TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING TODAY’S RESEARCH DRIVING TOMORROW’S OUTCOMES 2018 AGENDA

June 24-26 │ Seattle academyhealth.org/arm #ARM18 @AcademyHealth TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS Continuing Education Credits...... 2 Conference at a Glance...... 5 Conference Information...... 6 Conference Supporters and Participating Federal Agencies...... 8 Washington State Convention Center Floor Plan...... 9 Sheraton Seattle Hotel Floor Plan...... 10 TAB 1: Interest Group and Adjunct Meetings...... 11 TAB 2: Agenda—Sunday...... 17 TAB 3: Agenda—Monday...... 33 TAB 4: Agenda—Tuesday...... 55 TAB 5: Resources...... 69 Speaker Index...... 69 Participating Federal Agencies Profiles...... 74 Private Supporters Profiles...... 75 Exhibit Program and Profiles...... 78 Exhibit Hall Floor Plan...... 88 Poster Index...... 89 Best Abstracts...... 160 TAB 6: Advertisements...... 165 Notes Pages...... 191

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 1 2018 CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS

Learner Notification Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing AcademyHealth - 2018 Annual Research Meeting education for the healthcare team. June 24-26, 2018 Credit Designation Statement - Amedco designates this Seattle, WA live activity for a maximum of 17.25 AMA PRA Category 1 TM Acknowledgement of Financial Commercial Credits for physicians and 17.25 contact hours for nurses. Learners should claim only the credit commensurate with the Support extent of their participation in the activity. No financial commercial support was received for this educational activity. Objectives - After attending this program you should be able to: Acknowledgement of In-Kind Commercial Support 1. Identify the latest emerging evidence in health services No in-kind commercial support was received for this research educational activity. 2. Improve applications of rigorous and research and Satisfactory Completion methods skills Learners must complete an evaluation to receive a certificate 3. Examine the most current and useful health services of completion. Your chosen sessions must be attended in research their entirety. Partial credit of individual sessions is not Disclosure of Conflict of Interest available. If you are seeking continuing education credit for a specialty not listed below, it is your responsibility to The following table of disclosure information is provided to contact your licensing/certification board to determine course learners and contains the relevant financial relationships eligibility for your board requirement. that each individual in a position to control the content disclosed to Amedco. All of these relationships were treated Physicians / Nurses as a conflict of interest, and have been resolved. (C7 SCS 6.1-­‐6.2, 6.5) In support of improving patient care, this activity has been planned and implemented by All individuals in a position to control the content of CE Amedco LLC and AcademyHealth. Amedco are listed in the program book. If their name is not listed LLC is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for below, they disclosed that they had no relevant financial Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation relationships. Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American

First Name Last Name Commercial Interest Katherine Baicker Eli Lilly; Received-Stock Shareholder; Eli Lilly; Received-Corporate Board Member Laurence Baker Halyard Health; Received-Acted as expert in legal matter involving Halyard Health Anirban Basu Salutis Consulting; Received-Consultant Anne Beal Sanofi; Received-Employee Rinad Beidas Merck; Received-Consultant; Oxford University Press; Received-Royalties for Book Abbott Labs; Received-Stock Shareholder; Abbvie; Received-Stock Shareholder; Johnson & Johnson; Received-Stock Shareholder; Foundation ; Received-Stock Shareholder; Prosumer Health a start- Andrea Borondy Kitts up company developing an AI driven individualized mobile health platform to help individuals manage their health and healthcare; National Cancer Institute; Received-Stock Shareholder, Employee, Corporate Board Member; Mary Brunette Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; Alkermes; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; Alkermes; Received-Consultant Diana Buist GRAIL; Received-Consultant; Concure Oncology; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Kate Bundorf Bayer; Received-Consultant NIA; Received-Co-I; BCBSM Fdn; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; AHA; Received- Lena Chen Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; Commonwealth Fund; Received-Consultant; HHS; Received- Employee; RWJF; Received-Honoraria

2 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

First Name Last Name Commercial Interest David Classen Pascal Metrics; Received-Stock Shareholder; Pascal Metrics; Received-Employee John Dane Home State Health Insurance Company; Received-Member of Quality Committee for HSH Medicaid Plan Amy Davidoff Celgene; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Lindsey Ferris Audacious Inquiry; Received-Employee; CRISP; Received-Consultant Amy Flaster Health Catalyst; Received-Employee Genentech, Inc.; Received-Consultant; Novartis, Inc.; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Novartis, Inc.; Received-Consultant; Adamas Pharmaceuticals; Received-Consultant; Novo Nordisk, Inc.; Received- Lou Garrison Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Merck, Inc.; Received-Consultant; Premera, Inc.; Received-Scientific/ Medical Advisory Board Member Astra Zeneca; Received-Research Grant Co-investigator; ; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Michael Gionfriddo Member; Hillcrest Medical Center; Received-Speaker on SDM at a CME Conference; PhRMA Foundation; Received-Panel member at a conference on medication adhernece Sherry Glied NeuroRx; Received-Corporate Board Member Pacira Pharmaceuticals; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Spark Therapeutics; Neil Goldfarb Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member NaviHealth; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Precision Health ; Received- David Grabowski Consultant; CareLinx; Received-Consultant; Vivacitas; Received-Consultant Regina Greer-Smith Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals; Received-Consultant Abbott; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; GlaxoSmithKline; Received-Research Grant Bradley Hammill Overall Principal Investigator; Amgen; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; Boston Scientific; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator Katherine Harris IMPAQ International; Received-Employee Fang He General Electric; Received-Stock Shareholder; Costco; Received-Stock Shareholder Molly Jeffery Vireo Health; Received-Stock Shareholder Blue Cross Blue Shield of /Blue Care Network; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Keith Kocher Investigator Julia Kohn Pfizer, Inc.; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator Miriam Laugesen Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Received-Research Grant Site Principal Investigator Lois Lee UptoDate; Received-author Jodi Liu Amgen; Received-Employee; Amgen; Received-Stock Shareholder Danielle Lloyd AHIP; Received-Employee Kristina Lowell Deloitte; Received-Consultant Kristin Lyman eNre, Inc.; Received-Stock Shareholder NIDA; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; CMS; Received-Research Grant Site Principal Matthew Maciejewski Investigator; VA HSR&D; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; University of Alabama- Birmingham; Received-Speakers Bureau; Amgen; Received-Stock ownership due to spouse's employment United Health Group; Received-Employee; Medtronic; Received-Stock Shareholder; Medtronic; Received- Jaclyn Marshall Employee J. Michael McGinnis Caleres; Received-Corporate Board Member John McHugh Navigant Consulting; Received-Consultant David Meltzer CVS Health; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Brian Mittman Merck Vaccines Division; Received-Speakers Bureau PointRight; Received-Stock Shareholder; PointRight; Received-Corporate Board Member; PointRight; Vincent Mor Received-Founder; NaviHealth; Received-Stock Shareholder; HCR Manor Care; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Navvis and Company; Received-Consultant; Navigant Inc.; Received-Consultant; Lync Medical; Received- Amol Navathe Consultant; Indegene Inc.; Received-Consultant; Sutherland Global Services; Received-Consultant; Elsevier Press; Received-publisher

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 3 2018

First Name Last Name Commercial Interest Catalyst Health; Received-Founder; HealthMine Services; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Mitesh Patel Life.io; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Robert Penfold Janssen Pharmaceuticals; Received-Research Grant Site Principal Investigator Jonathan Perlin Cerner; Received-Consultant; IBM Watson; Received-Consultant Kathryn Phillips Illumina; Received-Consultant; Counsyl; Received-Consultant Elisa Priest GSK; Received-Research Grant Site Principal Investigator Andrew Quanbeck CHESS Mobile Health; Received-Stock Shareholder Carl Rush Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Received-Consultant Robert Saunders Pfizer; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator Sarah J. Shoemaker Emmi Solutions-Medical Advisory Board; Received-Consultant Tecomet; Received-Corporate Board Member; Tecomet; Received-partner in investment partnership that is Anna Sinaiko majority owner Christie Teigland Avalere Health; Received-Employee VA HSR&D; Received-Research Grant Overall Principal Investigator; NIDDK; Received-Research Grant Virginia Wang Overall Principal Investigator Stephanie Wheeler Pfizer; Received-unrelated grant funding University of Washington; Received-Employee; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; Received- Adam Wilcox Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member; Kaiser Permanente; Received-Consultant; Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute; Received-Scientific/Medical Advisory Board Member Edwin Wong UnitedHealth Group Inc.; Received-Stock Shareholder Jiani Yu Optum; Received-Employee

How to get your certificate: 1. Go to http://achl.cmecertificateonline.com 2. Click on the “AcademyHealth - 2018 Annual Research Meeting” link

Please print all pages of your certificate for your record.

Questions? Email [email protected] ACHE Qualified Education Credit AcademyHealth is authorized to award 17.25 hours of pre-approved ACHE Qualified Education credit for this program toward advancement or recertification in the American College of Healthcare Executives (ACHE). Participants in this program who wish to have the continuing education hours applied toward ACHE Qualified Education credit must self-report their participation. To self-report, participants should log into their MyACHE account and select ACHE Qualified Education Credit.

4 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 CONFERENCE AT A GLANCE All Annual Research Meeting activities and sessions will take place at the Washington State Convention Center, unless otherwise noted.

Saturday, June 23 Sunday, June 24 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Registration Open 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Registration Open 8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Concurrent Interest 7:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Meet-the-Experts Student Group Pre-Conference Sessions Breakfast 8:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Coffee Break Behavioral Health Services 8:45 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Opening Plenary Research / Disability Research / 10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Break Global Health and Health Care/ Health Economics / 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open Interdisciplinary Research Group 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Concurrent Sessions on Nursing Issues / Public 12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m. Poster Session A and Health Systems Research / Boxed Lunch Surgical & Perioperative Care / Translation & Communications 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. Concurrent Sessions 3:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Break

8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. State Health Research and 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Concurrent Sessions Policy Interest Group Pre-Conference Session Monday, June 25 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Registration Open 8:30 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Child Health Services Research Interest Group Pre-Conference 8:00 a.m.–9:15 a.m. Poster Session B and Session Continental Breakfast 8:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Concurrent Sessions 12:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. AcademyHealth Interest Groups and NRSA Poster Session 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Luncheon Plenary 1:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Seminars in Health Services 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions Research Methods 4:00 p.m.–8:15 p.m. Exhibit Hall Open 4:45 p.m.–5:15 p.m. Break 2:15 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Health Information Technology 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m. Concurrent Sessions Interest Group Pre-Conference 6:45 p.m.–8:15 p.m. Poster Session C and Reception Session

2:30 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Concurrent Interest Group Tuesday, June 26 Pre-Conference Sessions 7:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Registration Open Disparities / Health Workforce 7:00 a.m.-8:00 a.m. Coffee Break / Long-Term Services and 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Concurrent Sessions Supports / Oral Health / Quality and Value 9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Break 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Concurrent Sessions 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m. Concurrent Sessions

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 5 2018 CONFERENCE INFORMATION

Registration Location and Hours Code of Conduct Conference registration will be located in the Atrium Lobby AcademyHealth is committed to providing a safe, hospitable on Level Four of the Washington State Convention Center and productive meeting environment for everyone attending (WSCC). Registration will be open during the following days our events. We are committed to providing a harassment- and times: free environment for everyone, regardless of gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, ethnicity, religion, disability, Saturday, June 23 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. physical appearance or other group identity. As such, Sunday, June 24 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. AcademyHealth prohibits intimidating, threatening or harassing Monday, June 25 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. conduct during our meetings. This prohibition applies to all Tuesday, June 26 7:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. participants, including attendees, speakers, volunteers, staff, Exhibit Hours exhibitors and volunteers. If an individual engages in harassing behavior, AcademyHealth reserves the right to remove the Sunday, June 24 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. individual from the meeting or take other appropriate action. Monday, June 25 8:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m.–8:15 p.m. Conference Recording and Photography Badges AcademyHealth staff and official vendors will photograph and record events and educational sessions throughout Official ARM badges must be worn at all times to be admitted the ARM. While we encourage attendees to take photos on to all conference activities. their mobile devices and share their experience on social media, all other recording devices are prohibited without Accessibility Services prior authorization. Recorded educational sessions will be Conference staff will work with attendees to provide available on the AcademyHealth website following the ARM. reasonable accommodations for those who require special In addition, official photographs and recordings may be used needs. Visit the registration desk in the Atrium Lobby on for promotional purposes and continuing education offerings. Level Four of the WSCC to request onsite assistance. Private Room Membership Services A private room will be available throughout the conference Membership services staff will be available during the for those needing private space (e.g., nursing mothers). meeting at the AcademyHealth booth located in the 6ABC Please see the onsite registration desk for access. Foyer on Level Six of the WSCC. FedEx Office Message Board Located on Level One of the WSCC, the FedEx Office hours You may leave general messages for other attendees on the are as follows: message board located near registration. Monday-Thursday 7:00 a.m.–10:00 p.m. Wi-Fi Access Friday 7:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m. Complimentary wireless internet access is available Saturday Saturday-Sunday 9:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. through Tuesday in the meeting space of the WSCC. See the back of your meeting badge for access information. Shipping Services The FedEx Office (listed above) can assist you with your Supported in part by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation shipping needs.

Participants List Lost and Found A PDF of the participant list is available at academyhealth.org/ To inquire about a lost item or report a found item, contact arm/arc. Also, check out connecting with ARM participants on the the WSCC Security Control office at 206.694.5127. official meeting app. Concierge Service The concierge in your hotel can locate and book various services, including restaurant reservations, sightseeing tickets, tours, sports and performing arts tickets, local attractions, and ground transportation.

6 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Mobile App (powered by Core-apps) Access session information to build a customized meeting Social Media at the ARM agenda, view a list of exhibitors, and much more! To Stay connected throughout the conference: download, search “AcademyHealth Events” on your phone’s app store. Follow us on Twitter: @AcademyHealth The conference hashtag is #ARM18 Supported in part by Westat Read about the ARM on the blog: Poster Walks academyhealth.org/blog AcademyHealth will host poster walks limited to students and fellows for three themes during each poster session. These poster walks are led by expert faculty who will Like us on Facebook: review and put into context select posters of interest, while www.facebook.com/academyhealth providing a venue for networking and informal discussion. Advance registration was required, but please check the Build your network by joining the AcademyHealth booth for possible openings. AcademyHealth LinkedIn group Children and Families at the ARM For those traveling with children and families, please note:

• For safety and insurance reasons, as well as WSCC regulations, children younger than 16 are not permitted in the Exhibit Hall or Poster Sessions at any time. • Family members ages 16 and older may attend plenary meal functions and/or receptions with prior registration. Visit onsite registration for details. • Conference sessions are for registered participants only. Contact the hotel concierge to inquire about onsite babysitting services.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 7 2018 SUPPORTERS Learn more about the Supporters by reading their profi les (located in the Resources section). Media Partner

Diamond

Platinum

Gold Silver

Bronze

University of California San Francisco

PhD Program in Health Services

Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies School of Medicine Participating Federal Agencies

8 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER FLOOR PLAN

WSCC Use 2AB Lobby

Convention FE FE Open To/From Center Office M W Level 3 FE 12 To/From North Service Corridor 11 Level 1 FE Deli FE N-2 208* North W Loading Dock N-1 2A To/From The Conference UP

M 209* Center DOWN 205 4E 4F

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212 Grill 400 203 4C-1 Dock 4C-4 FE 10 W FE 4C M 4B 4A 213 416

202 FE 401

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FE Levels 1 to 4 FE 201 439 438 FE 67 1 2 WM MW FE $ 76 DOWN To/From UP

Ramp Level 6 Galleria Waterfall Suite FE To Two Union Square Atrium Lobby FE FE Open FE Grand Staircase To/From Levels 5 & 6 Int’l. FE FE Meeting FE Place FE

Ellis Plaza

Service Service FE FE Service FE Service FE FE FE 3 5 4

6E 6C 6B 6A

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610 605 618 617 M W MW 609 606 604 FE 619 616 611

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6E Lobby FE 614 613 657 FE Suite C Suite A FE M W 6ABC Lobby 601* Terrace

Level 4 12 To/From FE 67 To/From Level 4

To/From Levels 4 & 5 Galleria Atrium Lobby (Below) (Below)

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 9 2018 SHERATON SEATTLE FLOOR PLAN

10 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda Interest Group and Adjunct Meetings

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Fellowship by 5pm PT 2019 Fellowship for the July degree PhD or in October 2018 to be scheduled are : Division of Research projects Master’s Science are due Sept 17, 2018 modest amount of clinical to engage in a are encouraged clinical training private federal agencies, n grants awarded by the NIH, other i without a Science.withhealth professional candidates We seek outstanding studies delivery science mentorship on at least two scientific Individualized with faculty and fellows Weekly Works-In-Progress meetings topics skills development and Monthly seminar series on career Core competency including journal in Delivery Science methods training methodological at The opportunity for advanced in relevant areas coursework Permanente nearby UC campuses Candidate interviews UC Berkeley). application with Health (requires successful Berkeley’s School of Public Fellows with basis system, to be arranged on a case-by-case activity within the health part of Kaiser Permanente’s California, Northern The Division of Research in Oakland, on a projects funded ongoing, and 350 faculty-level investigators California Region, has 53 over totaled research portfolio Division’s wide range of health research topics. In 2017, the $84 million industry, and Kaiser Permanente. Applications Kaiser publications based on first-authored at least two • Experience writing • Delivery program in research fellowship Research offers a post-doctoral The Division of Delivery ScD,degrees (e.g. PhD, DrPH or equivalent). The two-year, full-time program includes: • • • • Track within the fellowship Informatics also apply for the Clinical may Candidates Clinicians (e.g. MD, PharmD,doctorate degrees and/or research or equivalent) https://divisionofresearch.kaiserpermanente.org/research/fellowship-program For more information Interest Group and Adjunct Meetings MPH Class of2019 I vumc.org/health-policy @VUHealthPol • • • • Q UICKFATS The health credible, Trusted Master Over 22 Photo Credit Terry Wyatt at • Vanderbilt the Primary Health, Tracks and 60 local, nonpartisan of source mentees health in Public & Faculty Epidemiology, state, Health Department for care Health in data and information Policy 16 through V ANDERBILT H D federal  disciplines and program E

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TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 INTEREST GROUP AND ADJUNCT MEETINGS INTEREST GROUP AND GROUP AND INTEREST Interest group and adjunct meetings take place at the Washington State Convention Center (WSCC) and the Sheraton Seattle Hotel. ADJUNCT MEETINGS

Saturday, June 23 Global Health and Health Care Interest Group Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 613 (Level Six) 8:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m. Registration required 24th Annual NRSA Trainees Research Conference Sheraton - Grand Ballroom A (Second Floor) The Global Health and Health Care Interest Group is a network to connect researchers, practitioners, policymakers, Invitation only and trainees interested in health services and systems research (HSR) in a global context. This meeting will foster the global development, dissemination, and use of HSR to 8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. improve the quality, efficiency, effectiveness, and outcome of Concurrent Interest Group Meetings care globally.

Behavioral Health Services Research Interest Health Economics Interest Group Group Pre-Conference Session Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 615/616 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 619/620 (Level Six)

Registration required Registration required

The Behavioral Health Services Research Interest Group The Health Economics Interest Group is composed of Meeting provides a unique opportunity for the community of researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and others behavioral health services researchers, providers, and policy interested in a broad range of health economics issues. professionals to learn about the latest behavioral health The group’s mission is to foster the development and services research, develop new skills, and discuss critical dissemination of the best health economics research to policy issues. affect health services policy and practice. Supported in part by the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement; Supported in part by Booz Allen Hamilton, IMPAQ International, LLC, Brandeis University; Health Care Systems Research Network; and IBM Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery, and the Watson Health University of Washington

Disability Research Interest Group Interdisciplinary Research Group on Nursing Pre-Conference Session Issues Interest Group Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 617 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 611/612 (Level Six)

Registration required Registration required

AcademyHealth’s Disability Research Interest Group (DRIG) The Interdisciplinary Research Group on Nursing Issues is composed of health services and policy researchers Interest Group Meeting provides a unique opportunity for interested in care coordination, quality improvement, support nursing health services researchers, providers, and policy services, assistive technology, and environmental changes professionals to learn about the latest research, develop new for people with disabilities and chronic illnesses. The DRIG skills, and discuss critical policy issues. brings together a community of researchers, analysts, and persons with disabilities to share research findings on Supported in part by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing; disability policy and practice in the United States and abroad. NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing; Press Ganey; The Rita and Alex Hillman Foundation; University of Alabama at Birmingham, School Supported in part by the Center for Health Policy and Research, of Nursing; University of Pennsylvania, School of Nursing, Center for Commonwealth Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School; Health Outcomes & Policy Research; and Westat Health Care Systems Research Network; Lurie Institute for Disability Policy; Mathematica Policy Research; and Washington State University

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 11 2018

Public Health Systems Research Interest Group 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Pre-Conference Session State Health Research and Policy Interest Group WSCC - Room 618 (Level Six) Pre-Conference Session Registration required WSCC - Room 609 (Level Six)

The Public Health Systems Research Interest Group Meeting Registration required offers researchers the opportunity to disseminate their The State Health Research and Policy (SHRP) Interest findings and provides policymakers and practitioners with Group provides a forum for researchers, policymakers, and information to make sound decisions to improve public practitioners to share state-level research that emphasizes health policy and practice. the unique challenges of working within a state policy and Supported in part by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation political environment. The group strives to develop a network to inform decision making and foster dialogue between state Surgical and Perioperative Care Interest Group and national health services researchers, policy analysts, and Pre-Conference Session policymakers. WSCC - Room 614 (Level Six) Supported in part by the Georgia Health Policy Center; Hilltop Institute Registration required at UMBC; New York State Health Foundation; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Rutgers Center for State Health Policy; SHADAC at the AcademyHealth’s Surgical and Perioperative Care University of Minnesota Interest Group offers a common venue for surgeons, anesthesiologists, intensivists, proceduralists, nurses, health 8:30 a.m.–6:30 p.m. policy analysts, researchers, and policymakers to discuss high-priority issues that affect the value of care and quality Child Health Services Research Interest Group of life for surgical patients. Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 606 (Level Six) Supported in part by Intuitive Surgical, Penn Center for Perioperative Outcomes Research and Transformation’s; Mayo Clinic, Center for the Registration required Science of Health Care Delivery; S-SPIRE in the Stanford Department of Surgery; and Surgical Outcomes Club The Child Health Services Research (CHSR) Interest Group provides a forum for researchers, policymakers, practitioners, Translation and Communications Interest Group and trainees to share information about health services Pre-Conference Session issues affecting children. The group recognizes the important WSCC - Room 610 (Level Six) role of pregnancy and perinatal health, family context, and the dynamics of transitions from childhood to adolescence to Registration required young adulthood in shaping health and well-being. The group The Translation and Communications Interest Group provides opportunities to disseminate research findings, is composed of researchers, policymakers, advocates, inform policy and clinical decision making, build researchers’ journalists, consumers, practitioners, and others interested skills, and network. in improving the quality of health care. The group focuses on Supported in part by the American Academy of Pediatrics; and Nemours practical ways to understand, translate, and communicate research findings to meet the needs of various audiences, including improving the quality of information that informs health policy development.

