care for these beneficiaries because they provide primary care, behavioral health services, and care management services, often at the same clinic site. (crfb.org)
  • Results The sample consisted of 397,238 individual Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries. (medrxiv.org)
  • Post-acute care provides a "short-stay" transition between hospitalization and home (or another long-term care setting) for more than five million Medicare beneficiaries each year. (va.gov)
  • Regulators should maintain close oversight of billing by skilled nursing facilities and patient outcomes as the PDPM takes effect to mitigate potential unintended consequences. (ajmc.com)
  • Outcomes of emergency department patients presenting with adverse drug events. (ahrq.gov)
  • DeCenso B, Duber HC, Flaxman AD, Murphy SM, Hanlon M. Improving Hospital Performance Rankings Using Discrete Patient Diagnoses for Risk Adjustment of Outcomes. . (ahrq.gov)
  • However, these SRFs may make it more challenging for hospitals to improve certain quality outcomes. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Dr. Staudenmayer was promoted to Associate Professor of Surgery in 2016, and continues her research, policy and advocacy work to improve the care and outcomes for patients with traumatic injuries and critical surgical illnesses. (stanford.edu)
  • In its annual June report to Congress, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) explores a number of reforms that could help improve outcomes and reduce spending in Medicare. (crfb.org)
  • Objective The relationship between admission nutritional status and clinical outcomes following hospital discharge is not well established. (bmj.com)
  • He performs health services and outcomes research focused on understanding and improving the lives and care of patients with advanced lung disease and is actively involved in clinical trials to improve outcomes in interstitial lung disease. (stanford.edu)
  • Objectives To describe trends in national hospitalization rates for hypertensive emergencies, overall and by demographic and geographical subgroups. (medrxiv.org)
  • Among 3,143 counties and county-equivalents included in the study, less than 1% of counties either had no change (n=7) or decreased (n=20) hospitalization rates since 1999. (medrxiv.org)
  • Black adults had the largest increase in hospitalization rates across age, sex, race, and dual-eligible strata. (medrxiv.org)
  • MONDAY, Jan. 26, 2015 (HealthDay News) - An electronic medical record system, designed to identify patients who have been discharged from heart failure hospitalization and present in the emergency department, can prevent readmissions, according to a study published in The American Journal of Medicine . (ehealth-news.com)
  • The study will compare the time to a composite endpoint of relative decline in lung function [10% relative decline in forced vital capacity (FVC), first respiratory hospitalization, lung transplantation, or all-cause mortality] The secondary objectives will be to examine the effect of NAC on the components of the primary composite endpoint, the rates of clinical events, change in physiology, change in health status, and change in respiratory symptoms. (stanford.edu)
  • Desai was speaking on strategies for reducing heart failure readmissions at 30 days and beyond initial hospitalization during his presentation entitled "Practice: Clinical Initiatives to Address Readmission" at the American Heart Association (AHA) meeting. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Data from a study by McAlister et al ( J Am Coll Cardiol 2004 ) show that smoothing the transition from the hospital to home reduced not only heart failure readmissions (26%), but also overall mortality (25%) and overall hospitalization (19%) and was generally cost-saving or cost neutral. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • The commission urged Congress to "equalize payment rates" or at least reduce the disparities, for doctor's office visits and hospital clinic visits in which similar patients receive the same or similar services. (crfb.org)
  • Together with the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 amendment, it represents the U.S. healthcare system's most significant regulatory overhaul and expansion of coverage since the enactment of Medicare and Medicaid in 1965. (wikipedia.org)
  • The act largely retained the existing structure of Medicare, Medicaid, and the employer market, but individual markets were radically overhauled. (wikipedia.org)
  • The individual insurance market was radically overhauled, and many of the law's regulations applied specifically to this market, while the structure of Medicare, Medicaid, and the employer market were largely retained. (wikipedia.org)
  • This study evaluated the impact of care management on reducing infant mortality in the largest Medicaid MCO in Ohio. (rand.org)
  • But a University of Chicago Medicine analysis of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Hospital Compare rating system shows that hospitals serving vulnerable communities may be judged on social factors outside of their control. (medicalxpress.com)
  • this increase was most pronounced among the following subgroups: adults ≥85 years (66.8 to 274.1), females (64.9 to 160.1), Blacks (144.4 to 369.5), and Medicare-Medicaid insured (dual eligible, 93.1 to 270.0). (medrxiv.org)
