134 results on '"Keesey J"'
Search Results
2. Adjusting cesarean delivery rates for case mix
- Author
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Keeler, E B, Park, R E, Bell, R M, Gifford, D S, and Keesey, J
- Subjects
Washington ,Cesarean Section ,Infant, Newborn ,Risk Assessment ,Patient Discharge ,Pregnancy ,Birth Certificates ,Humans ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Diagnosis-Related Groups ,Research Article ,Probability ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: (1) To describe the issues in developing a clinical predictor of cesarean delivery that could be used to adjust reported cesarean rates for case mix, and (2) to compare its performance to other, simpler predictors using clinical and statistical criteria. DATA SOURCES: Singleton births greater than 2,500 grams in Washington State in 1989 and 1990 for whom mothers and infant hospital discharge records could be matched to birth certificate data. DESIGN: Statistical analysis of retrospective merged hospital and birth certificate data, which were used to develop variables and models to predict the probability that any particular delivery would be a cesarean. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Merged data led to better predictor variables than those based on one source. A simple four-category hierarchical classification into births with prior cesarean, breech but no prior cesarean, first birth, and other explains 30 percent of the variance in individual cesarean rates. The full clinical model fit the data well and explained 37 percent of the variance. Multiparas without serious complications comprised 35 percent of the mothers and averaged less than 2 percent cesareans. A hospital's predicted cesarean rate depends strongly on the proportion of its births that are first births. CONCLUSION: Government and private agencies have reported cesarean rates as measures of hospital performance. Depending on data and resources available, both simple and complex measures of case mix can be used to adjust reported rates. These adjustments should not include all variables related to the rates. Proper adjustments may not alter hospital rankings greatly, but they will improve the validity and acceptability of the reports.
- Published
- 1997
3. Redistributional consequences of community rating
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Goldman, D P, Leibowitz, A, Buchanan, J L, and Keesey, J
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Rural Population ,Insurance, Health ,Urban Population ,Insurance Pools ,Models, Theoretical ,California ,Catchment Area, Health ,Fees and Charges ,Rate Setting and Review ,Humans ,Community Health Services ,Health Expenditures ,health care economics and organizations ,Research Article - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To predict the geographical effects of community rating of health insurance premiums on the amount individuals pay for insurance. DATA SOURCES: We estimate premiums and health expenditures for a 5 percent sample of Californians from the 1990 U.S. Census (the Public Use Microdata Sample) and use data from Blue Cross of California to adjust for regional price differences in services. STUDY DESIGN: We use an episodic health simulation model to estimate health expenditures for 975,074 Californians. Because the simulations do not reflect expenditure differences due to price variation in cost of services, we adjust these data for relative price differences by county. This leaves us with a sample of Californians for whom we have estimated health expenditures. We then compute average expenditures within areas of different sizes (all California, two regions, within counties) to estimate community-rated premiums. We then compare these premiums with actual expenditures on a county-by-county basis. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: With a single California-wide premium, rural residents pay premiums that exceed their use of care, while urban residents pay premiums that are less than their use of care. These transfers are substantial. Dividing California into regional risk pools at the county level still results in poorer communities providing substantial subsidies to their more wealthy counterparts. CONCLUSIONS: Mandated community rating of premiums in a heterogeneous state such as California results in large unintended transfers of wealth from poorer, rural communities to urban, wealthier communities. Allowing premiums to vary with the regional cost of medical care would eliminate some of the transfers without sacrificing the benefits of community rating. Subsidies to low-income families could also effectively mitigate this redistribution. UTILITY: This article points out some potentially regressive consequences of geographic community rating and suggests ways to mitigate them.
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- 1997
4. Lack of progress in labor as a reason for cesarean.
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Gifford DS, Morton SC, Fiske M, Keesey J, Keeler E, Kahn KL, Gifford, D S, Morton, S C, Fiske, M, Keesey, J, Keeler, E, and Kahn, K L
- Published
- 2000
5. The effect of alternative case-mix adjustments on mortality differences between municipal and voluntary hospitals in New York City
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Shapiro, M F, Park, R E, Keesey, J, and Brook, R H
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Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Adolescent ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Comorbidity ,Middle Aged ,Severity of Illness Index ,Sampling Studies ,Logistic Models ,Patient Admission ,Child, Preschool ,Humans ,Female ,New York City ,Health Services Research ,Hospital Mortality ,Child ,Hospitals, Municipal ,Hospitals, Voluntary ,Diagnosis-Related Groups ,Research Article ,Aged ,Quality of Health Care - Abstract
OBJECTIVE. This study investigated how mortality differences between groups of municipal versus voluntary hospitals are affected by case-mix adjustment methods. DATA SOURCES AND STUDY SETTING. We sampled about 10,000 random admissions from administrative data for patients hospitalized with each of six conditions in hospitals in New York City during 1984-1987. STUDY DESIGN. We developed logistic regression models adjusting for age and gender, for principal diagnosis, for "limited other diagnoses" (secondary diagnoses that were very unlikely to result from care received), for "full other diagnoses" (all secondary diagnoses irrespective of whether they might have been due to care received), for previous diagnoses, and for other variables. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS. For five of the six conditions, when the limited other diagnoses adjustment was used there was higher mortality in the municipal hospitals (p < .05), with 3.3 additional deaths/100 admissions for myocardial infarction, 1.2 for pneumonia, 8.3 for stroke, 2.8 for head trauma, and 0.8 for hip repair. However, when the full other diagnoses adjustment was used, differences remained significant only for stroke (4.3 additional deaths/100 admissions) and head trauma (1.3) (p < .05). CONCLUSIONS. Estimates of mortality differences between New York City municipal and voluntary hospitals are substantially affected by which secondary diagnoses are used in case-mix adjustment. Judgments of quality should not be based on administrative data unless models can be developed that validly capture level of sickness at admission.
