2021
Differences in Burnout and Intent to Leave Between Women’s Health and General Primary Care Providers in the Veterans Health Administration
Apaydin EA, Mohr DC, Hamilton AB, Rose DE, Haskell S, Yano EM. Differences in Burnout and Intent to Leave Between Women’s Health and General Primary Care Providers in the Veterans Health Administration. Journal Of General Internal Medicine 2021, 37: 2382-2389. PMID: 34618305, PMCID: PMC9360298, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-07133-5.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsVeterans Health AdministrationPrimary care providersCare providersWomen veteransPractice characteristicsHealth AdministrationUnique clinical needsMinority of patientsLogistic regression analysisSatisfied patientsCross-sectional wavesPreventative careWomen's healthClinical needPatientsPractice dataOutcomes of burnoutRegression analysisAdministrationCareClinical demandStaff ratiosVeteransPCPMore research
2019
Improving cirrhosis care: The potential for telemedicine and mobile health technologies
Stotts MJ, Grischkan JA, Khungar V. Improving cirrhosis care: The potential for telemedicine and mobile health technologies. World Journal Of Gastroenterology 2019, 25: 3849-3856. PMID: 31413523, PMCID: PMC6689809, DOI: 10.3748/wjg.v25.i29.3849.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCare of patientsHeart failureHigh-value carePatient-reported outcome measuresLiver disease managementCare of veteransDownstream cost savingsMobile health technologyCirrhosis careHospital readmissionClinical outcomesLiver diseaseSignificant morbidityCancer screeningOutcome measuresCirrhosisPreventative careMortality rateClinical practicePatientsCareDisease managementQuality gapMobile healthHealth technologiesBreast Cancer Management Among Refugees and Forcibly Displaced Populations: a Call to Action
Alawa J, Alhalabi F, Khoshnood K. Breast Cancer Management Among Refugees and Forcibly Displaced Populations: a Call to Action. Current Breast Cancer Reports 2019, 11: 129-135. DOI: 10.1007/s12609-019-00314-6.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchBreast cancer preventionBreast cancerCancer preventionHealth systemBreast cancer managementLate-stage diagnosisPoor health outcomesReviewThe prevalencePoor prognosisCancer managementPreventative careCountry's health systemHealth outcomesHost countries' health systemsTreatment resourcesRecent FindingsInCancerCancer educationTreatmentDiagnosisPrevention
2016
Impact of Insurance Status on Outcomes and Use of Rehabilitation Services in Acute Ischemic Stroke: Findings From Get With The Guidelines‐Stroke
Medford‐Davis L, Fonarow G, Bhatt D, Xu H, Smith E, Suter R, Peterson E, Xian Y, Matsouaka R, Schwamm L. Impact of Insurance Status on Outcomes and Use of Rehabilitation Services in Acute Ischemic Stroke: Findings From Get With The Guidelines‐Stroke. Journal Of The American Heart Association 2016, 5: e004282. PMID: 27930356, PMCID: PMC5210352, DOI: 10.1161/jaha.116.004282.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedAmbulancesAnticholesteremic AgentsAntihypertensive AgentsBrain IschemiaDiabetes MellitusFemaleGuideline AdherenceHospital MortalityHumansHypercholesterolemiaHypertensionHypoglycemic AgentsInsurance CoverageInsurance, HealthLogistic ModelsMaleMedicaidMedically UninsuredMedicareMiddle AgedMultivariate AnalysisOdds RatioPractice Guidelines as TopicSkilled Nursing FacilitiesStrokeStroke RehabilitationTime FactorsUnited StatesConceptsAcute ischemic strokeIschemic strokeInsurance statusHospital mortalityGuidelines-Stroke programIschemic stroke patientsMultivariable logistic regressionPatient insurance statusGovernment-sponsored insuranceSkilled nursing facilitiesGuidelines-StrokeInpatient rehabPostdischarge destinationHospital outcomesPatient demographicsSymptom onsetAcute treatmentControl medicationDiabetes mellitusStroke patientsHospital characteristicsUninsured patientsHigh cholesterolNursing facilitiesPreventative care
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