BACKGROUND: Efforts to improve outcomes for the 10% of patients using two thirds of health care expenditures increasingly include addressing social determinants. Empiric evidence is needed to identify the highest impact nonmedical drivers of medical complexity and cost. OBJECTIVES: This study examines whether complex, highest cost patients have different patterns of critical life adversity than those with better health and lower utilization. RESEARCH DESIGN: Using a validated algorithm we constructed a complexity/cost risk patient profile. We developed and fielded a life experience survey (Supplemental Digital Content 1, http://links.lww.com/MLR/B920) to a representative sample, then examined how the prevalence of specific adversities varie...
Background: U.S. health systems, incentivized by financial penalties, are designing programs such as...
Abstract Background Healthcare costs are disproportio...
Introduction: High-need, high-cost patients can over-utilize acute care services, a pattern of behav...
BACKGROUND: Efforts to improve outcomes for the 10% of patients using two thirds of health care expe...
A high proportion of U.S. health care costs are attributable to a relatively small proportion of pat...
Background: The 11.4 million Americans who receive both Medicare and Medicaid benefits constitute on...
BackgroundAmidst high and rising health care spending in the US, there is a growing focus on patient...
ObjectivesExisting literature indicates that multimorbidity, mental health (MH) conditions, substanc...
BACKGROUND: Persons with behavioral disorders incur higher healthcare costs. Although they utilize b...
Abstract Background High-cost high-need patients are typically defined by risk or cost thresholds wh...
Background: Accurately identifying high-need, high-cost (HNHC) patients to reduce their preventable...
Health care costs are highly concentrated among people with multiple chronic conditions, behavioral ...
Objective: Payers, providers and policymakers in the USA are interested in developing interventions...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the value of two kinds of patient-level dat a (cost and diagnoses) for identif...
Contains fulltext : 196448.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Background: U.S. health systems, incentivized by financial penalties, are designing programs such as...
Abstract Background Healthcare costs are disproportio...
Introduction: High-need, high-cost patients can over-utilize acute care services, a pattern of behav...
BACKGROUND: Efforts to improve outcomes for the 10% of patients using two thirds of health care expe...
A high proportion of U.S. health care costs are attributable to a relatively small proportion of pat...
Background: The 11.4 million Americans who receive both Medicare and Medicaid benefits constitute on...
BackgroundAmidst high and rising health care spending in the US, there is a growing focus on patient...
ObjectivesExisting literature indicates that multimorbidity, mental health (MH) conditions, substanc...
BACKGROUND: Persons with behavioral disorders incur higher healthcare costs. Although they utilize b...
Abstract Background High-cost high-need patients are typically defined by risk or cost thresholds wh...
Background: Accurately identifying high-need, high-cost (HNHC) patients to reduce their preventable...
Health care costs are highly concentrated among people with multiple chronic conditions, behavioral ...
Objective: Payers, providers and policymakers in the USA are interested in developing interventions...
OBJECTIVE: To examine the value of two kinds of patient-level dat a (cost and diagnoses) for identif...
Contains fulltext : 196448.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Background: U.S. health systems, incentivized by financial penalties, are designing programs such as...
Abstract Background Healthcare costs are disproportio...
Introduction: High-need, high-cost patients can over-utilize acute care services, a pattern of behav...