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  1. Article ; Online: Community-Acquired Pneumonia.

    Montalto, Michael / Leff, Bruce

    The New England journal of medicine

    2023  Volume 389, Issue 17, Page(s) 1632

    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Pneumonia ; Community-Acquired Infections/drug therapy
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-10-27
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Letter ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 207154-x
    ISSN 1533-4406 ; 0028-4793
    ISSN (online) 1533-4406
    ISSN 0028-4793
    DOI 10.1056/NEJMc2310748
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: A Scoping Review of Dementia Interventions in Home-Based Primary Care.

    Weiner, Jeffrey D / Leff, Bruce / Ritchie, Christine S

    Journal of the American Medical Directors Association

    2024  

    Abstract: Objectives: Home-based primary care (HBPC) provides interdisciplinary, longitudinal, comprehensive care at home to homebound older adults. The prevalence of dementia among HBPC recipients is approximately 50%. To date, little research has been performed ...

    Abstract Objectives: Home-based primary care (HBPC) provides interdisciplinary, longitudinal, comprehensive care at home to homebound older adults. The prevalence of dementia among HBPC recipients is approximately 50%. To date, little research has been performed to determine whether dementia-specific interventions have been conducted in HBPC or their efficacy. We performed a scoping review to assess the landscape of dementia interventions in HBPC.
    Design: Systematic scoping review.
    Setting and participants: Care delivery programs for patients or caregivers of patients with dementia for the purpose of improving the management of dementia in the setting of HBPC.
    Methods: The PRISMA-ScR protocol was followed. Literature searches were performed using PubMed, Embase, and Scopus for articles on dementia-focused interventions implemented in HBPC. Articles were excluded if they consisted of abstracts only, were not in English, or were not dementia interventions in HBPC.
    Results: A total of 1657 unique titles and abstracts were screened. Overall, 1584 titles and abstracts were excluded, resulting in 73 full-text studies to assess for eligibility. Of these 73 full-text studies, 1 study met criteria for inclusion, an observational study assessing the implementation of the Resources for Enhancing Alzheimer's Caregiver Health (REACH) intervention in Veterans Affairs HBPC. That study found the intervention to be effective in reducing caregiver burden, with a decrease of 2 hours on duty per day, trending toward significance. Among the excluded 72 full-text studies, some studies included potentially relevant interventions that could be translated into HBPC care, including dementia interventions that targeted long-term services and supports, office-based primary care and other nonhome settings such as nursing homes, and home-based palliative care.
    Conclusions and implications: Despite high prevalence of dementia among homebound older adults receiving HBPC, there are a dearth of studies on HBPC-specific dementia interventions. Future studies should consider adapting and testing interventions found to be effective in other settings to HBPC.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-04-22
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ZDB-ID 2171030-2
    ISSN 1538-9375 ; 1525-8610
    ISSN (online) 1538-9375
    ISSN 1525-8610
    DOI 10.1016/j.jamda.2024.03.112
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article ; Online: Home-Based Care Reimagined: A Full-Fledged Health Care Delivery Ecosystem Without Walls.

    Ritchie, Christine / Leff, Bruce

    Health affairs (Project Hope)

    2022  Volume 41, Issue 5, Page(s) 689–695

    Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the dangers of tying health care delivery to brick-and-mortar health care facilities. Both before and, more intensely, during the pandemic, health systems have struggled to support high-need patients, especially those unable ...

    Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic exposed the dangers of tying health care delivery to brick-and-mortar health care facilities. Both before and, more intensely, during the pandemic, health systems have struggled to support high-need patients, especially those unable to engage with virtual technology or needing urgent care in the home. The pandemic has highlighted an ongoing need to create a distributed health care delivery ecosystem centered in patients' homes and the community. This age-friendly ecosystem would initially focus on high-need patients, expand access, improve equity, and be of high value. It would integrate episodic and longitudinal care and expand to serve broader populations as it matures. We briefly describe the evidence base for home-based care models that constitute this ecosystem, define the guiding principles underlying it, and discuss what will be required to build out and scale it.
    MeSH term(s) COVID-19 ; Delivery of Health Care ; Ecosystem ; Home Care Services ; Humans ; Pandemics
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-05-02
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 632712-6
    ISSN 1544-5208 ; 0278-2715
    ISSN (online) 1544-5208
    ISSN 0278-2715
    DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.2021.01011
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  4. Article ; Online: The hospital at home in the USA: current status and future prospects.

