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Strange Bedfellows: Coordinating Medicare and Medicaid to Achieve Cost-Effective Care for Patients with the Greatest Health Needs
Elmaleh-Sachs, Arielle; Schneider, Eric C
This perspective describes federal efforts in the United States (U.S.) to integrate care for an especially complex, vulnerable, and costly patient population: adults eligible for both Medicare and Medicaid insurance. The goal of the paper is to demystify for clinical policy leaders and practicing clinicians the origins and evolution of the Dual-Eligible Special Needs Plans (D-SNPs) recently permanently authorized by the U.S. Congress and to explore the potential for these policy changes to help such health plans improve care for the sickest and most vulnerable Americans.
PMCID:7728965
PMID: 32462570
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 5297532
Cessation of oral anticoagulants in antiphospholipid syndrome
Comarmond, C; Jego, P; Veyssier-Belot, C; Marie, I; Mekinian, A; Elmaleh-Sachs, A; Leroux, G; Saadoun, D; Oziol, E; Fraisse, T; Hyvernat, H; Thiercein-Legrand, M-F; Sarrot-Reynauld, F; Ferreira-Maldent, N; de Menthon, M; Goujard, C; Khau, D; Nguen, Y; Monnier, S; Michon, A; Castel, B; Decaux, O; Piette, J-C; Cacoub, P
Objective To study the outcome of patients with antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) after oral anticoagulant treatment cessation. Methods We performed a retrospective study of patients with APS experiencing cessation of oral anticoagulant and enrolled in a French multicentre observational cohort between January 2014 and January 2016. The main outcome was the occurrence of recurrent thrombotic event after oral anticoagulation cessation. Results Forty four APS patients interrupted oral anticoagulation. The median age was 43 (27-56) years. The median duration of anticoagulation was 21 (9-118) months. Main causes of oral anticoagulant treatment cessation were switch from vitamin K antagonists to aspirin in 15 patients, prolonged disappearance of antiphospholipid antibodies in ten, bleeding complications in nine and a poor therapeutic adherence in six. Eleven (25%) patients developed a recurrent thrombotic event after oral anticoagulation cessation, including three catastrophic APS and one death due to lower limb ischemia. Antihypertensive treatment required at time of oral anticoagulants cessation seems to be an important factor associated with recurrent thrombosis after oral anticoagulant cessation (15.2% in patients with no relapse versus 45.5% in patients with recurrent thrombosis, p = 0.038). Oral anticoagulant treatment was re-started in 18 (40.9%) patients. Conclusion The risk of a new thrombotic event in APS patients who stopped their anticoagulation is high, even in those who showed a long lasting disappearance of antiphospholipid antibodies. Except for the presence of treated hypertension, this study did not find a particular clinical or biological phenotype for APS patients who relapsed after anticoagulation cessation. Any stopping of anticoagulant in such patients should be done with caution.
PMID: 28355985
ISSN: 1477-0962
CID: 5297562
The Bellevue patient
Elmaleh-Sachs, Arielle
ORIGINAL:0016202
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5354802
Changes in the Profile and Care of HIV-HCV Seropositive Patients in Two Cross-Sectional Surveys in France (2006 and 2013)
Cacoub, Patrice; Elmaleh-Sachs, Arielle; Poizot-Martin, Isabelle; Goujard, Cecile; Miaihes, Patrick; Morlat, Philippe; Chas, Julie; Goderel, Isabelle; Halfon, Philippe; Caron, Francois; Rey, David; Boue, Francois; Simon, Anne; Pol, Stanislas; Rosenthal, Eric, GERMIVIC Study Group
ORIGINAL:0016200
ISSN: 2155-6113
CID: 5354782
Iron deficiency anemia in women
Chapter by: Deen, Darwin; Elmaleh-Sachs, Arielle
in: Medical nutrition & disease : a case-based approach by Hark, Lisa; Deen, Darwin; Morrison, Gail [Eds]
Chichester, West Sussex, UK ; Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2014
pp. 83-88
ISBN: 9781118652435
CID: 5354792