Health policy
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Commentary
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Digital contact tracing has the potential to limit the spread of COVID-19. A contact-tracing smartphone app that has been readily adopted by people in England and Wales has shown efficacy in reducing disease spread.
Journal Publisher
Nature
Authors
C. Jason Wang
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Wiley Online Library
Authors
Douglas K. Owens
Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert
Joshua Salomon
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Commentary
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Stanford health law experts Michelle Mello and David Studdert discuss the ongoing pandemic, proof of vaccination “passports” at the state and federal levels, and a July 19 ruling that Indiana University could require that its students be vaccinated.
Authors
David Studdert
Michelle Mello
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Peter ("Pete") W. Groeneveld, MD, MS is Professor of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and a primary care physician at Philadelphia’s Corporal Michael J. Crescenz VA Medical Center. He is the Founding Director of Penn’s Cardiovascular Outcomes, Quality, and Evaluative Research (CAVOQER) Center, Director of Research at Penn’s Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (LDI), Chair of the VA’s Research and Development Committee, Co-Director of Penn’s Master of Science in Health Policy (MSHP) program, and Associate Director of the VA’s Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion. Dr. Groeneveld’s research is focused on the quality, outcomes, costs, and equity of high-technology cardiovascular care, and his methodological expertise is in the analysis of a wide variety of health care data, including administrative claims, clinical registries, electronic medical records, and surveys. His research has been funded by the VA, NIH, AHRQ, and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and he has co-authored over 100 peer-reviewed publications. Dr. Groeneveld is a Fellow of the American Heart Association and of the American College of Physicians, and he is an elected member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation (ASCI).

Title: Cardiology Physician Group Practice Vertical Integration and the Use of Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract: A substantial proportion of previously independent U.S. cardiology physician practices have become vertically integrated into larger health systems.  It is unclear if vertical integration affected the clinical practice patterns of these cardiologists.  Longitudinal data from cardiology practice surveys from 2008-2013 were combined with Medicare fee-for-service claims for two common cardiology imaging tests: echocardiograms and cardiac nuclear studies. Cardiologists who transitioned from independent to hospital- or health system-owned practices ordered 17% more echocardiograms and 10% more cardiac nuclear imaging studies after their practices had transitioned.  Our findings surprisingly suggest that vertical integration of cardiologists' practices was associated with higher rates of cardiovascular imaging.  Potential explanations include preferential integration of group practices with lower pre-integration imaging rates, increased post-integration clinician incentives for ordering tests, and/or reduced administrative barriers to obtaining testing after integration. 

Zoom Meeting

Register in advance for this meeting:
https://stanford.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwqduivrDMrEtDKYMqYvz3A_hVwRSE0_-A6 

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Peter W. Groeneveld, MD, MS
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Journal Articles
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Now that a third COVID-19 vaccine has been given emergency-use authorization, Michelle Mello and colleagues ask whether individuals should be able to choose which vaccine they receive.
Journal Publisher
The New England Journal of Medicine
Authors
Michelle Mello
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Pascal Geldsetzer, PhD 
Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Primary Care and Population Health

Title:  Regression Discontinuity in Electronic Health Record Data

Abstract: Regression discontinuity in electronic health record (EHR) data combines the main advantage of randomized controlled trials (causal inference without needing to adjust for confounders) with the large size, low cost, and representativeness of observational studies in routinely collected medical data. Regression discontinuity could be an important tool to help clinical medicine move away from a “one size fits all” approach because, along with the increasing size and availability of EHR data, it would allow for a rigorous examination of how treatment effects vary across highly granular patient subgroups. In addition, given the broad range of health outcomes recorded in EHR data, this design could be used to systematically test for a wide range of unexpected beneficial and adverse health effects of different treatments. I will talk about the broad motivation for this research and discuss examples from some of our ongoing work in this area. If there is time, I will also discuss some of my ongoing research on improving healthcare services for chronic conditions in low- and middle-income country settings. 

Zoom Meeting

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Division of Primary Care and Population Health, Department of Medicine
Stanford University School of Medicine, Medical School Office Building, 1265 Welch Road,
Stanford, CA 94305, USA

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Assistant Professor, Medicine
croppedbewerbungsfoto_2018-06-08.jpg MD, PhD, MPH

Pascal Geldsetzer is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Division of Primary Care and Population Health. He has been a study coordinator and postdoctoral research fellow with the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Tanzania and Eswatini, completed the Young Professionals Program of the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) in Namibia, and was a German National Merit Scholar.

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