    Pandit, Jay A / Pawelek, Jeff B / Leff, Bruce / Topol, Eric J

    NPJ digital medicine

    2024  Volume 7, Issue 1, Page(s) 48

    Abstract: The annual cost of hospital care services in the US has risen to over $1 trillion despite relatively worse health outcomes compared to similar nations. These trends accentuate a growing need for innovative care delivery models that reduce costs and ... ...

    Abstract The annual cost of hospital care services in the US has risen to over $1 trillion despite relatively worse health outcomes compared to similar nations. These trends accentuate a growing need for innovative care delivery models that reduce costs and improve outcomes. HaH-a program that provides patients acute-level hospital care at home-has made significant progress over the past two decades. Technological advancements in remote patient monitoring, wearable sensors, health information technology infrastructure, and multimodal health data processing have contributed to its rise across hospitals. More recently, the COVID-19 pandemic brought HaH into the mainstream, especially in the US, with reimbursement waivers that made the model financially acceptable for hospitals and payors. However, HaH continues to face serious challenges to gain widespread adoption. In this review, we evaluate the peer-reviewed evidence and discuss the promises, challenges, and what it would take to tap into the future potential of HaH.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-27
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Review
    ISSN 2398-6352
    ISSN (online) 2398-6352
    DOI 10.1038/s41746-024-01040-9
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  5. Article ; Online: Integrating the Financing and Delivery of Medical and Supportive Services for People Living With Dementia.

    Leff, Bruce / Stevenson, David G

    Journal of the American Medical Directors Association

    2021  Volume 22, Issue 7, Page(s) 1377–1380

    Abstract: The number of people living with dementia (PLWD) is expected to grow considerably in the coming years. PLWD often have substantial medical and supportive service needs and face fragmentation of services across payers and across health and social service ... ...

    Abstract The number of people living with dementia (PLWD) is expected to grow considerably in the coming years. PLWD often have substantial medical and supportive service needs and face fragmentation of services across payers and across health and social service systems; recently, efforts have been made to achieve greater integration of care and financing. This article considers issues related to integrating long-term services and supports (LTSS), medical care, and financing for PLWD; reviews the policy context and key clinical and delivery system challenges to these efforts; and describes key lessons regarding integration learned from examples in the field. Recommendations are provided and include the following: (1) assess carefully whether integration of medical and LTSS is required to achieve the intended outcomes of an intervention or program targeted at PLWD; if integration is needed, select carefully the types of medical and LTSS to integrate and the mode of integration; (2) use measures that evaluate quality across LTSS settings in which PLWD receive care; (3) assess whether and how eligibility and payment policies pose barriers to PLWD from receiving services they need, and evaluate ways in which policies might be reformed to meet beneficiaries' needs; and (4) conduct research examining the potential of value-based payment efforts to improve the quality and efficiency of care received by PLWD, including their potential impact on out-of-pocket expenses and caregiving burden for PLWD and their families.
    MeSH term(s) Caregivers ; Dementia/therapy ; Humans
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-05-28
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
    ZDB-ID 2171030-2
    ISSN 1538-9375 ; 1525-8610
    ISSN (online) 1538-9375
    ISSN 1525-8610
    DOI 10.1016/j.jamda.2021.05.004
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Article ; Online: Acute Hospital Care at Home in the United States: The Early National Experience.

    Levine, David M / Souza, Jeffrey / Schnipper, Jeffrey L / Tsai, Thomas C / Leff, Bruce / Landon, Bruce E

    Annals of internal medicine

    2024  Volume 177, Issue 1, Page(s) 109–110

    MeSH term(s) Humans ; United States ; Hospitalization ; Patient Readmission ; Hospitals ; Home Care Services
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-09
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Letter
    ZDB-ID 336-0
    ISSN 1539-3704 ; 0003-4819
    ISSN (online) 1539-3704
    ISSN 0003-4819
    DOI 10.7326/M23-2264
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Article: Caring for caregivers and persons living with dementia under home-based primary care: protocol for an interventional clinical trial.

