n e ws & u p d at e s - jhsph

1
Share this email: Winter 2019 FACULTY SPOTLIGHT We are thrilled to spotlight one of our newest faculty members, Emmanuel F. Drabo, PhD, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management. Dr. Drabo is a health economist and recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Primary Care and Outcomes Research in the Basu Lab at Stanford University. He holds a doctoral degree from the University of Southern California. Dr. Drabo’ research exploits economic evaluation and systems science methods to estimate the impact of major public health policy changes on morbidity and mortality from major chronic conditions in the United States–including cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and dementias, as well as disparities in these outcomes. RESEARCH FINDINGS Do Medicare Advantage Rebates Reduce Enrollees’ Out-of-Pocket Spending? Study by Lauren Nicholas and Shannon Wu in Medical Care Research and Review examines whether Medicare Advantage plan savings are passed on to the consumer or retained by the plan. Results suggest enrollees do not recover the full value of additional payments, but may benefit from increased availability of supplemental benefits, increasing the value of the benefit package. Read More. Using Credit Scores to Understand Predictors and Consequences of Disease Credit scores may serve as proxies for social and economic factors that are on the causal pathway between individual psychobehavioral characteristics and health. Commentary by Lorraine Dean and Lauren Nicholas in American Journal of Public Health discusses how consumer credit may be used to advance public health research, but must be considered in the context of health equity to avoid reinforcing health disparities. Read More. Evaluation of the Measuring and Improving Quality in Palliative Care Survey A study by Sydney Dy, Ritu Sharma, Kamini Kuchinad, Zi-Rou Liew, Nebras Abu Al Hamayel, Susan M. Hannum, Junya Zhu, Arif H. Kamal, Anne M. Walling, Karl A. Lorenz, and Sarina R. Isenberg in the Journal of Oncology Practice evaluates the reliability, content validity and variation of a survey designed to assess facilitators and barriers to quality measurement and improvement in palliative care. The survey may be useful to palliative care programs seeking to target specific issues or areas of improvement before implementing a new initiative. Read More. Racial Disparities in Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services Study by Chanee Fabius, Kali Thomas, Tingting Zhang, Jessica Ogarek, and Theresa Shireman in BMC Health Services Research finds black Home & Community-Based Services recipients with Multiple Sclerosis are much less likely to use supportive services such as case management, equipment, technology, modifications, and nursing services. African-Americans are already disproportionately impacted by Multiple Sclerosis, and findings may reflect differing preferences for care or in access to care. Read More. Examining Disparities in Assisted Living Settings Study by Chanee Fabius and Kali Thomas in Journal of the American Medical Directors Association examined racial differences among a national cohort of assisted living residents and how the racial variation among assisted living Medicare Fee-For-Service beneficiaries compared to differences in community-dwelling and nursing home cohorts. Results suggest black beneficiaries were disproportionally represented in assisted living, were more often younger, disabled, and dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid compared to white residents. Read More. Access to Hearing Care Services Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries Study by Amber Willink, Nicholas S. Reed, and Frank R. Lin in Health Affairs analyzed experiences of Medicare recipients aged sixty-five and older who utilized hearing aids to compare access across different demographics. The findings show that lower education and income levels of beneficiaries were associated with increased chances of having hearing impairments and decreased likelihood of using hearing aids and services. With the Over-the-Counter Hearing Aid Act of 2017, increased access to hearing aids may not correlate with improved hearing overall unless hearing care services are provided. Read More. Effect of a Biobehavioral Environmental Approach on Disability among Low- Income Older Adults Study by Sarah Szanton, Qian-Li Xue, Bruce Leff; Jack Guralnik, Jennifer Wolff, Ibby Tanner, Cynthia Boyd, Roland Thorpe, David Bishai and Laura Gitlin in Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicine demonstrates that CAPABLE, a home-based intervention, reduced disability by 30% compared to a control group also receiving home visits. This work was recently awarded a $3 million grant from the Rita & Alex Hillman Foundation to scale the CAPABLE program beyond the 26 places in 12 States it is already operating. Read More. Older Adults’ Preferences for Discussing Long-Term Life Expectancy Study by Nancy Schoenborn, Ellen Janssen, Cynthia Boyd, John Bridges, Antonio Wolff, Qian-Li Xue & Craig Pollack in Annals of Family Medicine examined older adults' preferences for communicating long-term life expectancy in the primary care setting when patients may have less than 10 years to live but are not at the end of life. Findings indicate that most participants did not wish to discuss life expectancy when presented a hypothetical scenario, but were willing to discuss life expectancy as life expectancy became limited. Read More. It’s Still The Prices, Stupid: Why The US Spends So Much On Health Care Article by Gerard Anderson, Peter Hussey, and Varduhi Petrosyan in Health Affairs revisits a 2003 coauthored article as a tribute to Uwe Reinhardt. Conclusions from most recent OECD data indicate that little has changed since 2003 and that comparatively higher prices drive disproportionate health care spending in US. Read More. NEWS FROM THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND AGING TRENDS STUDY Seven rounds of NHATS (2011-2017) and three waves of the National Study of Caregivers (2011, 2015, 2017) are available at www.nhats.org. The longitudinal NSOC III file with time use diaries will be released this Spring. Nearly 3,000 users have registered to access NHATS data, from which >150 peer-reviewed articles have been published, including these: Does Caregiving Strain Increase as Patients with and without Dementia Approach the End of Life? Family caregivers are critically important in dementia care. However, when demands exceed capacity, caregiving can impose role-related strain. A study led by Judith Vick, Katherine Ornstein, Sarah Szanton, Sydney Dy & Jennifer Wolff in Journal of Pain and Symptom Management using NHATS data finds that dementia caregivers report significantly higher strain than non-dementia caregivers, and this is even more pronounced for the caregiver near the end of the patient’s life. Read more. Care Arrangements of Older Adults: What They Prefer, What They Have, and Implications for Quality of Life Study by Judith Kasper, Jennifer Wolff & Maureen Skehan in The Gerontologist using NHATS data examines individual preferences of older persons for long-term services and supports. Investigators found an even split in preferences between assisted living/continuing care retirement communities, care in own home with family help, and care in own home with paid help, but that these preferences were not always aligned with actual care arrangements. Read More. Factors Associated with Loss of Usual Source of Care Among Older Adults An estimated 95% of older adults report having a usual source of medical care, which often bridge the gaps in care continuity. Study by Stephanie Nothelle, Cynthia Boyd, Orla Sheehan & Jennifer Wolff in Annals of Family Medicine finds losing access to a USC was associated with transportation barriers, moving residences, depressive symptoms, and lack of supplemental insurance. Read More. Impact of Age, Health and Function on Cancer Screening in Older Adults Study by Nancy Schoenborn, Jin Huang, Orla Sheehan, Jennifer Wolff, David Roth & Cynthia Boyd in Journal of General Internal Medicine examines cancer screening rates and whether certain population sub-groups among older adults are over or under screened. Findings suggest that the sub-group of younger adults with poor health are over-screened for cancer at higher rates than the sub-group who are older with the same predicted life expectancy. Read More. NEWS & UPDATES David Roth Appointed to Maryland Commission on Aging by Governor Hogan David Roth, Director for the Center on Aging and Health, was appointed by Governor Larry Hogan as one of 13 members of the Maryland Commission on Aging. The commission reviews ongoing and future statewide programs and activities for seniors, and makes recommendations to the Secretary of the Department of Aging. Jennifer Wolff appointed to NASEM Committee on Care Interventions for Individuals with Dementia and their Caregivers The committee will take stock of the current state of knowledge and inform decision making about which care interventions for individuals with dementia and their caregivers are ready for dissemination and implementation on a broad scale. SELECT RECENT PUBLICATIONS Aboumatar H, Naqibuddin M, Chung S, Chaudhry H, Kim SW, Saunders J, Bone L, Gurses AP, Knowlton A, Pronovost P, Putcha N, Rand C, Roter D, Sylvester C, Thompson C, Wolff JL, Hibbard J, Wise RA. Effect of a Program Combining Transitional Care and Long-term Self- management Support on Outcomes of Hospitalized Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2018 Dec 11;320(22):2335-2343. doi: 10.1001/jama.2018.17933. Boyd CM, Leff B, Wolff JL, Roth DL, Sheehan OC. Interactions Between Physicians and Skilled Home Health Care Agencies in Certification of Plans of Care. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Nov 6;169(9):661-662. doi: 10.7326/L18-0466. No abstract available. Granbom M, Perrin N, Szanton S, Cudjoe T, Gitlin LN. Household Accessibility and Residential Relocation in Older Adults. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2018 Nov 2. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gby131. [Epub ahead of print] Reeve E, Wolff JL, Skehan M, Bayliss EA, Hilmer SN, Boyd CM. Assessment of Attitudes Toward Deprescribing in Older Medicare Beneficiaries in the United States. JAMA Intern Med. 2018 Dec 1;178(12):1673-1680. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.4720. Riffin C, Van Ness PH, Wolff JL, Fried T. Multifactorial Examination of Caregiver Burden in a National Sample of Family and Unpaid Caregivers. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2018 Nov 19. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15664. [Epub ahead of print] Wanigatunga AA, Gresham GK, Kuo PL, Martinez-Amezcua P, Zipunnikov V, Dy SM, Simonsick EM, Ferrucci L, Schrack JA. Contrasting characteristics of daily physical activity in older adults by cancer history. Cancer. 2018 Dec 15;124(24):4692-4699. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31745. Epub 2018 Oct 1. Wolff JL, Mulcahy J, Huang J, Roth DL, Covinsky K, Kasper JD. Family Caregivers of Older Adults, 1999-2015: Trends in Characteristics, Circumstances, and Role-Related Appraisal. Gerontologist. 2018 Nov 3;58(6):1021-1032. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnx093. Roger C. Lipitz Center for Integrated Health Care, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health 624 N. Broadway Rm. 692, Baltimore, MD 21205 | 410-614-7910 Visit our Website | Follow us on Twitter | View Previous Issues 2018 © Manage your preferences | Opt out using TrueRemove® Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails. View this email online. 624 North Broadway, Room 692 Baltimore, MD | 21205 US This email was sent to . To continue receiving our emails, add us to your address book. Subscribe to our email list

