2023
Real-World Observational Evaluation of Common Interventions to Reduce Emergency Department Prescribing of Opioid Medications
Sangal R, Rothenberg C, Hawk K, D'Onofrio G, Hsiao A, Solad Y, Venkatesh A. Real-World Observational Evaluation of Common Interventions to Reduce Emergency Department Prescribing of Opioid Medications. The Joint Commission Journal On Quality And Patient Safety 2023, 49: 239-246. PMID: 36914528, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2023.01.013.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAnalgesics, OpioidElectronic Health RecordsEmergency Service, HospitalHospitalsHumansPractice Patterns, Physicians'Retrospective StudiesConceptsOpioid prescribingED visitsElectronic health recordsOpioid prescriptionsEmergency department opioid prescriptionsAnalgesia prescriptionOpioid stewardshipOpioid medicationsSecondary outcomesPrimary outcomePreintervention periodInterruptive alertsCommon interventionPrescribingAlert fatigueElectronic prescribingPrevious interventionsHospital systemObservational evaluationHealth recordsVisitsStewardship policiesInterventionOutcomesPrescription
2020
Choosing wisely in emergency medicine: Early results and insights from the ACEP emergency quality network (E-QUAL)
Venkatesh AK, Scofi JE, Rothenberg C, Berdahl CT, Tarrant N, Sharma D, Goyal P, Pilgrim R, Klauer K, Schuur JD. Choosing wisely in emergency medicine: Early results and insights from the ACEP emergency quality network (E-QUAL). The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2020, 39: 102-108. PMID: 32014376, PMCID: PMC7365747, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2020.01.029.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCT utilization ratesMinor head injuryLow back painBack painHead injuryED sitesAtraumatic back painChoosing Wisely recommendationsQuality improvement dataLow-value careWisely recommendationsEmergency physiciansObservational studyQI interventionsAmerican CollegeClinical targetsPainSyncopeQI practicesInjuryEmergency medicineSignificant decreasePractice improvementImprovement dataMRI
2018
Emergency physician empathy does not explain variation in admission rates
Parwani V, Ashkenasi D, Rothenberg C, Ulrich A, Chekijian S, Shapiro M, Melnick E, Venkatesh A. Emergency physician empathy does not explain variation in admission rates. The American Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2018, 37: 767-768. PMID: 30220643, DOI: 10.1016/j.ajem.2018.08.025.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchTrends and Variation in the Utilization and Diagnostic Yield of Chest Imaging for Medicare Patients With Suspected Pulmonary Embolism in the Emergency Department.
Venkatesh AK, Agha L, Abaluck J, Rothenberg C, Kabrhel C, Raja AS. Trends and Variation in the Utilization and Diagnostic Yield of Chest Imaging for Medicare Patients With Suspected Pulmonary Embolism in the Emergency Department. American Journal Of Roentgenology 2018, 210: 572-577. PMID: 29364724, DOI: 10.2214/ajr.17.18586.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedEmergency Service, HospitalFemaleHumansMaleMedicarePractice Patterns, Physicians'Pulmonary EmbolismRadiography, ThoracicTomography, X-Ray ComputedUnited StatesConceptsChest CT utilizationPulmonary embolismCT utilizationEmergency departmentDiagnostic yieldMedicare beneficiariesEmergency medicine board certificationAmerican Medical Association Physician MasterfileChest CT useSample of feeHospital referral regionsAmerican Hospital Association Annual SurveyED visitsChest CTHospital characteristicsCT useAnalytic FilesMedicare patientsChest imagingProvider characteristicsReferral regionsPhysician identificationPhysician useService beneficiariesPhysician Masterfile