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- 1994
6. Contemporary opinions about Mary Walker: A shy pioneer of therapeutic neurology
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Keesey, J. C., primary
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- 1998
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7. Mortality differences between New York City municipal and voluntary hospitals, for selected conditions.
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Shapiro, M F, primary, Park, R E, additional, Keesey, J, additional, and Brook, R H, additional
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- 1993
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8. Thymus, antibodies, and myasthenia
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Keesey, J. C., primary
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- 1992
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9. Carotid Endarterectomy for Elderly Patients
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BROOK, R. H., primary, PARK, R. E., additional, CHASSIN, M. R., additional, KOSECOFF, J., additional, KEESEY, J., additional, and SOLOMON, D. H., additional
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- 1991
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10. Eye muscles in myasthenia gravis
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Keesey, J. C., primary
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- 1991
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11. The quality of pharmacologic care for adults in the United States.
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Shrank WH, Asch SM, Adams J, Setodji C, Kerr EA, Keesey J, Malik S, and McGlynn EA
- Abstract
BACKGROUND:: Despite rising annual expenditures for prescription drugs, little systematic information is available concerning the quality of pharmacologic care for adults in the United States. We evaluated how frequently appropriate pharmacologic care is ordered in a national sample of U.S. residents. METHODS:: The RAND/UCLA Modified Delphi process was used to select quality-of-care indicators for adults across 30 chronic and acute conditions and preventive care. One hundred thirty-three pharmacologic quality-of-care indicators were identified. We interviewed a random sample of adults living in 12 metropolitan areas in the United States by telephone and received consent to obtain copies of their medical records for the most recent 2-year period. We abstracted patient medical records and evaluated 4 domains of the prescribing process that encompassed the entire pharmacologic care experience: appropriate medication prescribing (underuse), avoidance of inappropriate medications (overuse), medication monitoring, and medication education and documentation. A total of 3457 participants were eligible for at least 1 quality indicator, and 10,739 eligible events were evaluated. We constructed aggregate scores and studied whether patient, insurance, and community factors impact quality. RESULTS:: Participants received 61.9% of recommended pharmacologic care overall (95% confidence interval 60.3-63.5%). Performance was lowest in education and documentation (46.2%); medication monitoring (54.7%) and underuse of appropriate medications (62.6%) performance were higher. Performance was best for avoiding inappropriate medications (83.5%). Patient race and health services utilization were associated with modest quality differences, while insurance status was not. CONCLUSIONS:: Significant deficits in the quality of pharmacologic care were seen for adults in the United States, with large shortfalls associated with underuse of appropriate medications. Strategies to measure and improve pharmacologic care quality ought to be considered, especially as we initiate a prescription drug benefit for seniors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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12. Measuring the effectiveness of a collaborative for quality improvement in pediatric asthma care: does implementing the Chronic Care Model improve processes and outcomes of care?
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Mangione-Smith R, Schonlau M, Chan KS, Keesey J, Rosen M, Louis TA, and Keeler E
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OBJECTIVE: To examine whether a collaborative to improve pediatric asthma care positively influenced processes and outcomes of that care. METHODS: Medical record abstractions and patient/parent interviews were used to make pre- and postintervention comparisons of patients at 9 sites that participated in the evaluation of a Breakthrough Series (BTS) collaborative for asthma care with patients at 4 matched control sites. SETTING: Thirteen primary care clinics. PATIENTS: Three hundred eighty-five asthmatic children who received care at an intervention clinic and 126 who received care at a control clinic (response rate = 76%). INTERVENTION: Three 2-day educational sessions for quality improvement teams from participating sites followed by 3 'action' periods over the course of a year. RESULTS: The overall process of asthma care improved significantly in the intervention group but remained unchanged in the control group (change in process score +13% vs 0%; P < .0001). Patients in the intervention group were more likely than patients in the control group to monitor their peak flows (70% vs 43%; P < .0001) and to have a written action plan (41% vs 22%; P = .001). Patients in the intervention group had better general health-related quality of life (scale score 80 vs 77; P = .05) and asthma-specific quality of life related to treatment problems (scale score 89 vs 85; P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: The intervention improved some important aspects of processes of care that have previously been linked to better outcomes. Patients who received care at intervention clinics also reported higher general and asthma-specific quality of life. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2005
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13. Quality of health care for women: a demonstration of the Quality Assessment Tools System.
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McGlynn EA, Kerr EA, Adams J, Keesey J, and Asch SM
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Consumers, purchasers, and regulators are seeking information on quality for a variety of purposes. To address these demands, methods are required that are flexible in meeting the information needs of different audiences. OBJECTIVES: To test a new clinically detailed, comprehensive approach to quality measurement called Quality Assessment (QA) Tools. DESIGN: Quality measures were developed for women ages 18 to 50 years for preventive care and 17 clinical areas that included chronic and acute health problems. A stratified random sample of women enrolled in 1 of 2 health plans in 1996 to 1997 was drawn and data abstracted from the medical records of all their providers for a 2-year period. FINDINGS: We evaluated quality for 758 women in 2 managed care plans. Quality of care varied substantially depending on the dimension being examined. For example, acute care was significantly better than chronic or preventive care. Quality was highest for follow-up care and lowest for treatment in both plans. Quality by modality ranged from approximately 90% for referral or admission to 16% for education and counseling. We found significant differences between the plans in the quality of care for 7 of the 17 conditions studied. CONCLUSION: The QA Tools system offers an alternative approach to evaluating health system performance. Potential advantages include the richness of the information produced by the system, the ability to create summary scores for consumers and purchasers, and the system-level performance information for use in quality improvement activities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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14. Variations in the care of HIV-infected adults in the United States: results from the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study.