Upload: others

Post on 02-Jan-2022

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: N E WS & U P D AT E S - JHSPH

Share this email:

Winter 2019

FACULTY SPOTLIGHT

We are thrilled to spotlight one of our newest faculty members, Emmanuel F.Drabo, PhD, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management. Dr. Drabois a health economist and recently completed a postdoctoral fellowship inPrimary Care and Outcomes Research in the Basu Lab at Stanford University.He holds a doctoral degree from the University of Southern California. Dr.Drabo’ research exploits economic evaluation and systems science methodsto estimate the impact of major public health policy changes on morbidity andmortality from major chronic conditions in the United States–includingcardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases and dementias, as well asdisparities in these outcomes.

RESEARCH FINDINGS

Do Medicare Advantage Rebates Reduce Enrollees’ Out-of-Pocket Spending? Study by Lauren Nicholas and Shannon Wu in Medical Care Research andReview examines whether Medicare Advantage plan savings are passed onto the consumer or retained by the plan. Results suggest enrollees do notrecover the full value of additional payments, but may benefit from increasedavailability of supplemental benefits, increasing the value of the benefitpackage. Read More.

Using Credit Scores to Understand Predictors andConsequences of Disease

Credit scores may serve as proxies for social and economic factors that are on the causal pathwaybetween individual psychobehavioral characteristics and health. Commentary by Lorraine Dean andLauren Nicholas in American Journal of Public Health discusses how consumer credit may be used toadvance public health research, but must be considered in the context of health equity to avoidreinforcing health disparities. Read More.

Evaluation of the Measuring and Improving Quality in Palliative Care Survey

A study by Sydney Dy, Ritu Sharma, Kamini Kuchinad, Zi-RouLiew, Nebras Abu Al Hamayel, Susan M. Hannum, Junya Zhu, Arif H.Kamal, Anne M. Walling, Karl A. Lorenz, and Sarina R. Isenberg in theJournal of Oncology Practice evaluates the reliability, content validity andvariation of a survey designed to assess facilitators and barriers to qualitymeasurement and improvement in palliative care. The survey may be usefulto palliative care programs seeking to target specific issues or areas ofimprovement before implementing a new initiative. Read More.

Racial Disparities in Medicaid Home and Community-Based Services

Study by Chanee Fabius, Kali Thomas, Tingting Zhang, Jessica Ogarek, andTheresa Shireman in BMC Health Services Research finds black Home &Community-Based Services recipients with Multiple Sclerosis are much less likely touse supportive services such as case management, equipment, technology,modifications, and nursing services. African-Americans are alreadydisproportionately impacted by Multiple Sclerosis, and findings may reflect differingpreferences for care or in access to care. Read More.