  • In contrast, Medicare and Medicaid - the two largest government health insurance programs - regulate the rates that providers receive. (who.int)
  • The private sector also led the development of the health insurance system in the early 1930s, as the major federal government health insurance programs, Medicare and Medicaid, were not established until the mid-1960s. (who.int)
  • Until 1977, the Social Security Administration (SSA) managed the Medicare program, and the Social and Rehabilitation Service (SRS) managed the Medicaid program. (who.int)
  • Financing Administration (HCFA), renamed in 2001 as the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)1. (who.int)
  • This study examined the relationship between report card scores and patient choice of nursing home after the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services began publicly reporting nursing home quality information on post-acute care in 2002. (va.gov)
  • The primary data source for this study was the Minimum Data Set (MDS), which contains detailed clinical data collected at regular intervals for every resident in a Medicare- or Medicaid-certified nursing home. (va.gov)
  • Undertriage of elderly trauma patients to state-designated trauma centers. (ahrq.gov)
  • They validated the index against education status, which does not enter into the creation of the index, and created harmonized and general measures of health, including malnutrition, stunting, and infant mortality in the household. (stanford.edu)
  • Building upon the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program enacted under the ACA, MedPAC recommends several changes to improve the measurement of hospital readmissions. (crfb.org)
  • 1 The PDPM replaces the Resource Utilization Groups (RUG) system, which had been used since 1998 and which many believe created perverse incentives that contributed to rapid growth and unwarranted variation in Medicare spending on postacute care. (ajmc.com)
  • Outcome measures The impact of nutritional status was measured on a combined endpoint of any readmission or death within 0-7 days and between 8 and 180 days following hospital discharge. (bmj.com)
  • Results Within 7 days following discharge, 29 (10.5%) patients had an unplanned readmission or death whereas an additional 124 (50.0%) patients reached this combined endpoint within 8-180 days postdischarge. (bmj.com)
  • In this study, we applied a generic prediction model to nationwide discharge data from hospitals with various characteristics. (biomedcentral.com)
  • In this study, we applied a generic case-mix-based risk adjustment model for in-hospital mortality prediction to hospitals with varying characteristics, and evaluated its performance for benchmarking risk-adjusted hospital mortality using a nationwide database of discharge cases. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This study investigated whether older patients' nutritional status at admission predicts unplanned readmission or death in the very early or late periods following hospital discharge. (bmj.com)
  • Conclusions Malnutrition in older patients at the time of hospital admission is a significant predictor of readmission or death both in the very early and in the late periods following hospital discharge. (bmj.com)
  • Data from Lala et al ( J Card Fail 2013 ) show that 40% of patients have moderate to severe congestion at discharge, and that recurrent congestion after discharge is frequent. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Educate patients prior to discharge on issues such as lifestyle (diet, activity level), medications (schedule, adherence, titration), follow-up appointments (ensuring the when and with whom are set up), self-evaluation (including weight monitoring, and knowing warning signs of recurrence), and having a rescue plan (what to do and who to call). (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Data show that cognitively impaired patients may need additional support after discharge. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Some SNFs are thought to have taken advantage of these features to increase revenue by moving patients into higher RUG payment categories, contributing to rapid growth in Medicare expenditures. (ajmc.com)
  • The model starts with a "snap-shot" of the middle-aged and elderly Japanese population in 2010 and then projects risk of developing 19 chronic conditions, health care utilization, annual medical expenditures, and mortality. (stanford.edu)
  • Between 2002 and 2016, the use of the ultra-high category increased from 7% to 63% of all SNF days reimbursed by Medicare 5 -a 9-fold increase. (ajmc.com)
  • Since the inception of star ratings in 2016, however, hospital leaders and industry groups have criticized the program's methodology. (medicalxpress.com)
  • However, the dataset used in the previous study was derived mainly from large university-affiliated teaching hospitals, which may compromise the ability to generalize results to a broader array of hospitals. (biomedcentral.com)
  • We used an electronic, standardized dataset of discharged patients provided by 469 hospitals that participated in a Japanese patient classification system and related evaluation scheme from July 1 to October 31, 2006. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Thus, investigators compared healthcare use and mortality for Veterans eligible for the Choice Act to those who were not eligible, including more than 2.7 million VA enrollees between 2015 and 2018, who lived between 20-60 miles from a VA facility. (va.gov)
