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Assessing Oral Health Curriculum In Us Family Medicine Residency Programs: A Cera Study, Hugh Silk, Ronnelle King, Ian M. Bennett, Alexander W. Chessman, Judith A. Savageau Dec 2012

Assessing Oral Health Curriculum In Us Family Medicine Residency Programs: A Cera Study, Hugh Silk, Ronnelle King, Ian M. Bennett, Alexander W. Chessman, Judith A. Savageau

Judith A. Savageau

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: During the past decade, national initiatives have called for improved oral health training for physicians. We do not know, however, how family medicine residency programs have answered this call. METHODS: Family medicine residency directors completed a survey that asked how many hours of oral health teaching are included in their programs in addition to what topics are covered and the perceived barriers to this education. The response rate was 35%. RESULTS: A total of 72% of respondents agreed that oral health is an important topic, but only 32% are satisfied with their residents' competency in oral health. …


An Ounce Of Prevention: How Are We Managing The Early Assessment Of Residents' Clinical Skills?: A Cera Study, Tracy Kedian, Lisa S. Gussak, Judith A. Savageau, Andreas Cohrssen, Ilene Abramson, Kelly Everard, Alison Dobbie Dec 2012

An Ounce Of Prevention: How Are We Managing The Early Assessment Of Residents' Clinical Skills?: A Cera Study, Tracy Kedian, Lisa S. Gussak, Judith A. Savageau, Andreas Cohrssen, Ilene Abramson, Kelly Everard, Alison Dobbie

Judith A. Savageau

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Clinical skills deficits in residents are common but when identified early can result in decreased cost, faculty time, and stress related to remediation. There is currently no accepted best practice for early assessment of incoming residents' clinical skills. This study describes the current state of early PGY-1 clinical skills assessment in US family medicine residencies.

METHODS: Eleven questions were embedded in the nationwide CERA survey to US family medicine residency directors regarding the processes, components, and barriers to early PGY-1 assessment. Responses are described, and bivariate analyses of the relationship between assessment variables and percentage of international …


Porque Mas Iberoamerica? De Lecciones Aprendidas Y Buenas Practicas., Diego A. Bernardini Nov 2012

Porque Mas Iberoamerica? De Lecciones Aprendidas Y Buenas Practicas., Diego A. Bernardini

Diego Bernardini MD, PhD

No abstract provided.


Factors Associated With Inadequate Colorectal Cancer Screening With Flexible Sigmoidoscopy, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Chyke Doubeni, Paul Pinsky, V. Paul Doria-Rose, Andrew Sanderson, Robert Bresalier, Joel Weissfeld, Robert Schoen, Pamela Marcus, Phillip Prorok, Christine Berg Oct 2012

Factors Associated With Inadequate Colorectal Cancer Screening With Flexible Sigmoidoscopy, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Chyke Doubeni, Paul Pinsky, V. Paul Doria-Rose, Andrew Sanderson, Robert Bresalier, Joel Weissfeld, Robert Schoen, Pamela Marcus, Phillip Prorok, Christine Berg

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND AND STUDY AIM: Inadequate colorectal cancer screening wastes limited endoscopic resources. We examined patients factors associated with inadequate flexible sigmoidoscopy (FSG) screening at baseline screening and repeat screening 3-5 years later in 10 geographically-dispersed screening centers participating in the ongoing Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial.

METHODS: A total of 64,554 participants (aged 55-74) completed baseline questionnaires and underwent FSG at baseline. Of these, 39,385 participants returned for repeat screening. We used logistic regression models to assess factors that are associated with inadequate FSG (defined as a study in which the depth of insertion of FSG was …


Contribution Of Behavioral Risk Factors And Obesity To Socioeconomic Differences In Colorectal Cancer Incidence, Chyke Doubeni, Jacqueline Major, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Mario Schootman, Ann Zauber, Albert Hollenbeck, Rashmi Sinha, Jeroan Allison Oct 2012

Contribution Of Behavioral Risk Factors And Obesity To Socioeconomic Differences In Colorectal Cancer Incidence, Chyke Doubeni, Jacqueline Major, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Mario Schootman, Ann Zauber, Albert Hollenbeck, Rashmi Sinha, Jeroan Allison

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND:Health behaviors are known risk factors for colorectal cancer and are more common in low socioeconomic status (SES) populations. We evaluated the extent to which behavioral risk factors and body mass index (BMI) explain SES disparities in colorectal cancer incidence, overall and by tumor location.