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Shapiro MF, Morton SC, McCaffrey DF, Senterfitt JW, Fleishman JA, Perlman JF, Athey LA, Keesey JW, Goldman DP, Berry SH, Bozzette SA, Shapiro, M F, Morton, S C, McCaffrey, D F, Senterfitt, J W, Fleishman, J A, Perlman, J F, Athey, L A, Keesey, J W, and Goldman, D P
- Abstract
Context: Studies of selected populations suggest that not all persons infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) receive adequate care.Objective: To examine variations in the care received by a national sample representative of the adult US population infected with HIV.Design: Cohort study that consisted of 3 interviews from January 1996 to January 1998 conducted by the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Consortium.Patients and Setting: Multistage probability sample of 2864 respondents (68% of those targeted for sampling), who represent the 231400 persons at least 18 years old, with known HIV infection receiving medical care in the 48 contiguous United States in early 1996 in facilities other than emergency departments, the military, or prisons. The first follow-up consisted of 2466 respondents and the second had 2267 (65% of all surviving sampled subjects).Main Outcome Measures: Service utilization (<2 ambulatory visits, at least 1 emergency department visit that did not lead to hospitalization, at least 1 hospitalization) and medication utilization (receipt of antiretroviral therapy and prophylaxis against Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia).Results: Inadequate HIV care was commonly reported at the time of interviews conducted from early 1996 to early 1997 but declined to varying degrees by late 1997. Twenty-three percent of patients initially and 15% of patients subsequently had emergency department visits that did not lead to hospitalization, 30% initially and 26% subsequently of those who had CD4 cell counts below 0.20 x 10(9)/L did not receive P carinii pneumonia prophylaxis, and 41% initially and 15% subsequently of those who had CD4 cell counts below 0.50 x 10(9)/L did not receive antiretroviral therapy (protease inhibitor or nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor). Inferior patterns of care were seen for many of these measures in blacks and Latinos compared with whites, the uninsured and Medicaid-insured compared with the privately insured, women compared with men, and other risk and/or exposure groups compared with men who had sex with men even after CD4 cell count adjustment. With multivariate adjustment, many differences remained statistically significant. Even by early 1998, fewer blacks, women, and uninsured and Medicaid-insured persons had started taking antiretroviral medication (CD4 cell count adjusted P values <.001 to <.005).Conclusions: Access to care improved from 1996 to 1998 but remained suboptimal. Blacks, Latinos, women, the uninsured, and Medicaid-insured all had less desirable patterns of care. Strategies to ensure optimal care for patients with HIV requires identifying the causes of deficiency and addressing these important shortcomings in care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1999
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15. IMMUNOREGULATION OF TOTAL IgC SYNTHESIS IN MYASTHENIA GRAVIS.
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Kelley, R. E., Keesey, J. C., Goymerac, V., Larrick, S. B., Kebo, D., and Buffkin, D.
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- 1981
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16. SACCADE FATIGUE AND RESPONSE TO EDROPHONIUM FOR THE DIAGNOSIS OF MYASTHENIA GRAVIS.
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Baloh, R. W. and Keesey, J. C.
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- 1976
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17. Medicaid health maintenance organizations. Can they reduce program spending?
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Buchanan, J L, Leibowitz, A, and Keesey, J
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- 1996
18. Association of HLA-B8, DRw3, and Anti-Acetylcholine Receptor Antibodies in Myasthenia Gravis.
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Naeim, F., Keesey, J. C., Herrmann, C., Lindstrom, J., Zeller, E., and Walford, R. L.
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- 1978
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19. Carotid endarterectomy for elderly patients: predicting complications.
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Brook, Robert H., Park, Rolla Edward, Chassin, Mark R., Kosecoff, Jacqueline, Keesey, Joan, Solomon, David H., Brook, R H, Park, R E, Chassin, M R, Kosecoff, J, Keesey, J, and Solomon, D H
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ENDARTERECTOMY ,MORTALITY ,CAROTID artery surgery ,AGE distribution ,CEREBROVASCULAR disease ,COMPARATIVE studies ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MYOCARDIAL infarction ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,EVALUATION research ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Objective: To determine whether the complication or death rate from carotid endarterectomy can be predicted from hospital and physician structural variables, such as the hospital's teaching status or the number of endarterectomies done by the surgeon per year.Design: Survey of medical records. After controlling for the severity of the patient's condition on the basis of data in the medical record at the time of the endarterectomy, regression analyses were used to predict the postoperative stroke, heart attack, and 30-day death rate as a function of patient, physician, and hospital characteristics.Setting: Three geographic areas (states or large parts of states; average population, 3 million) in the United States.Patients: Random sample of 1302 patients 65 years of age or older having carotid endarterectomy in 1981.Intervention: Carotid endarterectomy.Measurements and Main Results: Of 1302 patients, 11.3% had a postoperative stroke or heart attack or died within 30 days of the operation. Patient age, race, income, and gender; physician volume, board certification status, and age; and hospital size, for-profit status, ownership, and teaching status were not significantly related to the postoperative complication or death rate. If the surgeon was a graduate of a foreign, but not a Western European or Canadian, medical school, however, the average complication or death rate rose from 10.4% to 19.6% (P less than 0.05).Conclusions: The effectiveness of carotid endarterectomy depends heavily on its complication rate. Because complications after surgery cannot, in general, be predicted from structural variables, referring physicians cannot rely solely on the surgeon's experience and qualifications when recommending a carotid endarterectomy. The surgeon's and the hospital's actual postoperative complication and death rate should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1990
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20. The appropriateness of hysterectomy. A comparison of care in seven health plans. Health Maintenance Organization Quality of Care Consortium.