12 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 INTEREST GROUP AND GROUP AND INTEREST ADJUNCT MEETINGS 12:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. Generating and Understanding Evidence Needed for Complex Interventions and Real World Applications Joint Interest Group and NRSA Poster Session WSCC - Room 603 (Level Six) WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4 AfB (Level Four) This AcademyHealth Methods Council Pre-Conference Registration required Workshop exposes investigators to the implementation and use of different designs, methodologies and data for 1:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. evaluating complex interventions, and explores how various approaches have been used in a diversity of settings with Seminars in HSR Methods real-world applications. Registration required Level of Seminar Difficulty: Introductory Understanding and Analyzing Health Care Data – the NAMCS & NHAMCS IPUMS Data Resources for Health Services Research WSCC - Room 602 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 604 (Level Six)

The overall goal of the workshop is to provide a general overview This session provides an overview of data resources of two records-based surveys of ambulatory medical care, the available from IPUMS for health services research. National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) and the Speakers will review access and use of data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS). Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Household Component The NAMCS collects data on physician office visits and (MEPS), National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), American community health centers, while the NHAMCS collects data on Community Survey (ACS), Current Population Survey (CPS), hospital outpatient and emergency department visits. National Historic Geographic Information System (NHGIS), and GeoMarker (a new geocoding platform for health data). Level of Seminar Difficulty: Introductory Level of Seminar Difficulty: Introductory Supported by the National Center for Health Statistics Supported by the University of Minnesota Extending Your Reach: Building a Basic Communications Plan to Disseminate Your Work 2:15 p.m.–6:30 p.m. WSCC - Room 605 (Level Six) Health Information Technology Interest Group Led by members of AcademyHealth’s communications team, this Pre-Conference Session workshop will present fundamental concepts of communications WSCC - Room 618 (Level Six) planning while walking participants through the practical application of those concepts to their own work. Registrants Registration required should bring a sample of their research from which to begin building their own communications plans during the workshop. The Health Information Technology (HIT) Interest Group encompasses health information systems and technologies Level of Seminar Difficulty: Introductory used in health care delivery and management. The group focuses on using HIT to improve health care quality, optimize patient safety, and reduce the cost of health care.

Supported in part by Health Care Systems Research Network; and Westat

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 13 2018

2:30 p.m.–6:30 p.m. Oral Health Interest Group Pre-Conference Session Concurrent Interest Group Meetings WSCC - Room 617 (Level Six) Disparities Interest Group Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) Registration required

Registration required Supported in part by ADA HPI and Dentaquest

The Disparities Interest Group provides a forum to share Quality and Value Interest Group knowledge, challenges, methods, and best practices in Pre-Conference Session improving inequalities in health care access, quality of care, WSCC - Room 615/616 (Level Six) and health outcomes. Registration required Supported in part by Center for Health Disparities Solutions, Johns Hopkins University; Cigna; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; RWJF The Quality and Value Interest Group is composed of Center for Health Policy at Meharry Medical College; and University of researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and others Iowa interested in the broad range of health care quality issues. The mission of the group is to bring together these multiple Health Workforce Interest Group disciplines to foster development of a climate of awareness Pre-Conference Session of health care quality issues and to integrate that awareness WSCC - Room 611/612 (Level Six) into a more comprehensive understanding of pathways for effective measurement and policy development, with specific Registration required focus on these aspects of quality: measurement, quality The Health Workforce Interest Group focuses on health improvement/safety, and incentivizing value. services research related to the health workforce, including Supported in part by Health Care Systems Research Network; the relationships between workforce and access; quality Urban Institute; and Westat and cost; data collection and analysis; sources and quality of health workforce data; methods of measuring supply, demand, and need; distribution and diversity; and policy and Sunday, June 24 program information.

Supported in part by the AAMC; Center for Health Workforce Studies Health Research, Inc.; , Behavioral Health 7:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Workforce Research Center; University of North Carolina; and University Contractor Networking Breakfast of Washington Sheraton - Willow (2nd Floor)

Long-Term Services and Supports Interest Group Open to all Pre-Conference Session WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Join us for the second annual contractor networking breakfast. Participate in open dialogue about how we can Registration required better partner with AcademyHealth to highlight the research being done in the contracting community. Actions already The mission of the Long-Term Care Services and Supports taken as a result of last year’s breakfast will be discussed. Interest Group is to foster the development of the evidence See you there! base needed for policy and practice to meet the growing need for supportive services to individuals of all ages who Supported in part by NORC; Abt Associates; and IBM Watson Health live with chronic and disabling conditions.

Supported in party by American Health Care Association/National Center for Assisted Living; Brown University; Center for Large Data Research; LeadingAge; Purdue University School of Nursing; UConn Health Center on Aging; and University of Washington

14 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 INTEREST GROUP AND GROUP AND INTEREST ADJUNCT MEETINGS 7:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. 6:00 p.m.–9:00 p.m. AcademyHealth Education Council and HSR Diversity Scholars Networking Reception Training Directors Meeting Location TBD Sheraton - Cedar (2nd Floor) Invitation only Invitation only Supported in part by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and Urban By invitation of the Education Council, all SR educators who direct Institute and organized by the AcademyHealth Center for Diversity, training programs at the pre-doctoral and post-doctoral levels are Inclusion and Minority Engagement. invited to attend an open session with the Council. The purpose of this open session is to engage in an interactive discussion of Council activities and seek feedback from HSR educators on Monday, June 25 AcademyHealth’s current and future educational offerings. 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. 7:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m. 2018 Fellowship Networking Meeting Sheraton - Aspen (2nd Floor) Meet-the-Experts Student Breakfast Sheraton - Grand Ballroom A (2nd Floor) Invitation only

Open to all student attendees Supported in part by DentaQuest Institute; Kaiser Permanente Northwest Region; and NYU Langone Medical Center Meet with nationally known experts in HSR, health policy, and advocacy. This breakfast event is a great opportunity to ask questions, get career advice, and hear from experts in an 7:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. informal setting. Methods and Data Council Meeting Supported in part by RTI International; Urban Institute; and Vanderbilt Sheraton - Willow B (2nd Floor) University Invitation only

5:45 p.m.–7:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Interest Group Leaders Meeting Department of Veterans Affairs HSR&D Meeting WSCC - Room 201 (Level Two) Sheraton - Capitol Hill (3rd Floor)

Invitation only Invitation only

6:00 p.m.–7:30 p.m. 6:30 p.m.–8:30 p.m. University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Medical Care Research and Review (MCRR) Policy & Innovation Reception Editorial Board Meeting Sheraton - Cedar (2nd Floor) Tango Restaurant, 1100 Pike St, Seattle, WA 98101

Invitation only Invitation only

7:30 p.m.–9:30 p.m. 6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m. Student Networking Happy Hour UW Health Services Ph.D. Prospective Student Location TBD Reception Long Provincial Vietnamese Restaurant, 1901 Second Ave, Seattle, Open to all student attendees WA 98101 This annual networking event brings together students and Open to Students - RSVP required young professionals in HSR and health policy.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 15 2017 Membership Ad_edit.pdf 1 12/21/17 8:18 AM

2018

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Join Today Become a part of a movement to strengthen health services research; increase the skills of research producers and users; and help policymakers and practitioners make evidence- informed decisions. C

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16 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda SUNDAY

CE SP SP SP SP SP SP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP PR RP PR RP RP CD RR MS MS MS BOA Type Session HS BH BH HW CCI IQV IQV IQV DIS DIS ORL PPH PPH PDS COV COV ORG MCR Theme 24 June Chair Glen Mays Brian Leas Shale Wong Adirim Terry Abby Kazley Lisa Klesges Amir Ghaferi Ruth Ballweg Lisa Simpson David Hickam Megan Morris Ben Sommers Laura Dummit Andrea Hassol Robert O'Brien Grant Marshall Khan Tamkeen Joel Weissman Diane Rowland Charlene Wong Romano Patrick William Scanlon Katherine Harris Gerald Kominski Jessica Kronstadt Kalyan Pasupathy Katharine Bradley Sarah Shoemaker Gretchen Jacobson Andrianna McIntyre Jeanne-Marie Guise Matthew Maciejewski

Lunch) Breakfast

Open Open (Boxed Program Marketing, Workforce Methods Break Effectiveness Student A Hall Break Plenary Improving Care Guidelines, Coffee Dental Science Exhibit Registration to Session Comparative in and Provider Networks Poster Opiates Systems Meet-the-Experts for Harm and Programs/Policies Data with from Research on Enrollment, Title Mising Health Promises vs Reality & Problem Rates, Payment Strategies and Community Health System for Oral Modifier: Payment Value-Based The in Quality DoD, Era Trump Stabilizing Insurance Markets in the on Health Care Effects of National and Local Policy Data Identification of Risk, VA, Topics for and Clinical Will Change National Policy That Studies Don't Know Do and We What One Meet the Editors Part The Evolving Response to Markets and Measures Implementation Hot Harm, Engineering and Medicine's Report Attitudes and Public Methods and Clinicians Department Case of Smart Emergency Complex When Organizations Change Undertake Solving Improving Models Payment Medicare Conditions-Focused Late-Breaking Session: Effects of Plan Characteristics, The Learning Healthcare System: Delivery: Coverage, Analytics Improving Health Care and Partnership Trans-Disciplinary Approaches Health Population to Improve Upstream Medicare Beneficiaries with Dual Sources of Coverage: Trump: under Act Affordable Care The The Critical Context of Behavioral Health and Costs Using Innovative Qualitative Research Methods Academies Affordable Prescription Drugs—the National Access to Ensuring of Sciences, of Change in the Face Policy Diverse Disability Health and Healthcare Disparities Experienced by Four Populations Hospital Quality: Opioid Epidemic in the Health Care System: the Tackling An Empirical and Practical Look at to Encourage Medicaid Incentives Publish or Perish: Experiences and the Impact on Care Work Understanding Physician Practice, Health Behaviors: Interprofessional Models Medicare's Bundled Payment Cochrane's Next Generation Evidence Systems Evidence from Bundled Payments? Through Achieved What Can Be Dental Benefit Policies Adult How States Use Data to Improve Medicaid Opioid Safety: Practice Delivery and Quality Reduction Best of IG Session: Late-Breaking Session: Research Methodological Challenges and Opportunities in Disparities SegmentationPopulation for Care and Cost Management Outcomes and Implications for Disparities Session: Year of the Article Preventing Suicides: Research-to-Practice Efforts

Fl) (L4) (L6) (L4) (L4) A Sunday, GLANCE: AT AGENDA Grand (2nd - (L6) A AB AB Lobby Lobby 4 4 2A (L2) 2A (L2) 2B (L2) 2B (L2) 607 (L6) 608 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 607 (L6) 608 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 6A-E 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 619-620 (L6) 602-604 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 602-604 (L6) Hall Hall Room (Level) Sheraton 6ABC Atrium Ballroom p.m. a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m. p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. Time a.m.–12:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.–1:45 a.m.–10:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m.–3:30 a.m.–6:00 10:30 8:45 10:00 10:00 8:00 8:00 2:00 12:15 7:00 SUNDAY AGENDA ATGLANCE: Sunday, A Theme HCN COV DTH ADL CFH LFA 4:00 4:00 3:30 IQV CCI DIS HW BH p.m.–5:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m.–4:00 Improving Safety, High Cost, Health Workforce Disparities andHealthEquity Digital Technologies andHealth Coverage, Consumer ChoiceandIncentives Child andFamily Health Health Behavioral Aging, from Abroad Lessons Disability, p.m. p.m. p.m. Access, HighNeed andEnd-of-Life Quality, andMedicaid 602-604 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 612 (L6) 611 (L6) 608 (L6) 607 (L6) 2B (L2) and Value NOW Do What We aboutMeasuringHospitalQuality? Know Building aHealthyCommunity: ResultstoPolicy ComplexEvaluation Communicating Makers The CenterforMedicareandMedicaidInnovation Agenda and Global BudgetandPayment Models Systems for Delivery ChildHealthRisksandOpportunities: toCapture Using Data AcademyHealth ReinhardtLecture Underserved Identifying and Addressing HealthDisparitiesand Why Patients are So You've EarnedaPh.D.—Now What? the Affordable Care Act and MovingForward? ShouldHappen What Non-Profit HospitalCommunityBenefits: Incentive Program(MIPS): Transitioning from Year Oneto Year Two ofthePhysicianMeritBased CDC RuralHealthUpdate: Outcomes ExpansiononHospitalCareandChronicHealth Impacts ofCoverage Medicare Part DPlanChoicesandPrescriptionDrugUtilization Mechanismsand Methods StandardstoStudy Adaptation ComplexInterventions: MethodsforStudying Innovative Inclusive Workforce Building aCultureofDiversity: MQV MCR ORG PPH MET PDS PCR ORL TDI WH Women’s Health Translation, Public andPopulation Health Payment SystemsInnovations andDelivery Patient-Centered Research andManagement Behavior Organizational Oral Health Methods Research Medicare Measuring Safety, Science, System forDelivery Implications Transformation Dissemination, forBuildingaDiverseand Approaches ImpactsPopulation Health How

Quality,

Surveillance, HasChangedasaResultof What Implementation, and Value

andService PCORI Applying June24 andImpact Break Implications

Session Type

BOA MS RR CD RP PR CP SP CE Grembowski David Grimes Katherine Andrew Bindman Margo Edmunds Lauren Nicholas Laurence Baker Noemi Rudolph Lisa Simpson/ Richard Puddy Brian Mittman Lipton Brandy TungGregory Nancy Delew Nabil Natafgi Irene Fraser Ruth Carlos Special Session Research Resources Research Panel Policy Roundtable Methods Session Critical andEmergingIssuesinHSRPanel Career Development Call for Abstracts Session of ARM Best (continued)

MCR MQV COV PCR PDS PPH CFH IQV MS CD RP PR CP CP CP CP CP CP SP SP SP SP SP TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 SUNDAY, JUNE 24

7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Inspirational Performance Registration WSCC - Atrium Lobby (Level Four) Swil Kanim 7:30 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Violinist and Storyteller

Meet-the-Experts Student Breakfast 9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Sheraton - Grand Ballroom A (2nd Floor) SUNDAY Steven Cohen, Vice President, Statistical and Data Sciences, Keynote Address RTI; Dominick Esposito, Vice President, Insight Policy Research; Will Evidence Matter in a World of Amir Ghaferi, Associate Professor, University of Michigan; John Misinformation? And What is the Role of McConnell, Director and Professor, Oregon Health and Science Media? University; Catherine McLaughlin, Senior Fellow, Mathematica WSCC - Room Ballroom 6A-E (Level Six) Policy Research; Anne Sales, Professor, Department of Learning Health Sciences and Research Scientist, University of Michigan Chair: Medical School and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System; Joanne Spetz, Professor of Health Policy, University of California, San Francisco; Ming Tai-Seale, Professor, University of California, Noam Levey San Diego; Erin Trish, Associate Director of Health Policy, USC; Los Angeles Times Washington Bureau Stephen Zuckerman, Co-Director and Senior Fellow, Urban Institute Speakers: (confirmed experts as of June 1, 2018)

Supported in part by RTI International; Urban Institute; and Aaron Carroll Vanderbilt University Indiana University

8:00 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Coffee Break WSCC - 6ABC Foyer (Level Six) Dora Hughes Sidley Austin LLP 8:45 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Welcome and Introductions WSCC - Room Ballroom 6A-E (Level Six) Terri Tanielian RAND Speakers:

Lisa Simpson Chad Terhune AcademyHealth Kaiser Health News

Attendees will hear from experts in the media, policy, and research fields on the importance and role of Eric Larson evidence currently. Panelists will share insights and Kaiser Permanente Washington Health strategies on how attendees can most effectively Research Institute disseminate their research results. The format will be a Supported in part by the American Dental Association Health facilitated conversation with Noam Levey serving as the Policy Institute moderator.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 17 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

Aaron Carroll, M.D., M.S., is a Professor of Pediatrics Chad Terhune, senior correspondent for Kaiser Health and Associate Dean for Research Mentoring at Indiana News and California Healthline, is an award-winning University’s School of Medicine, and Director of the Center reporter based in Los Angeles. He writes about the for Pediatric and Adolescent Comparative Effectiveness cost and quality of health care and what it means for Research. His research focuses on the study of consumers and taxpayers. Terhune has investigated information technology to improve pediatric care, health how companies profit from Medicaid managed care, care policy, and health care reform. In addition to his superbug outbreaks at U.S. hospitals and a $3 billion scholarly activities, he has written about health, research, accounting fraud scandal. Previously, he was a reporter and policy for many major media outlets. at the Los Angeles Times, the Wall Street Journal and BusinessWeek magazine. Dora Hughes, M.D., M.P.H., is a senior health policy advisor in Sidley Austin’s Government Strategies practice. She provides strategic advice to clients across a wide range of issues relating to coverage, health care quality and innovation, and payment policy and reimbursement. Dora joined Sidley after serving nearly 10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. four years as counselor to Secretary Kathleen Sebelius at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Break Prior to this role, she staffed the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy as deputy director for the Committee on 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Health, Education, Labor, & Pensions and former Senator Exhibit Hall Hours Barack Obama as health policy advisor. WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4 AB (Level Four) Noam Levey is an award-winning national healthcare reporter for the Los Angeles Times, based in 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Washington, D.C. Over the last decade, he has reported on health reform from more than two dozen states Concurrent Sessions around the country and on global health from Asia, ORG, CP When Organizations Undertake Change Africa and Latin America. Noam’s stories about the WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) Affordable Care Act, Medicare, Medicaid and other Chair: Abby Kazley, Medical University of South Carolina healthcare issues regularly appear in newspapers nationwide, including the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Tribune and Baltimore Sun. He has also been published John Bowblis, Miami University in Health Affairs, the Journal of the American Medical Private Equity Ownership and Healthcare Billing Practices: Assn. and Milbank Quarterly. The Case of Medicare Reimbursed Post-Acute Care in Skilled Nursing Facilities Terri Tanielian, M.A., is a senior behavioral scientist at the RAND. She also currently serves as the RAND Health Dorothy Hung, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute liaison to the Department of Veterans Affairs and is a Sustained Impact of Lean Redesigns on Primary Care nationally recognized expert in military and veteran’s Workflow Efficiency health policy. Her research interests include access to and quality of care for service-connected health Danielle Rose, Department of Veterans Health, problems; military suicide; military sexual assault; Greater Los Angeles military families; veteran caregivers; and psychological Long-Term Impacts of Evidence Based Quality Improvement and behavioral effects of combat, terrorism, and Innovations: Findings from VA’s Patient Centered Medical disasters. Home Implementation Victoria Scott, University of North Carolina at Charlotte Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care: Monitoring Organizational Readiness to Facilitate Practice Transformation Efforts

18 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Edwin Wong, Department of Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound BOA Best of IG Session: Studies That Will Effects of the VA Patient Centered Medical Home Initiative on Change National Policy and Clinical Practice Healthcare Utilization: Results after Four Years WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Call for Abstracts Session: Health care organizations continue Chair: Terry Adirim, Department of Defense to face challenges based on changing external forces in the , Kaiser Permanente Washington environment. To survive, the organizations must strategize to Discussants: Eric Larson Health Research Institute; , Kansas survive. In this session, presenters share evaluations of the Gianfranco Pezzino Health Institute strategies that health care organizations use to deal with change. Framed by organizational theories, each presentation shares Speakers: SUNDAY a unique approach and the outcomes associated with it. From Bradley Gray, American Board of Internal Medicine evidence based care to patient centered medical homes to quality Diagnostic Knowledge Among General Internists Is improvement and lean redesigns, the early success of these Associated with Reduced 90-Day Mortality, Emergency organization responses to change will be shared. Department Use, and Emergency Hospitalizations Following Outpatient Evaluations for New Problems. RR Preventing Suicides: VA, DoD, and Community Health System Strategies for Jean Hall, University of Kansas & University of Kansas Research-to-Practice Efforts Medical Center WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) State Benchmarking, Employment Outcomes, and Implications for People with Disabilities Chair: Robert O’Brien, Department of Veterans Affairs Mac McCullough, Arizona State University Discussant: Gregory Simon, Group Health Cooperative Optimizing Governmental Health and Social Spending Interactions

Speakers: Lisa Brenner, Department of Veterans Affairs, Best Of: This session will present the three best podium Eastern Colorado; Bruce Crow, University of Washington; presentations taking place at the Interest Group Pre- Sara Landes, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences; Conference Meeting on Saturday. Topic areas include Gregory Simon, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health quality and value, disabilities and public health systems. Research Institute Improvements in care is the unifying theme among the Research Resources: This series of presentations will focus abstracts. All three studies have the potential to improve on challenges and opportunities in implementing suicide outcomes of people with acute and chronic health conditions. prevention efforts across a range of health systems, including VA, DoD, and community health programs. These challenges CP Late-Breaking Session: Effects of National include the growing trend in health systems of having to and Local Policy on Health Care Delivery and think about integrating population health strategies, while Quality opportunities may include strategies to scale up and spread WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) effective interventions within and across health systems. Chair: Amir Ghaferi, University of Michigan Current research is informing efforts to maintain program fidelity, share data across systems to track risk factors, and Discussant: Jack Needleman, University of California, resource efforts to sustain effective interventions. Los Angeles

Supported in part by the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Research & Development Service Jordan Harrison, University of Pennsylvania Nursing and Neurologic Outcomes Following in-Hospital Cardiac Arrest

Joshua Liao, University of Washington; University of Pennsylvania LDI The Impact of Voluntary Bundled Payment on Selection for Joint Replacement Surgery Among Socioeconomically Vulnerable Patients

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 19 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

Rachel Patzer, Emory University Call for Abstracts Session: Evidence shows that disparities Improving Provider Knowledge of a Kidney Transplant exist among racial and ethnic groups across a wide variety of Policy Change: A Dialysis Facility-Based Effectiveness- health conditions and settings. However, availability of data Implementation Study on race/ethnicity and social determinants remain a challenge. This panel will examine opportunities for collecting and using Christie Teigland, Avalere Health data and other methodological challenges and opportunities Impact of CMS Proposed Changes to the Medicare Advantage in disparities research. HCC Risk Adjustment Model for Payment Year 2019

Call for Abstracts Session: In this session of late breaking HC, CP Population Segmentation for Care and abstracts, speakers will review the effects of national and local Cost Management policy changes and their implementation on the quality of care. WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) The research includes policies affecting payment, delivery, and Chair: Matthew Maciejewski, Department of Veterans quality. Given the broad scope of this special session, there will Affairs, Durham and Duke University be presentations about how health care workforce characteristics affect patient outcomes, how effective dissemination of policy Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: changes to frontline providers is vital, the role of national Emmanuelle Belanger, Brown University payment reform on socioeconomic disparities, and the potential Characteristics of Top Performing Hospitals Caring for High- unintended consequences of CMS policies. Need Medicare Beneficiaries: The Exemplary Nodes of Care for Outcomes and Reduced Expenditures (ENCORE) for High- DIS, CP Methodological Challenges and Need Patients Study Opportunities in Disparities Research Anna Davis, Kaiser Permanente WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) The Vital Few: Clustering High-Cost Patients Based on Chair: Joel Weissman, and Brigham and Longitudinal Trajectories of Healthcare Spending using a Women’s Hospital Latent Growth Curve Analysis

Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Jose Figueroa, Harvard University Cheryl Clark, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Persistence and Drivers of Spending Among High-Cost Dual- Data Science Applied to Understanding Racial and Ethnic Health Eligible Medicare-Medicaid Patients Disparities in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Ann O’Malley, Mathematica Policy Research Alison Fohner, Kaiser Permanente Accountable Care Organizations’ Use of Population Opportunities for Pharmacogenetic Testing to Alleviate Racial/ Segmentation for High-Need, High-Cost Patients Ethnic Disparities in Phenytoin Treatment Robin Telford, Aetna Rachel Gold, Kaiser Permanente High Medical Cost and Service Utilization: Exploring the Adoption of EHR Tools for Collecting and Acting on Social Intersection of Mental Health and Substance Use Disorders, Determinants of Health in Community Health Centers: Pilot Comorbid Chronic Medical Conditions, and Age Study Results Call for Abstracts Session: Five presenters in the session, Katherine Harris, IMPAQ International, LLC Population Segmentation for Care and Cost Management, will Increasing the Number of Minorities Responding to a report on drivers of health care utilization and costs in dual- Sequential, Mixed-Mode Quality of Life Survey Administered eligible patients and patients with comorbid mental health to Sample of Medicare ESRD Beneficiaries and substance use disorders. The session will also introduce the audience to a method for characterizing distinct Ninez Ponce, University of California, Los Angeles subgroups of high cost patients by their cost trajectories Improving Data Capacity for American Indian/Alaska Native that has been growing in popularity. Finally, the session (AI/AN) Populations will describe methods that hospitals and Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) are using to segment and manage their high need, high cost patients.

