About
Copy Link
Titles
Statistician 2
Research
Copy Link
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Frequent collaborators of Craig Rothenberg's published research.
Publications Timeline
A big-picture view of Craig Rothenberg's research output by year.
Arjun Venkatesh, MD, MBA, MHS
Cameron Gettel, MD, MHS
Andrew Ulrich, MD
Rohit Sangal, MD, MBA, FACEP
Ula Hwang, MD, MPH
Vivek Parwani, MD, FACEP
86Publications
1,096Citations
Publications
2026
Health Care Contact Days Among Older Adults After Emergency Department Visits: A Cross‐Sectional Analysis
Gettel C, Rothenberg C, Kitchen C, Song Y, Hastings S, Hwang U, Fischer M, Shenvi C, Venkatesh A. Health Care Contact Days Among Older Adults After Emergency Department Visits: A Cross‐Sectional Analysis. Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society 2026 PMID: 42287122, DOI: 10.1111/jgs.70550.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsTreat-and-release ED visitsTreat-and-releaseHealth care contactsED visitsOlder adultsCross-sectional analysisAmbulatory contactsCare contactsContact daysEmergency departmentMedicare Current Beneficiary Survey dataAssociated with greater oddsEmergency department visitsCare coordinationZero-inflated Poisson regressionMulti-MorbidityChronic conditionsDepartment visitsHealth careED dischargeAmbulatory follow-upPoisson regressionAnalytic sampleGreater oddsHealthHigh‐Risk Medication Prescribing Among Older Adults in the Emergency Department: A National Assessment
Follman S, Canavan M, Rothenberg C, Iscoe M, Venkatesh A, Ramachandran R, Gettel C. High‐Risk Medication Prescribing Among Older Adults in the Emergency Department: A National Assessment. Academic Emergency Medicine 2026, 33: e70321. PMID: 42136546, DOI: 10.1111/acem.70321.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsDays of ED dischargeED dischargeOlder adultsMedication fillsMedication prescribingED visitsYounger cohorts of older adultsCohort of older adultsTransitions of careHigh-risk medicationsAssociated with higher oddsSystem-level factorsAdverse drug eventsCross-sectional studyYounger cohortsDays of dischargeMultivariate logistic regressionMedication safetyED encountersTargeted educationDrug eventsHigher oddsEmergency departmentSkeletal muscle relaxantsMedication classesAssociation of Geriatric Emergency Department Care With Hospitalization and Mortality in Older Adults
Qian Y, Gettel C, Su J, Grogan E, Cohen I, Rothenberg C, Chen X, Hwang U. Association of Geriatric Emergency Department Care With Hospitalization and Mortality in Older Adults. Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society 2026, 74: 1395-1405. PMID: 41937389, DOI: 10.1111/jgs.70421.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsGeriatric Emergency DepartmentAmerican College of Emergency PhysiciansNon-Hispanic white individualsAcute careOlder adultsEmergency departmentHospital admissionED visitsWhite individualsHealth and Retirement StudyOdds of hospital admissionAmerican CollegeHigh-quality careAssociated with lower oddsEmergency department careHospital-level characteristicsOutcome of hospital admissionMultivariate logistic regression modelAssociated with admissionAssociated with lower mortalityLogistic regression modelsRetirement StudyPatient-level analysisSocioeconomic statusLower oddsThe Nuance of Clinical Decision Support in Intravenous Fluid Shortages
Sun W, Rothenberg C, Venkatesh A, Alfano A, Aydin A, Balcezak T, Brining D, Cahill J, Chmura C, Davison C, Dubin S, Liebhardt B, McGovern M, Mittleman C, Parwani V, Powers E, Rose M, Ulrich A, Van Tonder R, Tuffuor K, Zahn E, Sangal R. The Nuance of Clinical Decision Support in Intravenous Fluid Shortages. Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2026, 85: 22-27. PMID: 41950688, DOI: 10.1016/j.jemermed.2026.02.035.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsInterruptive alertsSustained practice changeDecision support alertsPop-up alertsClinical decision supportIV fluidsWorkflow redesignPractice changeClinician responsesMedication shortagesTeam engagementEmergency departmentHealth workflowImmediate behavior changePop-upFluid shortageBehavioral changesFluid ordersDecision supportCliniciansStudy periodVisitsOral hydrationAcute crisisAlertsBoard Examination Pass Rates of Emergency Medicine Residency Training Programs: Associations With Founding Year, Teaching Status, Length, and Hospital Ownership
Topping C, Venkatesh A, Rothenberg C, Goldflam K, Carter W, Chung A, Siegelman J, Sangal R, Iscoe M, Ulrich A, Gettel C. Board Examination Pass Rates of Emergency Medicine Residency Training Programs: Associations With Founding Year, Teaching Status, Length, and Hospital Ownership. AEM Education And Training 2026, 10: e70144. PMID: 41798586, PMCID: PMC12964488, DOI: 10.1002/aet2.70144.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchThis study investigates factors affecting emergency medicine board exam pass rates, showing newer programs and for-profit hospital affiliations are linked to lower success rates.Decoding Emergency Department Dissatisfaction: Factors Associated with Patient Complaints