METHODS: We analyzed prospective National Institutes of Health-AARP Diet and Health Study data on 506 488 participants who were recruited in 1995-1996 from six US states and two metropolitan areas and followed through 2006. Detailed baseline data on risk factors for colorectal cancer, including health behaviors, were obtained using questionnaires. SES was measured by self-reported …


Socioeconomic Status, Healthcare Density, And Risk Of Prostate Cancer Among African American And Caucasian Men In A Large Prospective Study, Jacqueline Major, M. Oliver, Chyke Doubeni, Albert Hollenbeck, Barry Graubard, Rashmi Sinha Oct 2012

Socioeconomic Status, Healthcare Density, And Risk Of Prostate Cancer Among African American And Caucasian Men In A Large Prospective Study, Jacqueline Major, M. Oliver, Chyke Doubeni, Albert Hollenbeck, Barry Graubard, Rashmi Sinha

Chyke A. Doubeni

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to separately examine the impact of neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation and availability of healthcare resources on prostate cancer risk among African American and Caucasian men. METHODS: In the large, prospective NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, we analyzed baseline (1995-1996) data from adult men, aged 50-71 years. Incident prostate cancer cases (n = 22,523; 1,089 among African Americans) were identified through December 2006. Lifestyle and health risk information was ascertained by questionnaires administered at baseline. Area-level socioeconomic indicators were ascertained by linkage to the US Census and the Area Resource File. Multilevel Cox models were …


Variation Of Adenoma Prevalence By Age, Sex, Race, And Colon Location In A Large Population: Implications For Screening And Quality Programs, Douglas Corley, Christopher Jensen, Amy Marks, Wei Zhao, Jolanda De Boer, Theodore Levin, Chyke Doubeni, Bruce Fireman, Charles Quesenberry Oct 2012

Variation Of Adenoma Prevalence By Age, Sex, Race, And Colon Location In A Large Population: Implications For Screening And Quality Programs, Douglas Corley, Christopher Jensen, Amy Marks, Wei Zhao, Jolanda De Boer, Theodore Levin, Chyke Doubeni, Bruce Fireman, Charles Quesenberry

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND and AIMS: Reliable community-based colorectal adenoma prevalence estimates are needed to inform colonoscopy quality standards and to estimate patient colorectal cancer risks; however, minimal data exist from populations with large numbers of diverse patients and examiners. METHODS: We evaluated the prevalence of adenomas detected by sex, age, race/ethnicity, and colon location among 20,792 Kaiser Permanente Northern California members >/=50 years of age who received a screening colonoscopy exam (102 gastroenterologists, years 2006-2008). RESULTS: Prevalence of detected adenomas increased more rapidly with age in the proximal colon (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 2.39; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.05-2.80; 70-74 vs 50-54 …


Self-Reported Colorectal Cancer Screening Of Medicare Beneficiaries In Family Medicine Vs. Internal Medicine Practices In The United States: A Cross-Sectional Study, Angela (Young) Higgins, Anna R. B. Doubeni, Karon L. Phillips, Adeyinka O. Laiyemo, Becky A. Briesacher, Jennifer Tjia, Chyke A. Doubeni Oct 2012

Self-Reported Colorectal Cancer Screening Of Medicare Beneficiaries In Family Medicine Vs. Internal Medicine Practices In The United States: A Cross-Sectional Study, Angela (Young) Higgins, Anna R. B. Doubeni, Karon L. Phillips, Adeyinka O. Laiyemo, Becky A. Briesacher, Jennifer Tjia, Chyke A. Doubeni

Jennifer Tjia

BACKGROUND: The benefit of screening for decreasing the risk of death from colorectal cancer (CRC) has been shown, yet many patients in primary care are still not undergoing screening according to guidelines. There are known variations in delivery of preventive health care services among primary care physicians. This study compared self-reported CRC screening rates and patient awareness of the need for CRC screening of patients receiving care from family medicine (FPs) vs. internal medicine (internists) physicians.