20 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

MS Using Innovative Qualitative Research IQV, CP Tackling the Opioid Epidemic in the Methods Health Care System: Guidelines, Practice, and WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) Clinicians Chair: Andrea Hassol, Abt Associates WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Chair and Discussant: Sarah Shoemaker, Abt Associates, Speakers: Deborah Cohen, Oregon Health & Science Inc. University; Jennifer Gala True, Department of Veterans Affairs; Lisa LeRoy, Abt Associates, Inc. Call for Abstracts Session Speakers:

Roman Ayele, Department of Veterans Affairs, Eastern Colorado SUNDAY Methods Session: Qualitative data collection and analysis Competing Demands of Opioid Management and Access in the can be costly and time consuming, and results may seem VA: Tensions Experienced By Providers Due to Practice Guidelines to be ‘in the eye of the beholder.’ Innovative methods and and Patient Rights technologies can reduce costs of qualitative data collection and analysis, and improve reliability/replicability of results. Amy Bohnert, University of Michigan Panelists will describe several innovative qualitative research Opioid Prescribing in the United States before and after methods, and discuss practicalities in applying these Publication of the CDC’s 2016 Guideline for Prescribing methods for program evaluation. Opioids for Chronic Pain

Level of Difficulty: Intermediate to Advanced Kathleen Carlson, Department of Veterans Affairs & Oregon Health and Science University SP Trans-Disciplinary Partnership and Analytics Associations between Reduction in VA Prescription Opioid Improving Health Care Delivery: Case of Smart Dose and Receipt of Non-VA Opioids: An Analysis of Post- Emergency Department 9/11 Veterans in Oregon WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Elizabeth Danielson, Indiana University Chair: Kalyan Pasupathy, Mayo Clinic How Patients and Primary Care Clinicians Discuss the Risks, Benefits, and Goals of Opioid Treatment Speakers: Heather Heaton, Thomas Hellmich, and Mustafa Sir, Mayo Clinic Call for Abstracts Session: This session includes both quantitative and qualitative papers that explore the impact of Special Session: An aging population with co-morbidities, recent guidelines and efforts to improve appropriate opioid reduced insurance/reimbursement levels and increased wait- treatment. The four studies address the quality and safety of times for access are placing increasing pressures on emergency opioid use by examining prescribing rates and understanding departments (EDs). This complex and changing landscape challenges to appropriate prescribing and treatment. warrants innovative ways to sustain high levels of care. The session highlights the ED-Clinical Engineering Learning Lab, a CCI, PR multidisciplinary team pairing bedside clinicians with scientists An Empirical and Practical Look at and engineers that performs discovery and rapid-prototype Medicaid Incentives to Encourage Healthy solutions, and makes practice changes to improve care. Behaviors: What We Do and Don’t Know Specifically, the clinical-engineering partnership session focuses WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) on multi-disciplinary staffing, scheduling scribes, optimized Chair: Charlene Wong, Duke University patient flow and real-time location system projects that provided staff situational awareness, improved patient safety, and reduced Speakers: Mary Brunette, Dartmouth; Susan Goold, ED waiting times. University of Michigan; Thomas Hoerger, RTI International; Robert Saunders, Duke University Supported in part by Mayo Clinic Policy Roundtable: As beneficiary incentives for health behaviors are increasingly implemented by Medicaid programs, this policy roundtable will provide empirical and practical insights on designing, implementing, and evaluating these programs; identify key challenges and best practices; and contextualize these incentive programs in the broader payment reform landscape.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 21 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

PPH, CP Upstream Approaches to Improve process and give useful hints about how to write a good Population Health research or policy paper and how to navigate the revision WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) process. Finally, panelists will help authors to differentiate among journals, including what types of subjects and , Public Health Chair and Discussant: Jessica Kronstadt presentation each journal prefers. Accreditation Board HW, CP Understanding Physician Work Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Experiences and the Impact on Care Kevin Curwick, Arizona State University WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Public Health and Social Services Expenditures Lead to Reductions in Preventable Admission Rates Chair: Grant Martsolf, RAND and University of Pittsburgh

Cezar Brian Mamaril, University of Kentucky Discussant: Miriam Laugesen, Columbia University Uncompensated Care Provision and the Implementation of Population Health Improvement Strategies Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Brock Hewitt, Northwestern University Joshua Vest, Indiana University and Regenstrief Institute Engagement to Burnout: Using Latent Class Modeling to Wraparound Services as a Strategy to Reduce Better Define the Continuum Among U.S. General Surgery Hospitalizations Residents

Jennifer Otten, University of Washington Adrian Garcia Mosqueira, Harvard University Responding to an Increased Minimum Wage: A Mixed Physician Compensation and Patterns of Care Delivery in the Methods Study of Child Care Businesses during the US, 2012-2014 Implementation of Seattle’s Minimum Wage Ordinance Sebastian Negrusa, The Lewin Group Call for Abstracts Session: This session highlights An Evaluation of the Recruiting and Retention Effects of the quantitative and mixed-methods research investigating how National Health Service Corps Program upstream interventions can influence health. Studies explore the effects of social services expenditures on population Jesus Leal Trujillo, Deloitte health outcomes and preventable admission rates; hospital Does the Structure of Physician Referral Networks Matter for participation in public health activities; the provision of Physician Cost Performance? Evidence from Medicare wraparound services in federally qualified health centers; Call for Abstracts Session: Evidence suggests that the work and the implications for child care businesses of an increase experience of physicians can vary drastically based various in the minimum wage. factors including specialty, gender, employment status and this experience can have significant effects on performance. CD Publish or Perish: Meet the Editors Part One In this panel, we explore a variety of issues related to how WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) physicians experience their work arrangements and how Chair: Patrick Romano, Health Services Research and these factors impact the cost, quality, and access to care. University of California, Davis Four diverse presentations examine these issues from a variety of angles including physician social networks, Speakers: Jeroan Allison, Medical Care and University of physician compensation and burnout, and efforts at recruiting Massachusetts Medical School; Arnold Epstein, New England and retaining providers in high need communities. Journal of Medicine and Harvard University; Denys Lau, American Journal of Public Health and National Center for Health MCR, RP Medicare Beneficiaries with Dual Statistics Sources of Coverage: Improving Care and Costs Career Development Workshop: This workshop is designed WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) to help authors improve their success rate in publishing in Chair: Gretchen Jacobson, Henry J. Kaiser Family top journals in the field, with better understanding of what Foundation different journals publish. Specifically, panelists will try to improve authors’ understanding of the journals’ peer-review

22 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Discussant: David Grabowski, Harvard University Paul Shafer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The Trump Effect: Post-Inauguration Changes in Marketplace Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Enrollment Zachary Levinson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor Assessing the Impact of Medicare Advantage on High-Need, Research Panel: Panelists in this session use innovative High-Cost Beneficiaries data and analytic approaches to shed light on the policy implications of political changes to the ACA under the Trump Lok Wong Samson, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Administration, focusing on enrollment, marketing, coverage Planning and Evaluation for those with chronic conditions, and the perceptions of the

Does Unmeasured Medical Complexity Explain the Higher general public. SUNDAY Risk of Readmissions Among Dually-Enrolled Medicare Beneficiaries? BH, CE The Critical Context of Behavioral Health Chuan-Fen Liu, University of Washington WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Medicare-Enrolled Veterans Are Increasingly Voting with Their Chair: Shale Wong, Eugene S. Farley Health Policy Center Feet to Use More VA and Less Medicare, 2003-2014. Speakers: Mark Duncan, University of Washington; Daniel Mark Unruh, Weill Cornell Medical College Goldberg and Hilary Stempel, University of Colorado; The Impact of the Medicaid Primary Care Fee Bump on the Ellen-Marie Whelan, Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services Cost and Quality of Care for Dual-Eligibles with Multiple Chronic Conditions Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: This panel brings together experts to discuss the evidence and Call for Abstracts Session: People on Medicare with dual opportunities to improve health though integrated behavioral sources of coverage face greater challenges with care health services in five focus areas: Medicaid, commercial coordination and costs, and often have more medical needs than payers, opioids, school-based health, and stigma and equity. other Medicare beneficiaries. This session will discuss research examining issues for Medicare beneficiaries with dual sources of coverage, such as Medicaid or VA, including how changes in payment and setting affect the costs of care received by 12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m. dual-eligibles. It will also discuss how the choice of care source has changed over time for beneficiaries who can choose from Poster Session A and Boxed Lunch more than one source of care, and how risk adjustment for these WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4AB (Level Four) beneficiaries may affect delivery system reforms. Features: COV, RP The Affordable Care Act under Trump: Student Posters Research on Enrollment, Marketing, Coverage, Child and Family Health and Public Attitudes Coverage, Access and Medicaid WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Disparities and Health Equity Medicare Chair: Adrianna McIntyre, Harvard University Translation, Dissemination, Implementation, and Impact Speakers: Women’s Health Sarah Gollust, University of Minnesota For an index of poster presenters by theme, see page Marketing and the Marketplace: Differences in Television 87. Advertising for Health Insurance in 2017 Compared to 2016 Supported in part by IBM Watson Health Michael Karpman, Urban Institute Experiences of Adults with Chronic Conditions under the ACA’s Nongroup Coverage Expansion

Ashley Kirzinger, Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation Polling on Health Care Policy during President Trump’s First Year in Office

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 23 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. Special Session: This session will discuss the 2018 Article-of- the-Year Award winning paper authored by Eric Roberts, Alan Concurrent Sessions Zaslavsky, and Michael McWilliams. The authors estimated ORL, CP Interprofessional Hot Topics in Oral the average effects of the Medicare Value-based Payment Health from Opiates to Dental Workforce Modifier (VM) on provider performance on measures of WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) quality and efficiency, using a regression discontinuity design that exploited thresholds in practice size determining VM Chair: Ruth Ballweg, University of Washington exposure. The study also examined how VM-like programs Discussant: Patricia Braun, University of Colorado can cause sustained financial transfers from practices serving sicker and poorer patients to practices serving healthier and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: wealthier patients because of inadequate risk adjustment. Jacqueline Burgette, University of Pittsburgh Dr. McWilliams and Dr. Roberts will present the paper, and Early Head Start and Coordination of Preventive Dental discussants will expand on its implications. Services By Medical and Dental Providers SP Cochrane’s Next Generation Evidence Shannon Munro, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center Systems WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Interprofessional Collaboration and Expansion of an Oral Care Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Hospital Acquired Chair: Jeanne-Marie Guise, Oregon Health & Science Pneumonia among Older Veterans University

Nadereh Pourat, University of California, Los Angeles Speakers: Julian Elliott, Alfred Hospital, Monash University, A Strategy to Deliver Preventive Care to Alaska Native and Cochrane Australia; Cathy Gordon, Oregon Health & Medicaid Beneficiaries Has Succeeded in Improving Oral Science University Health of Children Special Session: The goal of this workshop is to Shabnam Seyedzadeh Sabounchi, State University of provide an overview of Cochrane, new and easy ways New York at Binghamton to become involved, and introduce some of Cochrane’s National Dental Opioid Prescriptions in Hospital Emergency new technologies. Machine learning and citizen science Departments: A Systems Modeling Approach technologies reduce the time to produce systematic reviews and guidelines, and enable reviews and guidelines to keep Call for Abstracts Session: This session features up with the latest research - an approach termed Living interprofessional hot topics in oral health. Topics to be Evidence. The workshop is appropriate for a broad audience, presented will range from the prescribing of opioids for from novice to experienced systematic reviewers and dental pain in Emergency Departments to interprofessional guideline developers. approaches to improving the health across the lifespan (toddlers to older veterans) to expanding access to dental SP What Can Be Achieved Through Bundled services in remote settings with dental health aides. Payments? Evidence from Medicare’s Bundled Payment Models SP Article of the Year Session—The Value- WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) Based Payment Modifier: Program Outcomes and , The Lewin Group Implications for Disparities Chair: Laura Dummit WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Speakers: Daver Kahvecioglu, Center for Medicare and Chair: Lisa Simpson, AcademyHealth Medicaid Innovation; Grecia Marrufo and Jaclyn Marshall, The Lewin Group; Matthew Trombley, Abt Associates Discussants: Austin Frakt, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Lena Chen, University of Michigan

Speakers: J. Michael McWilliams, Harvard University; Eric Roberts, University of Pittsburgh

24 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Special Session: Bundled payment approaches that link Michael Barnett, Harvard University payments for services provided during an episode of care A California Health Plan’s Opioid Formulary Change Led to a are one of the most important reform options being tested by Reduction in Initiation of Extended-Release Opioids Medicare and other public and private payers to reduce cost while maintaining or improving quality. This panel presents Lindsey Ferris, Johns Hopkins University the most recent results from a comprehensive evaluation of A Needle in the Haystack? A Novel Predictive Model to Medicare’s Bundled Payment for Care Improvement (BPCI) Identify Opioid Overdose Risk initiative, the largest test of bundled payments to date. The Pooja Lagisetty, University of Michigan panel will also include a summary of how the results from

Opioid-Related Hospitalizations in an Integrated Health System SUNDAY the BPCI evaluation informed the design of BPCI Advanced. Call for Abstracts Session: This session addresses the Supported in part by The Lewin Group current opioid epidemic with sessions that cover current SP How States Use Data to Improve Medicaid epidemiologic patterns, tools that have been developed to Adult Dental Benefit Policies identify opioid-related risk, and evaluations of programs and WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) policies that have been developed for harm reduction. , West Health Chair and Discussant: William Scanlon MS Solving Complex Implementation Problems Speakers: Leon Assael, University of California, San with Systems Science Methods Francisco; Stacey Chazin, Center for Health Care Strategies; WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) John Dane, Missouri Department of Health and Senior Chair: Glen Mays, University of Kentucky Services Speakers: Thomas Best, ; Special Session: As awareness builds around poor oral Xi Zhu, University of Iowa health among vulnerable populations, the Medicaid adult dental benefit remains deficient. As 20 states’ Medicaid Methods Session: Improving clinical and population health programs offer no dental benefit, others offer benefits that outcomes requires implementing evidence-based practices and are restricted or unstable. The panel will discuss current policies across complex health and social systems. Research- research on the issue and how some states are taking data- tested interventions often fall short of their intended results when driven approaches to motivate policy actions. introduced within complex real-world settings, demonstrating failures of implementation, diffusion and replication. Dynamic Supported in part by West Health systems of provider organizations, federal and state policies, community networks, and interpersonal relationships often BH, CP Opioid Safety: Harm, Identification of distort or attenuate the effects of actions to improve health. To Risk, and Programs/Policies for Harm Reduction understand and solve these problems, systems science methods WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) can be applied to study medical, social, and public health Chair: Katharine Bradley, Kaiser Permanente systems and their complex interactions. This session reviews new models and analytic approaches used at the intersection of Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: implementation science and systems science. Marcus Bachhuber, Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine Level of Difficulty: Beginner Reducing the Default Dispense Quantity for New Opioid Analgesic Prescriptions in the Electronic Health Record SP Improving Methods for Data Quality & Reduces the Quantity Prescribed Missing Data in Comparative Effectiveness and WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Implementation of a Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Chair: David Hickam, Patient Centered Outcomes Research Mandate Was Associated with Significantly Lower Rates Institute of Potentially Problematic Patterns of Opioid Analgesic Dispensing Speakers: David Dorr, Oregon Health & Science University; Denise Hynes, Oregon State University; Michael Kahn, University of Colorado, Denver; Adam Wilcox, UW Medicine

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 25 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

Special Session: Critical issues related to data quality Call for Abstracts Session: Policy decisions that arise with and missing data are often overlooked in comparative the changing landscape of society should account for their effectiveness research (CER). This session reviews the impact on public and population health. Policy interventions PCORI Methodology Standards, discusses advances in data at various levels can affect health outcomes, health science, and examines considerations and best practices for behaviors, and healthcare itself. The four presentations in this managing datasets and ensuring the integrity of data in CER session will highlight various pathways through which recent studies. policy changes are associated with health and describe the practical implications of these associations. Supported in part by PCORI

IQV, PR Ensuring Access to Affordable PDS, CP Medicare Conditions-Focused Prescription Drugs—the National Academies of Payment Models Sciences, Engineering and Medicine’s Report WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Chair and Discussant: Katherine Harris, IMPAQ Chair: Diane Rowland, Kaiser Family Foundation International, LLC

Speakers: Stacie Dusetzina, Vanderbilt University; Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Michelle Mello, Stanford University; Diane Rowland, Kaiser Arnold Epstein, New England Journal of Medicine and Family Foundation; Brendan Saloner, Johns Hopkins University Harvard University Changes in Costs and Outcomes under Voluntary Medical Policy Roundtable: In November 2017, a National Bundles in Medicare’s Bundled Payments for Care Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine committee Improvement Initiative released a report on prescription drug affordability. In this Roundtable, the report’s authors will discuss the key findings Fang He, RTI International and research base, including evidence about contributors to The Effect of the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement high drug costs and policy proposals to improve access to Model on Orthopedic Surgeon Practice Consolidation affordable . Joshua Liao, University of Washington and University of Pennsylvania LDI PPH, CP Policy in the Face of Change Characteristics of Hospitals Earning Savings in the First Year WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) of Mandatory Bundled Payment Chair and Discussant: Tamkeen Khan, American Medical Association Brighita Negrusa, The Lewin Group Impact of the Comprehensive End-Stage Renal Disease Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: (ESRD) Care (CEC) Model on Medicare Spending and Shari Bolen, Case Western Reserve University Utilization Real World Implications of Changing Blood Pressure Metrics Call for Abstracts Session: Medicare is testing condition- Alva Ferdinand, Texas A&M University School of Public specific payment models that provide financial incentives for Health, Dept. of Health Policy & Management health care organizations to reduce costs while maintaining State Texting-While-Driving Bans and Their Impact on Motor or improving quality. The research presented in this session Vehicle Crash-Related Emergency Department Visits evaluates the effectiveness of these models in reducing cost and utilization for beneficiaries with end-stage renal disease, Phuc Le, Cleveland Clinic acute myocardial infarction, congestive failure, and Trends in Demand for Primary Care under the Affordable Care Act pneumonia. The session also includes research that describes features of hospitals that reduce costs during the first year of Julia Raifman, Boston University the mandatory Comprehensive Joint Replacement bundled State Laws Permitting Denial of Services to Same-Sex payment model and examines its effects on the size and Couples and Severe Mental Distress among Sexual Minority composition of orthopedic surgery practices. Adults

26 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

DIS, RP Health and Healthcare Disparities Keith Kocher, University of Michigan and Institute for Experienced By Four Diverse Disability Healthcare Policy and Innovation Populations The Influence of the Regional Health Care Environment on WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Hospitalization Practices from the Emergency Department among Medicare Beneficiaries Chair: Megan Morris, University of Colorado, Denver and Speakers: The Impact of Patient Non-Clinical Factors on Emergency Kristin Jensen, University of Colorado School of Medicine Department Hospitalization Practices

Receipt of Preventive Healthcare Services in Adolescents and Call for Abstracts Session: Federal policymakers are SUNDAY Adults with Down Syndrome actively seeking to change hospital care by reducing Michael McKee, University of Michigan preventable hospital use and motivating hospitals to improve the quality of care. But local markets vary widely and the Hearing Loss and Associated Health Conditions impact of federal policies can be difficult to predict. This Megan Morris, University of Colorado, Denver session features several empirical analyses that aim to Even If We Build It, Equitable Care Might Not Come: understand the influence of key market trends on the use Mixed-Methods Study of the Implementation of Accessible and quality of hospital care. Equipment in the Primary Care Setting CP Late-Breaking Session: Stabilizing Insurance Michelle Stransky, Tufts University Markets in the Trump Era Adults with Communication Disabilities Experience Poorer WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) Health and Healthcare Outcomes Compared to Persons without Communication Disabilities Chair: Gerald Kominski, University of California, Los Angeles

Research Panel: Due to the recent recognition that patients Discussant: Dan Polsky, University of Pennsylvania with disabilities experience health and healthcare disparities, Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: exploratory research is needed to understand the types and Brett Fried, SHADAC/University of Minnesota extent of these disparities. The panel will present studies that Modeling State-Based Reinsurance: One Option for describe health and healthcare disparities experienced by Stabilization of the Individual Market four diverse disability populations and potential strategies to address them. Dylan Roby, University of Maryland Removing the Individual Mandate Penalty: What Will Happen IQV, CP Hospital Quality: The Evolving to Insurance Enrollment and Premium Growth in California? Response to Markets and Measures WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Ashley Semanskee, Kaiser Family Foundation Individual Insurance Market Performance in Late 2017 and Chair: Brian Leas, University of Pennsylvania Early 2018: How Affordable Care Act (ACA) Marketplaces Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Have Responded to Uncertainty and the Loss of Cost-Sharing Nancy Beaulieu, Harvard University Reduction (CSR) Payments The Impact of Hospital Mergers on Clinical Quality of Care Erin Trish, University of Southern California and Patient Experience Estimating the Impact of Implementing an Out-of-Pocket Cap Jose Figueroa, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and in Medicare Part D Harvard University Are Preventable Hospitalizations Improving over Time across U.S. Health Markets?

