2023
Correlations among common emergency medicine physician performance measures: Mixed messages or balancing forces?
Scofi J, Underriner E, Sangal R, Rothenberg C, Patel A, Pickens A, Sather J, Parwani V, Ulrich A, Venkatesh A. Correlations among common emergency medicine physician performance measures: Mixed messages or balancing forces? The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2023, 72: 58-63. PMID: 37481955, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2023.07.021.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEmergency medicine physician workforce attrition differences by age and gender
Gettel C, Courtney D, Agrawal P, Madsen T, Rothenberg C, Mills A, Lall M, Keim S, Kraus C, Ranney M, Venkatesh A. Emergency medicine physician workforce attrition differences by age and gender. Academic Emergency Medicine 2023, 30: 1092-1100. PMID: 37313983, PMCID: PMC10973949, DOI: 10.1111/acem.14764.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedChildCross-Sectional StudiesEmergency MedicineFemaleHumansMaleMedicareMiddle AgedPhysiciansUnited StatesWorkforceConceptsFemale emergency physiciansEmergency physiciansMedian ageMultivariate logistic regression modelMale emergency physiciansResidency graduationRepeated cross-sectional analysisCharacteristics of physiciansWorkforce attritionCross-sectional analysisLogistic regression modelsStudy time frameDate of birthPrimary outcomeFemale genderMale physiciansClinical practiceFemale physiciansClinical servicesPhysiciansEmergency medicineAgeNumber of yearsRecent dataWorkforce concerns
2022
The 2013 to 2019 Emergency Medicine Workforce: Clinician Entry and Attrition Across the US Geography
Gettel CJ, Courtney DM, Janke AT, Rothenberg C, Mills AM, Sun W, Venkatesh AK. The 2013 to 2019 Emergency Medicine Workforce: Clinician Entry and Attrition Across the US Geography. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2022, 80: 260-271. PMID: 35717274, PMCID: PMC9398978, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2022.04.031.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedCross-Sectional StudiesEmergency MedicineGeographyHumansMedicareUnited StatesWorkforceConceptsAdvanced practice providersEmergency physiciansPractice providersNonemergency physiciansEmergency cliniciansRural designationUrban emergency physiciansRepeated cross-sectional analysisEmergency medicine workforceCross-sectional analysisUnique cliniciansMedicare Part BStudy yearsCliniciansPhysiciansProvider UtilizationPhysician attritionSubstantial state-level variationResidency trainingLongitudinal trendsManagement servicesAttrition ratesState-level changesState-level variationTotal proportion
2021
Balancing quality and utilization: Emergency physician level correlation between 72 h returns, admission, and CT utilization rates
Parwani V, Thomas M, Rothenberg C, Ulrich A, Venkatesh A. Balancing quality and utilization: Emergency physician level correlation between 72 h returns, admission, and CT utilization rates. The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2021, 48: 365-366. PMID: 33597095, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2021.01.078.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2018
An appraisal of emergency medicine clinical practice guidelines: Do we agree?
Zupon A, Rothenberg C, Couturier K, Tan T, Siddiqui G, James M, Savage D, Melnick ER, Venkatesh AK. An appraisal of emergency medicine clinical practice guidelines: Do we agree? International Journal Of Clinical Practice 2018, 73: e13289. PMID: 30372798, PMCID: PMC6351191, DOI: 10.1111/ijcp.13289.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsACEP clinical policyClinical practice guidelinesStrength of recommendationsClinical policyPractice guidelinesEvidence-based emergency careAGREE II instrumentAppraisal of GuidelinesRigor of developmentAGREE II criteriaOverall qualityPrimary outcomeOverall assessmentEmergency physiciansAmerican CollegeEmergency carePublication dateClarity of presentationSecondary analysisAppraisal instrumentsMean scorePositive associationGuidelinesAppraisal itemsScores
2017
Systematic review of emergency medicine clinical practice guidelines: Implications for research and policy
Venkatesh AK, Savage D, Sandefur B, Bernard KR, Rothenberg C, Schuur JD. Systematic review of emergency medicine clinical practice guidelines: Implications for research and policy. PLOS ONE 2017, 12: e0178456. PMID: 28628660, PMCID: PMC5476239, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178456.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsEmergency MedicineEvidence-Based MedicineHumansPolicyPractice Guidelines as TopicResearchConceptsCurrent clinical policyClinical practice guidelinesPractice guidelinesClinical policyEmergency medicineSystematic reviewClinical practice guideline recommendationsACEP clinical policyPractice guideline recommendationsLow-level evidenceLarge evidence baseLevel of recommendationPrimary outcomeGuideline recommendationsEmergency physiciansAmerican CollegeMajority of recommendationsExpert opinionClass of evidencePrimary analysisEvidence gapsSecondary analysisClass IIEvidence baseClass I
2016
Overuse targets for Choosing Wisely: Do emergency physicians and nurses agree?
Venkatesh AK, Anderson A, Rothenberg C, Parwani V, Schwartz I, Haggan J, Sevilla M, Shapiro MJ. Overuse targets for Choosing Wisely: Do emergency physicians and nurses agree? The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2016, 35: 306-310. PMID: 27856139, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2016.11.016.Peer-Reviewed Original Research