Examining Disparities in Assisted Living Settings

Study by Chanee Fabius and Kali Thomas in Journal of the American Medical DirectorsAssociation examined racial differences among a national cohort of assisted living residents and howthe racial variation among assisted living Medicare Fee-For-Service beneficiaries compared todifferences in community-dwelling and nursing home cohorts. Results suggest black beneficiaries weredisproportionally represented in assisted living, were more often younger, disabled, and dually eligiblefor Medicare and Medicaid compared to white residents. Read More.

Access to Hearing Care Services Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries Study by Amber Willink, Nicholas S. Reed, and Frank R. Lin in Health Affairsanalyzed experiences of Medicare recipients aged sixty-five and older whoutilized hearing aids to compare access across different demographics. Thefindings show that lower education and income levels of beneficiaries wereassociated with increased chances of having hearing impairments and decreasedlikelihood of using hearing aids and services. With the Over-the-Counter HearingAid Act of 2017, increased access to hearing aids may not correlate with improvedhearing overall unless hearing care services are provided. Read More.

Effect of a Biobehavioral Environmental Approach on Disability among Low-Income Older Adults

Study by Sarah Szanton, Qian-Li Xue, Bruce Leff; Jack Guralnik, JenniferWolff, Ibby Tanner, Cynthia Boyd, Roland Thorpe, David Bishai and LauraGitlin in Journal of the American Medical Association Internal Medicinedemonstrates that CAPABLE, a home-based intervention, reduced disability by30% compared to a control group also receiving home visits. This work wasrecently awarded a $3 million grant from the Rita & Alex Hillman Foundation toscale the CAPABLE program beyond the 26 places in 12 States it is alreadyoperating. Read More.

Older Adults’ Preferences for Discussing Long-Term Life Expectancy

Study by Nancy Schoenborn, Ellen Janssen, Cynthia Boyd, John Bridges,Antonio Wolff, Qian-Li Xue & Craig Pollack in Annals of Family Medicine examinedolder adults' preferences for communicating long-term life expectancy in the primarycare setting when patients may have less than 10 years to live but are not at the endof life. Findings indicate that most participants did not wish to discuss life expectancywhen presented a hypothetical scenario, but were willing to discuss life expectancyas life expectancy became limited. Read More.

It’s Still The Prices, Stupid: Why The US Spends So Much On Health Care

Article by Gerard Anderson, Peter Hussey, and Varduhi Petrosyan in HealthAffairs revisits a 2003 coauthored article as a tribute to Uwe Reinhardt.Conclusions from most recent OECD data indicate that little has changed since2003 and that comparatively higher prices drive disproportionate health carespending in US. Read More.

NEWS FROM THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND AGING TRENDS STUDY

Seven rounds of NHATS (2011-2017) and three waves of the National Study of Caregivers (2011,2015, 2017) are available at www.nhats.org. The longitudinal NSOC III file with time use diaries willbe released this Spring. Nearly 3,000 users have registered to access NHATS data, from which>150 peer-reviewed articles have been published, including these:

Does Caregiving Strain Increase as Patients with and without Dementia Approachthe End of Life? Family caregivers are critically important in dementia care. However,when demands exceed capacity, caregiving can impose role-relatedstrain. A study led by Judith Vick, Katherine Ornstein, Sarah Szanton,Sydney Dy & Jennifer Wolff in Journal of Pain and SymptomManagement using NHATS data finds that dementia caregivers reportsignificantly higher strain than non-dementia caregivers, and this iseven more pronounced for the caregiver near the end of the patient’slife. Read more.

Care Arrangements of Older Adults: What They Prefer, What They Have, andImplications for Quality of Life Study by Judith Kasper, Jennifer Wolff & Maureen Skehan in The Gerontologistusing NHATS data examines individual preferences of older persons for long-termservices and supports. Investigators found an even split in preferences betweenassisted living/continuing care retirement communities, care in own home withfamily help, and care in own home with paid help, but that these preferences werenot always aligned with actual care arrangements. Read More.