  • The CMS Hospital Compare program uses a variety of quality metrics and survey data to assign every Medicare-certified hospital in the U.S an overall rating of one-to-five stars. (medicalxpress.com)
  • This year's report provides lawmakers with yet another set of options as they work to address the long-term sustainability of the Medicare program. (crfb.org)
  • URMC/Strong Memorial Hospital is seeking ANCC Magnet Recognition Program® reaccreditation. (rochester.edu)
  • This program will train the next generation of leaders in the experimental therapeutics of neurological disease, to accelerate therapeutic development and improve access to emerging breakthroughs for all patients and families who may benefit. (rochester.edu)
  • Researchers found little difference in the quality of nursing home care provided to Medicare enrollees in managed care and those enrolled in traditional fee-for-service nursing homes. (rand.org)
  • UChicago Medicine researchers examined associations between neighborhood SRFs and seven CMS quality scores-effectiveness of care, efficiency of care, hospital readmission, mortality, patient experience, safety of care and timelessness of care-for 3,608 hospitals nationwide. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Findings suggest that larger provider networks are associated with more intensive healthcare use by affected patients. (va.gov)
  • Scores in safety, efficiency and effectiveness of care-measures that occur within the hospital walls-were minimally affected by SRFs. (medicalxpress.com)
  • To encourage accountability, care coordination, and efficiency in Medicare, MedPAC examined expanding current bundled payment reforms to post-acute care services. (crfb.org)
  • Using VA data, investigators also assessed patient demographics and mortality. (va.gov)
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA), formally known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and colloquially known as Obamacare, is a landmark U.S. federal statute enacted by the 111th United States Congress and signed into law by President Barack Obama on March 23, 2010. (wikipedia.org)
  • and pediatric services, including oral and vision care" and others rated Level A or B by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. (wikipedia.org)
  • The model fits well to a group of hospitals with a wide variety of acute care events, though model fit is less satisfactory for specialized hospitals and those with convalescent wards. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The goal of health care is to ensure that patients receive the right care for the right patient for the right problem at the right time from the right provider. (rand.org)
  • To address these issues, CDEHA promotes the study of trends in demography, economics, health, and health care, and the effects of these trends on the well-being of the elderly. (stanford.edu)
  • One frequently proclaimed advantage of single-payer health care is its potential to reduce administrative costs, but new Vancouver School of Economics research calls that assumption into question. (medicalxpress.com)
  • An experiment in Maryland designed to save health care dollars by shifting services away from expensive hospital-based care and toward less costly primary, preventive and outpatient services has yielded disappointing results. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Hospital ratings are intended to help patients decide where to get medical care and encourage hospitals to improve the quality of their services. (medicalxpress.com)
  • The impact of neighborhood SRFs was most evident in scores for timeliness of care, hospital readmissions, and patient experience. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Our study suggests that a hospital's quality rating may be tied to its geographic location -its place," said Elizabeth Tung, MD, MS, senior author of the paper published in the journal Medical Care . (medicalxpress.com)
  • Don't penalize hospitals that are taking care of less-resourced patients. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Dr. Staudenmayer's clinical focus is on trauma, emergency general surgery, and surgical critical care, and her research interests encompass trauma systems of care and vulnerable patient populations such as the elderly. (stanford.edu)
  • Last year, MedPAC recommended that Medicare payment rates for office visits should be the same regardless of if care is provided in an outpatient department (OPD) or in a freestanding physician's office. (crfb.org)
  • Design, setting and participants The study prospectively recruited 297 patients ≥60 years old who were presenting to the General Medicine Department of a tertiary care hospital in Australia. (bmj.com)
  • Investigators could not elicit the exact reasons VA patients decided to use community care nor could they determine the medical necessity for visits. (va.gov)
  • Joshua Mooney, MD, MS, is a board certified pulmonologist and critical care physician who specializes in the care of interstitial lung disease and lung transplant patients. (stanford.edu)
  • The purpose of this study is to compare the effect of n-acetylcysteine (NAC) plus standard care with matched placebo plus standard of care in patients diagnosed with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) who have the TOLLIP rs3750920 TT genotype. (stanford.edu)
