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  1. Article ; Online: Designing Quality Programs for Rural Hospitals.

    Fried, Jonathan E / Liebers, David T / Schwartz, Aaron L

    Journal of hospital medicine

    2021  Volume 16, Issue 11, Page(s) 699–700

    MeSH term(s) Hospitals, Rural ; Humans
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-07-30
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2233783-0
    ISSN 1553-5606 ; 1553-5592
    ISSN (online) 1553-5606
    ISSN 1553-5592
    DOI 10.12788/jhm.3651
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Validation of the Keele STarT MSK Tool for Patients With Musculoskeletal Pain in United States-based Outpatient Physical Therapy Settings.

    Beneciuk, Jason M / Michener, Lori A / Sigman, Erica / Harrison, Trent / Buzzanca-Fried, Katherine E / Lu, Xinlin / Shan, Guogen / Hill, Jonathan C

    The journal of pain

    2024  

    Abstract: The STarT MSK tool was developed to enable risk stratification of patients with common musculoskeletal (MSK) pain conditions and help identify individuals who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring in primary care settings, however, ...

    Abstract The STarT MSK tool was developed to enable risk stratification of patients with common musculoskeletal (MSK) pain conditions and help identify individuals who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring in primary care settings, however, its validity in U.S.-based outpatient physical therapy settings has not been investigated. The 10-item Keele STarT MSK risk stratification tool was tested for construct (convergent and discriminant) and predictive validity using a multicenter, prospective cohort study design. Participants (n = 141) receiving physical therapy for MSK pain of the back, neck, shoulder, hip, knee, or multisite regions completed intake questionnaires including the Keele STarT MSK tool, Functional Comorbidity Index (FCI), Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Review-of-Systems and Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag tools. Pain intensity, pain interference, and health-related quality of life (Medical Outcomes Study 8-item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-8) physical [PCS] and mental [MCS] component summary scores) were measured at 2- and 6-month follow-up. Participants were classified as STarT MSK tool low (44%), medium (39%), and high (17%) risk. Follow-up rates were 70.2% (2 months) and 49.6% (6 months). For convergent validity, fair relationships were observed between the STarT MSK tool and FCI and SF-8 MCS (r = .35-.37) while moderate-to-good relationships (r = .51-.72) were observed for 7 other clinical measures. For discriminant validity, STarT MSK tool risk-dependent relationships were observed for Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Review-of-Systems, Optimal Screening for Prediction of Referral and Outcome Yellow Flag, pain interference, and SF-8 PCS (low < medium < high; P < .01) and FCI, pain intensity, and SF-8 MCS (low < medium-or-high; P < .01). For predictive validity, intake STarT MSK tool scores explained additional variability in pain intensity (11.2%, 20.0%), pain interference (7.5%, 14.1%), and SF-8 PCS (8.2%, 12.8%) scores at 2 and 6 months, respectively. This study contributes to the existing literature by providing additional evidence of STarT MSK tool cross-sectional construct validity and longitudinal predictive validity. PERSPECTIVE: This study presents STarT MSK risk stratification tool validity findings from a U.S. outpatient physical therapy sample. The STarT MSK tool has the potential to help physical therapists identify individuals presenting with the most common MSK pain conditions who may require more targeted interventions or closer monitoring.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-17
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2018789-0
    ISSN 1528-8447 ; 1526-5900
    ISSN (online) 1528-8447
    ISSN 1526-5900
    DOI 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.01.340
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Sustaining Rural Hospitals After COVID-19: The Case for Global Budgets.

    Fried, Jonathan E / Liebers, David T / Roberts, Eric T

    JAMA

    2020  Volume 324, Issue 2, Page(s) 137–138

    MeSH term(s) Betacoronavirus ; Budgets ; COVID-19 ; Coronavirus Infections/epidemiology ; Health Policy ; Health Resources/economics ; Hospital Costs ; Hospitals, Rural/economics ; Humans ; Pandemics ; Pneumonia, Viral/epidemiology ; SARS-CoV-2 ; United States
    Keywords covid19
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-06-09
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.
    ZDB-ID 2958-0
    ISSN 1538-3598 ; 0254-9077 ; 0002-9955 ; 0098-7484
    ISSN (online) 1538-3598
    ISSN 0254-9077 ; 0002-9955 ; 0098-7484
    DOI 10.1001/jama.2020.9744
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: Advocacy: Achieving Physician Competency.

    Fried, Jonathan E / Shipman, Scott A / Sessums, Laura L

    Journal of general internal medicine

    2019  Volume 34, Issue 11, Page(s) 2297–2298

    MeSH term(s) Curriculum ; Education, Medical, Graduate ; Humans ; Physicians
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-08-16
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Editorial ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 639008-0
    ISSN 1525-1497 ; 0884-8734
    ISSN (online) 1525-1497
    ISSN 0884-8734
    DOI 10.1007/s11606-019-05278-y
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Financing Buprenorphine Treatment in Primary Care: A Microsimulation Model.