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 27 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

Call for Abstracts Session: Under the Trump Administration, Call for Abstracts Session: The five papers in this session the failure to fully repeal and replace the Affordable Care examine the effects on a range of healthcare, health and Act has resulted in other efforts to destabilize individual related outcomes from design features of recent insurance insurance markets, including elimination of cost-sharing expansions for vulnerable populations. Two of the papers reductions (CSRs) and individual mandate tax penalties. In examine utilization and outcomes from insurance expansions, contrast, the administration is proposing to implement out- in the context of two specific states with innovative programs of-pocket spending limits under Medicare Part D to provide (Michigan and Arkansas), while three of the papers focus on greater financial protection to beneficiaries. This session providers and access to care, examining how disruptions to reports on several state-level efforts to stabilize individual continued access to providers affects health outcomes, how insurance markets in face of federal efforts intended to provider networks are shaped by market forces, and how create instability, and on the impacts of proposed Medicare physicians react to changes in Medicaid payment structures. Part D beneficiaries spending caps. MS The Learning Healthcare System: Promises COV, CP Effects of Plan Characteristics, vs Reality Payment Rates, and Provider Networks WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Chair: Lisa Klesges, University of Memphis Chair: Ben Sommers, Harvard Discussant: J. Michael McGinnis, Institute of Medicine/ Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: National Academy of Sciences Anthony Goudie, Arkansas Center for Health Improvement Higher Rates of Preventive Health Care for Premium Speakers: Ann Geiger, National Cancer Institute; Assistance Commercial Compared to Medicaid Insured Lucy Savitz, Kaiser Permanente Northwest; Adults: Findings from the Arkansas Health Care Independence Paul Wallace, AcademyHealth Program “Private Option” Methods Session: Learning health systems (LHS) are John Hsu, Massachusetts General Hospital envisioned as driving better health outcomes through Changing Insurance Provider Networks: A Delicate Game of virtuous implementation cycles emphasizing multi-level Matching Supply and Demand data-driven improvement methods to inform clinical and community practice. While this vision holds promise to Edith Kieffer, University of Michigan and Institute for improve health outcomes, difficulties arise in building Healthcare Policy and Innovation evidence to support LHS and clarifying competencies to The Impact of Michigan’s Medicaid Expansion on Dental Care build an interprofessional workforce to facilitate the spread Utilization, Oral Health and Job-Related Outcomes and scale of LHS. This session will offer an historical overview of LHS, outline current models, clarify challenges Hannah Neprash, University of Minnesota in implementation of LHS use cases, and offers training Medicaid Payment Increases and Physician Labor Supply competencies to prepare a future LHS workforce to address Becky Staiger, the challenges of building effective LHS in diverse settings. Estimating the Causal Effect of Disruptions to Care on Level of Difficulty: Beginner Adverse Health Events in Medicaid

3:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Break

28 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: 4:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Christina Bethell, Child and Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative, Johns Hopkins University SP AcademyHealth Reinhardt Lecture New National and across State Findings on Flourishing among WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) US Children: Implications for Approaches to Identify and Chairs: Address Health and Social Risks in Children’s Health Services

Elizabeth Cliff, University of Michigan Baby Bump?: Examining Trends Household in Produce

Purchases Among New Parents SUNDAY Lisa Simpson AcademyHealth Ciaran Phibbs, Center for Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), Department of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto Hospital Market Competition and Infant Mortality

Andrew Bindman Call for Abstracts Session: This session will focus on varied HSR Journal approaches to capturing unrecognized information, and University of California, San Francisco information sources, with the potential to benefit child health policy decision-making, as well as to improve coherence and Speaker: effectiveness in service delivery system design.

SP Building a Healthy Community: How Katherine Baicker, Radiology Impacts Population Health University of Chicago WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Special Session: AcademyHealth’s inaugural Chair: Ruth Carlos, University of Michigan Reinhardt Lecture, in partnership with Health Speakers: Andrea Borondy Kitts, Lahey Hospital & Medical , honors the work and legacy Services Research Center; Melissa Chen, MD Anderson Cancer Center; Efren of health services research (HSR) champion Flores, Massachusetts General Hospital; James Rawson, Uwe Reinhardt. It serves as a living testament to Georgia Regents University the impact he had on the field of HSR and health policy and continues to have on generations of researchers. Each year, Special Session: This session will take a look at Population this Lecture will shine a spotlight on a national leader in the Health Management and the health of a community from a field of HSR who reflects the high standards Dr. Reinhardt multi-stakeholder perspective. By building bridges between established in moving evidence into action and translating health delivery systems, public health departments and information to serve the public interests. The inaugural other stakeholders, resources can be mobilized to improve Reinhardt Lecture will be given by Katherine Baicker, a the health of a community. Included in the discussion will leading scholar in the economic analysis of health care be asset mapping, bringing underserved populations to the policy, and Dean and the Emmett Dedmon Professor at the center, reducing low-value imaging, and the patient as a University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy. After the partner in building healthier communities. lecture, Katherine will join HSR Journal co-Editor in Chief, Supported in part by American College of Radiology Andy Bindman for a Q&A. MQV, CP NOW What Do We Know about Measuring Hospital Quality? 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) Concurrent Sessions Chair: Irene Fraser, NORC at the University of Chicago CFH Using Data to Capture Child Health Risks and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Opportunities: Implications for Delivery Systems Susannah Bernheim, Yale New Haven Health Services WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Corporation and Yale University School of Medicine Chair and Discussant: Katherine Grimes, Harvard Relationship between Hospital Quality Measure Reporting and Overall Hospital Quality Star Ratings Performance with University the December 2017 Enhanced Methodology

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 29 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m.

Miranda Lam, Harvard University, Brigham and Women’s Call for Abstracts Session: Global budget and global payment Hospital and Dana Farber Cancer Institute models as a way to drive improvements in health care delivery Does Hospital Accreditation Matter for Patient Outcomes? and health has been implemented in a number of contexts. The research in this session examines the impact of global budgets Jennifer Meddings, University of Michigan and payments on health care utilization, quality, and spending in Readmissions in Name Only? Assessing Relationships a range of settings including Maryland’s hospital-based global between Index Admit and 30-Day Readmit Diagnosis-Related budget model, global budgets in Oregon’s Medicaid reform, Groups (DRGs) for Conditions and Procedures Covered By the and global payments as used in the Alternative Quality Contract Hospital Readmission Reduction Program commercial model in Massachusetts. Amber Sabbatini, University of Washington SP The Problem of Excluding Observation Stays from Hospital The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Readmission Measures Innovation Agenda and Communicating Complex Evaluation Results to Policy Makers Arjun Venkatesh, Yale University and Yale New Haven Health WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) Services Corporation Chair: Noemi Rudolph, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Overall Hospital Quality Star Rating December 2017 Services Methodology Enhancements Speakers: Anupa Bir, RTI International; Andrew Ibrahim, Call for Abstracts Session: New research is questioning University of Michigan | HOK Architects; Lynne Page Snyder, and debunking what we thought we knew about measuring NORC at the University of Chicago; David Stinchcomb, Westat hospital quality, and suggesting ways to substantially refine existing measures. These papers focus on three critical Special Session: Communicating evaluation results to policy questions: Do hospitals accredited by The Joint Commission makers and other stakeholders can be challenging given the provide better care than hospitals assessed by other complexity of the analyses. Huge government reports may be accreditors? How did 2017 changes to the CMS Hospital comprehensive, but may also bury information or not presented Quality Star Rating methodology affect the distribution and in a digestible format that can be acted upon by decision accuracy of hospital star ratings? How does what we think makers. This session will present innovations in communication we knew about readmissions as a quality metric change and translation that can be used by policymakers and other once we factor in the role of observation stays and new stakeholders to improve decisions and programs. clinical data on the index and subsequent admission? Supported in part by CMS PDS, CP Global Budget and Global Payment Models SP Building a Culture of Diversity: Approaches WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) for Building a Diverse and Inclusive Workforce Chair and Discussant: Laurence Baker, Stanford University WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Chair: Margo Edmunds, AcademyHealth Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Jessica Galarraga, MedStar Health Research Institute Discussant: Donna Washington, Department of Veterans The Effects of Global Budgeting on Emergency Department Affairs, Greater Los Angeles Admission Rates Speakers: Beth Johnson, AcademyHealth; Rachel John McConnell, Oregon Health and Science University Hardeman, University of Minnesota; Matthew (Mateo) The Impact of Oregon’s Medicaid Reform & Transition to Banegas, Kaiser Permanente; Rashida Dorsey, Department Global Budgets on Hospitalizations of Health and Human Services

Eric Roberts, Johns Hopkins University and University Special Session: The commitment to diversity and inclusion of Pittsburgh in the HSR workforce stems from changing demographics in Changes in Health Care Use Associated with the Introduction the US population and a commitment to ensuring that the best of Hospital Global Budgets in Maryland talent from all backgrounds feels at home in our field. In keeping with our 2015 report on workforce diversity, AcademyHealth is Zirui Song, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard committed to scholarships, fellowships, and mentoring programs University that promote a diverse workforce at all career stages. This panel Changes in Health Care Spending and Quality 8 Years into will feature presentations from speakers who have participated Global Payment in fellowship and mentoring programs at various career stages, followed by an interactive discussion with the audience about new models to promote diversity and inclusion.

30 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

IQV, PR Transitioning from Year One to Year Methods Session: PCORI has released new methods Two of the Physician Merit Based Incentive standards guiding the study of complex interventions. These Program (MIPS): Implications for Delivery System standards require explicit specification of hypothesized causal Transformation pathways, identification and description of core functions vs. WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) forms, use of in-depth qualitative and/or quantitative process evaluations to specify and measure mediators, moderators Chair: Nancy Delew, U.S. Department of Health and Human and mechanisms of effect, and explicit specification and Services measurement of adaptations in complex intervention functions. This methods session presents selected methods for Speakers: Lena Chen and Lok Wong Samson, U.S.

operationalizing these standards, including use of logic models SUNDAY Department of Health and Human Services; Reena Duseja, or program theories to specify causal pathways, multiple Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; Joel Ruhter, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation qualitative and quantitative methods for testing and refining hypotheses linked to causal pathways, and others. Policy Roundtable: MACRA established the Merit-based Incentive Payment System (MIPS). This session will explore Level of Difficulty: Beginner policies of the MIPS’ program during the first two years, including the changes from performance year 1 to 2 and the CD So You’ve Earned a Ph.D.—Now What? implications for full implementation. Year 2 changes include WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) reducing physician burden and increasing program flexibility. Chair: David Grembowski, University of Washington

PPH, RP Non-Profit Hospital Community Speakers: Genna Cohen and Catherine McLaughlin, Benefits: What Has Changed As a Result of the Mathematica Policy Research; Nir Menachemi, Indiana Affordable Care Act and What Should Happen University; Lucy Savitz, Kaiser Permanente Northwest Moving Forward? Career Development Workshop: Finishing the dissertation WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) and launching a career is an exciting period for doctoral Chair: Gregory Tung, Colorado School of Public Health students but also brings stress and uncertainty about the future. This session offers practical skills and insights for Discussant: Kevin Barnett, Public Health Institute navigating the transition to land the ‘right’ position, whether that be a post-doctoral fellowship or an academic or Emily Johnson, Colorado Health Foundation research position. State Laws and Non-Profit Hospital Community Benefit Spending Richard Lindrooth, Colorado School of Public Health PCR Identifying and Addressing Health Understanding the Effect of Hospital Financial Performance Disparities and Why Patients are Underserved on the Amount and Type of Community Benefit Spending WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Gary Young, Northeastern University Chair: Nabil Natafgi, University of Maryland Provision of Community Benefits by Tax-Exempt Hospitals in the ACA Era Discussant: Hillary Edwards, University of Maryland, Baltimore Research Panel: Prior to the ACA non-profit hospitals spent $60 billion annually on community benefit activities as Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: required by the IRS to maintain non-profit status. This session Alicia Bergman, Department of Veterans Affairs, presents research on how community benefit spending has Greater Los Angeles been influenced by the ACA and state laws and proposes Enhancing the VA Primary Care and Facility Environment for policy recommendations for the field moving forward. Women Veterans with Histories of Sexual Trauma: Patient Recommendations MS Innovative Methods for Studying Complex Interventions: Applying PCORI Methods Standards Susan Brasher, Emory University to Study Mechanisms and Adaptation Using a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Approach to Identify Healthcare Disparities in Children Chair: Brian Mittman, Kaiser Permanente Southern California with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) Living in Rural and Underserved Communities Speakers: Deborah Cohen, Oregon Health & Science University; Laura Esmail, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 31 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m.

Sharron Close, Emory University COV, CP Impacts of Coverage Expansion on Bidirectional Translation of Knowledge and Need in Sex Hospital Care and on Chronic Health Outcomes Chromosome Aneuploidies: Lessons Learned and Unexpected WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Dividends Chair and Discussant: Brandy Lipton, San Diego State Rory Harte, University of Pennsylvania University Community Health Worker Support for Chronically-Ill Patients Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: at Veterans Affairs, Community and Academic Sites: A Multi- Kenton Johnston, Saint Louis University Center Randomized Clinical Trial The Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Preventable Call for Abstracts Session: The term underserved often Hospitalizations. is used to describe populations who frequently experience , Oregon Health & Science University barriers to health care services; oftentimes, many patients Miguel Marino may not receive the best quality care and thus may be The Impact of the Affordable Care Act on underserved within the healthcare system. This session Biomarker Control presents four studies that attempt to address the challenges Jamal Nabhani, University of California, Los Angeles faced by patients who are underserved. The presentations The Effect of Medicaid Expansion on Surgical Care provide various approaches to improving health care delivery and engage diverse groups of underserved populations. Rebecca Thorsness, Brown University Effects of Medicaid Expansion on Coverage, Access to Care MCR, CP Medicare Part D Plan Choices and and Mortality among Persons with End Stage Renal Disease Prescription Drug Utilization Call for Abstracts Session: The papers in this session examine WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) the effect of insurance coverage expansions on different forms of Chair: Lauren Nicholas, Johns Hopkins University intensive care ranging from preventable hospitalizations to surgical care, as well as on health outcomes, including mortality and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: biomarker outcomes specific to those with chronic conditions. All Kate Bundorf, National Bureau of Economic Research four papers study these outcomes in the context of the Affordable The Effects of Expert Recommendations on Choice among Care Act’s expansion of coverage, with most focusing specifically Prescription Drug Insurance Plans on the law’s Medicaid expansion. Daniel Hartung, Oregon State University / Oregon Health & Science University SP CDC Rural Health Update: Science, Trends in Coverage for Disease Modifying Therapies for Surveillance, and Service Multiple Sclerosis in Medicare Part D WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Chair: Richard Puddy, Centers for Disease Control and Preethi Rao, RAND Prevention Do Medicare Beneficiaries Who Switch Part D Plans Due to Financial Reasons Enroll in Lower-Cost Plans? Speakers: Macarena Garcia, CDC/CSELS; Diane Hall, CDC/ OADP; Andrea Young, CDC/OSTLTS Tisamarie Sherry, RAND and Brigham and Women’s Hospital The Impact of Medicare Part D on Opioid Use among Older Adults Special Session: The session will describe CDC’s science, surveillance, and service activities related to rural health, including Call for Abstracts Session: This session considers issues 1) an overview of the 2017 Mortality and Morbidity Weekly Report in Part D plan choice and Medicare beneficiaries use of (MMWR) Rural Health series, which emphasized the leading prescription drugs. The first two papers assess the potential causes of death and evidence-based approaches to reducing for better plan enrollment decisions through use of decision- rural disparities, 2) efforts underway to more accurately define support tools as patients continue to have difficulty identifying rurality as it relates to local health departments serving both lowest-cost plans when premiums and cost-sharing both vary. rural and urban populations, and 3) how CDC is translating the Panelists also explain sources of growth in Part D-financed science on rural disparities for decision makers and building rural opioid use and trends in plan formularies to potentially health capacity at the agency through trainings and partnerships, discourage costly multiple sclerosis patients from enrolling featuring HRSA’s Federal Office of Rural Health Policy. over time. Supported in part by the CDC

32 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda MONDAY SP SP SP SP SP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP PR PR RP PR RP CD CD RR MS MS MS MS Type Session HC HC BH HW WH TDI IQV DIS DIS LFA ORL ADL PPH DTH COV COV MQV MQV MCR Theme 25 June Chair Dymek Bundorf Xu Blewett Lynn Bryan Weiner Tsung-Mei Cheng May Carl Rush Kristin Kan David Dorr Kate Jordan Harrison Kristin Carman Rebecca Haffajee Matthew Maciejewski Xiao Austin Frakt Benjamin Miller Kelly Devers Cheryl Parcham Kathryn Phillips Susan Perez Kristi Swanson Anne Gauthier Dennis Hsieh Kelly Kyanko Gopal Khanna Jane Holl Christine Abrams Melinda / Rachel Atkins David Ramoni Lara Cartwright-Smith Christopher Murray Shana Sandberg Lisa Simpson FlatleyPatricia Brennan

Legacy Policy & Exhibit Hall Open Registration Open Luncheon Plenary

Research Learning from Universal Health Session B (Continental Breakfast) Poster Health His Title on and Implications Policy for State-Level Expend Integration Efforts to of and Health System Management Factors and Recidivism for Jail and Prison Building Making Health Services to Research Relevant Emerging Evidence from Research on Medicaid Emerging Complexities in Exchanging Health Data in Cost and Quality Highlight Opportunities Variations Mortality, Reducing Disparities: Together: Go Care Re-Entry Whole Person County Angeles The Los Two Meet the Editors Part Health and Healthcare Expenditures Future of Scholarly Communication and HSR Reinhardt: Insurance Market, Model Development, the Goal Toward Progress Uwe of Honor Data Inputs, Models: Projection Workforce Spending and LTSS Managing Demand, Coverage Systems Health Service in DeliveryWorkforce Worker the Community Health Health Services Disparities in Oral Health and its Role in Reducing Access for DataApproaches to Partnering New Data Sources & The Magnitude Services and Minutia of Low-Value Identifying and Understanding Drivers and Difficulties of Program Imple- mentation In in Medicaid Benefit Design and Managed Care Trends Reducing Morbidity, Safety New Directions in Measuring Hospital Patient Moving Beyond P<0.05: the C-Suite Academia Building Successful Careers in to Policy: Practice From ApproachesPatients High-Need to Support Delivery System and Payment for Opioid Use Disorders Treatment Recent Developments in Surveillance and State Law Research Methods Policy to Go Far, Want You If Addressing Language Services and Immigrant Health Ensuring the Quality of Big Data for HSR Affect Health Care Delivery? New Evidence Advantage How Does Medicare Providing Primary Care for High Cost High Need Populations The State of U.S. Outcomes Research for Patient-Centered Sustaining Partnerships Safer Care: Approaches Epidemic and its Impact to Monitoring the Opioid Emerging Analyses Conducting Health Cost Publish or Perish: in Maternal Care: Value Hall: Town NLM Public Policy, Veterans Vulnerable Access to Care for Low-Income and Affecting Treatment Behavioral Health Integration/New of Models Late-Breaking Session: Implications and the Policy Re-Entry Patients: Program A Monday, GLANCE: AT AGENDA Hall 4AB (L4) Hall 4AB (L4) Room (Level) (L4) Atrium Foyer 2A (L2) 6A-E (L6) 2A (L2) 608 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 602-604 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 607 (L6) 608 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 2B (L2) 2B (L2) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 602-604 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 607 (L6)

Time 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.–8:15 p.m. 8:00 a.m.–9:15 a.m. 8:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. 7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. MONDAY AGENDA ATGLANCE: Monday, A 3:15 p.m.–4:45p.m. 6:45 p.m.–8:15p.m. 5:15 p.m.–6:45p.m. 4:45 p.m.–5:15p.m. Tuesday. and Sunday for Glance a at Agenda the on found be can Type Session and Theme for Key 4C-3 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-1 (L4) 2B (L2) 613-614 (L6) 611 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 608 (L6) 607 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 602-604 (L6) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-1 (L4) 2B (L2) 619-620 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 612 (L6) 611 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 608 (L6) 607 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 602-604 (L6) 4C-4 (L4) 619-620 615-617 2A (L2) 2A (L2) Hall 4AB(L4) Models Care Delivery tion, Examining theEffectsofHealthPolicies toInsurance, Related Quality MeasurementforPrescriptionOpioidsandBenzodiazepines Poster Symposium#1 Women Reaching Across Time andSpace: Unintended Consequences Reforms toIncreasethe Value ofHospital-BasedCare: andDiffusionofEvidence-BasedPractices PoliciesDissemination Tribulations Clinical Embedding Pragmatic Trials inHealthCareSystems: Impacts Mental Healthand Addictions Treatment: ofLow De-Implementation Value Care Patients inNewModelsofITEnabledCare Engaging andHealthCare Machine Learningand toHealthServices Applications New InsightsonScopeofPracticeforNPsandCRNAs Health InsuranceandHealthcareUtilization andEncounter-BasedMethods toOptimizeSurvey-Based Researchon Poster Symposium#2 Outcomes Research to How toConductPatient Centered andUseNCHSLinkedData Access Patient-Centered Care HSR ComestoCare: Decision Making toSupportEvidence-Based Data MethodstoLeverage Innovative Products andInformation Data The CentersforMedicareandMedicaidServices Coverage, Who Will Benefitfrom Advances inHealthCare Payment ReformandthePhysicianNexus Telemedicine—Is itDelivering? Hospitals, Getting in, Delivery Implementing PCORResultstoInformChoicesandImproveHealthcare System DemandforInsights theSwellofData, Navigating Dual-Eligible Beneficiaries: Lost Mothers: Best of ARM: ty andMortalityintheUS ExplainsHigherSpendingintheUS: What Variation inEnd-of-LifeCareQuality Across Systems, andFinancial ProtectiononDisparitiesinHealthCare Eds, Access andPayment forChildandFamily Health Gettingout, Trends inUSHospital Care: Morbidi- oftheRisingDisparitiyinMaternal An Exploration andPost-Acute Care in SharedDecisionMakingInnovations Falling Through theCracks? Transitions Between MeasuringPolicy Impact ScienceandRisingDelivery SurgingData Advances in Access toCarefor Effectsof New Policies New and Trends, Prices, Poster SessionC(Reception) Break Disparities, orIntensity? Utlization Providers, Intendedand June25 andPolicy Trials and Competi- and Time Jane Holl Deborah Rinehart Louis Garrison Jack Needleman Martin Katie Lena Chen Brown Meagan Meyers Catherine Emily Williams Diana Buist Kevin Fuji Peter Veazie Ulrike Muench Stephanie Wheeler Jones Cheryl Irma Arispe Victor Montori Rashida Dorsey Allison Oelschlaeger Harold Pollack Frank Markel White Chapin Shannon Wu Deborah Scharf Joanna Siegel Paul Wallace Greg Downing/ Tamara Konetzka Utibe Essien Ashish Jha Garrido Melissa (continued) MCR MQV MET PDS DTH DTH ADL CFH LFA DIS IQV IQV TDI WH HW WH BH HC SP, BOA MS MS MS RR RR RP RP PR CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP SP SP SP CE CD TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 MONDAY, JUNE 25

7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m. Joanne Spetz, Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies at UCSF Registration Forecasting Future Workforce Needs for Long-Term Services WSCC - Atrium Lobby (Level Four) and Supports for the U.S. and States

8:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. Research Panel: The session includes three models that and predict the impact of the aging population on state Medicaid spending on LTSS. The first paper provides an application 4:00 p.m.–8:15 p.m. for Hawaii. The second paper describes a state-specific Exhibit Hall Hours model for Minnesota. The third paper predicts the future LTC WSCC – Exhibit Hall 4 A/B (Level Four) workforce needs from a national perspective.