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Bernstein SJ, McGlynn EA, Siu AL, Roth CP, Sherwood MJ, Keesey JW, Kosecoff J, Hicks NR, Brook RH, Bernstein, S J, McGlynn, E A, Siu, A L, Roth, C P, Sherwood, M J, Keesey, J W, Kosecoff, J, Hicks, N R, and Brook, R H
- Abstract
Objective: To develop and test a method for comparing the appropriateness of hysterectomy use in different health plans.Design: Retrospective cohort study.Setting: Seven managed care organizations.Patients: Random sample of all nonemergency, non-oncological hysterectomies performed in the seven managed care organizations over a 1-year period. Patients who were not continuously enrolled in a plan for 2 years prior to their hysterectomy were excluded.Main Outcome Measures: Proportion of women undergoing hysterectomy in each plan for inappropriate clinical reasons according to ratings derived from a panel of managed care physicians.Results: Overall, about 16% of women underwent hysterectomy for reasons judged to be clinically inappropriate. Only one plan had significantly more hysterectomies rated inappropriate compared with the group mean (27%, unadjusted). Adjusting for age and race did not affect the rankings of the plans and had little effect on the numeric results.Conclusion: The rates of inappropriate use of hysterectomies are similar to those for other procedures and vary to a small degree among health plans. This information may be useful to purchasers when they consider which health plans to offer their employees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1993
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21. Explaining variations in hospital death rates. Randomness, severity of illness, quality of care.
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Park, R E, Brook, R H, Kosecoff, J, Keesey, J, Rubenstein, L, Keeler, E, Kahn, K L, Rogers, W H, and Chassin, M R
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MYOCARDIAL infarction-related mortality ,HOSPITAL statistics ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEART failure ,HOSPITALS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDICAL care research ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MEDICAL records ,MEDICARE ,MORTALITY ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICAL sampling ,EVALUATION research ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,SEVERITY of illness index - Abstract
We used administrative (Part A Medicare) data to identify a representative sample of 1126 patients with congestive heart failure and 1150 with acute myocardial infarction in hospitals with significant unexpectedly high inpatient, age-sex-race-disease-specific death rates ("targeted") vs all other ("untargeted") hospitals in four states. Although death rates in targeted hospitals were 5.0 to 10.9 higher per 100 admissions than in untargeted hospitals, 56% to 82% of the excess could result from purely random variation. Differences in the quality of the process of care (based on a medical record review) could not explain the remaining statistically significant differences in mortality. Comparing targeted hospitals with subsets of untargeted ones, eg, those with lower than expected death rates, did not affect this conclusion. Severity of illness explained up to 2.8 excess deaths per 100 admissions for patients with myocardial infarction. Identifying hospitals that provide poor-quality care based on administrative data and single-year death rates is unlikely; targeting based on time periods greater than 1 year may be better. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 1990
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22. Myasthenia gravis
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Jaretzki, A., Barohn, R. J., Ernstoff, R. M., Kaminski, H. J., Keesey, J. C., Penn, A. S., and Sanders, D. B.
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- 2000
23. Myasthenia Gravis: Recommendations for Clinical Research Standards
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Jaretzki, A., Barohn, R. J., Ernstoff, R. M., Kaminski, H. J., Keesey, J. C., Penn, A. S., and Sanders, D. B.
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- 2000
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24. Cloning of the trp-1 gene from neurospora crassa by complementation of a trpC mutation in Escherichia coli
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Keesey, J K and Demoss, J A
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Studies with a hybrid plasmid containing 4.0 kilobase pairs of Neurospora crassa DNA cloned into plasmid pBR322 indicated that the plasmid restored to prototrophy a trpC mutant of Escherichia coli which lacked phosphoribosyl anthranilate isomerase but not a trpC mutant which lacked indole glycerol phosphate synthetase, that the relevant transcription was initiated at a promoter within the N. crassa DNA, and that the phosphoribosyl anthranilate isomerase could be specified by a subcloned segment of the original DNA.
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- 1982
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25. The product of the his4 gene cluster in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. A trifunctional polypeptide.
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Keesey, J K, Bigelis, R, and Fink, G R
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The his4 region of yeast encodes the information for the third (phosphoribosyl-AMP cyclohydrolase), second (phosphoribosyl-ATP pyrophosphohydrolase), and tenth (histidinol dehydrogenase) steps in the histidine biosynthetic pathway. These three activities co-purify with a single protein which has a subunit molecular weight of 95,000 (95,000 protein), as determined by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide gels in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. Extracts of yeast strains which carry nonsense or deletion mutations in various portions of the his4 region, purified in parallel by affinity chromatography on AMP-agarose columns, were examined on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis slabs. All such mutant extracts examined were found to lack the 95,000 protein found in a strain carrying a wild type his4 allele. The presence of a protease inhibitor, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, during the purification of the trifunctional enzyme prevented the degradation of the 95,000 protein to polypeptides of lower molecular weight. Monospecific antibody prepared against the 95,000 protein removed all three of the activities specified by his4 from solution; active 95,000 protein was recovered in the resuspended immunoprecipitates. All this evidence shows that the product of the his4 region is a trifunctional, 95,000-dalton protein. Preliminary evidence from two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, NH2-terminal analysis, and gel filtration column chromatography indicates that the native trifunctional enzyme is a dimer of identical 95,000-dalton subunits.