METHODS: Nationally representative sample of non-institutionalized beneficiaries who received medical care from FPs or internists in 2006 (using Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey). The main …


Self-Reported Colorectal Cancer Screening Of Medicare Beneficiaries In Family Medicine Vs. Internal Medicine Practices In The United States: A Cross-Sectional Study, Angela Higgins, Anna Doubeni, Karon Phillips, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Becky Briesacher, Jennifer Tjia, Chyke Doubeni Oct 2012

Self-Reported Colorectal Cancer Screening Of Medicare Beneficiaries In Family Medicine Vs. Internal Medicine Practices In The United States: A Cross-Sectional Study, Angela Higgins, Anna Doubeni, Karon Phillips, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Becky Briesacher, Jennifer Tjia, Chyke Doubeni

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND: The benefit of screening for decreasing the risk of death from colorectal cancer (CRC) has been shown, yet many patients in primary care are still not undergoing screening according to guidelines. There are known variations in delivery of preventive health care services among primary care physicians. This study compared self-reported CRC screening rates and patient awareness of the need for CRC screening of patients receiving care from family medicine (FPs) vs. internal medicine (internists) physicians. METHODS: Nationally representative sample of non-institutionalized beneficiaries who received medical care from FPs or internists in 2006 (using Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey). The main …


Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status And Use Of Colonoscopy In An Insured Population--A Retrospective Cohort Study, Chyke Doubeni, Guruprasad Jambaulikar, Hassan Fouayzi, Scott Robinson, Margaret Gunter, Terry Field, Douglas Roblin, Robert Fletcher Aug 2012

Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status And Use Of Colonoscopy In An Insured Population--A Retrospective Cohort Study, Chyke Doubeni, Guruprasad Jambaulikar, Hassan Fouayzi, Scott Robinson, Margaret Gunter, Terry Field, Douglas Roblin, Robert Fletcher

Chyke A. Doubeni

BACKGROUND: Low-socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with a higher colorectal cancer (CRC) incidence and mortality. Screening with colonoscopy, the most commonly used test in the US, has been shown to reduce the risk of death from CRC. This study examined if, among insured persons receiving care in integrated healthcare delivery systems, differences exist in colonoscopy use according to neighborhood SES. METHODS: We assembled a retrospective cohort of 100,566 men and women, 50-74 years old, who had been enrolled in one of three US health plans for >/=1 year on January 1, 2000. Subjects were followed until the date of first …


Technological Resources And Personnel Costs Required To Implement An Automated Alert System For Primary Care Physicians When Patients Transition From Hospitals To Home, Terry S. Field, Lawrence D. Garber, Shawn J. Gagne, Jennifer Tjia, Peggy Preusse, Jennifer L. Donovan, Abir O. Kanaan, Jerry H. Gurwitz Jul 2012

Technological Resources And Personnel Costs Required To Implement An Automated Alert System For Primary Care Physicians When Patients Transition From Hospitals To Home, Terry S. Field, Lawrence D. Garber, Shawn J. Gagne, Jennifer Tjia, Peggy Preusse, Jennifer L. Donovan, Abir O. Kanaan, Jerry H. Gurwitz

Jennifer Tjia

Background With the adoption of electronic medical records by medical group practices, there are opportunities to improve the quality of care for patients discharged from hospitals. However, there is little guidance for medical groups outside of integrated hospital systems to automate the flow of patient information during transitions in care.

Objective To describe the technological resources, expertise and time needed to develop an automated system providing information to primary care physicians when their patients transition from hospitals to home.