Blenden M, Sangal R, Rothenberg C, Sun W, Tuffuor K, Pavuluri S, Van Tonder R, Chekijian S, Reid E, Parwani V. Decoding Emergency Department Dissatisfaction: Factors Associated with Patient Complaints. Western Journal Of Emergency Medicine 2026, 0: 244-249. PMID: 42054121, PMCID: PMC13016072, DOI: 10.5811/westjem.48866.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEmergency departmentED visitsRetrospective matched-cohort studyPatient experienceED lengthAcademic health systemPatient complaintsFrequent ED visitsFormal complaintsAssociated with fewer complaintsComplaint riskChief complaintHigh-volume periodsHealth systemED encountersLength of stayPatient careHospital admissionAcuity scoresLogistic regressionPrimary insuranceVisitsHospitalBonferroni correctionRace/ethnicity
2025
Capabilities Among Emergency Departments Participating in a Nationwide Quality Improvement Learning Collaborative to Care for Patients With Opioid Use Disorder: 2020 to 2024
Hawk K, Venkatesh A, Rothenberg C, Sharma D, Goyal P, Lin Z, Mendez-Hernandez C, Sharma P, Sambell M, Weiner S. Capabilities Among Emergency Departments Participating in a Nationwide Quality Improvement Learning Collaborative to Care for Patients With Opioid Use Disorder: 2020 to 2024. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2025, 87: 305-312. PMID: 41369633, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2025.10.012.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsClinical support toolOpioid use disorderEmergency departmentLearning CollaborativeEmergency careOpioid overdoseNaloxone provisionQuality improvement learning collaborativeUse disorderAmerican CollegeEmergency care of patientsQuality Improvement CollaborativeCommunity emergency departmentsED-initiated buprenorphineCare of patientsOpioid use disorder treatmentTreatment of opioid use disorderED cliniciansImprove collaborationSupport toolOpioid initiationBuprenorphine initiationOnline surveyOpioidCliniciansEvaluating a Disease-Specific Look-Back Trigger Methodology vs. Traditional Screening for Diagnostic Errors in the Emergency Department
Pavuluri S, Sangal R, Rothenberg C, Venkatesh A, Taylor R, Sather J. Evaluating a Disease-Specific Look-Back Trigger Methodology vs. Traditional Screening for Diagnostic Errors in the Emergency Department. The Joint Commission Journal On Quality And Patient Safety 2025, 52: 42-43. PMID: 41238461, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcjq.2025.10.002.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchThis study investigates a disease-specific look-back trigger method for identifying emergency diagnostic errors, showing it detects more errors than traditional quality assurance methods, particularly for appendicitis and brain injuries.Trends in Nonresearch Industry Payments to Emergency Physicians Between 2016 and 2023
Owda D, Radu C, Ross J, Rothenberg C, Venkatesh A. Trends in Nonresearch Industry Payments to Emergency Physicians Between 2016 and 2023. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2025, 87: 515-520. PMID: 41071135, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2025.08.019.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsProportion of emergency physiciansEmergency physiciansCross-sectional analysisCenters for Medicare and Medicaid ServicesIndustry paymentsValue of paymentsAnnual proportionMedicaid ServicesOpen Payments DataPayment valueSecondary outcomesTotal valuePhysiciansPrimary outcomeConsulting feesClinical practiceDistribution of paymentsStudy periodPayment dataSmall groupGroup of recipientsAbsolute differenceSmall group of recipientsUnited StatesPaymentTreatment of Opioid Use Disorder Across a National Emergency Department Practice Improvement Network
Weiner S, Venkatesh A, Sharma P, Rothenberg C, Shahid S, Sambell M, Goyal P, Hawk K. Treatment of Opioid Use Disorder Across a National Emergency Department Practice Improvement Network. Annals Of Emergency Medicine 2025, 87: 313-320. PMID: 41071133, DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2025.09.010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAltmetricConceptsQuality improvement initiativesOpioid use disorderEmergency departmentImprovement initiativesSample of emergency departmentAmerican CollegeSubstance use disorder programsRandom sampleProvision of naloxonePercentage of visitsSample of visitsUse disorderTreatment of opioid use disorderED sitesQuarter of patientsDiagnosis codesImprovement NetworkOpioid overdoseVisitsMOUDData elementsNaloxoneDisorders ProgramOpioidPatients
News
Copy Link
Get In Touch
Copy Link