The American journal of managed care
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To evaluate the effect of nonadherence to American Diabetes Association (ADA) guidelines on health care expenditures for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D). ⋯ Nonadherence to the ADA guidelines results in a significant increase in health care expenditures among patients with diabetes. The economic impact of nonadherent care for T2D is a significant and extensive issue that needs to be addressed. These findings emphasize the importance of providing care based on ADA guidelines.
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Due to the highly contagious nature of the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 and its subvariants, a high rate of transmission was observed throughout Chengdu, China, within 2 weeks of the relaxation of COVID-19 measures on December 3, 2022, particularly in hospitals. Hospitals experienced different degrees of medical overcrowding during the first 2 weeks, with a high patient volume in the emergency departments and a significant lack of beds in the medical wards, particularly in the respiratory intensive care unit (ICU) and ICU. ⋯ It has been emulated by sister hospitals and was well received by the local populace and municipal government. The hospital made the following significant alterations and modifications to this emergency medical care: (1) immediate establishment of the General ICU (GICU), a temporary unit set up in emergency situations that had most of the functions of but was not as complete as the ICU and had a lower ratio of doctors to nurses; (2) dynamic adjustment of anesthesiologists and respiratory physicians jointly stationed in the GICU; (3) choice of nurses with extensive experience in internal medicine and allocation to the GICU according to a 2:3 ICU bed to nurse ratio; (4) emergency purchase or deployment of pneumonia-related treatment equipment; (5) implementation of the GICU resident rotation system; (6) "twinning" of internal medicine and other departments to add beds; and (7) implementation of uniform hospital bed allocation for inpatients.
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To estimate the economic benefit of evidence-based patient-initiated virtual physical therapy (PIVPT) service among a nationally representative sample of commercially insured patients with musculoskeletal (MSK) conditions. ⋯ PIVPT service provides added value to MSK care by facilitating earlier access and better adherence to PT and lowering the cost of PT.
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To estimate neighborhood income differences between the locations of 340B-covered entities and their contract pharmacies (CPs) and examine whether these differences vary between hospitals and grantees. ⋯ CPs serve at least 2 purposes: They can increase low-income patients' access to medicines directly when a CP is closer to where a covered entity's patients live, and they can increase profits for covered entities (some of which are potentially passed on to patients) and CPs. We find that in 2019, both hospitals and grantees used CPs to generate income but generally they do not appear to contract with pharmacies located in neighborhoods where low-income patients are likeliest to live. Prior research findings have suggested that hospitals and grantees behave differently from each other with respect to CP use, but results of our analysis suggest the opposite.
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COVID-19 vaccination in the United States has stalled, with some of the lowest rates in the South. Vaccine hesitancy is a primary contributor and may be influenced by health literacy (HL). This study assessed the association between HL and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in a population residing in 14 Southern states. ⋯ HL was not a significant indicator of vaccine hesitancy in the study population, suggesting that general low rates of vaccination in the Southern region may not be due to knowledge about COVID-19. This indicates a critical need for place-based or contextual research on why vaccine hesitancy in the region transcends most sociodemographic differences.