Factors Associated with Loss of Usual Source of Care Among Older Adults An estimated 95% of older adults report having a usual source of medicalcare, which often bridge the gaps in care continuity. Study by StephanieNothelle, Cynthia Boyd, Orla Sheehan & Jennifer Wolff in Annals of FamilyMedicine finds losing access to a USC was associated with transportationbarriers, moving residences, depressive symptoms, and lack of supplementalinsurance. Read More.

Impact of Age, Health and Function on Cancer Screening in Older Adults Study by Nancy Schoenborn, Jin Huang, OrlaSheehan, Jennifer Wolff, David Roth & CynthiaBoyd in Journal of General Internal Medicineexamines cancer screening rates and whethercertain population sub-groups among older adultsare over or under screened. Findings suggest thatthe sub-group of younger adults with poor healthare over-screened for cancer at higher rates thanthe sub-group who are older with the samepredicted life expectancy. Read More.

NEWS & UPDATES

David Roth Appointed to Maryland Commission on Aging by Governor Hogan

David Roth, Director for the Center on Aging and Health, was appointed byGovernor Larry Hogan as one of 13 members of the Maryland Commission onAging. The commission reviews ongoing and future statewide programs andactivities for seniors, and makes recommendations to the Secretary of theDepartment of Aging.

Jennifer Wolff appointed to NASEM Committee on Care Interventions forIndividuals with Dementia and their Caregivers The committee will take stock of the current state of knowledge and inform decisionmaking about which care interventions for individuals with dementia and theircaregivers are ready for dissemination and implementation on a broad scale.

SELECT RECENT PUBLICATIONS

Aboumatar H, Naqibuddin M, Chung S, Chaudhry H, Kim SW, Saunders J, Bone L, Gurses AP,Knowlton A, Pronovost P, Putcha N, Rand C, Roter D, Sylvester C, Thompson C, Wolff JL,Hibbard J, Wise RA. Effect of a Program Combining Transitional Care and Long-term Self-management Support on Outcomes of Hospitalized Patients With Chronic ObstructivePulmonary Disease: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2018 Dec 11;320(22):2335-2343. doi:10.1001/jama.2018.17933. Boyd CM, Leff B, Wolff JL, Roth DL, Sheehan OC. Interactions Between Physicians and SkilledHome Health Care Agencies in Certification of Plans of Care. Ann Intern Med. 2018 Nov6;169(9):661-662. doi: 10.7326/L18-0466. No abstract available. Granbom M, Perrin N, Szanton S, Cudjoe T, Gitlin LN. Household Accessibility and ResidentialRelocation in Older Adults. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2018 Nov 2. doi:10.1093/geronb/gby131. [Epub ahead of print] Reeve E, Wolff JL, Skehan M, Bayliss EA, Hilmer SN, Boyd CM. Assessment of AttitudesToward Deprescribing in Older Medicare Beneficiaries in the United States. JAMA Intern Med.2018 Dec 1;178(12):1673-1680. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.4720. Riffin C, Van Ness PH, Wolff JL, Fried T. Multifactorial Examination of Caregiver Burden in aNational Sample of Family and Unpaid Caregivers. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2018 Nov 19. doi:10.1111/jgs.15664. [Epub ahead of print] Wanigatunga AA, Gresham GK, Kuo PL, Martinez-Amezcua P, Zipunnikov V, Dy SM, SimonsickEM, Ferrucci L, Schrack JA. Contrasting characteristics of daily physical activity in older adultsby cancer history. Cancer. 2018 Dec 15;124(24):4692-4699. doi: 10.1002/cncr.31745. Epub 2018Oct 1. Wolff JL, Mulcahy J, Huang J, Roth DL, Covinsky K, Kasper JD. Family Caregivers of OlderAdults, 1999-2015: Trends in Characteristics, Circumstances, and Role-Related Appraisal.Gerontologist. 2018 Nov 3;58(6):1021-1032. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnx093.

Roger C. Lipitz Center for Integrated Health Care, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health624 N. Broadway Rm. 692, Baltimore, MD 21205 | 410-614-7910

Visit our Website | Follow us on Twitter | View Previous Issues 2018 ©

Manage your preferences | Opt out using TrueRemove®

Got this as a forward? Sign up to receive our future emails.

View this email online.

624 North Broadway, Room 692 Baltimore, MD | 21205 US

This email was sent to . To continue receiving our emails, add us to your address book.

Subscribe to our email list