    Fried, Jonathan E / Basu, Sanjay / Phillips, Russell S / Landon, Bruce E

    Annals of family medicine

    2020  Volume 18, Issue 6, Page(s) 535–544

    Abstract: Purpose: We sought to determine the financial impact to primary care practices of alternative strategies for offering buprenorphine-based treatment for opioid use disorder.: Methods: We interviewed 20 practice managers and identified 4 approaches to ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: We sought to determine the financial impact to primary care practices of alternative strategies for offering buprenorphine-based treatment for opioid use disorder.
    Methods: We interviewed 20 practice managers and identified 4 approaches to delivering buprenorphine-based treatment via primary care practice that differed in physician and nurse responsibilities. We used a microsimulation model to estimate how practice variations in patient type, payer, revenue, and cost across primary care practices nationwide would affect cost and revenue implications for each approach for the following types of practices: federally qualified health centers (FQHCs), non-FQHCs in urban high-poverty areas, non-FQHCs in rural high-poverty areas, and practices outside of high-poverty areas.
    Results: The 4 approaches to buprenorphine-based treatment included physician-led visits with nurse-led logistical support; nurse-led visits with physician oversight; shared visits; and solo prescribing by physician alone. Net practice revenues would be expected to increase after introduction of any of the 4 approaches by $18,000 to $70,000 per full-time physician in the first year across practice type. Yet physician-led visits and shared medical appointments, both of which relied on nurse care managers, consistently produced the greatest net revenues ($29,000-$70,000 per physician in the first year). To ensure positive net revenues with any approach, providers would need to maintain at least 9 patients in treatment, with a no-show rate of <34%.
    Conclusions: Using a simulation model, we estimate that many types of primary care practices could financially sustain buprenorphine-based treatment if demand and no-show rate requirements are met, but a nurse care manager-based approach might be the most sustainable.
    MeSH term(s) Buprenorphine/economics ; Computer Simulation ; Humans ; Opiate Substitution Treatment/economics ; Opioid-Related Disorders/drug therapy ; Opioid-Related Disorders/economics ; Practice Management, Medical/economics ; Primary Health Care/economics ; Primary Health Care/organization & administration
    Chemical Substances Buprenorphine (40D3SCR4GZ)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2020-12-02
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2171425-3
    ISSN 1544-1717 ; 1544-1709
    ISSN (online) 1544-1717
    ISSN 1544-1709
    DOI 10.1370/afm.2587
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: Sustaining Rural Hospitals After COVID-19 ; The Case for Global Budgets

    Fried, Jonathan E. / Liebers, David T. / Roberts, Eric T.

    JAMA

    2020  Volume 324, Issue 2, Page(s) 137

    Keywords General Medicine ; covid19
    Language English
    Publisher American Medical Association (AMA)
    Publishing country us
    Document type Article ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2958-0
    ISSN 1538-3598 ; 0254-9077 ; 0002-9955 ; 0098-7484
    ISSN (online) 1538-3598
    ISSN 0254-9077 ; 0002-9955 ; 0098-7484
    DOI 10.1001/jama.2020.9744
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  7. Article ; Online: A single full-length VAR2CSA ectodomain variant purifies broadly neutralizing antibodies against placental malaria isolates.

    Doritchamou, Justin Y A / Renn, Jonathan P / Jenkins, Bethany / Mahamar, Almahamoudou / Dicko, Alassane / Fried, Michal / Duffy, Patrick E

    eLife

    2022  Volume 11

    Abstract: Placental malaria (PM) is a deadly syndrome most frequent and severe in first pregnancies. PM results from accumulation ... ...

    Abstract Placental malaria (PM) is a deadly syndrome most frequent and severe in first pregnancies. PM results from accumulation of
    MeSH term(s) Antibodies, Protozoan ; Antigens, Protozoan ; Antigens, Surface ; Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies ; Chondroitin Sulfates/metabolism ; Epitopes ; Erythrocytes/parasitology ; Female ; Humans ; Immunoglobulin G ; Malaria/prevention & control ; Malaria Vaccines ; Malaria, Falciparum/parasitology ; Placenta/metabolism ; Plasmodium falciparum/physiology ; Pregnancy
    Chemical Substances Antibodies, Protozoan ; Antigens, Protozoan ; Antigens, Surface ; Broadly Neutralizing Antibodies ; Epitopes ; Immunoglobulin G ; Malaria Vaccines ; Chondroitin Sulfates (9007-28-7)
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-02-01
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural
    ZDB-ID 2687154-3
    ISSN 2050-084X ; 2050-084X
    ISSN (online) 2050-084X
    ISSN 2050-084X
    DOI 10.7554/eLife.76264
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article: Development of An All‐Payer Quality Program for the Pennsylvania Rural Health Model

    Herzog, Mark B. / Fried, Jonathan E. / Liebers, David T. / MacKinney, A. Clinton

    Journal of rural health. 2022 Jan., v. 38, no. 1

    2022  

    Abstract: PURPOSE: Measuring rural health care quality is challenging, and payer and government reporting requirements are frequently misaligned. The Pennsylvania Rural Health Model, a multipayer global budget demonstration for rural hospitals, initially required ... ...