    Sy, Maimouna / Thacker, Ayush / Sheehan, Orla C / Leff, Bruce / Ritchie, Christine Seel

    Pilot and feasibility studies

    2024  Volume 10, Issue 1, Page(s) 28

    Abstract: Background: Approximately 7.5 million older adults are homebound, who have difficulty and/or need assistance to leave their homes. In this growing population, the prevalence of people living with dementia (PLWD) is approximately 50%. Current dementia ... ...

    Abstract Background: Approximately 7.5 million older adults are homebound, who have difficulty and/or need assistance to leave their homes. In this growing population, the prevalence of people living with dementia (PLWD) is approximately 50%. Current dementia care models in the USA were developed for traditional office-based primary care and have not been tailored to home-based primary care (HBPC) delivery models. Literature has shown that office-based collaborative interventions can improve caregiver outcomes including caregiver stress, well-being, and morbidity and patient outcomes including improved quality of life and reduced emergency department visits (Possin KL, Merrilees JJ, Dulaney S, Bonasera SJ, Chiong W, Lee K, JAMA Int Med 179:1658, 2019). To date, the evidence for HBPC dementia interventions is lacking. Though HBPC has demonstrated benefit in homebound older adults, there is limited literature on the effects of HBPC on persons living with dementia (Nguyen HQ, Vallejo JD, Macias M, Shiffman MG, Rosen R, Mowry V, J Am Geriatr Soc 70:1136-46, 2021). Our goal is to develop a HBPC-focused dementia care intervention that integrates the components of two previously developed dementia care models and test the feasibility of implementing it in HBPC practices to improve the quality of life and wellbeing of homebound PLWD and their caregivers.
    Methods: We will first conduct qualitative focus groups at two HBPC practice sites, one in the Southeast and one in Hawaii in order to obtain preliminary feedback on the proposed intervention. At each site, there will be one focus group with caregivers of PLWD and another with HBPC clinicians and staff to help develop and refine our intervention. We will then conduct an open-pilot trial of the refined intervention at the two HBPC practices. A total of up to 25 patient/caregiver dyads will be recruited at each site (N = 50 total). Outcomes measured through pre-and-post assessments and exit interviews will include (a) feasibility for the caregiver to engage with and complete baseline assessments and access educational materials and community resources and (b) feasibility for the practice to identify potential caregivers/patients, assess eligible patient/caregiver dyads, use patient and caregiver assessments, recruit patient/caregiver dyads, recruit racial and ethnic minorities, use care modules, and engage with the tele-video case conference, (c) net promoter score, (d) acceptability of the intervention to caregivers and patients to participate in the intervention, (e) caregivers feeling heard and understood, and (f) caregiver well-being.
    Discussion: Testing the feasibility and acceptability of the adapted intervention in these two HBPC practices will provide the basis for future testing and evaluation of a fully powered intervention for PLWD and their caregivers cared for in HBPC with the goal of disseminating high-quality and comprehensive dementia-care focused interventions into HBPC practices.
    Trial registration: This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05849259 in May 2023.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-02-09
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2809935-7
    ISSN 2055-5784
    ISSN 2055-5784
    DOI 10.1186/s40814-024-01455-x
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Geriatricians, general internists, and potentially inappropriate medications for a national sample of older adults.

    Vandergrift, Jonathan L / Weng, Weifeng / Leff, Bruce / Gray, Bradley M

    Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

    2023  Volume 72, Issue 1, Page(s) 37–47

    Abstract: Background: Older adults are often prescribed medications that are potentially dangerous and geriatricians have specialized training in treating polypharmacy that may benefit these patients. To examine this, we compared potentially inappropriate ... ...