- Published
- 1979
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26. Differences among hospitals in Medicare patient mortality
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Chassin, M R, Park, R E, Lohr, K N, Keesey, J, and Brook, R H
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Inpatients ,Time Factors ,Quality Assurance, Health Care ,Length of Stay ,Medicare ,Hospitals ,Patient Discharge ,United States ,Surgical Procedures, Operative ,Humans ,Mortality ,Research Article ,Aged ,Probability - Abstract
Using hospital discharge abstract data for fiscal year 1984 for all acute care hospitals treating Medicare patients (age greater than or equal to 65), we measured four mortality rates: inpatient deaths, deaths within 30 days after discharge, and deaths within two fixed periods following admission (30 days, and the 95th percentile length of stay for each condition). The metric of interest was the probability that a hospital would have as many deaths as it did (taking age, race, and sex into account). Differences among hospitals in inpatient death rates were large and significant (p less than .05) for 22 of 48 specific conditions studied and for all conditions together; among these 22 "high-variation" conditions, medical conditions accounted for far more deaths than did surgical conditions. We compared pairs of conditions in terms of hospital rankings by probability of observed numbers of inpatient deaths; we found relatively low correlations (Spearman correlation coefficients of 0.3 or lower) for most comparisons except between a few surgical conditions. When we compared different pairs of the four death measures on their rankings of hospitals by probabilities of the observed numbers of deaths, the correlations were moderate to high (Spearman correlation coefficients of 0.54 to 0.99). Hospitals with low probabilities of the number of observed deaths were not distributed randomly geographically; a small number of states had significantly more than their share of these hospitals (p less than .01). Information from hospital discharge abstract data is insufficient to determine the extent to which differences in severity of illness or quality of care account for this marked variability, so data on hospital death rates cannot now be used to draw inferences about quality of care. The magnitude of variability in death rates and the geographic clustering of facilities with low probabilities, however, both argue for further study of hospital death rates. These data may prove most useful as a screening mechanism to identify patterns of potentially poor quality of care. Careful choice of the mortality measure used is needed, however, to maximize the probability of identifying those hospitals, and only those hospitals, warranting more in-depth review.
- Published
- 1989
27. Acetylcholine Receptor Antibody Titer and HLA-B8 Antigen in Myasthenia Gravis
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Keesey, J., primary, Naiem, F., additional, Lindstrom, J., additional, Roe, D., additional, Herrmann, C., additional, and Walford, R., additional
- Published
- 1982
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28. Computed tomography of the anterior mediastinum in myasthenia gravis. A radiologic-pathologic correlative study.
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Fon, G T, primary, Bein, M E, additional, Mancuso, A A, additional, Keesey, J C, additional, Lupetin, A R, additional, and Wong, W S, additional
- Published
- 1982
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29. Autoreactivity Between Lymphocytes and Thymus Cells in Myasthenia Gravis
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Opelz, G., primary, Keesey, J., additional, Glovsky, M. M., additional, and Gale, R. P., additional
- Published
- 1978
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30. Familial Neurological Disease Associated With Spongiform Encephalopathy
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Rosenthal, N. P., primary, Keesey, J., additional, Crandall, B., additional, and Brown, W. J., additional
- Published
- 1976
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31. Detection of thymoma in myasthenia gravis
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Keesey, J., primary, Bein, M., additional, Mink, J., additional, Sample, F., additional, Sarti, D., additional, Mulder, D., additional, Herrmann, C., additional, and Peter, J. B., additional
- Published
- 1980
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32. Successful Plasmapheresis for Fulminant Myasthenia Gravis During Pregnancy
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Levine, S. E., primary and Keesey, J. C., additional
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- 1986
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33. THE ROLE OF CT IN THE RADIOLOGIC INVESTIGATION OF THYMOMA
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Mink, J. I., primary, Bein, M. E., additional, Keesey, J., additional, Sukov, R., additional, Herrmann, C., additional, Sample, W. F., additional, and Mulder, D., additional
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- 1978
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34. Detection of thymoma in myasthenia gravis
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AITA, J. F., primary, KEESEY, J., additional, BEIN, M., additional, MULDER, D., additional, and HERRMANN, C., additional
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- 1981
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35. The Quality of Health Care for Veterans Compared with Other Patients.
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Asch, S. M., McGlynn, L. A., Hogan, M. M., Hayward, R. A., Shekelle, P., Rubenstein, L., Keesey, J., Adams, J., and Kerr, E. A.
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MEDICAL care of veterans ,HEALTH facilities ,MEDICAL centers ,PATIENTS - Abstract
The article presents information about a study which compares the quality of care for patients in the veterans health administration and patients in a national sample in the question and answer form. The U.S. Veterans Health Administration (VHA) provides comprehensive health care to veterans through VHA-run medical centers. Since the early 1990s, VHA has worked to improve the quality of the health care it delivers. An important part of that effort has been a program that measures health care quality and holds administrators of VHA medical centers responsible for maintaining high-quality care at their institutions.
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- 2004
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36. Ischemic Contracture in Multiple Carnitine Acyltransferase Deficiencies.
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ANDERSON, T. L., KAR, N., and KEESEY, J.