    Abstract PURPOSE: Measuring rural health care quality is challenging, and payer and government reporting requirements are frequently misaligned. The Pennsylvania Rural Health Model, a multipayer global budget demonstration for rural hospitals, initially required the proposal of an All‐Payer Quality (APQ) Program in which participating payers would have held participating hospitals accountable for performance on a common set of quality measures. We sought to identify quality measures appropriate for use in APQ measurement and reporting programs for globally budgeted rural hospitals. METHODS: A method was devised to identify, assess, and select quality measures from an environmental scan of core measure sets. An initial screen identified measures that were relevant, valid, and reliable. Four reviewers then independently assessed measures that passed the initial screen on a Likert scale of 1‐5 for relevance, validity, reliability, responsiveness, alignment, and feasibility, and they selected a proposed measure set guided by prespecified measure set criteria. RESULTS: The 4 reviewers selected 10 quality measures from a list of 344 measures drawn from 8 core measure sets. One hundred twenty‐five measures satisfied screening criteria and were assessed. The mean total score was 21.5/30 (95% CI: 17.0‐26.0). Inter‐rater reliability was moderate (intraclass correlation coefficient range 0.544‐0.656). CONCLUSION: A formal performance measure selection methodology can generate a set of rural‐appropriate health care quality measures for a multipayer rural hospital global budget program. This methodology could be replicated to select quality measures for inclusion in rural multipayer quality measurement and reporting programs.
    Keywords hospitals ; models ; rural health care ; Pennsylvania
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-01
    Size p. 270-281.
    Publishing place John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
    Document type Article
    Note JOURNAL ARTICLE
    ZDB-ID 639160-6
    ISSN 0890-765X
    ISSN 0890-765X
    DOI 10.1111/jrh.12547
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  9. Article ; Online: Functional diversity affects tree vigor, growth, and mortality in mixed-conifer/hardwood forests in California, U.S.A, in the absence of fire

    Looney, Christopher E. / Long, Jonathan W. / Fettig, Christopher J. / Fried, Jeremy S. / Wood, Katherine E.A. / Audley, Jackson P.

    Forest Ecology and Management. 2023 Sept., v. 544 p.121135-

    2023  

    Abstract: ... Beyond disturbance-risk reduction, tree-species diversification may foster functional-diversity effects (e.g ...

    Abstract Mixed tree-species forest management can increase forest resilience by reducing the impacts of disturbances that disproportionately affect a single tree species or closely related groups of tree species. Beyond disturbance-risk reduction, tree-species diversification may foster functional-diversity effects (e.g., complementarity or facilitation) that alter the performance of a given tree species in mixed versus pure stands, potentially benefitting carbon sequestration and wildlife habitat. Tree species-mixture effects have been explored to only a limited degree in western US forests and, particularly, in California. Establishing whether vigor, growth, and mortality of common tree species vary with stand composition would help inform restoration and modeling of these forests under climate change. Using data from USDA Forest Service Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) plots from California, we examined how individual-tree vigor, as indicated by live crown ratio (LCR), periodic basal area increment (BAI), and mortality odds varied with functional dissimilarity (FDis). We quantified FDis using an index based on 11 traits related to resource acquisition, competition, environmental tolerances, and fire ecology. We classified major tree species into ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa), Jeffrey pine (Pinus jeffreyi), incense-cedar (Calocedrus decurrens), true firs (Abies spp.), Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), live oaks (Quercus spp.), and deciduous oaks (Quercus spp.) response groups. We tested for the main effects of FDis on tree responses, as well as for interactions with tree, site, stand, and climate factors. We found that initial tree height modulated the effects of FDis on ponderosa pine, Jeffrey pine, incense-cedar, and true fir LCR, whereas FDis interacted with climate to alter live oak and deciduous oak LCR. FDis decreased BAI in ponderosa pine and increased BAI in live oaks. FDis interacted with tree size to influence BAI for Jeffrey pine, Douglas-fir, and true firs. We found no evidence that climate or site quality modulated FDis effects on BAI for any species group. Tree mortality was not responsive to FDis, except for the true firs, where both initial tree height and competition interacted with FDis to increase and decrease mortality odds, respectively. FDis effects commonly shifted from positive to negative along gradients of stand structure and site quality, indicating that these effects vary with site and stand conditions. Our results have implications for balancing the ecosystem benefits of mixed stands, such as disturbance risk, carbon sequestration, and habitat during forest restoration projects in the region, as well as for more accurate modeling of complex stands.
    Keywords Abies ; Calocedrus decurrens ; Pinus jeffreyi ; Pinus ponderosa ; Pseudotsuga menziesii ; Quercus virginiana ; USDA Forest Service ; administrative management ; carbon sequestration ; climate ; climate change ; ecosystems ; fire ecology ; forest ecology ; forest inventory ; forest management ; forest restoration ; forests ; functional diversity ; mortality ; risk ; stand composition ; stand structure ; tree height ; tree mortality ; trees ; vigor ; wildlife habitats ; California
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2023-09
    Publishing place Elsevier B.V.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Note Pre-press version
    ZDB-ID 751138-3
    ISSN 0378-1127
    ISSN 0378-1127
    DOI 10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121135
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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