Development Within a medical group practice, we developed an automated alert system that provides notification of discharges, reminders of the need …


Inquiring Into Our Past: When The Doctor Is A Survivor Of Abuse, Lucy M. Candib, Judith A. Savageau, Linda F. Weinreb, George W. Reed Jul 2012

Inquiring Into Our Past: When The Doctor Is A Survivor Of Abuse, Lucy M. Candib, Judith A. Savageau, Linda F. Weinreb, George W. Reed

Judith A. Savageau

BACKGROUND: Health care professionals like other adults have a substantial exposure to childhood and adult victimization, but the prevalence of abuse experiences among practicing family physicians has not been examined. Also unclear is the impact of such personal experiences of abuse on physicians' screening practices for childhood abuse among their patients and the personal and professional barriers to such screening. METHODS: We surveyed Massachusetts family physicians about their screening practices of adult patients for a history of childhood abuse and found that 33.6% had some experience of personal trauma, with 42.4% of women and 24.3% of men reporting some kind …


Verbal Autopsy Tool For Infant Mortality, Vijay Kumar Chattu May 2012

Verbal Autopsy Tool For Infant Mortality, Vijay Kumar Chattu

Vijay Kumar Chattu

Information on causes of death is extremely important for policy-making, planning, monitoring and evaluation of health programs as well as for field research, comparisons and epidemic awareness.The Millennium Development Goal for India is to reduce infant mortality rate to 35 per 1000 & under-five mortality to 45 per 1000 live births by 2015.The incorporation of Verbal Autopsy (VA) in the existing Registration Systems is necessary in order to fulfil its ultimate goal of improving the information on causes of infant deaths in areas where Civil Registration and Death Certification are weak. VA provides information for local action by health authorities …


Healthcare Preferences Among Lesbians: A Focus Group Analysis, Margaret R. Seaver, Karen M. Freund, Leslie M. Wright, Jennifer Tjia, Susan M. Frayne Feb 2012

Healthcare Preferences Among Lesbians: A Focus Group Analysis, Margaret R. Seaver, Karen M. Freund, Leslie M. Wright, Jennifer Tjia, Susan M. Frayne

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVE: The healthcare needs of lesbians are not well understood. We sought to characterize lesbians' experiences with, and preferences for, women's healthcare. METHODS: We conducted three age-stratified focus groups (18-29, 30-50, and >50 years) with a total of 22 participants using a semistructured interview guide to elicit lesbians' experiences and preferences. We analyzed transcripts of these audiotaped sessions using the constant comparative method of grounded theory. Community-dwelling women who self-identified as lesbian and responded to advertisements were selected on first-come basis. RESULTS: Participants voiced experiences and preferences for healthcare that emerged into three themes: desired models of care, desired processes …


Predicting Nursing Home Adherence To A Clinical Trial Intervention: Lessons For The Conduct Of Cluster Randomized Trials, Jennifer Tjia, Kathleen Mazor, Terry Field, Peter Doherty, Ann Spenard, Jerry Gurwitz Feb 2012

Predicting Nursing Home Adherence To A Clinical Trial Intervention: Lessons For The Conduct Of Cluster Randomized Trials, Jennifer Tjia, Kathleen Mazor, Terry Field, Peter Doherty, Ann Spenard, Jerry Gurwitz

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVES: To describe factors predictive of nursing home (NH) adherence to a clinical trial intervention. DESIGN: Post hoc analysis of a cluster randomized trial (CRT) evaluating a structured communication intervention to improve nurse-physician telephone communication in NHs. SETTING: NH. PARTICIPANTS: All eligible licensed nursing staff in all participating NHs. MEASUREMENTS: Adherence was defined as active participation for at least 3 months of the 12-month trial. NH characteristics hypothesized to affect trial outcomes (profit status, bed size, nursing staff time, NH quality, and leadership turnover) were measured a priori. The association between intervention adherence, NH characteristics and preintervention questionnaire response rate …


Diagnostic E-Codes For Commonly Used, Narrow Therapeutic Index Medications Poorly Predict Adverse Drug Events, Charles Leonard, Kevin Haynes, A. Localio, Sean Hennessy, Jennifer Tjia, Abigail Cohen, Stephen Kimmel, Harold Feldman, Joshua Metlay Feb 2012