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- 1982
37. Who is at greatest risk for receiving poor-quality health care?
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Asch SM, Kerr EA, Keesey J, Adams JL, Setodji CM, Malik S, and McGlynn EA
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- 2006
38. The quality of ambulatory care delivered to children in the United States.
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Mangione-Smith R, DeCristofaro AH, Setodji CM, Keesey J, Klein DJ, Adams JL, Schuster MA, and McGlynn EA
- Published
- 2007
39. The quality of health care delivered to adults in the United States.
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McGlynn EA, Asch SM, Adams J, Keesey J, Hicks J, DeCristofaro A, and Kerr EA
- Published
- 2003
40. Cost implications to health care payers of improving glucose management among adults with type 2 diabetes.
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Nuckols TK, McGlynn EA, Adams J, Lai J, Go MH, Keesey J, and Aledort JE
- Subjects
- Costs and Cost Analysis, Drug Utilization, Glycated Hemoglobin analysis, Humans, Hypoglycemic Agents economics, Hypoglycemic Agents therapeutic use, Insurance Claim Review statistics & numerical data, Models, Economic, Patient Compliance statistics & numerical data, Quality of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Blood Glucose, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 economics, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 therapy, Health Expenditures statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective. To assess the cost implications to payers of improving glucose management among adults with type 2 diabetes. Data Source/Study Setting. Medical-record data from the Community Quality Index (CQI) study (1996-2002), pharmaceutical claims from four Massachusetts health plans (2004-2006), Medicare Fee Schedule (2009), published literature. Study Design. Probability tree depicting glucose management over 1 year. Data Collection/Extraction Methods. We determined how frequently CQI study subjects received recommended care processes and attained Health Care Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) treatment goals, estimated utilization of visits and medications associated with recommended care, assigned costs based on utilization, and then modeled how hospitalization rates, costs, and goal attainment would change if all recommended care was provided. Principal Findings. Relative to current care, improved glucose management would cost U.S.$327 (U.S.$192-711 in sensitivity analyses) more per person with diabetes annually, largely due to antihyperglycemic medications. Cost-effectiveness to payers, defined as incremental annual cost per patient newly attaining any one of three HEDIS goals, would be U.S.$1,128; including glycemic crises reduces this to U.S.$555-1,021. Conclusions. The cost of improving glucose management appears modest relative to diabetes-related health care expenditures. The incremental cost per patient newly attaining HEDIS goals enables payers to consider costs as well as outcomes that are linked to future profitability., (© Health Research and Educational Trust.)
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- 2011
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41. Cost implications of improving blood pressure management among U.S. adults.
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Nuckols TK, Aledort JE, Adams J, Lai J, Go MH, Keesey J, and McGlynn E
- Subjects
- Antihypertensive Agents economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Counseling economics, Drug Utilization, Humans, Life Style, Models, Economic, Quality of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Severity of Illness Index, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Blood Pressure, Health Services statistics & numerical data, Hypertension economics, Hypertension therapy, Office Visits statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the cost-effectiveness of improving blood pressure management from the payer perspective., Data Source/study Setting: Medical record data for 4,500 U.S. adults with hypertension from the Community Quality Index (CQI) study (1996-2002), pharmaceutical claims from four Massachusetts health plans (2004-2006), Medicare fee schedule (2009), and published literature., Study Design: A probability tree depicted blood pressure management over 2 years., Data Collection/extraction Methods: We determined how frequently CQI study subjects received recommended care processes and attained accepted treatment goals, estimated utilization of visits and medications associated with recommended care, assigned costs based on utilization, and then modeled how hospitalization rates, costs, and goal attainment would change if all recommended care was provided., Principal Findings: Relative to current care, improved care would cost payers U.S.$170 more per hypertensive person annually (2009 dollars). The incremental cost per person newly attaining treatment goals over 2 years would be U.S.$1,696 overall, U.S.$801 for moderate hypertension, and U.S.$850 for severe hypertension. Among people with severe hypertension, blood pressure would decline substantially but seldom reach goal; the incremental cost per person attaining a relaxed goal (≤ stage 1) would be U.S.$185., Conclusions: Under the Health Care Effectiveness Data and Information Set program, which monitors the attainment of blood pressure treatment goals, payers will find it slightly more cost-effective to improve care for moderate than severe hypertension. Having a secondary, relaxed goal would substantially increase payers' incentive to improve care for severe hypertension., (© Health Research and Educational Trust.)
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- 2011
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42. The relationship between multimorbidity and patients' ratings of communication.
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Fung CH, Setodji CM, Kung FY, Keesey J, Asch SM, Adams J, and McGlynn EA
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Reimbursement, Incentive, Chronic Disease therapy, Communication, Comorbidity, Patient Satisfaction, Physician-Patient Relations
- Abstract
Background: The growing interest in pay-for-performance and other quality improvement programs has generated concerns about potential performance measurement penalties for providers who care for more complex patients, such as patients with more chronic conditions. Few data are available on how multimorbidity affects common performance metrics., Objective: To examine the relationship between multimorbidity and patients' ratings of communication, a common performance metric., Design: Cross-sectional study, Setting: Nationally representative sample of U.S. residents, Participants: A total of 15,709 noninstitutionalized adults living in the United States participated in a telephone interview., Measurements: We used 2 different measures of multimorbidity: 1) "individual conditions" approach disregards similarities/concordance among chronic conditions and 2) "condition-groups" approach considers similarities/concordance among conditions. We used a composite measure of patients' ratings of patient-physician communication., Results: A higher number of individual conditions is associated with lower ratings of communication, although the magnitude of the relationship is small (adjusted average communication scores: 0 conditions, 12.20; 1-2 conditions, 12.06; 3+ conditions, 11.90; scale range 5 = worst, 15 = best). This relationship remains statistically significant when concordant relationships among conditions are considered (0 condition groups 12.19; 1-2 condition groups 12.03; 3+ condition groups 11.94)., Conclusions: In our nationally representative sample, patients with more chronic conditions gave their doctors modestly lower patient-doctor communication scores than their healthier counterparts. Accounting for concordance among conditions does not widen the difference in communication scores. Concerns about performance measurement penalty related to patient complexity cannot be entirely addressed by adjusting for multimorbidity. Future studies should focus on other aspects of clinical complexity (e.g., severity, specific combinations of conditions).
