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13299


Interprofessional education between dentistry and nursing: the NYU experience

Haber, Judith; Spielman, Andrew I; Wolff, Mark; Shelley, Donna
In 2005, New York University Colleges of Dentistry and Nursing formed an organizational partnership to create a unique model of interprofessional education, research, service and practice. This paper describes the first eight years of experience, from the early reaction of the public to the partnership, to examples of success and past and current challenges.
PMID: 25080689
ISSN: 1043-2256
CID: 1609952

The cost-effectiveness of New York City's Safe Routes to School Program

Muennig, Peter A; Epstein, Michael; Li, Guohua; DiMaggio, Charles
OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the cost-effectiveness of a package of roadway modifications in New York City funded under the Safe Routes to School (SRTS) program. METHODS: We used a Markov model to estimate long-term impacts of SRTS on injury reduction and the associated savings in medical costs, lifelong disability, and death. Model inputs included societal costs (in 2013 US dollars) and observed spatiotemporal changes in injury rates associated with New York City's implementation of SRTS relative to control intersections. Structural changes to roadways were assumed to last 50 years before further investment is required. Therefore, costs were discounted over 50 consecutive cohorts of modified roadway users under SRTS. RESULTS: SRTS was associated with an overall net societal benefit of $230 million and 2055 quality-adjusted life years gained in New York City. CONCLUSIONS: SRTS reduces injuries and saves money over the long run.
PMCID:4056240
PMID: 24832430
ISSN: 1541-0048
CID: 1601482

Prescription drug monitoring and dispensing of prescription opioids

Brady, Joanne E; Wunsch, Hannah; DiMaggio, Charles; Lang, Barbara H; Giglio, James; Li, Guohua
OBJECTIVE: In the United States, per-capita opioid dispensing has increased concurrently with analgesic-related mortality and morbidity since the 1990s. To deter diversion and abuse of controlled substances, most states have implemented electronic prescription drug monitoring programs (PDMPs). We evaluated the impact of state PDMPs on opioid dispensing. METHODS: We acquired data on opioids dispensed in a given quarter of the year for each state and the District of Columbia from 1999 to 2008 from the Automation of Reports and Consolidated Orders System and converted them to morphine milligram equivalents (MMEs). We used multivariable linear regression modeling with generalized estimating equations to assess the effect of state PDMPs on per-capita dispensing of MMEs. RESULTS: The annual MMEs dispensed per capita increased progressively until 2007 before stabilizing. Adjusting for temporal trends and demographic characteristics, implementation of state PDMPs was associated with a 3% decrease in MMEs dispensed per capita (p=0.68). The impact of PDMPs on MMEs dispensed per capita varied markedly by state, from a 66% decrease in Colorado to a 61% increase in Connecticut. CONCLUSIONS: Implementation of state PDMPs up to 2008 did not show a significant impact on per-capita opioids dispensed. To control the diversion and abuse of prescription drugs, state PDMPs may need to improve their usability, implement requirements for committee oversight of the PDMP, and increase data sharing with neighboring states.
PMCID:3904893
PMID: 24587548
ISSN: 1468-2877
CID: 1601492

Validating Health Information Exchange (HIE) Data For Quality Measurement Across Four Hospitals

Garg, Nupur; Kuperman, Gil; Onyile, Arit; Lowry, Tina; Genes, Nicholas; DiMaggio, Charles; Richardson, Lynne; Husk, Gregg; Shapiro, Jason S
Health information exchange (HIE) provides an essential enhancement to electronic health records (EHR), allowing information to follow patients across provider organizations. There is also an opportunity to improve public health surveillance, quality measurement, and research through secondary use of HIE data, but data quality presents potential barriers. Our objective was to validate the secondary use of HIE data for two emergency department (ED) quality measures: identification of frequent ED users and early (72-hour) ED returns. We compared concordance of various demographic and encounter data from an HIE for four hospitals to data provided by the hospitals from their EHRs over a two year period, and then compared measurement of our two quality measures using both HIE and EHR data. We found that, following data cleaning, there was no significant difference in the total counts for frequent ED users or early ED returns for any of the four hospitals (p<0.001).
PMCID:4419935
PMID: 25954362
ISSN: 1942-597x
CID: 1601502

Changes in abundance of oral microbiota associated with oral cancer [Meeting Abstract]