Diagnostic E-Codes For Commonly Used, Narrow Therapeutic Index Medications Poorly Predict Adverse Drug Events, Charles Leonard, Kevin Haynes, A. Localio, Sean Hennessy, Jennifer Tjia, Abigail Cohen, Stephen Kimmel, Harold Feldman, Joshua Metlay

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVE: We sought to examine the validity of specific hospital discharge codes in identifying drug toxicity precipitating hospitalization, among elderly users of high-risk medications. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: We conducted a cross-sectional evaluation assessing the diagnostic test characteristics of International Classification of Diseases-9 External-Cause-of-Injury codes (E-codes) compared with a reference standard of medical record review. This study was nested within a prospective cohort of elders using warfarin, digoxin, or phenytoin as identified in the Pharmaceutical Assistance Contract for the Elderly benefit program. RESULTS: We identified 4,803 subjects contributing 11,409 person-years of exposure to at least one of three drug groups. …


A Comparison Of Outcomes Resulting From Generalist Vs Specialist Care For A Single Discrete Medical Condition: A Systematic Review And Methodologic Critique, Gerald Smetana, Bruce Landon, Andrew Bindman, Helen Burstin, Roger Davis, Jennifer Tjia, Eugene Rich Feb 2012

A Comparison Of Outcomes Resulting From Generalist Vs Specialist Care For A Single Discrete Medical Condition: A Systematic Review And Methodologic Critique, Gerald Smetana, Bruce Landon, Andrew Bindman, Helen Burstin, Roger Davis, Jennifer Tjia, Eugene Rich

Jennifer Tjia

BACKGROUND: Studies of clinical outcomes for generalist vs specialist care for diagnoses within a specialist's narrow domain have tended to favor specialty care. METHODS: A MEDLINE search from January 1, 1980, through April 1, 2005, and a hand search of retrieved bibliographies of English-language studies that compared generalist vs specialist care for individual patients with a single discrete medical condition were performed. Two reviewers determined eligibility for each study and abstracted data onto a standardized instrument. RESULTS: A total of 49 articles met our inclusion criteria: 24 studies favored specialty care, 13 found no difference in outcomes, 7 varied by …


A Systematic Review Of Validated Methods For Identifying Heart Failure Using Administrative Data, Jane Saczynski, Susan Andrade, Leslie Harrold, Jennifer Tjia, Sarah Cutrona, Katherine Dodd, Robert Goldberg, Jerry Gurwitz Feb 2012

A Systematic Review Of Validated Methods For Identifying Heart Failure Using Administrative Data, Jane Saczynski, Susan Andrade, Leslie Harrold, Jennifer Tjia, Sarah Cutrona, Katherine Dodd, Robert Goldberg, Jerry Gurwitz

Jennifer Tjia

PURPOSE: To identify and describe the validity of algorithms used to detect heart failure (HF) using administrative and claims data sources.

METHODS: A systematic review of PubMed and Iowa Drug Information Service searches of the English language was performed to identify studies published between 1990 and 2010 that evaluated the validity of algorithms for the identification of patients with HF using and claims data. Abstracts and articles were reviewed by two study investigators to determine their relevance on the basis of predetermined criteria.

RESULTS: The initial search strategy identified 887 abstracts. Of these, 499 full articles were reviewed and 35 …


Growth In Dementia-Associated Hospitalizations Among The Oldest Old In The United States: Implications For Ethical Health Services Planning, Marya Zilberberg, Jennifer Tjia Feb 2012

Growth In Dementia-Associated Hospitalizations Among The Oldest Old In The United States: Implications For Ethical Health Services Planning, Marya Zilberberg, Jennifer Tjia