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- 2008
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43. The most vulnerable synapse: historic aspects of neuromuscular junction disorders.
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Keesey J
- Subjects
- History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Medical Illustration, Neuromuscular Junction Diseases physiopathology, Photography, Synapses ultrastructure, Neuromuscular Junction Diseases history, Neuromuscular Junction Diseases pathology, Synapses pathology
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- 2008
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44. Something in the Blood? A history of the autoimmune hypothesis regarding myasthenia gravis.
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Keesey J and Aarli J
- Subjects
- Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System etiology, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System history, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System physiopathology, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Myasthenia Gravis etiology, Myasthenia Gravis physiopathology, Receptors, Cholinergic immunology, Risk Factors, Thymus Gland immunology, Myasthenia Gravis history
- Abstract
From the first descriptions of myasthenia gravis (MG) in the late nineteenth century, speculation about the cause of MG has centered on the possibility of some curare-like factor circulating in the blood. The transfer of transient myasthenic symptoms from a myasthenic mother to her newborn reinforced this speculation. However, it was not until 1960, when William Nastuk and coworkers noted that serum complement correlated with the clinical course in MG, and Arthur Strauss and colleagues described antiskeletal muscle antibodies in the sera of some MG patients, that a paradigm shift occurred from prior exclusive focus on the neuromuscular junction to a broader consideration of the relevance of immunological mechanisms in myasthenia. These findings coincided with an even greater scientific revolution pioneered by Macfarlane Burnet towards cell-mediated and away from chemical immunology. The dominant immunological question of the decade 1955-1965, however, was whether human autoimmune diseases actually existed. During the next decade, 1965-1975, various diseases were accepted as being autoimmune in character, and although comparatively rare, MG became prominent among them because of a known antigen, the acetylcholine receptor, and an excellent experimental model.
- Published
- 2007
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45. Can a chronic care model collaborative reduce heart disease risk in patients with diabetes?
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Vargas RB, Mangione CM, Asch S, Keesey J, Rosen M, Schonlau M, and Keeler EB
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- Aged, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 complications, Female, Humans, Long-Term Care methods, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases prevention & control, Cooperative Behavior, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 therapy, Models, Cardiovascular
- Abstract
Background: There is a need to identify effective practical interventions to decrease cardiovascular disease risk in patients with diabetes., Objective: We examine the impact of participation in a collaborative implementing the chronic care model (CCM) on the reduction of cardiovascular disease risk in patients with diabetes., Design: Controlled pre- and postintervention study., Patients/participants: Persons with diabetes receiving care at 13 health care organizations exposed to the CCM collaborative and controls receiving care in nonexposed sites., Measurements and Main Results: Ten-year risk of cardiovascular disease; determined using a modified United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study risk engine score. A total number of 613 patients from CCM intervention sites and 557 patients from usual care control sites met the inclusion criteria. The baseline mean 10-year risk of cardiovascular disease was 31% for both the intervention group and the control group. Participants in both groups had improved blood pressure, lipid levels, and HbA1c levels during the observation period. Random intercept hierarchical regression models showed that the intervention group had a 2.1% (95% CI -3.7%, -0.5%) greater reduction in predicted risk for future cardiovascular events when compared to the control group. This would result in a reduced risk of one cardiovascular disease event for every 48 patients exposed to the intervention., Conclusions: Over a 1-year interval, this collaborative intervention using the CCM lowered the cardiovascular disease risk factors of patients with diabetes who were cared for in the participating organization's settings. Further work could enhance the impact of this promising multifactorial intervention on cardiovascular disease risk reduction.
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- 2007
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46. The quality of obstructive lung disease care for adults in the United States as measured by adherence to recommended processes.
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Mularski RA, Asch SM, Shrank WH, Kerr EA, Setodji CM, Adams JL, Keesey J, and McGlynn EA
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- Adult, Aged, Delivery of Health Care standards, Delivery of Health Care statistics & numerical data, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Quality Indicators, Health Care, Socioeconomic Factors, United States, Urban Population, Asthma therapy, Guideline Adherence standards, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive therapy, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: The extent to which patients with obstructive lung disease receive recommended processes of care is largely unknown. We assessed the quality of care delivered to a national sample of the US population., Methods: We extracted medical records for 2 prior years from consenting participants in a random telephone survey in 12 communities and measured the quality of care provided with 45 explicit, process-based quality indicators for asthma and COPD developed using the modified Delphi expert panel methodology. Multivariate logistic regression evaluated effects of patient demographics, insurance, and other characteristics on the quality of health care., Results: We identified 2,394 care events among 260 asthma participants and 1,664 events among 169 COPD participants. Overall, participants received 55.2% of recommended care for obstructive lung disease. Asthma patients received 53.5% of recommended care; routine management was better (66.9%) than exacerbation care (47.8%). COPD patients received 58.0% of recommended care but received better exacerbation care (60.4%) than routine care (46.1%). Variation was seen in mode of care with considerable deficits in documenting recommended aspects of medical history (41.4%) and use of diagnostic studies (40.1%). Modeling demonstrated modest variation between racial groups, geographic areas, insurance types, and other characteristics., Conclusions: Americans with obstructive lung disease received only 55% of recommended care. The deficits and variability in the quality of care for obstructive lung disease present ample opportunity for quality improvement. Future endeavors should assess reasons for low adherence to recommended processes of care and assess barriers in delivery of care.
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- 2006
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47. How electric fish became sources of acetylcholine receptor.