  • Prevention of heart failure readmissions begins with effective in-hospital treatment and efficient care transitions,' says Akshay S. Desai, MD in a presentation at the 2015 AHA Fall Conference meeting. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Prevention of [heart failure] readmissions begins with effective in-hospital treatment and efficient care transitions," said Akshay S. Desai, MD, director for heart failure disease management, in the cardiovascular division, of Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. (medicaleconomics.com)
  • Under these rate-setting systems, the federal or state government establishes how much providers are paid for health care services. (who.int)
  • Medicare was established in response to the specific medical care needs of the elderly, coverage was extended for disabled persons and persons with kidney disease in 1973. (who.int)
  • 2 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, signed into law in March 2010, made broad changes to the way health insurance is provided and paid for in the United States. (who.int)
  • Translating these advances into improved clinical care for patients requires a cadre of specialty-trained clini. (rochester.edu)
  • Translating these advances into improved clinical care for patients requires a cadre of specialty-trained clinician neuroscientists who are to be responsive to the increasing pace of scientific discoveries, as well as to the emerging suite of approaches and techniques. (rochester.edu)
  • Patients needing post-acute care are likely to be older with worse health status, making the search for information more difficult than among younger populations studied in non-nursing home settings. (va.gov)
  • Instead of paying SNFs based on the volume of therapy provided, the PDPM uses diagnoses and other clinical factors to set payment rates for 5 components that are summed to determine the per diem reimbursement: physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech language pathology services, nursing services, and nontherapy ancillary conditions and services. (ajmc.com)
  • Clinical validation of the AHRQ postoperative venous thromboembolism patient safety indicator. (ahrq.gov)
  • Economic measurement of medical errors using a hospital claims database. (ahrq.gov)
  • The results showed that hospitals caring for patients in neighborhoods with higher social risks garnered lower quality scores, but largely in areas that hospitals may have little control over. (medicalxpress.com)
  • The $163, or 37%, differential in the per diem payment between the very high and ultra-high categories created a strong incentive for SNFs to provide just enough therapy to move a patient into the higher-paying category, regardless of whether they required such intensive therapy. (ajmc.com)
  • Risk-reduction strategies adopted by Medicare Advantage plans to prevent hospital readmissions have not succeeded in lowering the markedly higher rates of readmission for black patients compared to white patients. (rand.org)
  • Hospital administrative overheads are far higher in the US than in other high-spending countries (Himmelstein et al. (who.int)
  • CONCLUSIONS: Isavuconazole is a cost-effective treatment compared to voriconazole for patients with possible IA for a willingness to pay threshold of 25,000 per additional QALY. (bvsalud.org)
  • Main parameters influencing results were mortality, treatment duration and hospitalisation days. (bvsalud.org)
  • The patient classification system, or Diagnosis Procedure Combination (DPC), includes information for up to two major diagnoses and up to six co-existing diagnoses. (biomedcentral.com)
  • These factors work against well-being, so patients from these neighborhoods have more barriers to health to begin with. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Lawmakers would be wise to take on these suggestions and restart the debate on how to put Medicare and overall federal health spending on a more sustainable path. (crfb.org)
  • THURSDAY, Jan. 22, 2015 (HealthDay News) - Physicians have ranked electronic health record (EHR) systems based on five key performance areas, according to a report published in Medical Economics . (ehealth-news.com)
  • Accountable Health Partner Accountable Health Partners (AHP) is a network of over 2,000 community and UR medical faculty and a dozen leading hospitals throughout the region. (rochester.edu)
  • The new report identified 66 groups of services where OPD payment rates can be aligned with physician office rates, and 12 groups of services where OPD payment rates can be aligned with ambulatory surgical center (ASC) rates. (crfb.org)
  • They pay more than twice as much - $452 - for the same test in the outpatient department of a hospital. (crfb.org)
  • 4 Under the RUG system, an SNF received $438 per day, on average, for a typical patient needing assistance with 6 to 10 activities of daily living in the "very high" RUG category (Table 1). (ajmc.com)
  • If this same patient were placed in the "ultra-high" category, the per diem payments increased to $601, on average. (ajmc.com)
  • In the earlier example, an SNF providing a patient with 719 minutes of therapy in a week would receive the very high category payment rate ($438), but providing 720 minutes would raise payment to the ultra-high category rate ($601). (ajmc.com)