Jennifer Tjia

As the world population ages, an epidemic of neurologic diseases, such as Alzheimer-type dementia and Parkinson disease, is predicted. The most rapid population growth has been observed in the 85 years and older group ... Concurrent with this population growth, we have witnessed a vast expansion of health care utilization and expenditures, with the consequent close scrutiny and attempts to rein in this supply-driven juggernaut. ... We conducted this analysis to gain a better understanding of the current trends in dementia-associated hospitalizations among the 85 years and older population in the United States and its implications for future health care …


Medication Discrepancies Upon Hospital To Skilled Nursing Facility Transitions, Jennifer Tjia, Alice Bonner, Becky Briesacher, Sarah Mcgee, Eileen Terrill, Kathleen Miller Feb 2012

Medication Discrepancies Upon Hospital To Skilled Nursing Facility Transitions, Jennifer Tjia, Alice Bonner, Becky Briesacher, Sarah Mcgee, Eileen Terrill, Kathleen Miller

Jennifer Tjia

BACKGROUND: Failure to reconcile medications across transitions in care is an important source of harm to patients. Little is known about medication discrepancies upon admission to skilled nursing facilities (SNFs). OBJECTIVE: To describe the prevalence of, type of medications involved in, and sources of medication discrepancies upon admission to the SNF setting. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. PARTICIPANTS: Patients admitted to SNF for subacute care. MEASUREMENTS: Number of medication discrepancies, defined as unexplained differences among documented medication regimens, including the hospital discharge summary, patient care referral form and SNF admission orders. RESULTS: Of 2,319 medications reviewed on admission, 495 (21.3%) had a …


Challenge Of Changing Nursing Home Prescribing Culture, Jennifer Tjia, Jerry Gurwitz, Becky Briesacher Feb 2012

Challenge Of Changing Nursing Home Prescribing Culture, Jennifer Tjia, Jerry Gurwitz, Becky Briesacher

Jennifer Tjia

This article described a framework for improving prescribing in nursing homes (NH) by focusing on the whole facility as a system that has created a "prescribing culture." We offered this paradigm as an alternative to focused interventions that target prescribers only. We used the example of atypical antipsychotics to illustrate the approach. We also highlighted elements of the NH culture change movement that are germane to medication prescribing, and illustrated which elements of NH culture were shown to be associated with suboptimal quality of care. We concluded by describing current models, including our study funded by the Agency for Healthcare …


A Systematic Review Of Validated Methods For Identifying Cerebrovascular Accident Or Transient Ischemic Attack Using Administrative Data, Susan Andrade, Leslie Harrold, Jennifer Tjia, Sarah Cutrona, Jane Saczynski, Katherine Dodd, Robert Goldberg, Jerry Gurwitz Feb 2012

A Systematic Review Of Validated Methods For Identifying Cerebrovascular Accident Or Transient Ischemic Attack Using Administrative Data, Susan Andrade, Leslie Harrold, Jennifer Tjia, Sarah Cutrona, Jane Saczynski, Katherine Dodd, Robert Goldberg, Jerry Gurwitz

Jennifer Tjia

PURPOSE: To perform a systematic review of the validity of algorithms for identifying cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs) or transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) using administrative and claims data. METHODS: PubMed and Iowa Drug Information Service searches of the English language literature were performed to identify studies published between 1990 and 2010 that evaluated the validity of algorithms for identifying CVAs (ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes, intracranial hemorrhage, and subarachnoid hemorrhage) and/or TIAs in administrative data. Two study investigators independently reviewed the abstracts and articles to determine relevant studies according to pre-specified criteria. RESULTS: A total of 35 articles met the criteria for evaluation. …


Daily Medication Use In Nursing Home Residents With Advanced Dementia, Jennifer Tjia, Margaret Rothman, Dan Kiely, Michele Shaffer, Holly Holmes, Greg Sachs, Susan Mitchell Feb 2012

Daily Medication Use In Nursing Home Residents With Advanced Dementia, Jennifer Tjia, Margaret Rothman, Dan Kiely, Michele Shaffer, Holly Holmes, Greg Sachs, Susan Mitchell

