Improving the Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction Program through Rulemaking
- Our JAMA Health Forum manuscript describes potential modifications the Department
of Health and Human could make through rulemaking
Difference-in-Differences for Evaluating Changes in Health Care Policy
- Visual abstract for our article in JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods - Methods
for Evaluating Changes in Health Care Policy: The Difference-in-Difference Approach
Effect of Pay-for-Performance in Primary Care on Mortality in the UK
- Visual abstract for our article in The Lancet - Long-term evidence for the effect
of pay-for-performance in primary care on mortality in the UK: a population study
Changes in Hospital Quality Associated with Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
- Visual abstract for our article in NEJM - Changes in Hospital Quality Associated with
Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
Facilitating Evaluation of CMS Policies
- Visual abstract for our article in NEJM - Changes in Hospital Quality Associated with
Hospital Value-Based Purchasing
Incremental Effects of Antihypertensive Drugs
- Visual abstract for our article in BMJ - Incremental effects of antihypertensive drugs:
instrumental variable analysis
Risk Adjustment May Lessen Penalties On Hospitals Treating Complex Patients Under
Medicare's Bundled Payment
- Visual abstract for our article in - Risk Adjustment May Lessen Penalties On Hospitals
Treating Complex Cardiac Patients Under Medicare's Bundled Payments
Coping with non-parallel trends using difference-in-differences analysis in health
policy
- Visual abstract for our article in Statistical Methods in Medical Research - Now trending:
Coping with non-parallel trends in difference-in-differences analysis
How to Paper Sprint like CEHR
- Visual abstract for our article in Perspective on Medical Education - Sprint to work:
A novel model for team science collaboration in academic medicine
Do effects of Medicare ACOs spill over to commercial patients?
- Visual abstract for our article in Medical Care - Physician Participation in Medicare
Accountable Care Organizations and Spillovers in Commercial Spending
Has the Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) appropriately balanced incentives for
accountable care organizations (ACOs) to continue caring for high-risk beneficiaries?
- Visual abstract for our article in Health Affairs - Risk Adjustment In Medicare ACO
Program Deters Coding Increases But May Lead ACOs To Drop High-Risk Beneficiaries
CMS expansion of secondary diagnoses and incentives for health IT associated with
increases in measured severity
- Visual abstract for our article in JAMA Network Open - Association Between Medicare
Policy Reforms and Changes in Hospitalized Medicare Beneficiaries' Severity of Illness
Medicare Shared Savings Program not associated with greater relative reductions among
high-cost beneficiaries
- Visual abstract for our article in Journal of General Internal Medicine - ACOs and
the 1%: Changes in Spending Among High-Cost Patients Following the Medicare Shared
Savings Program
Instrumental Variable Analysis suggests that Medical Shared Savings Program (MSSP)
not associated with spending reductions or quality improvement
- Visual abstract for our article in Annals of Internal Medicine - Performance in the
Medicare Shared Savings Program After Accounting for Nonrandom Exit: An Instrumental
Variable Analysis
The Hospital Acquired Conditions Reduction Program (HACRP) is not associated with
significant clinical improvements
- Visual abstract for our article in BMJ - Changes in hospital safety following penalties
in the US Hospital Acquired Condition Reduction Program: retrospective cohort study
Three Strategies to Motivate Providers to Manage High-Cost Patients and Limit Financial
Risk
- Visual abstract for our article in ScienceDirect - A delicate balance: Accountability
for very high-cost patients in new payment models
CMS change in inpatient pneumonia coding does not explain HRRP readmission reduction
- Visual abstract for our article in Health Services Research - Changes in coding of
pneumonia and impact on the Hospital Readmission Reduction Program
The Hospital Acquired Conditions Reduction Program (HACRP) Is Not Associated with
Additional Improvement in Patient Safety
- Visual abstract for our article in Health Affairs - Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction
Program Is Not Associated With Additional Patient Safety Improvement
Invalid measurement of patient safety will limit the ability of the CMS penalty program
to drive meaningful improvements in patient safety
- Visual abstract for our article in BMJ Quality & Safety - Accuracy of quality measurement
for the Hospital Acquired Conditions Reduction Program
Paper Sprints: Singular Focus, High Productivity
- Visual abstract for our article in JAMA Internal Medicine - Association of Coded Severity
With Readmission Reduction After the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program