  • Despite the face validity of using report cards to increase demand for highly-rated providers, the evidence that providers who receive a high report card rating are rewarded with an increased market share - or that providers who receive a low report card rating lose market share - is mixed. (va.gov)
  • This study aimed to examine the content of the recommendations given to providers aimed at improving provider-patient interactions, characterize these recommendations, and examine their actionability. (rand.org)
  • The research was a large prospective observational study evaluating the association between nutritional status and readmission or death in medical inpatients ≥60 years old. (bmj.com)
  • FRIDAY, Jan. 30, 2015 (HealthDay News) - Red Bull consumption combined with mental stress correlates with increased blood pressure (BP) and heart rate, according to a study published in the Jan. 15 issue of The American Journal of Cardiology . (ehealth-news.com)
  • THURSDAY, Jan. 29, 2015 (HealthDay News) - From 2002 to 2011 there was a decrease in the rate of hospitalizations for hepatitis A, according to a study published in the February issue of Hepatology . (ehealth-news.com)
  • TUESDAY, Jan. 27, 2015 (HealthDay News) - For patients seen in emergency departments solely for chest pain not due to myocardial infarction, noninvasive screening tests for coronary heart disease do not appear to benefit the prediction of future cardiovascular events, a new study suggests. (ehealth-news.com)
  • FRIDAY, Jan. 23, 2015 (HealthDay News) - For patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) in the Veterans Affairs (VA) system, the variation in one-year risk-adjusted mortality is smaller than variation in risk-standardized costs, according to a study published in the Jan. 27 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology . (ehealth-news.com)
  • THURSDAY, Jan. 22, 2015 (HealthDay News) - For patients with clinically suspected deep vein thrombosis (DVT), systematic imaging of both legs has a very low yield, according to a study published online Jan. 20 in the Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis . (ehealth-news.com)
  • A study in mild/moderate IPF patients using an αVβ6 PET ligand to evaluate target engagement. (stanford.edu)
  • Citing data from a study by Logeart et al ( J Am Coll Cardiol 2004 ), Desai showed that the risk of death and readmissions increases significantly with increases in brain natriuretic peptide (BNP). (medicaleconomics.com)
  • We used standardized data of 1,878,767 discharged patients provided by 469 hospitals from July 1 to October 31, 2006. (biomedcentral.com)
  • John Fahrenbach, Ph.D., data scientist at UChicago Medicine and lead author on the paper, acknowledges that it is a challenge for CMS and other organizations that rate hospitals to come up with good quality metrics, but calls for more fairness and equity in their approach. (medicalxpress.com)
  • Dr. Kristan Staudenmayer received her medical degree at the University of Texas at Southwestern Medical School in 1999, and completed her residency in General Surgery at Parkland Hospital in 2006. (stanford.edu)
  • WEDNESDAY, Jan. 28, 2015 (HealthDay News) - An appropriately-targeted benefits package is crucial for attracting and retaining employees, according to an article published Jan. 22 in Medical Economics . (ehealth-news.com)
  • As its name suggests, the PDPM is based on patient characteristics. (ajmc.com)
  • While most of these recommendations and policy issues have been discussed and debated before, MedPAC's latest report helps to inject renewed support and analysis behind many of them at a time when momentum for Medicare reforms on Capitol Hill is critical. (crfb.org)
  • OBJECTIVES: To estimate the cost-effectiveness of isavuconazole vs voriconazole for the treatment of adult patients with possible IA prior to differential pathogen diagnosis, in Spain. (bvsalud.org)
  • There was a differential response across patients by education level, which raises the possibility that the format and distribution of this information matters. (va.gov)
  • 4. To promote and enhance research in the demography and economics of aging at Stanford and in collaborating institutions. (stanford.edu)
  • Stanford is currently not accepting patients for this trial. (stanford.edu)
  • Allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) is an essential treatment to cure patients with blood cancers such as leukemia. (medicalxpress.com)
  • During her post-graduate training, she conducted NIH T32-funded research at Harborview Hospital evaluating the effects of innate immunity on trauma. (stanford.edu)
  • She obtained further training in Trauma and Surgical Critical at San Francisco General Hospital, completing her training in 2008. (stanford.edu)
  • RESULTS: In patients with possible IA and when compared to voricanozole, isavuconazole showed an incremental cost of 4758.53 , besides an incremental effectiveness of +0.49 LYs and +0.41 QALYs per patient. (bvsalud.org)
  • The cost-effectiveness of magnetic resonance imaging in patients with equivocal neurological symptoms. (rochester.edu)
  • Costs for laboratory analysis, management of adverse events, hospitalisation and drugs per patient, deaths and long-term effects in life years (LYs) and quality-adjusted LYs (QALYs) were considered. (bvsalud.org)
  • The rates reflect the costs that the typical efficient provider is expected to incur. (who.int)
  • Both received new spending, funded through a combination of new taxes and cuts to Medicare provider rates and Medicare Advantage. (wikipedia.org)