8:00 a.m.–9:15 a.m. HW, PR If You Want to Go Far, Go Together: State-Level Efforts to Expand Integration of the Poster Session B and Continental Breakfast Community Health Worker Workforce into Health WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4AB (Level Four) Service Delivery Features: WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Behavioral Health Chair: Carl Rush, University of Texas MONDAY Improving Safety, Quality and Value Lessons from Abroad Speakers: Aunima Bhuiya, Centers for Disease Control Measuring Safety, Quality and Value and Prevention; Deborah Fournier, Association of State and Methods Research Territorial Health Officials;June Robinson, Washington State Patient-Centered Research Legislature; Ashley Wennerstrom, Tulane University Payment and Delivery Systems Innovations Policy Roundtable: Community health workers (CHWs) For an index of poster presenters by theme, see page 112. foster relationships that facilitate the integration of health care, social services, and communities. This Roundtable of Supported in part by IBM Watson Health policy researchers and practitioners will contribute to an ongoing conversation about state-level strategies to expand the reach of the CHW workforce to the millions of Americans that face health disparities. 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Concurrent Sessions DIS, CP Addressing Language Services and ADL, RP LTSS Spending and Workforce Projection Immigrant Health Models: Data Inputs, Model Development, and WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Implications for Policy Chair: Kristin Kan, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) of Chicago Chair: Lynn Blewett, University of Minnesota Discussant: Elizabeth Jacobs, University of Texas at Austin

Discussant: David Grabowski, Harvard University Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Marc Elliott, RAND Speakers: Bilingual Outreach Using Predicted Probabilities of Spanish Giovann Alarcon, State Health Access Data Assistance Center Preference to Improving Response Rates and Representation Minnesota Long Term Services and Supports Financing Model of Spanish-Preferring Patients: A Randomized Experiment Melissa Favreault, Urban Institute Karen Finnegan, Institute for Community Health Evaluating Policy Options for Financing Long-Term Services and Immigrants Contributed $25.1B More to Private Insurers Than Supports in the U.S. and Selected States They Took out in 2014

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 33 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m.

Denise Quigley, RAND Orestis Panagiotou, Brown University Inpatient Care Experiences Differ By Preferred Language Comparison of Hospital Readmission Rates in Medicare within Racial/Ethnic Groups Advantage and Medicare Fee-for-Service

Allison Squires, New York University Sungchul Park, University of Washington Language Concordant Home Care Visits Reduce 30 Day Service-Level Selection: Strategic Risk Selection in Medicare Readmissions in Limited English Proficiency Patients Advantage in Response to Risk Adjustment

Call for Abstracts Session: An increase in linguistic Margot Schwartz, Brown University diversity and global migration presents challenges for Comparing the Quality of Home Health Agencies That health care providers, patients, and their families. Designing Serve Traditional Medicare Versus Medicare Advantage systems that can provide high quality care to an increasingly Beneficiaries diverse population are important considerations especially in the context of patient experience. This panel explores Call for Abstracts Session: Medicare Advantage (MA) plans bi-lingual outreach, language concordant services, and other cover approximately 1/3 of Medicare beneficiaries overall important topics in immigrant health. and the majority of Medicare beneficiaries in some U.S. counties. Despite the prominent role of MA Plans in health MS Ensuring the Quality of Big Data for HSR care delivery for older Americans, substantive gaps remain in our knowledge of how the delivery of care differs between WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) MA plans and traditional Medicare. This session includes Chair: David Dorr, Oregon Health & Science University four studies that provide new evidence on care delivery in MA plans in the context of acute care, nursing home and Speakers: Bradley Hammill, Duke University; Kristin Lyman, home health services and how risk selection incentives affect Louisiana Public Health Institute; Elisa Priest, Baylor Scott & service use. White Health; Lisa Schilling, University of Colorado

Methods Session: Health Services Researchers need to HC, CP Providing Primary Care for High Cost understand the impact of data generation and management High Need Populations on data quality in order to produce valid and precise WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) estimates for research. These skills are usually not learned Chair: Jordan Harrison, University of Pennsylvania in class and must be obtained through time-consuming (and often painful!) real world experience. This beginner methods Discussant: John Hsu, Massachusetts General Hospital workshop will define data quality and provide examples of the complexity of data generation, management, and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: reporting across single and multi-site research projects. Steven Asch, Stanford University Attendees will get valuable “lessons-learned” from the Randomized Evaluation of Intensive Outpatient Management panelists and insight into the messy and sometimes for High-Need Veterans: Effects on Patient Experience frustrating world of big data for health services research. Elenir Avritscher, University of Texas at Houston Level of Difficulty: Beginner Medical Home for High-Risk Chronically Ill Children: Post-Trial Sustainability of the Benefits

MCR, CP How Does Medicare Advantage Affect Audrey Jones, Department of Veterans Affairs, Salt Lake City Health Care Delivery? New Evidence Perceptions of Primary Care Services among Veterans with WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) Opioid Use Disorder in the Veterans Health Administration Chair: Kate Bundorf, National Bureau of Economic Research Amy Kandilov, RTI International Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: The Impact of Four Primary Care Initiatives on High-Risk David Meyers, Brown University Populations The Effects of Medicare Advantage Contract Concentration on Patient Nursing Home Outcomes

34 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Call for Abstracts Session: Primary care can play an SP Sustaining Partnerships for Patient-Centered important role in linking high need patients to the health care Outcomes Research system and in managing their outcomes. This session will WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) present results from recent evaluations of targeted primary Chair and Discussant: Kristin Carman, Patient-Centered care programs for different types of high need patients, and Outcomes Research Institute describe the patient experience with such interventions. Speakers: Courtney Clyatt, Lia Hotchkiss, and Julie Kennedy

Lesch, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

SP The State of U.S. Health and Healthcare Special Session: Engaging patients and other stakeholders Expenditures in the research process, from topic generation through the WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) dissemination and implementation of study results, is a key Chair: component of patient-centered outcomes research (PCOR). While effective strategies for patient and stakeholder engagement have emerged at a rapid pace over the past few years, very little has focused on the important and necessary work of sustaining Christopher Murray partnerships with patients and stakeholders. This session University of Washington features a synthesis of approaches for supporting and nurturing MONDAY Speakers: researcher-patient/stakeholder partnerships over time identified from PCORI-funded research, PCORI’s Pipeline to Proposal Awards, and the Eugene Washington PCORI Engagement Awards.

Joseph Dieleman Supported in part by PCORI Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation IQV, CP Safer Care: Progress Toward the Goal WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Chair and Discussant: Shana Sandberg, National Laura Dwyer-Lindgren Committee for Quality Assurance University of Washington Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Special Session: In order to be responsive to the health Emily Arntson, University of Michigan needs of their populations, decision-makers need The Effect of the Hospital-Acquired Condition Reduction accurate information about local health trends and health Program on Hospital-Acquired Condition Rates and Clinical system performance. The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Outcomes study produces both national and local health data for the U.S., while the Disease Expenditure (DEX) uncovers Lori Loan, University of Alabama at Birmingham how resources are spent on U.S. health care. This session Evaluation of Patient Outcomes Following Implementation of will highlight key results and trends from both the GBD the Patient Caring Touch System and DEX studies that help us better understand the state Wei Song, Department of Veterans Affairs, Canandaigua and of U.S. health and healthcare. A panel discussion will University of Rochester elaborate on how this evidence can be used for policy and Fewer Falls after Antihypertensive Drug De-Intensification in decision-making. VHA Community Living Centers

Angela Thomas, MedStar Health Research Institute Race Differences in Adverse Patient Safety Events in Organizations Applying High Reliability Principles

Call for Abstracts Session: In this session, four studies examine interventions designed to provide safer care, across a breadth of inpatient and long-term care settings. The session will start by examining the effect of the CMS

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 35 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m.

Hospital Acquired Condition Reduction Program (HACRP) Methods Session: Economic evaluation of health care on Medicare beneficiaries, explore changes in fall rates of interventions or policy changes often involves the analysis of Veterans with disability after antihypertensive drug de- costs incurred by patients for using outpatient and inpatient intensification, examine race differences in patient safety, services, medications and other inputs. Health care cost data are and finally compare fall rates in U.S. military hospitals after rarely normally distributed, so must be analyzed using methods implementation of an evidence-based nursing framework. that can address the reasons for non-normality. Additional considerations of health care cost analysis may be needed PPH, CP Emerging Approaches to Monitoring the when one is evaluating costs over time in a longitudinal or panel Opioid Epidemic and its Impact study. The purpose of this workshop is to provide attendees WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) with an overview of these issues and an introduction to current approaches to modeling health care costs. Chair: Rebecca Haffajee, University of Michigan Level of Difficulty: Beginner Discussant: Caleb Banta-Green, University of Washington CD Publish or Perish: Meet the Editors Part Two Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Mahshid Abir, University of Michigan and RAND Chair: Lisa Simpson, AcademyHealth Development of the System for Opioid Overdose Surveillance (S.O.S) Speakers: Sarah Dine, Health Affairs; Christopher Koller, The Milbank Quarterly and Milbank Memorial Fund; Ian Laura Burke, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Norman, International Journal of Nursing Studies and King’s Harvard University College London; Amol Navathe, Healthcare: Journal of Are Rates of Opioid Use Disorder and Overdose Declining Delivery Science & Innovation and University of Pennsylvania; Among the Opioid-Naive Initiating Opioid Treatment? Paul Wallace, eGEMs and AcademyHealth

Caitlin Murphy, University of Texas Southwestern Career Development Workshop: This workshop is designed Medical Center to help authors improve their success rate in publishing in Polypharmacy and Patterns of Prescription Medication Use top journals in the field, with better understanding of what among Cancer Survivors different journals publish. Specifically, panelists will try to Michael Topmiller, American Academy of Family Physicians improve authors’ understanding of the journals’ peer-review process and give useful hints about how to write a good Identifying Opioid Intervention Opportunities for the Health research or policy paper and how to navigate the revision Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) process. Finally, panelists will help authors to differentiate Call for Abstracts Session: In the context of a constantly- among journals, including what types of subjects and evolving opioid epidemic, public c health authorities and presentation each journal prefers. health care systems need better tools for tracking patterns of opioid misuse. The following session presents several novel WH, CP Value in Maternal Care: Variations in approaches to tracking fatal, nonfatal opioid overdoses and Cost and Quality Highlight Opportunities opioid prescriptions, often in near real-time, using a variety of WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) data sources and linkage methods. Data sources range from Chair: Xiao Xu, Yale University emergency department visits, EMS, claims data, survey data and medical examiner files. Discussant: Catherine Chanfreau, Veterans Affairs Informatics and Computing Infrastructure MS Conducting Health Cost Analyses WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Jessica Holzer, Hofstra University Chair: Matthew Maciejewski, Department of Veterans Maternal Morbidities: Identifying Significant Data Gaps and Affairs, Durham and Duke University Implications for Creating Meaningful Quality Improvement in Speakers: Anirban Basu and Lindsay White, University of the United States Washington

36 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Michelle Moniz, University of Michigan Professional Payments Drive Variation in Expenditures for Low Risk Births

Julia Phillippi, Vanderbilt University Adam Wilcox Midwifery Presence in U.S. Hospitals and Labor Care and UW Medicine Birth Outcomes among Low-Risk, Nulliparous Women: A Consortium on Safe Labor Study.

Emily White VanGompel, University of Chicago Lucy Savitz Explaining Unexplained Variation in Patient Outcomes: Kaiser Permanente Northwest Cesarean Overuse and the Culture of Care Special Session: The National Library of Medicine’s Call for Abstracts Session: Almost one-quarter of hospital recently-issued strategic plan, A Platform for Biomedical stays are for pregnancy, childbirth, and newborn care. Discovery and Data-Powered Health (2017–2018), There is enormous variation in the cost of childbirth both envisions a future where “data and information transform geographically and by mode of delivery. Moreover, disturbing and accelerate biomedical discovery and improve health trends in maternal morbidity and mortality indicate high and health care.” Open access, dataset submission costs are not yielding good outcomes. This session examines and sharing, new peer review platforms and pre-print MONDAY variation in costs and outcomes and begins to identify repositories, “executable” documents that interact with potential solutions. readers, open science—these are but a few aspects of the changing scholarly publishing environment for

science that challenge the research enterprise. Join NLM SP NLM Town Hall: Future of Scholarly Director Patti Brennan and other HSR data science and Communication and HSR publishing leaders to discuss how these trends could WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) and are already affecting health systems and services research. Chair and Speaker:

COV, RP Patricia Flatley Brennan Public Policy, Insurance Market, and National Library of Medicine Health System Management Factors Affecting Access to Care for Low-Income and Vulnerable Veterans Discussant: WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Chair: Austin Frakt, VA Partnered Evidence-Based Policy Resource Center Andrew Bindman University of California, San Francisco Speakers: Aigerim Kabdiyeva, VA Partnered Evidence-Based Policy Speakers: Resource Center Nurse Burnout in the Veterans Health Administration

Taeko Minegishi, VA Partnered Evidence-Based Policy Jennifer Hansen Resource Center Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Managing a Market for Publicly Provided Healthcare

Christine Yee, University of Maryland, Baltimore County and VA Partnered Evidence-Based Policy Resource Center Insider and Outsider Access to Care in Public Healthcare Delivery Systems

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 37 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m.

Research Panel: The Veterans Health Administration Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: (VHA) provides health care to lower-income and vulnerable Kathryn Dreyer, The Health Foundation populations. Researchers will discuss 1) the effect of local Harvesting Household Structure Information from Electronic area factors and private insurance on access to VHA care, 2) Health Records to Examine Links with Health Care Utilisation the effect of prioritizing returning patients on access for new patients, and 3) retention of the VHA workforce. Irene Papanicolas, London School of Economics Global Approaches to Readmission Reduction: Lessons from BH, CP Behavioral Health Integration/New Other Countries? Models of Treatment Pooja Paode, Arizona State University WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Standardizing Cancer Screening and Diagnosis Protocols: The Chair: Benjamin Miller, Well Being Trust Impact of the Urgent Referral Pathway on Cancer Referral and Detection Patterns in the United Kingdom Discussant: Jurgen Unutzer, University of Washington Adam Steventon, The Health Foundation Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Predictors of Emergency Department Attendance in a Yuxian Du, Texas A&M University Universal Single Payer Healthcare System Following Calls Overcoming Geographical Distances: An Investigation of a to a Telephone Advice Line for Children and Young People: Hub and Spoke Telemental Health Model Analysis of Linked Data

Lucinda Leung, Department of Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Call for Abstracts Session: This session presents Angeles and University of California, Los Angeles and critically discusses approaches taken in the United High Quality of Care Persists Despite Shifting Depression Kingdom and other OECD countries (which have universal Services from VA Specialty to Primary Care health coverage) to reduce demand for care and to better understand patients’ social contexts associated with Shamis Mohamoud, University of Maryland, Baltimore County disparities in use. Evaluation of the Maryland Health Homes Program for Medicaid Enrollees with Severe Mental Illnesses or Opioid CP Late-Breaking Session: Emerging Evidence Substance Use Disorder and Risk of Additional Chronic Conditions from Research on Medicaid and the Policy Implications Scarlett Wang, New York State Psychiatric Institute WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care Services for Chair: Kelly Devers, NORC at the University of Chicago People with Serious Mental Illness: A Qualitative Systems Analysis of Integration in New York Discussant: Joe Thompson, University of Arksansas for Medical Sciences Call for Abstracts Session: This session presents new evaluations of innovative behavioral health integration Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: models within three U.S. states as well as a national Carrie Fry, Harvard University evaluation of behavioral health integration within the U.S. New Approaches to Medicaid Expansion: Work Requirements, Veterans Health Administration. Health Savings Accounts, and Health Care Access

April Grady, Manatt Health Strategies 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. Medicaid’s Critical Role in Addressing the Opioid Crisis

Concurrent Sessions Hannah Neprash, University of Minnesota LFA, CP Managing Demand, Reducing Supply-Side Responses to the Medicaid Expansion Disparities: Learning from Universal Health Ketra Rice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Coverage Systems Health and Economic Impacts of State Tobacco Control WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) Programs: A Microsimulation Analysis of Coordinated Efforts Chair and Discussant: Bryan Weiner, University of Washington

38 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Call for Abstracts Session: This panel focuses on the MS New Data Sources & Approaches to impacts of Medicaid expansions on coverage and access Partnering for Data Access to care as well as Medicaid’s critical role in addressing the WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) opioid epidemic and tobacco use. The first paper examines Chair: Kathryn Phillips, University of California, San Francisco Indiana’s Medicaid expansion which employs health savings accounts, lock-out periods for premium non-payment, Speakers: Naomi Bardach, University of California, San and work requirements. The second paper examines how Francisco; Louis Garrison, University of Washington; Adam physicians responded to Medicaid expansion and the impact Wilcox, UW Medicine on access. The third paper examines the role state’ Medicaid programs play in combatting the opioid epidemic. The final Methods Session: Researchers and decision makers are paper assesses the potential 10-year nationwide health and addressing challenging questions that require using data economic impacts of state coordination of evidence-based beyond what’s available in the large public datasets that tobacco control interventions. have been the mainstay of health services research. This panel explores innovative approaches to obtaining and using ORL, CP Health Services and its Role in Reducing data through collaborations and partnerships with industry Disparities in Oral Health and other groups. We will discuss how these partnerships WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) emerge, their pros/cons, and how researchers can adopt similar approaches. The session will use case studies to MONDAY Chair: Cheryl Parcham, Families USA illustrate opportunities and challenges, including cases on precision medicine and use of IT in clinical settings. Discussant: Joana Cunha-Cruz, University of Washington Level of Difficulty: Beginner Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Elizabeth Mertz, University of California, San Francisco MQV, CP The Magnitude and Minutia of Low- Feasibility Assessment of Applying Health Services Research Value Services Methods to Evaluating Dental Disparities in Children WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) Nadereh Pourat, University of California, Los Angeles Chair: Susan Perez, California State University, Sacramento Colocation Does Not Equal Integration: Practices in Primary Care Integration of Children’s Oral Health Services in Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Community Health Centers Stephen Flaherty, Northeastern University Patterns and Determinants of Inappropriate Diagnostic Imaging Simona Surdu, Oral Health Workforce Research Center Trends in the Provision of Oral Health Services by Federally George Miller, Altarum Qualified Health Centers A Methodology to Identify and Reduce Low-Value Care

Sarah Wovcha, Children’s Dental Services Ankur Pandya, Harvard University Reducing Oral Health Disparities in Rural Communities Using Cost-Effectiveness Analysis to Identify Low-Value Care through Telehealth Innovations William Schpero, Yale University Call for Abstracts Session: Despite overall improvements in Who Will Accept My Medicaid Coverage? Comparing Quality of oral health, pervasive racial and socioeconomic disparities in Care among Physicians Who Do and Do Not Accept Medicaid oral health persist. This session highlights how the provision of and the research on health services can improve oral Erika Sears, VA Center for Clinical Management Research; health of communities and reduce disparities. The session University of Michigan Health System features the experiences of dental care organizations, FQHCs Utilization of Mammography Prior to Breast Reduction and Community Health Centers in providing dental care to Surgery: A National Claims-Based Analysis low income underserved populations and the research to Call for Abstracts Session: Over 30% of health care spending measure the impact on increasing access to dental care and in the U.S. is considered wasteful and a significant amount of this reducing disparities in oral health. waste is attributed to low-value services. This session will start by outlining the magnitude of low-value care nationwide and explore the finer points of how to measure and tackle low-value care.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 39 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m.

TDI, CP Identifying and Understanding Drivers Special Session: Uwe Reinhardt was a brilliant, and Difficulties of Program Implementation compassionate, immensely entertaining teacher, researcher, WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) and speaker. He was utterly unique in his combination of experiences, expertise, wisdom, perspective and humanity. Chair: Kristi Swanson, Mayo Clinic He was also prolific. Reinhardt’s research spanned health care workforce, hospital pricing, systems of health care Discussant: Enola Proctor, Washington University at St. Louis around the world, Medicare reform, health care spending, ethical considerations on the uninsured and much more. Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: This session will honor Reinhardt’s work by building on the Bo Kim, Department of Veterans Affairs, Boston and legacy of those health research and policy issues to which he Harvard University contributed, and that were near and dear to his heart. Examining Local Influences on Implementation by Applying Case Study Research Methodology to a Multi-Site Trial Supported in part by Altarum

Shawna Smith, University of Michigan COV, CP Trends in Medicaid Benefit Design and Do Organizational Culture and Climate Moderate Managed Care Implementation Strategy Effectiveness? Results from a WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Cluster-Randomized Trial of Implementation Interventions for Chair: Anne Gauthier, MITRE Corporation Enhanced Outreach to Veterans with Serious Mental Illness and Discussant: Christine Buttorff, RAND 12 Month Outcomes of a Cluster Randomized Implementation Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Trial to Enhance Uptake of a Mood Disorders Collaborative Alice Burns, Congressional Budget Office Care Model in Community Practices Exploring the Growth of Medicaid Managed Care Jennifer Sullivan, Department of Veterans Affairs, Boston Sara McMenamin, University of California, San Diego Factors Affecting Implementation of Patient-Centered Medical Did the Affordable Care Act Create Differential Benefit Homes for Older Adults in the Veterans Health Administration Designs for Smoking Cessation Treatments Among Medicaid Using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Enrollees? Research Chima Ndumele, Yale University Call for Abstracts Session: Implementation science seeks Narrow Networks and the Continuity of Physicians in to inform health care professionals on the successful Medicaid Managed Care implementation of evidence-based practices into real world settings by identifying factors that positively or negatively Charlene Wong, Duke University and Duke Clinical impact execution and sustainability. The studies presented Research Institute in this session will examine barriers and facilitators that Medicaid Incentives to Encourage Healthy Behaviors: What influence program implementation in multi-site trials, as well Are Key Challenges and Best Practices for Implementation as comparisons of different implementation approaches and and Evaluation? their effect on health and outcomes. Call for Abstracts Session: This session examines the SP In Honor of Uwe Reinhardt: Building on His importance of plan design in Medicaid coverage. States have Health Research & Policy Legacy actively pursued innovative designs of the programs, and WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) the four papers in the session cover much breadth—ranging from examining the challenges faced in implementing Chair and Discussant: Tsung-Mei Cheng, Princeton healthy behavior incentives, to documenting the growth University of managed care contracting as well as well as provider Speakers: Mark Pauly, University of Pennsylvania; Karen network formation, to focusing specifically on smoking Davis, Johns Hopkins University; Austin Frakt, Department cession benefit designs in Medicaid as spurred by the of Veterans Affairs, Boston; Sherry Glied, New York University Affordable Care Act.

