4 results on '"Maksabedian, Ervant J."'
Search Results
2. 'In the Weeds: A Baseline View of Cannabis Use Among Legalizing States and Their Neighbours
- Author
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Pacula, Rosalie, Jacobson, Mireille, and Maksabedian, Ervant J
- Subjects
Adult ,Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Washington ,Colorado ,Adolescent ,Alcohol Drinking ,New Mexico ,Medical Marijuana ,Middle Aged ,Article ,Oregon ,Young Adult ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Marijuana Use ,Aged - Abstract
To describe patterns of cannabis use, the degree of overlap between medicinal and recreational users, and their differential use patterns, modes of consumption and sources of cannabis.An ongoing probability-based internet panel maintained by the market research firm GfK Group.Households in Colorado, Washington, Oregon and New Mexico, USA.A total of 2009 individuals from Washington (n = 787), Oregon (n = 506), Colorado (n = 503) and New Mexico (n = 213). Post stratification sampling weights were provided so that estimates could be made representative of the household population in each of these states. Respondents were aged between 18 and 91 years, with a mean age of 53 years.We compare patterns of cannabis consumption for medicinal and recreational users as well as simultaneous use of alcohol and cannabis. We also examine the extent to which patterns of use differ across states that chose to legalize (Washington and Colorado) and those that did not (New Mexico and Oregon).Rates of life-time medical cannabis use are similar in Colorado and Washington (8.8% and 8.2%) but lower in Oregon and New Mexico (6.5% and 1%). Recreational use is considerably higher than medical use across all states (41%), but highest in Oregon and Washington. Approximately 86% of people who report ever using cannabis for medicinal purposes also use it recreationally. Medical users are more likely to vaporize and consume edibles and report a higher amount (in grams) consumed, and spend more money per month than recreational users. Individuals who use cannabis do not commonly use it with alcohol, irrespective of whether they are consuming cannabis recreationally or medically. Fewer than one in five recreational users report simultaneous use of alcohol and cannabis most or all of the time and fewer than 3% of medicinal users report frequent simultaneous use of alcohol and cannabis.In the United States, the degree of overlap between medicinal and recreational cannabis users is 86%. Medicinal and recreational cannabis users favor different modes and amounts of consumption. Only a small proportion (12%) of cannabis users usually consume cannabis and alcohol simultaneously, while concurrent use is common among recreational users.
- Published
- 2016
3. Resources and Capabilities of the Department of Veterans Affairs to Provide Timely and Accessible Care to Veterans
- Author
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Hussey, Peter S., Ringel, Jeanne S., Sangeeta Ahluwalia, Rebecca Anhang Price, Christine Buttorff, Concannon, Thomas W., Lovejoy, Susan L., Martsolf, Grant R., Rudin, Robert S., Dana Schultz, Sloss, Elizabeth M., Watkins, Katherine E., Daniel Waxman, Melissa Bauman, Brian Briscombe, Broyles, James R., Burns, Rachel M., Chen, Emily K., Amy Soo Jin DeSantis, Liisa Ecola, Fischer, Shira H., Friedberg, Mark W., Gidengil, Courtney A., Ginsburg, Paul B., Timothy Gulden, Carlos Ignacio Gutierrez, Samuel Hirshman, Huang, Christina Y., Ryan Kandrack, Amii Kress, Leuschner, Kristin J., Sarah MacCarthy, Maksabedian, Ervant J., Sean Mann, Luke Joseph Matthews, Linnea Warren May, Nishtha Mishra, Lisa Miyashiro, Muchow, Ashley N., Jason Nelson, Diana Naranjo, Hanlon, Claire E. O., Francesca Pillemer, Zachary Predmore, Rachel Ross, Teague Ruder, Rutter, Carolyn M., Lori Uscher-Pines, Vaiana, Mary E., Vesely, Joseph V., Hosek, Susan D., and Farmer, Carrie M.
- Subjects
humanities ,health care economics and organizations ,Military Health - Abstract
The Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 addressed the need for access to timely, high-quality health care for veterans. Section 201 of the legislation called for an independent assessment of various aspects of veterans' health care. The RAND Corporation was tasked with an assessment of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) current and projected health care capabilities and resources. An examination of data from a variety of sources, along with a survey of VA medical facility leaders, revealed the breadth and depth of VA resources and capabilities: fiscal resources, workforce and human resources, physical infrastructure, interorganizational relationships, and information resources. The assessment identified barriers to the effective use of these resources and capabilities. Analysis of data on access to VA care and the quality of that care showed that almost all veterans live within 40 miles of a VA health facility, but fewer have access to VA specialty care. Veterans usually receive care within 14 days of their desired appointment date, but wait times vary considerably across VA facilities. VA has long played a national leadership role in measuring the quality of health care. The assessment showed that VA health care quality was as good or better on most measures compared with other health systems, but quality performance lagged at some VA facilities. VA will require more resources and capabilities to meet a projected increase in veterans' demand for VA care over the next five years. Options for increasing capacity include accelerated hiring, full nurse practice authority, and expanded use of telehealth.
4. Resources and Capabilities of the Department of Veterans Affairs to Provide Timely and Accessible Care to Veterans.
- Author
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Hussey PS, Ringel JS, Ahluwalia S, Price RA, Buttorff C, Concannon TW, Lovejoy SL, Martsolf GR, Rudin RS, Schultz D, Sloss EM, Watkins KE, Waxman D, Bauman M, Briscombe B, Broyles JR, Burns RM, Chen EK, DeSantis AS, Ecola L, Fischer SH, Friedberg MW, Gidengil CA, Ginsburg PB, Gulden T, Gutierrez CI, Hirshman S, Huang CY, Kandrack R, Kress A, Leuschner KJ, MacCarthy S, Maksabedian EJ, Mann S, Matthews LJ, May LW, Mishra N, Miyashiro L, Muchow AN, Nelson J, Naranjo D, O'Hanlon CE, Pillemer F, Predmore Z, Ross R, Ruder T, Rutter CM, Uscher-Pines L, Vaiana ME, Vesely JV, Hosek SD, and Farmer CM
- Abstract
The Veterans Access, Choice, and Accountability Act of 2014 addressed the need for access to timely, high-quality health care for veterans. Section 201 of the legislation called for an independent assessment of various aspects of veterans' health care. The RAND Corporation was tasked with an assessment of the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) current and projected health care capabilities and resources. An examination of data from a variety of sources, along with a survey of VA medical facility leaders, revealed the breadth and depth of VA resources and capabilities: fiscal resources, workforce and human resources, physical infrastructure, interorganizational relationships, and information resources. The assessment identified barriers to the effective use of these resources and capabilities. Analysis of data on access to VA care and the quality of that care showed that almost all veterans live within 40 miles of a VA health facility, but fewer have access to VA specialty care. Veterans usually receive care within 14 days of their desired appointment date, but wait times vary considerably across VA facilities. VA has long played a national leadership role in measuring the quality of health care. The assessment showed that VA health care quality was as good or better on most measures compared with other health systems, but quality performance lagged at some VA facilities. VA will require more resources and capabilities to meet a projected increase in veterans' demand for VA care over the next five years. Options for increasing capacity include accelerated hiring, full nurse practice authority, and expanded use of telehealth.
- Published
- 2016
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