2015
The relationship between voice climate and patients’ experience of timely care in primary care clinics
Nembhard IM, Yuan CT, Shabanova V, Cleary PD. The relationship between voice climate and patients’ experience of timely care in primary care clinics. Health Care Management Review 2015, 40: 104-115. PMID: 24589927, PMCID: PMC5428896, DOI: 10.1097/hmr.0000000000000017.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTimeliness of carePrimary care clinicsTimely carePatient care experiencesCare clinicsPatient experienceCare experiencesCross-sectional studyLess patientsStaff work environmentPatient reportsPatientsQuality careClinicAppointment timeCareClinical leadersAdministrative staffReportProfessional groupsWork environmentStaffAnalysis of varianceLeaders' reportsVoice climate
2012
Safety Climate and Medical Errors in 62 US Emergency Departments
Camargo CA, Tsai CL, Sullivan AF, Cleary PD, Gordon JA, Guadagnoli E, Kaushal R, Magid DJ, Rao SR, Blumenthal D. Safety Climate and Medical Errors in 62 US Emergency Departments. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2012, 60: 555-563.e20. PMID: 23089089, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2012.02.018.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsEmergency Service, HospitalFemaleHealth Care SurveysHumansIncidenceMaleMedical ErrorsMiddle AgedOrganizational CulturePatient SafetyUnited StatesConceptsEmergency departmentAdverse eventsNational Emergency Department Safety StudyMedical errorsNational treatment guidelinesUS emergency departmentsPreventable adverse eventsUrban emergency departmentSafety climateTreatment guidelinesED patientsNear missesMedical recordsMultivariable modelSafety studiesSafety climate scoresSystem factorsClimate scoresED conditionsDepartmentPatientsIncidenceImproving Organizational Climate for Quality and Quality of Care
Nembhard IM, Northrup V, Shaller D, Cleary PD. Improving Organizational Climate for Quality and Quality of Care. Medical Care 2012, 50: s74-s82. PMID: 23064280, PMCID: PMC5428889, DOI: 10.1097/mlr.0b013e31826b1087.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTimeliness of careDoctor-patient communicationClinical Systems ImprovementPatient-centered careQuality of careStaff helpfulnessRatings of doctorsComparison clinicsIntervention clinicsPre-post designQuality improvement collaborativesControl clinicsDoctors' ratingsQuality careClinicClinic employeesDoctor's officeCareEquivocal effectsImprovement collaborativesMonthsPoor qualityMixed effectsDoctorsStaff relationships
2011
Factors affecting the use of patient survey data for quality improvement in the Veterans Health Administration
Davies EA, Meterko MM, Charns MP, Nealon Seibert M, Cleary PD. Factors affecting the use of patient survey data for quality improvement in the Veterans Health Administration. BMC Health Services Research 2011, 11: 334. PMID: 22151714, PMCID: PMC3266219, DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-334.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAttitude of Health PersonnelClinical CompetenceHealth Care SurveysHospitals, VeteransHumansInterviews as TopicMedical Staff, HospitalOrganizational Case StudiesOrganizational CulturePatient SatisfactionPatient-Centered CareQuality ImprovementSocial SupportSurgicentersSurveys and QuestionnairesSystems AnalysisUnited StatesUnited States Department of Veterans Affairs
2009
Associations Between Organizational Characteristics and Quality Improvement Activities of Clinics Participating in a Quality Improvement Collaborative
Deo S, McInnes K, Corbett CJ, Landon BE, Shapiro MF, Wilson IB, Cleary PD. Associations Between Organizational Characteristics and Quality Improvement Activities of Clinics Participating in a Quality Improvement Collaborative. Medical Care 2009, 47: 1026-1030. PMID: 19704356, PMCID: PMC3748716, DOI: 10.1097/mlr.0b013e31819a5937.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsQuality improvement collaborativesPercent of interventionsClinic characteristicsIntervention activitiesPrimary care clinicsCross-sectional studyRyan White CARE ActSurvey of cliniciansQuality Improvement CollaborativeQuality of careNumber of interventionsQuality improvement activitiesHIV careCare clinicsMultidisciplinary teamClinicMore interventionsHealth care organizationsImprovement activitiesCare ActInterventionImprovement collaborativesCare organizationsIntervention choicesMonths
2007
Physicians and Electronic Health Records: A Statewide Survey
Simon SR, Kaushal R, Cleary PD, Jenter CA, Volk LA, Orav EJ, Burdick E, Poon EG, Bates DW. Physicians and Electronic Health Records: A Statewide Survey. JAMA Internal Medicine 2007, 167: 507-512. PMID: 17353500, DOI: 10.1001/archinte.167.5.507.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic health recordsHealth recordsPhysicians' actual useLaboratory test orderingPredictors of useMedical practiceVisit documentationClinical decision supportPhysicians' perceptionsTest orderingEHR usePhysiciansEHR functionsElectronic prescriptionsOrder entryHealth careEHR adoptionSignificant differencesEHR usersLaboratory reportsRandom sampleLow usersPrescription
2006
Correlates of Electronic Health Record Adoption in Office Practices: A Statewide Survey
Simon SR, Kaushal R, Cleary PD, Jenter CA, Volk LA, Poon EG, Orav EJ, Lo HG, Williams DH, Bates DW. Correlates of Electronic Health Record Adoption in Office Practices: A Statewide Survey. Journal Of The American Medical Informatics Association 2006, 14: 110-117. PMID: 17068351, PMCID: PMC2215070, DOI: 10.1197/jamia.m2187.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsElectronic health recordsOffice practiceHalf of physiciansHospital-based practiceEHR adoptionElectronic health record adoptionSmall practicesEHR adoption ratesMost physiciansNon-financial barriersResponse rateMedical careMultivariate analysisMore physiciansStratified random sampleMailed surveyPractice sizeEHR usePhysiciansMedical studentsSolo practiceHealth records