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DIS, PR Reducing Morbidity, Mortality, and Speakers: Recidivism for Jail and Prison Re-Entry Patients: The Los Angeles County Whole Person Care Re- Entry Program Ashish Jha WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Harvard University Chair: Dennis Hsieh, University of California, Los Angeles

Speakers: Clemens Hong, Margarita Pereyda and , LA County Department of Health Services Kiwon Yoo Russell Holman, Policy Roundtable: Re-entry individuals have many high- LifePoint Health risk health conditions. This session identifies how to create and fund a re-entry program for high risk patients to improve their access to care, provide social support and address their social needs to improve health outcomes based on the Los Jonathan Perlin Angeles County experience. HCA Healthcare Special Session: AHRQ is committed to ensuring health

MQV, PR New Directions in Measuring Hospital services research (HSR) has the greatest impact on MONDAY Patient Safety health for all Americans. To have the greatest impact, WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) HSR must also meet the needs of health care system Chair: Kelly Kyanko, New York University leaders. This session brings C-suite leaders together to discuss their pain points, unmet needs, burning platforms, Speakers: Ann Borzecki, Boston University; David Classen, and how they think about data, social determinants, Pascal Metrics; Joseph Kunisch, Memorial Hermann evidence, and research. AHRQ will challenge the research Healthcare System; Turner Prewitt, Patient community to reimagine HSR to transform questions, methods, outcomes, dissemination, implementation, and Policy Roundtable: This Policy Roundtable will discuss the operationalization strategies in order to remain relevant in successes in hospital safety since To Err is Human; current a rapidly evolving, technologically enabled, interdependent measurement programs including their methods, gaps, and and complex, health care ecosystem. lessons learned, and priority areas for new measures; and innovative methods for measurement, with a focus on EHR- Supported in part by AHRQ based quality measures.

CD Building Successful Careers in Academia SP Moving Beyond p<0.05: Making Health WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Services Research relevant to the C-Suite Chair: Jane Holl, Northwestern University WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Speakers: Rebecca Haffajee, University of Michigan; Chair: Corrina Moucheraud, University of California, Los Angeles; Paloma Toledo, Northwestern University

Career Development Workshop: This session is primarily Gopal Khanna designed for pre- and post-doctoral trainees and early career Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality faculty interested in careers focused on health services research or health policy in academic settings. Panelists representing a Discussant: range of disciplines, and the session chair, will share insights about important components of their own career development and discuss a range of issues and share lessons learned about Francis Chesley developing a research agenda, securing funding, receiving and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality providing mentoring, and balancing research, teaching or clinical activities, and other academic responsibilities.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 41 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m.

DTH, CP From Practice to Policy: Emerging Christie Teigland, Avalere Health Complexities in Exchanging Health Data A Comprehensive Profile of the High-Cost, High-Need WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Medicare Advantage Population Chair: Christine Dymek, Agency for Healthcare Research Virginia Wang, Department of Veterans Affairs, Durham and and Quality Duke University Differences in Survival and Hospitalization among Veterans Discussant: Robert Rudin, RAND Receiving Dialysis within and Outside the VA Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Call for Abstracts Session: Health systems, providers and Julia Adler-Milstein, University of California, San Francisco payers are testing new delivery and payment models to Measuring Inter-Hospital Information Exchange with Routine help improve outcomes for high-need, high-cost patients Patient Sharing Partners while simultaneously lowering overall costs of care. This Emily Cooper, Healthcentric Advisors session presents new research on the impact of various Physicians’ Self-Reported Use of a Mandatory Prescription health insurance approaches (e.g., consumer-directed health Drug Monitoring Program plans, Medicare Advantage), structural delivery models (e.g., ACOs) and settings (dialysis centers in- and outside of the Sunny Lin, University of Michigan VHA) across a spectrum of patients (children, veterans, older Accountable Care Organization Participation Does Not Drive adults). Despite the breadth of approaches, common themes Improvements in Hospital Health Information Exchange emerge regarding how to effectively manage care for this Capability patient populations with complex health and social needs. Lisa Moon, University of Minnesota & Advocate Consulting RR Recent Developments in Treatment for Opioid Control, Access and the Consumer Voice - Ethical, Legal and Public Policy Implications for Sharing Health Data Use Disorders WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Call for Abstracts Session: Interoperability and data exchange Chairs: David Atkins and Rachel Ramoni, Department of remain critical components for realizing the benefits of health Veterans Affairs IT, yet they continue to challenge providers and policymakers. This panel presents a multi-faceted picture of data exchange Discussant: Michael Stein, Boston University today, from the perspectives of hospitals, ACOs, physicians, and patients. Original research reveals gaps in inter-hospital data Speakers: Melissa Garrido, Icahn School of Medicine at exchange, minimal influence of ACOs, variable use of data for Mount Sinai; Taeko Minegishi, VA Partnered Evidence-Based monitoring controlled substances, and new insights into privacy Policy Resource Center; Julie Williams, Laura and John and the patient perspective. Arnold Foundation Research Resources: Recent explosive growth in the HC, CP Delivery System and Payment prevalence of opioid use disorders (OUD) has overwhelmed Approaches to Support High-Need Patients treatment capacity and added to already acute problems with WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) access to treatment. This panel will examine new evidence Chair: Melinda Abrams, The Commonwealth Fund regarding optimal treatment for OUD and consider strategies to improve alignment of payment incentives with effective Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: practices. Speakers will describe how new data analyses Ilene Hollin, University of Southern California and National are identifying risks associated with rapid tapering of opioid Pharmaceutical Council prescriptions, informing design of new payment models Consumer-Directed Health Plans for Children with Medical for community-based treatment and metrics for quality Complexity monitoring and pay-for-performance, and discuss the value of partnerships between federal agencies and private foundations Adam Markovitz, University of Michigan that align financial incentives with evidence-based practices. Accountable Care Organizations and the 1% Supported in part by the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services David Meyers, Brown University Research & Development Service How Do Medicare Advantage Plans Perform with High-Need Patients?

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MS Policy Surveillance and State Law Research Alice S. Hersh New Investigator Award Methods WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Mitesh Patel Chair: Lara Cartwright-Smith, George Washington University Department of Veterans Affairs, Philadelphia and University of Pennsylvania Speaker: Tara Ramanathan, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Keynote Address Methods Session: Policy surveillance is the regular and Innovation and the Future systematic collection and analysis of information about laws and other policies. The collected information is frequently Chair: presented in comparative maps or tables representing a point in time, but laws and other policies may be tracked over time in comprehensive databases. A form of qualitative data, law Anne Beal and policy information may be coded to create quantitative Sanofi data as well. However, the translation of legal research for non-legal audiences can be very challenging and careful Speakers: research and communication methods are required to ensure MONDAY accuracy. When done correctly, policy surveillance tools can help policymakers, advocates, and researchers understand Robert Califf the policy landscape and evaluate the impact of policy change. Duke University In this session, participants will be introduced to surveillance methods for both federal and state policies, looking at example policy surveillance projects on a variety of topics, and the concept of legal epidemiology. The session will include Dave Chokshi discussion of methods for researching state law (statutes and NYC Health + Hospitals regulations) and considerations for organizing data from state law research for non-legal researchers and other audiences.

Level of Difficulty: Beginner Porsche Everson 1:00 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Relevant Strategies, LLC

Luncheon Plenary This session will examine what’s happening on the WSCC - Room Ballroom 6A-E (Level Six) cutting edge of innovation from the perspectives of technology and data, care transformation, and Chair Address research. This innovation is disrupting the traditional model of research and creating new opportunities for Robin Newhouse collaboration, accelerating the pace and impact of Chair, AcademyHealth Board of Directors health services research. The format will be a facilitated Indiana University School of Nursing conversation with Anne Beal serving as the moderator. New this year! Be an active plenary participant by using Distinguished Investigator Award your mobile device to participate in the speaker polls and to ask questions of the speakers. Participate by going to https://arm2018.cnf.io.

Richard Frank Harvard University

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 43 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m.

Anne Beal, M.D., M.P.H., is dedicated to improving 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m. health care in the U.S., particularly for vulnerable patient groups. Her career is devoted to providing access to Concurrent Sessions high quality health care and has included delivering LFA, PR What Explains Higher Spending in the healthcare services, teaching, research, public health, US: Prices, Utilization or Intensity? and philanthropy. Dr. Beal is the Global Head of Patient WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) Solutions for Sanofi, an integrated, global healthcare Chair: Ashish Jha, Harvard University company focused on patient needs and engaged in the research, development, manufacturing and marketing of Speakers: Austin Frakt, Department of Veterans Affairs, healthcare products. Prior to that, she was the Deputy Boston & Boston University; Adrianna McIntyre, Harvard Executive Director and Chief Engagement Officer for The University; Irene Papanicolas, London School of Economics Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Policy Roundtable: The U.S. is a major outlier in health Robert Califf, M.D., MACC, is vice chancellor for health data care spending. New data suggests that we may have science and director of Duke Forge, the Center for Actionable misunderstood what drives higher spending in the U.S. Our Health Data Science at Duke Health, Donald F. Fortin, MD roundtable will offer ARM attendees access to the insights Professor of Cardiology in the Duke University, Chair of the from this analysis to help understand why U.S. healthcare Board of the People Centered Research Foundation, and an costs are so much higher. advisor for Verily Life Sciences, a member of the Alphabet family of companies formed by Google. He served as Commissioner of Food and Drugs in 2016-2017 during the WH, CP Reaching Across Time and Space: Obama administration. Prior to joining the FDA, Dr. Califf was Advances in Access to Care for Women a professor of medicine and vice chancellor for clinical and WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) translational research at Duke University. He was founding Chair: Katie Martin, National Partnership for Women & director of the Duke Clinical Research Institute. Families

Dave Chokshi, M.D., M.Sc., FACP, is chief population health Discussant: Manami Bhattacharya, University of Minnesota officer at Health + Hospitals (H+H)—the largest public health care system in the U.S. He also serves Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: as chief executive officer of the H+H Accountable Care Julia Kohn, Planned Parenthood Federation of America; Organization. Dr. Chokshi’s duties include leading a team Planned Parenthood Federation of America dedicated to health system improvement, supervising Depo Self-Administration: Putting a Patient-Centered Practice initiatives on ambulatory care transformation, innovative to the Test at Planned Parenthood care models, population health analytics, chronic disease prevention and management, and implementation research. Katy Kozhimannil, University of Minnesota His team was recognized with the 2017 Gage Award Maternal Opioid Use Disorder among Rural Residents Giving for Quality by America’s Essential Hospitals. Dr. Chokshi Birth at Rural, Urban Teaching and Urban Non-Teaching practices primary care (internal medicine) at Bellevue Hospitals Hospital and is a Clinical Associate Professor of Population Lois Lee, Boston Children’s Hospital Health and Medicine at the NYU School of Medicine. Health Care Access and Affordability for Women after the Porsche Everson, M.B.A., is owner and president of Affordable Care Act Relevant Strategies, a management consulting firm. Her professional experience spans public health, education, Leah Zullig, Duke University financial services, and social services, which helps her Telehealth Services Designed for Women: An Evidence Map look at complex problems broadly and identify systemic Call for Abstracts Session: Access to care is a critical solutions. Previously, she served as CEO of Starling Systems, precursor to better health outcomes, yet geography, cost, a software development company. Porsche is a former physical access can impede women’s ability to receive care. teacher and university administrator, and has held adjunct This session assesses several aspects of access to care faculty positions at The Evergreen State College and Pacific and provides evidence on potential interventions to make Lutheran University. She is the former chair of the Group services easier to obtain. Health Board of Trustees, former director and vice-chair at BECU, and current director at Group Health Foundation.

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CP Poster Symposium #1 Mitesh Patel, University of Pennsylvania WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Effect of an Automated Patient Dashboard Using Active Choice and Peer Comparison Performance Feedback to Chair: Jack Needleman, University of California, Los Angeles Physicians on Statin Prescribing: The Prescribe Randomized Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Clinical Trial Eric Apaydin, RAND Call for Abstracts Session: This session will feature Differences in Physician Income by Gender in a Multi-Region presentations from the top posters across 11 themes. The Survey first half of the session will allow presenters to give a brief Keith Branham, HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for overview at the podium, highlighting some of the most Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) interesting pieces of their work. The second half will give Relative Drug Prices and Spending across Federal Programs attendees the opportunity to visit the posters and engage in a and Benchmarks deeper discussion with the authors.

Jose Figueroa, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and MQV, CP Quality Measurement for Prescription Harvard University Opioids and Benzodiazepines Disparities in Preventable Hospital Admissions Are Narrowing WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) over Time

Chair: Louis Garrison, University of Washington MONDAY Ethan Forsgren, Harvard University and University of Iowa , Department of Veterans Affairs Creating Competition Using Active Purchasing: Evidence from Discussant: Walid Gellad the Massachusetts Health Insurance Exchange Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Karleen Giannitrapani, Department of Veterans Affairs Sumit Agarwal, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Stanford Ci2i Benzodiazepine Prescribing Trends in the United States from Veteran Experiences Seeking Non-Pharmacologic 2003-2015 Approaches for Pain R. Adams Dudley, University of California, San Francisco Sherry Glied, New York University Trends in Postoperative Opioid Prescribing after Common How the ACA’s Rating and Benefit Rules and Participation Surgeries in a Commercially Insured Population, 1994-2014 Requirements Affected the Insurance Coverage of Young, Sarah Shoemaker, Abt Associates Inc. High Income Men Quality Improvement (QI) Opioid Measures to Improve Opioid Chandrashekar Janakiram, National Institute of Dental and Prescribing in Primary Care Craniofacial Research National Institutes of Health Yongkang Zhang, Weill Cornell Medical College Gender and Racial Disparities in Opioid Prescriptions for First Opioid Prescription and Subsequent High-Risk Opioid Use Dental Diagnosis among Medicaid Populations Call for Abstracts Session: This session brings Yuna Lee, Columbia University together diverse research on prescription opioids Dissatisfied Creators: How Staff Characteristics and and benzodiazepines, specifically focused on quality Dissatisfaction Interact for Idea Creativity in Health Care measurement. Papers will discuss the importance of the Teams first opioid prescription for an opioid naïve patient, trends Mac McCullough, Arizona State University in postoperative opioid prescribing, and national trends in prescription benzodiazepine use. The session will end with a Measuring System Integration Using Multisector Claims- presentation of a set of opioid quality improvement measures Based Network Analysis: Differences in Network Structure for mapped to the CDC guidelines for prescribing opioids, Persons with and without Serious Mental Illness and a moderated discussion about how to pursue quality Stacey McMorrow, Urban Institute measurement with prescription opioids and benzodiazepines Expanded Access to Affordable Contraception and Women’s going forward. Educational Attainment

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 45 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m.

DIS, CP Examining the Effects of Health Policies Daria Pelech, Congressional Budget Office related to Insurance, Competition, and Financial The Impact of Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansions Protection on Disparities in Health Care on Dual Eligible Beneficiaries of Medicare and Medicaid: WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) Analysis of Administrative Data Chair and Discussant: Deborah Rinehart, Denver Health Research Panel: Better evidence on effective policies for dual-eligible beneficiaries can improve how Medicare Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: and Medicaid serve this high-cost, high-need population. Kathleen Call, University of Minnesota This panel demonstrates the importance of measuring and The Intersection of Social Risk Factors and Insurance-Based understanding how policy impact can vary for dual-eligible Discrimination on Healthcare Access Inequities beneficiaries across different state Medicaid programs. Sumedha Chhatre, University of Pennsylvania Hospital Competition and Racial and Ethnic Disparity in Prostate Cancer Care and Outcomes SP, CD Navigating the Swell of Data, Surging Mustafa Hussein, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee Data Science and Rising Delivery System Monitoring Financial Protection in the US Healthcare System, Demand for Insights 2005-2015: Measurement, Trends, and Disparities WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) Kevin Nguyen, Brown University Chairs: Insurance Coverage and Access to Care Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Nonelderly Americans, 2014-2017

Call for Abstracts Session: Disparities in health care have Greg Downing been a longstanding challenge in the United States and are a Innovation Horizons, LLC result of complex and multiple factors at the societal, health system, provider, and individual levels. This panel explores the effects of insurance, social risk, competition, and financial protection in the health care system and its impact Paul Wallace on disparities in health care. AcademyHealth

HC, RP Dual-Eligible Beneficiaries: Measuring Speakers: Policy Impact WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) Chair: Tamara Konetzka, University of Chicago Amy Compton-Phillips Speakers: Providence St. Joseph Health Tamara Hayford, Congressional Budget Office Reduced Physician Payments Associated with Less Use of Physician Office Care and More Use of Emergency Rooms by Dual-Eligibles Niall Brennan Health Care Cost Institute Laura Keohane, Vanderbilt University Risk Adjusting for Medicaid Participation in Medicare Advantage

Melissa McInerney, Tufts University Charles Bailey Improving Measures of Medicaid Participation among Older Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Adults Using Administrative Data and Self Reports

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IQV, CP Getting in, Getting out, Falling Through the Cracks? Transitions Between Hospitals, EDs, and Post-Acute Care Evan Carey WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Eastern Colorado Health Care System Chair and Discussant: Deborah Scharf, Lakehead University Special Session: As Learning Health Care Systems emerge, HSR is confronted with expanding and novel data resources, new analytic approaches and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: practitioners, and increasingly clear demands from Robert Burke, Department of Veterans Affairs, Eastern delivery system leaders and funders for rapid, reliable, Colorado and actionable knowledge. This session will feature Post-Acute Care Outcomes in the VHA System leaders in the field who will share how they are adapting and innovating in response, with ample opportunity for Amber Sabbatini, University of Washington dialog between attendees and presenters. Thirty-Day Unplanned Care Events after Hospital Observation Stay Versus Short Inpatient Admission

, University of Tennessee SP Sohul Shuvo Implementing PCOR Results to Inform MONDAY Association of Access to Primary Care with Healthcare Choices and Improve Healthcare Delivery Utilization among Medically Underserved Patients with WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Diabetes Chair: Joanna Siegel, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Zhiqiu Ye, University of Rochester Do Hospitals Serving Nursing Homes with Better Quality Speakers: Anirban Basu, Salutis Consulting; Uli Chettipally, Experience Lower 30-Day Readmission Rates? Kaiser Permanente; James Schuster, UPMC Health Plan Call for Abstracts Session: The effectiveness of health Special Session: Promoting the use and uptake of results care depends on the complex challenge of coordinating is a critical step in fulfilling the promise of Patient Centered care across several distinct settings. This session features Outcomes Research: To improve the quality and relevance empirical studies examining the relationships between the of evidence available to better inform health decisions. Two quality of care, transitions, and the use of services across recently completed PCORI-funded studies provide important new settings. evidence about effective strategies for managing and optimizing patient care. This session will feature the results of these studies DTH, CP Telemedicine—Is it Delivering? and the translation, dissemination and implementation efforts WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) PCORI is undertaking to maximize the impact of these and other Chair: Shannon Wu, Johns Hopkins University research findings on healthcare and health. These efforts include the public release of findings from PCORI-funded studies in Discussant: Cynthia LeRouge, Florida International patient- and clinician-friendly formats, targeted implementation in University healthcare settings, and dissemination to targeted audiences. We will also present analyses PCORI has undertaken to quantify the Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: potential economic impact of these interventions if implemented Michael Barnett, Harvard University broadly. Specialty Care Transformation in the Urban Safety Net: Frontline Perceptions of Econsult Implementation Supported in part by PCORI

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 47 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m.

SP Who Will Benefit from Advances in Andrew Quanbeck, University of Wisconsin—Madison Health Care Implementing a Mobile Health System to Integrate the WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Treatment of Addiction into Primary Care Chair: Frank Markel, Canadian Association for Health Mary Reed, Kaiser Permanente Services and Policy Research Patient-Provider Video Visit Telemedicine Integrated with Speakers: Kim Erwin, University of Illinois at Chicago; Clinical Care Romana Hasnain-Wynia, Denver Health and Hospital Jiani Yu, University of Minnesota Authority; Robert Reid, Trillium Health Partners A Multi-Payer Analysis of the Impact of Telemedicine Visits Special Session: As health systems further develop the on the Displacement of in-Person Services and on Follow-up ability to extend and enhance life, who will benefit? Will we Care see these health benefits extend to a larger proportion of Call for Abstracts Session: Is telemedicine delivering on the population, increasing health for all, or will the existing its promises, despite continuing reimbursement constraints? economic gradient of health status become steeper as This panel presents findings regarding the ability of years go by? And what is the contribution of health services telemedicine (particularly new forms of telemedicine, like research? In this session, leading experts from Canada and virtual primary care visits) to provide timely access to care, the United States will address these questions. displace the need for in-person visits, provide cost savings, and yield patient satisfaction. Panelists will also share current CFH, CP Coverage, Access and Payment for operational challenges in providing modern, innovative Child and Family Health telemedicine service lines. WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Chair: Harold Pollack, University of Chicago PDS, CP Payment Reform and the Physician Nexus WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Chair and Discussant: Chapin White, RAND Naomi Bardach, University of California, San Francisco The Association between Comorbid Mental Health Conditions Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: and Emergency Department Utilization in Pediatric Asthma Amelia Bond, University of Pennsylvania , University of South Carolina Physician Responses to Nonlinear Contracts Nicole Hair Association between Provider Reimbursement and Amol Navathe, University of Pennsylvania Vaccination Rates in the Medicaid-Eligible Population A Pragmatic Policy Trial Testing Larger Bonus Sizes and the , Mathematica Policy Research Behavioral Economic Principles of Loss Aversion and Social Andrea Wysocki Pressure in Physician Pay-for-Performance Building the Foundation for a Pediatric Medicaid Accountable Care Organization: The Reach and Impacts of Multiple Brady Post, University of Michigan Interventions to Prevent Emergency Department Visits Spillovers from Medicare ACOs to Commercial Patients Hao Yu, RAND Zirui Song, Harvard Medical School Integrating Mental Health Care for Pediatric Behavior Increased Spending on Primary Care Is Associated with a Disorders into Primary Care: Does It Reduce Mental Health Reduction in Total Medical Costs: An Evaluation of the Rhode Care Costs? Island Insurance Reform Call for Abstracts Session: This panel focuses on diverse Call for Abstracts Session: Physicians play a central role in approaches to finance and organize care for low-income or delivering health care, and in mediating the impacts of value- complex pediatric populations, with a particular focus on based payment initiatives. This session examines three broad Medicaid policy, mental health, and emergency department questions: how does the design of pay-for-performance care. contracts influence responses, are there practice-style spillover effects of value-based payment on patients in other health plans, and what are the effects of macro-level redirection of resources to primary care?