Albertson, Donna G; Kuczynski, Justin; Bhattacharya, Aditi; Huey, Bing; Corby, Patricia M; Queiroz, Erica LS; Nightingale, Kira; Kerr, Alexander R; DeLacure, Mark D; Veeramachaneni, Ratna; Olshen, Adam; Schmidt, Brian L
ISI:000349910203349
ISSN: 1538-7445
CID: 1598342

Comorbidities and Quality of Life among Breast Cancer Survivors [Meeting Abstract]

Fu, Mei; Palamar, Joseph; Ryan, Caitlin; Qiu, Jeanna M
ISI:000334098000160
ISSN: 1538-9847
CID: 1594112

Lewy body dementia: the impact on patients and caregivers

Zweig, Yael R; Galvin, James E
Lewy body dementia (LBD) is the second most common neurodegenerative dementia in older adults, yet there remains a delay in diagnosis that limits healthcare providers' ability to maximize therapeutic outcomes and enhance patient and caregiver quality of life. The impact of LBD on patients includes limiting the potential exposure to medications that may cause adverse outcomes, and addressing how the disease manifestations, such as autonomic features and behavior, affect quality of life. LBD impact on caregivers has been discussed to a greater degree in the literature, and there is clear evidence of caregiver burden and grief associated with disease manifestations. Other common caregiving concerns, such as access to care, prevention of hospitalization, managing behavior, and reviewing prognosis and nursing home placement, are important to comprehensively address the needs of patients with LBD and their caregivers.
PMCID:4054937
PMID: 25031635
ISSN: 1758-9193
CID: 1556082

Are hospitals "keeping up with the Joneses"?: Assessing the spatial and temporal diffusion of the surgical robot

Li, Huilin; Gail, Mitchell H; Braithwaite, R Scott; Gold, Heather T; Walter, Dawn; Liu, Mengling; Gross, Cary P; Makarov, Danil V
BACKGROUND: The surgical robot has been widely adopted in the United States in spite of its high cost and controversy surrounding its benefit. Some have suggested that a "medical arms race" influences technology adoption. We wanted to determine whether a hospital would acquire a surgical robot if its nearest neighboring hospital already owned one. METHODS: We identified 554 hospitals performing radical prostatectomy from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Statewide Inpatient Databases for seven states. We used publicly available data from the website of the surgical robot's sole manufacturer (Intuitive Surgical, Sunnyvale, CA) combined with data collected from the hospitals to ascertain the timing of robot acquisition during year 2001 to 2008. One hundred thirty four hospitals (24%) had acquired a surgical robot by the end of 2008. We geocoded the address of each hospital and determined a hospital's likelihood to acquire a surgical robot based on whether its nearest neighbor owned a surgical robot. We developed a Markov chain method to model the acquisition process spatially and temporally and quantified the "neighborhood effect" on the acquisition of the surgical robot while adjusting simultaneously for known confounders. RESULTS: After adjusting for hospital teaching status, surgical volume, urban status and number of hospital beds, the Markov chain analysis demonstrated that a hospital whose nearest neighbor had acquired a surgical robot had a higher likelihood itself acquiring a surgical robot. (OR=1.71, 95% CI: 1.07-2.72, p=0.02). CONCLUSION: There is a significant spatial and temporal association for hospitals acquiring surgical robots during the study period. Hospitals were more likely to acquire a surgical robot during the robot's early adoption phase if their nearest neighbor had already done so.
PMCID:4376012
PMID: 25821720
ISSN: 2213-0764
CID: 1540432

Text classification for automatic detection of alcohol use-related tweets: A feasibility study

Chapter by: Aphinyanaphongs, Y; Ray, B; Statnikov, A; Krebs, P
in: 2014 IEEE 15th International Conference on Information Reuse and Integration by
Piscataway, NJ : IEEE, 2014
pp. 93-97
ISBN: 978-1-4799-5880-1
CID: 1515072

Developing dementia-capable health care systems: a 12-step program

Borson, Soo; Chodosh, Joshua
Improving the quality, comprehensiveness, and coordination of health care for people with dementia is a primary goal of the National Alzheimer's Plan. In this article, the key principles of high-quality dementia care for nonspecialist clinicians and health care leaders are synthesized, a framework for operationalizing its components is presented, and simple steps for developing dementia-capable health care systems are offered.
PMID: 25037288
ISSN: 0749-0690
CID: 1498622