- Author
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Keesey J
- Subjects
- Animals, History, 20th Century, Humans, Macromolecular Substances, Myasthenia Gravis immunology, Myasthenia Gravis physiopathology, Electric Fish, Electric Organ, Muscles immunology, Myasthenia Gravis history, Receptors, Cholinergic
- Abstract
The purpose of this communication is to describe the historical steps by which fish electric organs were eventually determined to be modified motor endplates and therefore a plentiful source of acetylcholine receptor. A brief description of the early history of electric fish concerned with the nature of the discharge will provide the background for studies of the anatomy, embryology, and physiology of electric organs in the nineteenth century that suggested that electric organs were derived from modified muscles. In the twentieth century, transmission between nerve and electric organ was shown to be cholinergic, and because of their size and abundant cholinergic nerve supply, the electric organs of Torpedo and Electrophorus were chosen by biochemists and molecular biologists as possible rich sources of acetylcholine receptor.
- Published
- 2005
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48. Evaluation of a quality improvement collaborative in asthma care: does it improve processes and outcomes of care?
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Schonlau M, Mangione-Smith R, Chan KS, Keesey J, Rosen M, Louis TA, Wu SY, and Keeler E
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- Adult, Child, Cooperative Behavior, Female, Humans, Male, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Asthma therapy, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care standards, Patient Education as Topic
- Abstract
Purpose: We wanted to examine whether a collaborative to improve asthma care influences process and outcomes of care in asthmatic adults., Method: We undertook a preintervention-postintervention evaluation of 185 patients in 6 intervention clinics and 3 matched control sites that participated in the Institute for Healthcare Improvement Breakthrough Series (BTS) Collaborative for asthma care. The intervention consisted of 3, 2-day educational sessions for teams dispatched by participating sites, which were followed by 3 action periods during the course of a year., Results: Overall process of asthma care improved significantly in the intervention compared with the control group (change of 10% vs 1%, P = .003). Patients in the intervention group were more likely to attend educational sessions (20% vs 5%, P = .03). Having a written action plan, setting goals, monitoring peak flow rates, and using long-term asthma medications increased between 2% and 19% (not significant), but asthma-related knowledge was unchanged for the 2 groups. Patients in the BTS Collaborative were significantly more likely to be satisfied with clinician and lay educator communication (62% vs 39%, P = .02). Health-related quality of life, asthma-specific quality of life, number of bed days caused by asthma-related illness, and acute care service use were not significantly different between the 2 groups., Conclusions: The intervention was associated with improved process-of-care measures that have been linked with better outcomes. Patients benefited through increased satisfaction with communication. Follow-up of patients who participated in the intervention may have been too brief to be able to detect significant improvement in health-related outcomes.
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- 2005
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49. Comparison of quality of care for patients in the Veterans Health Administration and patients in a national sample.
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Asch SM, McGlynn EA, Hogan MM, Hayward RA, Shekelle P, Rubenstein L, Keesey J, Adams J, and Kerr EA
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Hospitals, Veterans standards, Humans, Male, Medical Records Systems, Computerized, Quality Indicators, Health Care, United States, Quality of Health Care, United States Department of Veterans Affairs standards
- Abstract
Background: The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has introduced an integrated electronic medical record, performance measurement, and other system changes directed at improving care. Recent comparisons with other delivery systems have been limited to a small set of indicators., Objective: To compare the quality of VHA care with that of care in a national sample by using a comprehensive quality-of-care measure., Design: Cross-sectional comparison., Setting: 12 VHA health care systems and 12 communities., Patients: 596 VHA patients and 992 patients identified through random-digit dialing. All were men older than 35 years of age., Measurements: Between 1997 and 2000, quality was measured by using a chart-based quality instrument consisting of 348 indicators targeting 26 conditions. Results were adjusted for clustering, age, number of visits, and medical conditions., Results: Patients from the VHA scored significantly higher for adjusted overall quality (67% vs. 51%; difference, 16 percentage points [95% CI, 14 to 18 percentage points]), chronic disease care (72% vs. 59%; difference, 13 percentage points [CI, 10 to 17 percentage points]), and preventive care (64% vs. 44%; difference, 20 percentage points [CI, 12 to 28 percentage points]), but not for acute care. The VHA advantage was most prominent in processes targeted by VHA performance measurement (66% vs. 43%; difference, 23 percentage points [CI, 21 to 26 percentage points]) and least prominent in areas unrelated to VHA performance measurement (55% vs. 50%; difference, 5 percentage points [CI, 0 to 10 percentage points])., Limitations: Unmeasured residual differences in patient characteristics, a lower response rate in the national sample, and differences in documentation practices could have contributed to some of the observed differences., Conclusions: Patients from the VHA received higher-quality care according to a broad measure. Differences were greatest in areas where the VHA has established performance measures and actively monitors performance.
- Published
- 2004
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50. Profiling the quality of care in twelve communities: results from the CQI study.
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Kerr EA, McGlynn EA, Adams J, Keesey J, and Asch SM
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Health Services Research, Humans, Preventive Health Services organization & administration, Preventive Health Services standards, United States, Urban Population, Community Health Services standards, Quality of Health Care
- Abstract
Health care quality falls far short of its potential nationally. Because care is delivered locally, improvement strategies should be tailored to community needs. This analysis from the Community Quality Index (CQI) study reports on a comprehensive examination of how effectively care is delivered in twelve metropolitan areas. We find room for improvement in quality overall and in dimensions of preventive, acute, and chronic care in all of these communities; no community was consistently best or worst on the various dimensions. Having concrete estimates of the extent of the gap in performance should stimulate community-based quality improvement efforts.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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