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RR The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid MS HSR Comes to Care: Shared Decision Making Services Data and Information Products Innovations in Patient-centered Care WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Chair: Allison Oelschlaeger, Centers for Medicare and Chair: Victor Montori, Mayo Clinic Medicaid Services Speakers: Jennifer Barton, Department of Veterans Affairs, Speakers: Stephanie Bartee, Geoff Gerhardt, Kevin Portland and Oregon Health & Science University; Hodges, and Ronnie Tan, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Michael Gionfriddo, Geisinger; Ana Quinones, Oregon Services Health & Science University

Research Resources: CMS will present new and updated Methods Session: A multidisciplinary panel of interventional data and information products for researchers and health health care services researchers focused on clinical care will policymakers. Panelists will present on visualization tools, review contemporary challenges affecting patient-centered new/updated public use data files, and the upcoming release interventions (e.g., shared decision making and minimally of new data for researchers. disruptive care) and the innovative ways forward they are exploring. Supported in part by CMS Level of Difficulty: Intermediate

MS Innovative Methods to Leverage Data to MONDAY Support Evidence-Based Decision Making WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) 4:45 p.m.–5:15 p.m. Chair: Rashida Dorsey, U.S. Department of Health and Break Human Services

Speakers: Scott Boggess, U.S. Census Bureau; Garth 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m. Graham, Aetna Foundation; Nick Hart, Bipartisan Policy Concurrent Sessions Center; Monica King, Administrative Data Research Facilities (ADRF) Network ADL, CP Variation in End-of-Life Care Quality across Systems, Providers, and Time Methods Session: As demonstrated by the establishment of WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) and recommendations from the Commission on Evidence- Based Policymaking and the Foundations for Evidence-Based Chair: Melissa Garrido, James J. Peters VA Medical Center Policymaking Act of 2017, increasingly policymakers are and Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai looking to expand the evidence-base for decision making Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: through the use of evaluation, research, and statistical Julie Bynum, Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical analysis. Health services researchers have an important Practice role in contributing to the evidence-base by developing Nurse Serious Illness and End of Life Care Less Aggressive and implementing innovative methods to access, combine, Than General Population and analyze administrative data. As open data initiatives continue, there will be more opportunities for health services Risha Gidwani-Marszowski, VA Health Economics Resource researchers to utilize data to provide further insights ways Center (HERC) to improve health and health care. This panel will describe End-of-Life Care Quality in Medicare Versus VA: Implications methods for researchers to use and combine administrative for Health Policy data resources to generate evidence for policy research. Pedro Gozalo, Brown University Level of Difficulty: Beginner State Variation in Mechanical Ventilation of Hospitalized Patients with Advanced Dementia

Helena Temkin-Greener, University of Rochester Rehabilitation Therapy for Nursing Home Residents at the End-of-Life: When Is Enough, Enough?

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 49 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m.

Joan Teno, Oregon Health & Science University Tina Hernandez-Boussard, Stanford University Change in End-of-Life Care for Medicare Beneficiaries 2000- Changes in Prostate Specific Antigen Screening and Prostate 2015: Site of Death, Place of Care, Health Care Transitions, Cancer Diagnosis after Guideline Changes and Burdensome Care Tracy Johnson, Denver Health & Hospital Authority Call for Abstracts Session: To improve end-of-life care Predictive Risk Modelling Under Different Data Access quality, we must identify care that is unnecessary and/or Scenarios: Variation in Who Is Identified As High-Risk and for potentially harmful. Understanding variations in care provision How Long? that are not due to patient preferences or needs and that may be due to policy or financial incentives is critical to this Hyeyoung Jung, Weill Cornell Medicine process. The speakers in this session are using comprehensive Do Physicians Who Specialize in Nursing Home Care data on decedents in the US from the past two decades to Provide Higher Quality Care for Nursing Home Patients with examine variations in processes and outcomes over time and Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias? across providers, facilities, states, and health care systems. Aaron Leppin, Mayo Clinic Developing a Toolkit to Implement the Statin Choice Conversation RR How to Access and Use NCHS Linked Data to Aid at Scale: Application of a Work Reduction Model Conduct Patient Centered Outcomes Research WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Connor Moseley, Duke University Chair and Discussant: Irma Arispe, National Center for Gift Cards for Well Checks: What Are Medicaid and CHIP Health Statistics Programs Doing to Incentivize Healthy Behaviors in Children? Doris Peter, Yale New Haven Health Services Corporation Speakers: Lisa Mirel, Ernest Moy, Jennifer Sayers, and Merianne Spencer, National Center for Health Statistics Hospital-Wide Mortality Measure Methodology Dario Tedesco, University of Bologna Research Resources: Lisa Mirel will provide an overview of the NCHS data linkage program. Jennifer Sayers will provide a Comparing Opioid-Related Hospitalizations and Opioid walkthrough of the process for accessing and getting started Prescription Patterns between the United States and Italy with NCHS linked data. Ernest Moy will discuss using hospital Zhiyou Yang, University of Minnesota administrative data linked with death certificate data to conduct Was the Medicare Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program patient centered outcomes research. Merianne Spencer will (HRRP) Associated with Differential Trends in Readmissions solicit input on ongoing patient centered outcomes research According to Patient Race and Socioeconomic Position? projects that apply natural language processing to linked electronic health records and death certificates, and identify Call for Abstracts Session: This session will feature specific opioid agents leading to emergency department use, presentations from the top posters across 10 themes. The hospitalization, and death. first half of the session will allow presenters to give a brief overview at the podium, highlighting some of the most Supported in part by NCHS interesting pieces of their work. The second half will give attendees the opportunity to visit the posters and engage in a CP Poster Symposium #2 deeper discussion with the authors. WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Chair: Cheryl Jones, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill MET, CP Methods to Optimize Survey-Based and Encounter-Based Research on Health Insurance Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: and Healthcare Utilization Andrew Barnes, Virginia Commonwealth University WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) Changes in Utilization of Treatment Services and Emergency Department Visits Among Medicaid Members with Opioid Use Chair: Stephanie Wheeler, University of North Carolina at Disorders Following Implementation of Virginia’s Addiction Chapel Hill and Recovery Treatment Services Program Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Tze Chiam, Christiana Care Health System Marc Elliott, RAND Closing the Gap in Health Disparities with Systems Effects of Mail Survey Length and Layout on Patient Engineering Techniques – One Language at a Time Experience Survey Response Rates

50 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Michel Boudreaux, University of Maryland Call for Abstracts Session: State level policies such as scope Using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (H-CUP) for of practice regulations for nurse practitioners (NP) are intended State Health Policy Research to ensure high quality care and safeguard the public. However, these restrictions affect health care delivery in a variety of Angela Fertig, University of Minnesota ways, often not facilitating improved outcomes for the public. Self-Reported Health Insurance Coverage: How Accurate Are In this session, we will explore associations and causal effects the Estimates from the ACS and the CPS? of NP scope of practice legislations on access to care in rural areas; utilization of health care providers; and prescription Joanne Pascale, U.S. Census Bureau opioid use. A fourth paper examines the effects of opting- Categorizing Type of Health Insurance Coverage in the out of physician supervision for Certified Registered Nurse Redesigned Current Population Survey Using Enrollment Anesthetist (CRNAs) on the use of different staffing models. Records and a Machine Learning Approach Kathleen Call, State Health Access Data Assistance Center MS Machine Learning and Applications to Health Who Gets It Right? Characteristics Associated with Accurate Services and Health Care Reports of Health Insurance Coverage WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) Call for Abstracts Session: Survey and healthcare encounter Chair: Peter Veazie, University of Rochester data are commonly used to understand patients’ experiences with healthcare systems, health insurance, and healthcare Speakers: Gang Luo, University of Washington; Sherri Rose, utilization. In particular, since the Affordable Care Act Harvard University; Edwin Wong, Department of Veterans MONDAY implementation, decision makers are interested in understanding Affairs, Puget Sound changes in insurance and healthcare utilization over time. This panel will explore the promises and pitfalls of using data from Methods Session: This session introduces Machine Learning the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), Medicare techniques and their application to health services and health Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems care. The session is targeted at an introductory to intermediate (MCAHPS) Survey, Current Population Survey (CPS), and American level. The session will present pros and cons of Machine Community Survey (ACS) to understand population-level Learning. Methods discussed will include combining prediction insurance and utilization patterns, with particular attention to and rule-based modeling, lasso and gradient boosting methods, response rate optimization, reporting accuracy, and sampling. and stacking/ensembling multiple ML algorithms. Speakers will discuss the application of machine learning techniques to HW, CP New Insights on Scope of Practice for prediction models using electronic medical records and Veterans NPs and CRNAs Administration patient data, and the application of machine WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) learning for causal inference and effect estimation. Chair: Ulrike Muench, University of California, San Francisco Level of Difficulty: Beginner/Intermediate Discussant: Allison Norful, Columbia University Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: DTH, CP Engaging Patients in New Models of IT Morris Hamilton, Abt Associates Enabled Care Nurse Practitioner Prescriptive Authority and Prescription WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Opioid Use Chair: Kevin Fuji, Creighton University

Amy Mills, RTI International Discussant: Joy Lee, Indiana University Prevalence of Anesthesia Staffing Models a Decade after the Medicare Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists Physician Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Supervision Exemption Policy Kimberly Brunisholz, University of Utah Jeongyoung Park, The George Washington University Delivering on the Promise of Digital Therapeutics—an Early Expanded Scope of Practice for Nurse Practitioners and Experience Implementing a Web-Based Diabetes Prevention Physician Assistants Has a Ripple Effect on Primary Care Program within a Learning Healthcare System. Provider Composition and Productivity in Community Health Centers Lisa Callegari, Department of Veterans Affairs, Puget Sounds and University of Washington Ying Xue, University of Rochester Development of a Web-Based Decision Support Tool to Full Scope-of-Practice Regulation Is Associated with Higher Promote Patient-Centered Family Planning Counseling in VA Supply of Nurse Practitioners in Rural and Primary Care Primary Care Health Professional Shortage Counties

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 51 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m.

Erin Hahn, Kaiser Permanente Southern California BH, CP Mental Health and Addictions Treatment: Use of Novel Patient-Facing, Self-Directed Health Information Trends, Disparities, and Policy Impacts Technology to Improve Patient Engagement in Preventive WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) Care: Focus on Colorectal Cancer Screening Chair: Emily Williams, Department of Veterans Affairs, Alexander Young, Department of Veterans Affairs, Los Denver and Seattle Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered Angeles and University of California, Los Angeles Value Driven Care The Effectiveness of Computerized Services and Peer Discussant: Robert Penfold, Kaiser Permanente Washington Coaches to Improve Weight in Patients with Serious Mental Health Research Institute Illness

Call for Abstracts Session: This session will highlight Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: efforts to facilitate patient engagement through the use of Elizabeth Charron, Clemson University patient-facing health IT. These efforts include the use of Disparities in Discharge Disposition to Inpatient Psychiatric patient portals to encourage self-administered colorectal Care Following Hospitalization for Intentional Drug Overdose cancer screening; benefits and barriers associated with in South Carolina, 2012-2013 a web-based diabetes prevention program; development Peiyin Hung, Yale University of a web-based tool to stimulate communication between Trends in Psychiatric Services Discontinuation in the United patients and providers about family planning; and a hybrid States and Suicide Mortality Rates, 2006-2015 web-based program combined with phone-based peer coaching to support weight management. Implications on Alene Kennedy-Hendricks, Johns Hopkins University policy and emerging models of both self-care and shared Effects of State Autism Mandate Age Caps on Health Service decision-making will be discussed. Use and Spending Among Adolescents

IQV, RP De-Implementation of Low Value Care Norah Mulvaney-Day, Truven Health Analytics, an IBM WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Company Impact of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act Chair: Diana Buist, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health on Outpatient Treatment for Substance Use Disorder Research Institute Call for Abstracts Session: This session broadly covers Speakers: current trends and disparities in key mental health treatment Jason Hockenberry, Emory University access measures, as well as policy influences on access to Cutting Payment Levels to Discourage Low Value Care mental health and addictions treatment. David Howard, Emory University The Role of Antifraud Enforcement in Reducing Low SP Embedding Pragmatic Clinical Trials in Health Value Care Care Systems: Trials and Tribulations WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Aaron Schwartz, Brigham and Women’s Hospital Chair: Catherine Meyers, NIH/NICCH Physician Variation in Provision of Low-Value Services Discussant: Eric Larson, Kaiser Permanente Washington Laura Smith, University of Minnesota Health Research Institute Geographic, Racial, and Socioeconomic Disparities in the De- Implementation of Ineffective or Unsafe Treatments. Speakers: Lynn DeBar and Gregory Simon, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute; Research Panel: This session will highlight research that Vincent Mor, Brown University assesses patient- and physician-level factors associated with the de-implementation of low-value care and Medicare coverage and payment policies to promote de- implementation.

52 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Special Session: This session covers the value of pragmatic MCR, CP Reforms to Increase the Value of clinical trials (PCTs) as a means of generating reliable Hospital-based Care: Intended and Unintended evidence on effectiveness of interventions by testing them Consequences across a spectrum of dynamic health care systems (HCSs) WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) across the US. Recognizing the need to develop more Chair: Lena Chen, Office of the Assistant Secretary for widespread use and best practices for conducting PCTs, the Planning and Evaluation National Institutes of Health (NIH) Common Fund initiated the NIH HCS Research Collaboratory in 2012, funding 9 Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: large-scale PCTs embedded in HCSs. These trials have Souvik Banerjee, Boston University produced generalizable knowledge from the challenges Association of the Hospital Value-Based Purchasing Program facing researchers as they balance achieving the rigor with Condition-Specific Mortality: Experience from the First of randomized trials of various interventions with daily Five Years of Medicare’s Pay-for-Performance Program operational issues. Amol Navathe, University of Pennsylvania Volume Response and Patient Selection in Voluntary Bundled TDI, CP Dissemination and Diffusion of Payment Evidence-Based Practices and Policies WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Eric Roberts, Johns Hopkins University and University of Pittsburgh MONDAY Chair: Meagan Brown, University of Washington Hospital Readmissions and Patient Characteristics: Discussant: Shawna Smith, University of Michigan Implications of Risk-Adjustment for Medicare’s Hospital Readmission Reduction Program Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Gery Guy, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Benjamin Silver, Brown University and RTI International Effect of Florida’s Prescription Drug Monitoring Program and Effects of Medicare Medical Reviews on Hospital Observation Pain Clinic Laws on Nonfatal Opioid-Related Overdoses Stays, Patient Outcomes, and Costs of Care

Peggy Hannon, University of Washington Call for Abstracts Session: Inpatient care makes up a Healthlinks: Disseminating Evidence-Based Interventions to substantial portion of Medicare spending, yet quality varies Small, Low-Wage Worksites widely. This session will describe new research on the intended and unintended consequences of regulatory efforts, Christina Nguyen, Harvard University as well as payment and delivery system reforms, aimed at Predictors of New Statin Initiation after the 2013 Cholesterol increasing the value of hospital-based care. Guidelines BOA Best of ARM: Trends in US Hospital Care: Call for Abstracts Session: Successful dissemination and Effects of New Policies and New Care Delivery diffusion of proven treatments, programs and policies into real world settings is critical to closing the current gap between Models WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) research and practice. The studies presented in this session will describe the results of active and passive approaches to Chair: Jane Holl, Northwestern University translating evidence-based strategies into practice. Discussant: Andrew Shin, ML Strategies

Speakers: Zhanlian Feng, RTI International Impact of the CMS Initiative to Reduce Avoidable Hospitalizations among Nursing Facility Residents on Mortality

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 53 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m.

Kenton Johnston, Saint Louis University 6:45 p.m.–8:15 p.m. The Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Preventable Hospitalizations. Poster Session C and Reception David Meltzer, University of Chicago WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4AB (Level Four) Effects of a Comprehensive Care Physician (CCP) Program on Patient Satisfaction, Health Status, and Hospital Admissions in Medicare Patients at Increased Risk of Hospitalization: Initial Features: Findings of a Randomized Trial Aging, Disability, and End of Life Consumer Choice and Incentives Amber Sabbatini, University of Washington Digital Technologies and Health The Problem of Excluding Observation Stays from Hospital Health Workforce Readmission Measures High Cost, High Need Oral Health Best Of: The session will begin with presentations of compelling Organizational Behavior and Management findings about new Medicaid and Medicare policies including Public and Population Health the effect of multi-state, multi-policy Medicaid expansions on hospitalization for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions and effect For an index of poster presenters by theme, see page of a national CMS initiative to reduce avoidable hospitalizations 136. in the elderly on mortality and then will showcase presentations of the effect of increasing use of hospital observation units on Supported in part by IBM Watson Health hospital inpatient readmission and the effect of a randomized trial of a comprehensive care physician program on patient experiences, health status, and hospitalization.

WH, CE Lost Mothers: An Exploration of the Rising Disparity in Maternal Morbidity and Mortality in the US WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Chair: Utibe Essien, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard University

Speakers: Joia Crear-Perry, National Birth Equity Collaborative and Black Mamas Matter Alliance; Rachel Hardeman, University of Minnesota; Elizabeth Howell, The Mount Sinai Medical Center; Chanel Porchia-Albert, Ancient Song Doula Services

Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: The U.S. has the highest rate of maternal mortality in the developed world. Black women die at 3-4 times the rate of white women from pregnancy-related complications--one of the widest disparities in women’s health. Through this session we explore multidisciplinary issues and approaches to reduce disparities in maternal mortality.

54 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TUESDAY CE CE CE CE SP SP SP SP SP SP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP RP PR PR RP RP CD CD RR MS Type Session HW HW TDI DIS CCI CCI DIS CFH ADL ADL PPH PDS PCR ORG ORG MET MQV MQV MCR MQV Theme 26 June Chair Howard Degenholtz Konetzka Tamara Cara Lewis Jeffrey Kullgren Delew Nancy Christine Gunn Amy Kilbourne Mark Unrush David Meyers Hilary Barnes Jeff Harris Edwin Wong Neil Jordan Ravi Jayadevappa Herbert Wong Louis Garrison Susan Skillman Lisa Rubenstein Hebert Paul Nia Heard-Garris Sara Galantowicz Elizabeth Haber- mann Apostle Keri Christian Helfrich Greg Arling Elizabeth Drye John McConnell Norris Tyler Cara James Christina Bethell Neeraj Bhandari Devel- A Complex Roles of Differ- Pieces of the and Overdose Break Anniversary 10-year Use, New Inves- Research from Five Title Advancing the Science of Implementa- Symposium Poster Implementation Clinical to Healthcare System From StrategiesAttribution to Support Accurate and Fair Applications World Real Small Grants with Big Impacts: Registration Open Coffee Break Understanding Health Care Use and the System to the Individual - From Adults Costs for Seriously Ill Older Nursing Home Quality and Outcomes Empirical Evidence on the Impact of Incentives on Consumer Health Behaviors and Health Care Decisions Models Under MACRA Alternative Payment The Evolution of NISGP: of QUERI: Years 20 Sustainability Initiatives in Medicare Value-Based Projects Funded: Your Get Won’t Title Just Putting Opioids in the Agenda for Opioid Research oping an HSR Care: Seeking to Provide Patient-Centered Teams Care tion Mechanisms tigators ent Clinical Professions Algorithms to Understand Complex Healthcare Application of Learning Data Tower” “Ivory Building a Successful HSR Career Outside the EngagementPatient to Improve Health Care Management Overview of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) & of Article AHRQ-AcademyHealth Outstanding HCUP Presentation of the Award the Year Performance Methods for Measuring Safety and Health System Workforce? Help Us Predict the Future of the Health Trends Will Past Research Workforce of Health Years Twenty Reflection on Access in Healthcare Systems: Managing Primary Care Challenge Classification to Causality: From Small Area Analysis Challenges and Opportunities at of Health Care and the Intersection Social Needs in a Contract Research Environment Working Measurable Impact on the Opioid Overdose Epidemic: Puzzle from Big Data The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Research Findings Interorganizational Coordination and Integration Late-Breaking Session: Raising the Bar: Reform and Impacts on Disparities Populations Vulnerable Reforms for Policy Act: Addiction Equity and Mental Health Parity Interventions on Opioid Prescribing, Policy Improving Quality through Incentivizing the Reducation of Health Dis- parities: Social Determinants and Stress and Engaging Fami- Addressing Family lies in Improving Health Care Quality and Outcomes Markets Consumer Choice and the Dynamics of Health Insurance A Tuesday, GLANCE: AT AGENDA Room (Level) (L4) Atrium Foyer (L6) 6ABC Foyer 2A (L2) 2A (L2) 608 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 2B (L2) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4) 602-604 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 611 (L6) 612 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 619-620 (L6) 4C-1 (L4) 4C-2 (L4) 4C-3 (L4) 4C-4 (L4 602-604 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 607 (L6) 608 (L6) 2B (L2) Time 9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. p.m. 7:00 a.m.–12:00 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m. TUESDAY AGENDA ATGLANCE: Tuesday, A 11:45 a.m.–1:15p.m. Theme HCN COV DTH ADL CFH LFA IQV CCI DIS HW BH from Abroad Lessons Improving Safety, High Cost, Health Workforce Disparities andHealthEquity Digital Technologies andHealth Coverage, Consumer ChoiceandIncentives Child andFamily Health Health Behavioral Aging, Disability, Access, HighNeed 2A (L2) 619-620 (L6) 615-617 (L6) 613-614 (L6) 612 (L6) 611 (L6) 609-610 (L6) 608 (L6) 607 (L6) 605-606 (L6) 4C-4 (L4 4C-3 (L4) 2B (L2) andEnd-of-Life Quality, andMedicaid and Value withHealthand and SocioeconomicStatus Aging Thinking Broadly- The InteractionofSupportiveServices, theCareofHCHNPopulations Coordinating forHighCostNeedPopulations/ toCareCoordination Approaches Payment SystemReformforHighCostPatients andDelivery Business Investment, Does GoodHealthMeanBusiness?ExploringtheInterplayamong Health, Best of ARM Hot Topics: intheResearchProcess Strategies Dissemination munication Methods toEnhancePatient-Centered OutcomesResearchandCom- tive Study Prescribers, Outcomes among Vulnerable Populations Session: Late-Breaking tion Science Social Network ResearchandImplementa- Analysis inHealthServices andCommunication Using andImprovingEHRsforCareDelivery comes Medicaid Enrollment, System Reports withPredictive Analytics: Translating toSharedDecision ClinicalandPatient-Reported Data MQV MCR ORG PPH MET PDS PCR ORL TDI WH HealthCareFinancing, Pharmacists, Women’s Health Translation, Public andPopulation Health Payment SystemsInnovations andDelivery Patient-Centered Research andManagement Behavior Organizational Oral Health Methods Research Medicare Measuring Safety, Care, EffectsofManaged Economic Activity, OpportunitiesandChallengesforImproving Policy Innovative forOptimizing Evaluations &theOpioidDilemma: Dissemination, Access,