    Abstract Background: Older adults are often prescribed medications that are potentially dangerous and geriatricians have specialized training in treating polypharmacy that may benefit these patients. To examine this, we compared potentially inappropriate medication (PIM) prescribing rates between geriatricians and similar general internists in the United States.
    Methods: Using national cross-sectional data from 2013 to 2019, we compared annual PIM prescribing rates between 2815 outpatient geriatricians certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1994-2018 and general internists matched 1:1 on IM certification exam score and year, residency exam pass rate, gender, and US birth and/or US medical school. PIM prescribing was based on the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) PIM physician annual prescribing measures which consider medications flagged as potentially inappropriate in the American Geriatric Society Beers Criteria® guideline. We also examined prescribing of appropriate alternative medications. Prescribing rates were calculated as the percentage a physician's patients with Medicare fee-for-service part D enrollment seen in the outpatient setting in a given year (mean: 150 patients per physician) with a PIM prescription they prescribed.
    Results: Across 30,677 physician-year observations, geriatricians were 16.7% less likely (95% confidence interval (CI): -19.8 to -13.7, p < 0.001) to prescribe a PIM (7.2% versus 8.7% of patients respectively) and 2.7% more likely (95% CI: 0.8 to 4.5, p = 0.004) to prescribe an appropriate alternative medication (52.0% versus 50.7% of patients respectively). Lower PIM prescribing was observed for most medication sub-types including central nervous system, anticholinergic, pain, and endocrine medications. In sensitivity analyses, differences in prescribing were similar when comparing recently trained physicians with more experienced physicians.
    Conclusion: Findings suggest geriatricians in the United States prescribe PIMs at lower rates than general internists. This highlights the value geriatricians provide as well as opportunities to embed key principles of geriatric care into internal medicine training and health care delivery systems.
    MeSH term(s) Humans ; Aged ; United States ; Potentially Inappropriate Medication List ; Inappropriate Prescribing ; Geriatricians ; Cross-Sectional Studies ; Medicare ; Physicians ; Pharmaceutical Preparations ; Retrospective Studies
    Chemical Substances Pharmaceutical Preparations
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-06-23
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 80363-7
    ISSN 1532-5415 ; 0002-8614
    ISSN (online) 1532-5415
    ISSN 0002-8614
    DOI 10.1111/jgs.18489
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  9. Article ; Online: Home-Based Medical Care Use In Medicare Advantage And Traditional Medicare In 2018.

    Marr, Jeffrey / Ritchie, Christine / Leff, Bruce / Ornstein, Katherine A

    Health affairs (Project Hope)

    2023  Volume 42, Issue 9, Page(s) 1198–1202

    Abstract: The use of home-based medical care differed in Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare in 2018. Having exactly one such visit was thirty-one times as likely for Medicare Advantage beneficiaries (18.6 percent) as for traditional Medicare beneficiaries ...

    Abstract The use of home-based medical care differed in Medicare Advantage and traditional Medicare in 2018. Having exactly one such visit was thirty-one times as likely for Medicare Advantage beneficiaries (18.6 percent) as for traditional Medicare beneficiaries (0.6 percent), likely reflecting incentives in the Medicare Advantage program to code all accurate diagnoses. Multiple home-based medical care visits were less likely in Medicare Advantage than in traditional Medicare (1.6 percent versus 2.1 percent of beneficiaries, respectively).
    MeSH term(s) Aged ; United States ; Humans ; Medicare Part C ; House Calls ; Patient Care
    Language English
    Publishing date 2023-09-04
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
    ZDB-ID 632712-6
    ISSN 1544-5208 ; 0278-2715
    ISSN (online) 1544-5208
    ISSN 0278-2715
    DOI 10.1377/hlthaff.2023.00376
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  10. Article ; Online: Reply to: Comment on: The underappreciated success of home-based primary care: Next steps for CMS' Independence at Home.

    Ornstein, Katherine / Levine, David M / Leff, Bruce

    Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

    2022  Volume 70, Issue 4, Page(s) 1288–1290

    MeSH term(s) Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, U.S. ; Humans ; Primary Health Care ; United States
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-01-08
    Publishing country United States
    Document type Letter ; Comment
    ZDB-ID 80363-7
    ISSN 1532-5415 ; 0002-8614
    ISSN (online) 1532-5415
    ISSN 0002-8614
    DOI 10.1111/jgs.17641
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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