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVES: To describe the pattern and factors associated with daily medication use in nursing home (NH) residents with advanced dementia. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study. SETTING: Twenty-two Boston-area NHs. PARTICIPANTS: NH residents with advanced dementia (N=323). MEASUREMENTS: Data from residents' records were used to determine the number or daily medications, specific drugs prescribed, and use of drugs deemed "never appropriate" in patients with advanced dementia. Resident characteristics associated with the use of more daily medications and drugs deemed inappropriate were examined. RESULTS: Residents were prescribed a mean of 5.9 +/- 3.0 daily medications, and 37.5% received at least one medication considered …


Deeply Discounted Medications: Implications Of Generic Prescription Drug Wars, Jessica Czechowski, Jennifer Tjia, Darren Triller Feb 2012

Deeply Discounted Medications: Implications Of Generic Prescription Drug Wars, Jessica Czechowski, Jennifer Tjia, Darren Triller

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVE: To describe the history of generic prescription pricing programs at major pharmacy chains and their potential implications on prescribing, quality of care, and patient safety. DATA SOURCES: Publicly available generic prescription discount program drug lists as of May 1, 2009. SUMMARY: Fierce competition among major pharmacy chains such as Walgreens, CVS, and Walmart has led to a generic prescription pricing war with unclear public health implications. Introduced in 2006, currently 7 of the 10 largest pharmacy chains advertise a version of a deeply discounted medication (DDM) program, accounting for more than 25,000 locations nationally. By early 2008, almost 70 …


Cholinesterase Inhibitor And Memantine Use In Newly Admitted Nursing Home Residents With Dementia, Carole Parsons, Becky Briesacher, Jane Givens, Yong Chen, Jennifer Tjia Feb 2012

Cholinesterase Inhibitor And Memantine Use In Newly Admitted Nursing Home Residents With Dementia, Carole Parsons, Becky Briesacher, Jane Givens, Yong Chen, Jennifer Tjia

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVES: To quantify the use of cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) and memantine in nursing home (NH) residents with dementia upon NH admission and 3 months later and to examine factors associated with reduction in therapy.

DESIGN: Retrospective cohort study.

SETTING: Nationwide sample of U.S. NHs.

PARTICIPANTS: Three thousand five hundred six NH residents with dementia newly admitted in 2006.

MEASUREMENTS: Data from pharmacy dispensing records were used to determine ChEI and memantine medication use upon NH admission and at 3-month follow-up. The Minimum Data Set was used to determine resident- and facility-level characteristics. Severity of dementia was defined using the Cognitive …


Interest In Breast Cancer Chemoprevention Among Older Women, Jennifer Tjia, Ellyn Micco, Katrina Armstrong Feb 2012

Interest In Breast Cancer Chemoprevention Among Older Women, Jennifer Tjia, Ellyn Micco, Katrina Armstrong

Jennifer Tjia

OBJECTIVES: The study aim is to describe interest in breast cancer chemoprevention among older women without a history of breast cancer and to determine whether aging-related factors such as diminished life expectancy, increasing comorbidity and medication burden attenuate chemoprevention interest. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: University of Pennsylvania Health System. PARTICIPANTS: Four-hundred fifty-seven community-dwelling women aged 60-65 years old who were potentially eligible for breast cancer chemoprevention according to guidelines linking risk and eligibility to age. MEASUREMENTS: Interest in breast cancer chemopre vention, Gail model breast cancer risk, perceived breast cancer risk, breast cancer worry, self-reported health status and comorbidities, and …


Medicare Part D And Changes In Prescription Drug Use And Cost Burden: National Estimates For The Medicare Population, 2000 To 2007, Becky Briesacher, Yanfang Zhao, Jeanne Madden, Fang Zhang, Alyce Adams, Jennifer Tjia, Dennis Ross-Degnan, Jerry Gurwitz, Stephen Soumerai Feb 2012

Medicare Part D And Changes In Prescription Drug Use And Cost Burden: National Estimates For The Medicare Population, 2000 To 2007, Becky Briesacher, Yanfang Zhao, Jeanne Madden, Fang Zhang, Alyce Adams, Jennifer Tjia, Dennis Ross-Degnan, Jerry Gurwitz, Stephen Soumerai

Jennifer Tjia

CONTEXT: The full effect of Medicare Part D, after the initial policy transition period and across the United States Medicare population, remains unclear.

OBJECTIVE: To estimate nationally representative changes in prescription drug use and out-of-pocket drug costs 2 years after implementation of Part D.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: We examined study outcomes over 8 years (2000 to 2007) and estimated changes after Part D, accounting for earlier trends. Our analyses used the community-dwelling sample of the Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey (unweighted unique n=38,798). Actual post-Part D outcomes were compared with projected values using 2000 to 2005 data. Subgroup analyses and …


Brazilian Longitudinal Study Of Adult Health (Elsa-Brasil): Objectives And Design., Paulo A. Lotufo Feb 2012

Brazilian Longitudinal Study Of Adult Health (Elsa-Brasil): Objectives And Design., Paulo A. Lotufo

Paulo A Lotufo

The Brazilian Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil) aims to contribute relevant information with respect to the development and progression of clinical and subclinical chronic diseases, particularly cardiovascular diseases and diabetes. In this report, the authors delineate the study's objectives, principal methodological features, and timeline. At baseline, ELSA-Brasil enrolled 15,105 civil servants from 5 universities and 1 research institute. The baseline examination (2008-2010) included detailed interviews, clinical and anthropometric examinations, an oral glucose tolerance test, overnight urine collection, a 12-lead resting electrocardiogram, measurement of carotid intima-media thickness, echocardiography, measurement of pulse wave velocity, hepatic ultrasonography, retinal fundus photography, and an …


Socioeconomic Deprivation Impact On Meat Intake And Mortality: Nih-Aarp Diet And Health Study, Jacqueline Major, Amanda Cross, Chyke Doubeni, Yikyung Park, Min Lian, Albert Hollenbeck, Arthur Schatzkin, Barry Graubard, Rashmi Sinha Jan 2012

Socioeconomic Deprivation Impact On Meat Intake And Mortality: Nih-Aarp Diet And Health Study, Jacqueline Major, Amanda Cross, Chyke Doubeni, Yikyung Park, Min Lian, Albert Hollenbeck, Arthur Schatzkin, Barry Graubard, Rashmi Sinha

Chyke A. Doubeni

OBJECTIVE: Previous studies have not examined potential interactions between meat intake and characteristics of the local environment on the risk of mortality. This study examined the impact of area socioeconomic deprivation on the association between meat intake and all-cause and cause-specific mortality after accounting for individual-level risk factors.

METHODS: In the prospective NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, we analyzed data from adults, ages 50-71 years at baseline (1995-1996). Individual-level dietary intake and health risk information were linked to the demographic and socioeconomic context of participants' local environment based on census tract data. Deaths (n = 33,831) were identified through December …


Primary Care, Economic Barriers To Health Care, And Use Of Colorectal Cancer Screening Tests Among Medicare Enrollees Over Time, Chyke Doubeni, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Angela Higgins, Carrie Klabunde, George Reed, Terry Field, Robert Fletcher Jan 2012

Primary Care, Economic Barriers To Health Care, And Use Of Colorectal Cancer Screening Tests Among Medicare Enrollees Over Time, Chyke Doubeni, Adeyinka Laiyemo, Angela Higgins, Carrie Klabunde, George Reed, Terry Field, Robert Fletcher

Chyke A. Doubeni

PURPOSE: Colorectal cancer (CRC) screening remains underutilized. The objective of this study was to examine the impact of primary care and economic barriers to health care on CRC testing relative to the 2001 Medicare expansion of screening coverage.

METHODS: Medicare Current Beneficiary Survey data were use to study community-dwelling enrollees aged 65 to 80 years, free of renal disease and CRC, and who participated in the survey in 2000 (n = 8,330), 2003 (n = 7,889), or 2005 (n = 7,614). Three outcomes were examined: colonoscopy/sigmoidoscopy within 5 years (recent endoscopy), endoscopy more than 5 years previously, and fecal occult …