Quality,

LessonsfortheLearningHealthcare andEquity Implementation, and Value andPopulation Health

andPharmacy Out- A Multi-SiteQualita- andImpact June26 Caregiving, Session Type

BOA MS RR CD RP PR CP SP CE Stevenson David Julie Bynum Howard David Mona Shah Purtle Jonathan Kelly Devers Bradley Katherine Brad Wright Barbara Bokhour Julia Adler-Milstein Michel Boudreaux Patricia Franklin Emily Williams Special Session Research Resources Research Panel Policy Roundtable Methods Session Critical andEmergingIssuesinHSRPanel Career Development Call for Abstracts Session of ARM Best (continued) MET PDS COV PCR DTH PPH ADL BH HC BOA MS CD PR RP CP CP CP CP CP CP CP CE TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 TUESDAY, JUNE 26

7:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. ORG, CP Interorganizational Coordination and Integration Registration WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) WSCC - Atrium Lobby (Level Four) Chair: Christian Helfrich, Department of Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound 7:00 a.m.–8:00 a.m. Coffee Break Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: WSCC - 6ABC Foyer (Level Six) Amanda Brewster, Yale University Greater Interconnection within Health Care and Social Service Networks Is Associated with Lower Rates of Avoidable Health 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Care Use and Spending Concurrent Sessions Ji Chang, New York University ADL, CP From the System to the Individual - Nursing Home Quality: Do on-Site Ancillary Services and Understanding Health Care Use and Costs for Hospital Colocation Matter? Seriously Ill Older Adults Kathryn Segal, NORC at the University of Chicago WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) The Association between Hospital Consolidation and Patient Chair: Howard Degenholtz, University of Pittsburgh Safety

Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Varsha Vimalananda, Center for Healthcare Organization and William Bobo, Mayo Clinic Implementation Research; Center for Health Quality, Outcomes Frequency and Predictors of the Potential Overuse of and Economic Research; Boston University School of Medicine Antidepressants in Elderly Residents of a Geographically Tools to Improve Primary Care-Specialty Care Referrals in the Defined U.S. Population Veterans Health Administration (VA)

Jodi Liu, RAND Gary Young, Northeastern University

Assessing the Preparedness of the U.S. Health Care System Hospital-Physician Integration and Quality of Cardiovascular Care TUESDAY Infrastructure for an Alzheimer’s Treatment Call for Abstracts Session: This session will present cutting- Anil Makam, UT Southwestern Medical Center edge research on different models of organizational integration Predictors and Variation in Long-Term Acute Care Hospital Use and care coordination, and the effects of different models on among Non-Mechanically Ventilated Hospitalized Older Adults patient-care quality and outcomes. This will include findings both on inter-organizational factors, such as hospital consolidation, Katherine Ornstein, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and intra-organizational factors, such as co-location of services. What Happens after Bereavement? National Trends in Health Findings will also touch on ownership structures, including Care Use among Older Surviving Spouses physician employment and ownership by private equity firms. Lindsay White, University of Washington There will be an opportunity to discuss implications of these Public Spending on Acute and Long-Term Care for findings for future research on organizational integration and Alzheimer’s and Related Dementias coordination in healthcare.

Call for Abstracts Session: This session brings together CP Late-Breaking Session: Poster Symposium several studies of cost and use of health care services for WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) older adults from a systems and an individual perspective, addressing care in a wide range of settings and populations. Chair: Greg Arling, Purdue University Two studies address Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementia, Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: looking at public spending and preparedness from a systems Julia Adler-Milstein, University of California, San Francisco perspective. A third paper addresses the widespread problem Health System Approaches to Patient Generated Health Data: of overuse of antidepressants among the elderly. A fourth study An Early Look examines the atypical patients who are admitted to long-term acute-care hospitals but do not receive mechanical ventilation. Caroline Au-Yeung, State Health Access Data Assistance Center The final paper takes an overdue look at health care use after Section 1115 Medicaid Expansion Waivers: Implementation bereavement among surviving spouses. Experiences of Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa & Michigan

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 55 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

Sachini Bandara, Johns Hopkins University DIS, RP Policy Reforms for Vulnerable The Impact of the Maryland Medicaid Health Home Program Populations and Impacts on Disparities on Emergency Department and Inpatient Utilization among WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) Individuals with Serious Mental Illness Chair: John McConnell, Oregon Health & Science University Andrea Finlay, Department of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto Speakers: Mental Health and Addiction Treatment Utilization among Jie Chen, University of Maryland Justice-Involved Veterans in Veterans Treatment Courts Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Insurance Coverage Inmaculada Hernandez, University of Pittsburgh among Individuals with Serious Psychological Distress, 2011- The Contribution of New Product Entry Vs Existing Product 2016 Inflation in the Rising Costs of Prescription Drugs John McConnell, Oregon Health & Science University Jaime Smith, Surescripts Oregon’s Efforts to Prioritize Health Equity in Its Medicaid A Six Month Update Post Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria: Program Provider Access to e-Prescription and Medication History Data Eric Slade, Department of Veteran’s Affairs Melanie Standish, Rush University Impacts of the Maryland Hospital System Financing Model on Toward a ‘Common Language’ for Leadership Development Black-White Disparities in Outpatient Follow-up Following a in Health: Development of an Evidence-Informed Psychiatric Inpatient Stay Interprofessional Organizing Framework Research Panel: This session will review research that Jeffery Talbert, University of Kentucky assesses the impacts of specific policies on existing Delayed Surge in Naloxone Availability Necessitates Caution disparities within vulnerable populations, including policies When Assessing the Impact of Naloxone Access Laws on the that address coverage, payment, and delivery systems. Opioid Crisis The research offers insights about how reforms may address long-standing disparities among socioeconomically Call for Abstracts Session: This session will feature disadvantaged or high risk populations. presentations from the top posters in the late-breaking abstract category. The first half of the session will allow presenters to give a brief overview at the podium, highlighting some of the most interesting pieces of their work. The second half will give SP Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity attendees the opportunity to visit the posters and engage in a Act: 10-year Anniversary deeper discussion with the authors. WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) Chair: MQV, PR Raising the Bar: Fair and Accurate Attribution Strategies to Support Reform WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) Tyler Norris , Yale University Chair: Elizabeth Drye Well Being Trust Speakers: Danielle Lloyd, America’s Health Insurance Plans; Speakers: Ateev Mehrotra, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Erin O’Rourke, National Quality Forum; Jennifer Perloff, Brandeis University Stoddard Davenport Policy Roundtable: A central challenge in measuring Milliman quality and cost is accurately and fairly attributing patients to providers. Most patients see many providers so accountability for their costs and outcomes is inherently diffuse. This Policy Roundtable will present key challenges in developing attribution strategies particularly as they relate to value based care.

56 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Call for Abstracts Session: Prescription opioid use, abuse, and overdose have increased across the country. This session will discuss policy approaches to reducing morbidity and mortality from opioid use. The papers discuss state-level MaryAnne Lindeblad opioid dosing guidelines, prescription monitoring programs, Washington State Health Care Authority opioid use and abuse treatment programs, and concurrent benzodiazepine and opioid prescribing.

SP Richard Frank Improving Quality through Incentivizing Harvard University the Reduction of Health Disparities: Real World Applications Special Session: Ten years ago a seminal piece of WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) legislation was passed. The Paul Wellstone and Pete Chair: Cara James, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act Services - Office of Minority Health of 2008 was an attempt to bring about a substantial change to how we covered mental health and substance Speakers: Guillermo Amezcua, Baxter International; Imtiaz use benefits ensuring that they were at parity with Daniel, University of Toronto; Marc Elliott, RAND; Winston medical and surgical benefits. Over the last decade our Wong, Kaiser Permanente country has made great progress, but with all major pieces of legislation that often require a cultural shift, Special Session: A 2016 ASPE Report to Congress on too, there is work to do. This presentation will highlight the impact of social risk factors and quality performance the past, present, and future of mental health parity. encouraged the embedding of health equity measures or domains into existing programs to measure disparities and incent their reduction. In this session, health care leaders will share what their organizations are doing and the key PPH, RP Policy Interventions on Opioid factors for success. They will discuss an array of topics from

Prescribing, Use, and Overdose measuring health equity, incentivizing better health care TUESDAY WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) decisions, to incorporating a health equity lens into quality Chair and Discussant: Jeff Harris, University of Washington improvement programs, and the challenges associated with each step as well as where more work is needed. Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Supported in part by CMS Office of Minority Health Yuhua Bao, Weill Cornell Medical College Policies to Optimize Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs CFH, CP Addressing Family Social Determinants and High Risk Use of Prescription Opioids in Non-Elderly and Stress and Engaging Families in Improving Adult, Privately Insured Patients Health Care Quality and Outcomes Peter Corcoran, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) and Science Chair: Chistina Bethell, Johns Hopkins University, Child and The a Way out Program of Lake County - an Interprofessional Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative Effort to Reduce Opioid Use and Abuse Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Guneet Jasuja, Center for Healthcare Organization and Dagmar Amtmann, University of Washington Implementation Research Development of a Measure to Assess the Impact of Do Veterans with Opioid with or without Benzodiazepine Caregiving: The UW-Caregiver Stress Prescriptions from Multiple Pharmacy Sources Have Higher Mortality or More Opioid Overdoses? Hannah Kloomok, Massachusetts Health Policy Commission Hospital-Based Approaches to Reduce Stigma for Pregnant Jeanne Sears, University of Washington, Harborview and Postpartum Women with Opioid Use Injury Prevention and Research Center, and Institute for Work and Health Opioid Overdose Hospitalization Trajectories in States with and without Opioid Dosing Guidelines

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 57 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

Omolara Uwemedimo, Hofstra/ Northwell MET, CP Application of Learning Algorithms to Associations between Social Determinants of Health and Understand Complex Healthcare Data Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder among Children and WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Adolescents Chair: Edwin Wong, University of Washington Venice Williams, University of Colorado Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Expanding the Nurse-Family Partnership to Multiparous David Chen, Mayo Clinic Women: Early Lessons Learned from a Pilot Study Predicting Postoperative Bleeding Risk following Colorectal Call for Abstracts Session: This session reports on research Surgery Using Gradient Boosting Machine examining the role of family context, stress and engagement Steven Lippmann, Duke University in promoting health and health care quality. Approaches to Model-Based Approach to Developing a Computable assess and address these factors in hospital, outpatient and Phenotype Algorithm for Detecting Peripheral Artery Disease home visiting contexts are featured. Using Administrative Data from an Electronic Health Record Data System CCI, CP Consumer Choice and the Dynamics of Health Insurance Markets Nicholas Schiltz, Case Western Reserve University WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) Association Rule Mining to Identify Frequent Concomitant Use Chair: Neeraj Bhandari, University of Nevada, Las Vegas of Prescribed Medications in the Population

Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Caroline Thirukumaran, University of Rochester Daniel Crespin, U.S. Department of Health and Human Natural Language Processing for the Surveillance of Surgical Services Site Infections The Effect of Insurer Exit on Consumer Retention in the Jiali Yan, University of Pennsylvania Federal Health Insurance Exchange Segmenting a Heterogeneous Medicare Advantage Shawn Du, Johns Hopkins University Population Using Density-Based Cluster Analysis Health Plan Choice and the Valuation of Plan Attributes in the Call for Abstracts Session: Machine learning methods ACA Marketplaces are being increasingly adopted in health care and have Vicki Fung, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard the potential to produce novel inferences. This session University will examine five machine learning applications to better The Potential Impact of Repealing the Individual Mandate on inform clinical decision making and care delivery. This the Individual Insurance Market in California includes presentations on predictive modeling using high dimensional data to identify patients at high risk for Laura Garabedian, Harvard University and Harvard Pilgrim postoperative bleeding and to improve classification of Health Care Institute patients with peripheral artery disease. We will also explore Ten-Year Trends in Consumer-Directed Health Plan natural language processing to identify patients who Enrollment and out-of-Pocket Costs among Commercially develop surgical site infections, density-based clustering Insured Members with Diabetes for segmenting a Medicare Advantage population, and association rule mining to pinpoint patterns of prescription Brian McGarry, Harvard University drug use. Is Less More? The Effect of Simplifying Plan Information on Medicare Part D Choices CD Building a Successful HSR Career Outside the Call for Abstracts Session: Since enactment of the “Ivory Tower” Affordable Care Act, there have been a number of changes WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) that have impacted insurance markets. Central to many of Chair: Neil Jordan, Northwestern University these changes is the role of the consumer – in both plan selection and reaction to the entry/exit of insurance options. Speakers: Dominick Esposito, Insight Policy Research; This session presents new empirical research on this topic. Kristina Lowell, NORC at the University of Chicago, Julie Schmittdiel, Kaiser Permanente Northern California; Laura Smith, RTI International

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Career Development Workshop: While the university setting SP Overview of the Healthcare Cost and is familiar as a career option to graduate students, post- Utilization Project (HCUP) & Presentation of the doctoral fellows, and other trainees, there are many career AHRQ-AcademyHealth HCUP Outstanding Article options for health services researchers in non-university of the Year Award settings. Panelists will share insights about their own career WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) choices, compare and contrast careers in health system, health policy, and other industry settings, and identify factors Chair: Herbert Wong, Agency for Healthcare Research and that lead to a successful career in a non-university setting. Quality Speakers: Marguerite Barrett, ML Barrett, Inc.; Carol PCR, CP Patient Engagement to Improve Health Stocks, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Care Management WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Special Session: AHRQ’s Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project is a family of healthcare databases and related Chair: Ravi Jayadevappa, University of Pennsylvania software tools for health services research and policy Discussant: Regina Greer-Smith, Healthcare Research analysis. This session provides an overview of HCUP national Associates, Inc. and state databases, tools and reports and recognizes HCUP Outstanding Article of the Year Award winners for their peer- Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: reviewed research. Attendees will be entered in a drawing for Sumedha Chhatre, University of Pennsylvania a free HCUP Nationwide Database. Association between Active Surveillance and Value Markers among Low-Risk Prostate Cancer – Patient-Centered Supported in part by IBM Watson Health and AHRQ Preference (PreProCare) Assessment Intervention Trial MQV, CP Methods for Measuring Safety and Hector Rodriguez, University of California, Berkeley Health System Performance The Impact of Patient Engagement and Relational WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Coordination on Improved Patient-Centered Outcomes of Chair: Louis Garrison, University of Washington Care in ACO-Affiliated Practices TUESDAY Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Kia Skrine Jeffers, University of California, Los Angeles Rhona Limcangco, Agency for Healthcare Research and Association of Patient Activation with Uptake and Adherence Quality to the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP): Results from the Variation of Risk-Adjusted Patient Safety Indicators for Prediabetes Informed Decisions and Education (PRIDE) Study Hospital Inpatient Care across Payer Categories, 2013-2014 Jennifer Wolff, Johns Hopkins University Sean McClellan, Abt Associates A Tool to Strengthen the Patient-Companion Partnership in Validation of Patient-Reported Functional Status Measures Primary Care: The Same Page Trial from a Large Survey of Medicare Beneficiaries Call for Abstracts Session: Patient-engaged research is Christina Nguyen, Harvard University designed to improve the patient health care experience A Machine Learning Approach to Identifying Low-Quality and health outcomes. The session includes four studies Accountable Care Organizations aimed at improving health care delivery and more active participation of patients and their care providers in managing Adam Rose, Boston University and RAND their medical conditions. The session includes a variety of Feasibility of Distinguishing Performance among Provider methodological approaches and study designs as well as Groups Using Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Older varies means for engaging patients and care providers. Adults with Multiple Chronic Conditions

Dionyssios Tsilimingras, Wayne State University Post-Discharge Adverse Events among NICU Neonates

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 59 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m.

Call for Abstracts Session: This session brings together Brian McGarry, Harvard University several studies with innovative and diverse methods for how Do Nursing Homes Specialize in Care for Patients with to better measure intervention safety, low-quality system Mental Illness? The Effect of High Concentrations of Seriously performance, patient functional status, performance based Mentally Ill Patients on the Quality of Care on patient-reported outcomes, and the impact of payer category on patient safety indicators. Guidance for future Marcelo Perraillon, University of Colorado research and implementation is given. Nursing Homes’ Response to Composite Quality Ratings Huiwen Xu, University of Rochester HW, CE Will Past Trends Help Us Predict the Impact of States’ Medicaid Spending on Hcbs and Nursing Future of the Health Workforce? Reflection on Home Reimbursement Rates on Successful Discharge of SNF Twenty Years of Health Workforce Research Residents to Community WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Call for Abstracts Session: Improving and assuring the Chair: Susan Skillman, University of Washington Center for quality of nursing home care has been a longstanding Health Workforce Studies challenge for policymakers and practitioners. In recent years, high-profile policies such as payment reform and public Speakers: Bianca Frogner, University of Washington Center reporting have been implemented to change the underlying for Health Workforce Studies; Eleni Papadakis, Washington incentives faced by providers. At the same time, the nursing Workforce Training and Education Coordinating Board; home sector has experienced a growth in residents with Michelle Washko, Institute for the Future of Aging Services serious mental illness and increased pressure to discharge Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: The back to the community when possible. In this session, panelists will discuss how health workforce research has researchers will present their analyses of the effects of these evolved to provide evidence for a transforming healthcare trends and policies on nursing home quality and outcomes. system. The panelists will highlight key research trends, discuss the role of federal funding, describe how this ORG, CE Managing Primary Care Access in research is used by policymakers and workforce planners, Healthcare Systems: A Complex Challenge and propose an agenda for future research. WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Chair: Lisa Rubenstein, University of California

9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Speakers: Susanne Hempel, RAND; Susan Kirsh, Veterans Break Health Administration; Isomi Miake-Lye, Department of Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles; Michael Morris, Kaiser Permanente 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Concurrent Sessions Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: Access to primary care is critical for population health and is a ADL, CP Nursing Home Quality and Outcomes fundamental healthcare aim. Access management strives WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) for optimal healthcare service use within healthcare Chair: Tamara Konetzka, University of Chicago organizations, i.e., complex systems with differing goals and strategies. This panel consists of researchers and Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: clinical leaders engaged in studying and improving access Zhanlian Feng, RTI International management. Impact of the CMS Initiative to Reduce Avoidable Hospitalizations among Nursing Facility Residents on TDI, CE From Classification to Causality: Mortality Advancing the Science of Implementation Zachary Hass, Purdue University Mechanisms WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Using Regression Discontinuity to Evaluate the Minnesota Return to Community Initiative’s Impact on Community Chair: Cara Lewis, University of Washington Discharge

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Speakers: Rinad Beidas, University of Pennsylvania; Predrag Paige Kulie, GW Medical Faculty Associates Klasnja, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research A Screening and Referral Program to Attempt to Address Institute; Byron Powell, University of North Carolina at Chapel Unmet Medical and Social Needs in the Adult District of Hill; Bryan Weiner, University of Washington Columbia Medicaid Population

Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: The science Aryn Phillips, University of California, Berkeley of implementation has offered little toward understanding Adults with Diabetes Residing in “Food Swamps” Have how different implementation strategies work. To improve Higher Hospitalization Rates implementation, health services, and population health outcomes through the integration of evidence-based Alanna Williamson, George Washington University practices, the field needs precise, testable theories that Medical-Legal Partnership: A Promising Intervention to describe the causal pathways through which implementation Address Social Determinants of Health through Cross-Sector strategies function. Collaboration Chao Zhou, Health Care Cost Institute MS Small Area Analysis The Association between Local Economic Conditions and WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) Opioid Prescribing Among Working Population Chair: Paul Hebert, Department of Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound Call for Abstracts Session: Where you live, learn, work and play affects overall health. Social needs (or social Speakers: Evan Carey, Eastern Colorado Health Care determinants) play an important role in overall well-being yet System; Robert Penfold, Kaiser Permanente Washington gaps in research, assessing the impact of partnerships, and Health Research Institute; Elisabeth Root, Ohio State ability to access data to address social needs remain. This University panel explores promising interventions that examine cross sector collaboration, use of data, lessons from a screening Methods Session: In this tutorial, we will examine methods and referral program, and the association of poverty and for the statistical analysis of small area heath data including: local economic conditions on health outcomes. estimation of areas of excess risk, disease mapping TUESDAY techniques, and identification of space and space-time SP Working in a Contract Research Environment clusters. Panelists will discuss Bayesian hierarchical models WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) and the creation of heatmaps that show geographic areas with higher-than-expected probabilities of events. Panelists Chair: Sara Galantowicz, Abt Associates, Inc. will use these models to examine relationships between Speakers: Lisa Green, L&M Policy Research; Melissa health outcomes and contextual factors that vary across Romaire, RTI International; Margo Rosenbach, Mathematica space. We will also demonstrate space-time clustering Policy Research; Chapin White, RAND algorithms that detect and evaluate clusters of events. Applications to analyses of birth outcomes, access to care, Special Session: Panel discussion featuring senior staff and changes in physician prescribing will be presented. from contract research organizations with a broad portfolio of health policy research and evaluation projects for federal Level of Difficulty: Intermediate clients, including CMS, AHRQ, ASPE and CDC, as well as state governments and foundations. Speakers will address DIS, CE Challenges and Opportunities at the the differences between working in academic and contract Intersection of Health Care and Social Needs research settings, professional development opportunities, WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) job search strategies for a contract research career, and the Chair: Nia Heard-Garris, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation breadth of their current and recent contract research and Clinical Scholars Program evaluation projects, with an emphasis on the impact these projects have on policy. Attendees will have an opportunity to Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: pose questions to the panel and network with presenters. Bradley Herring, Johns Hopkins University What Are the Effects of Neighborhood Poverty on Healthcare Utilization? Evidence from the Moving to Opportunity Experiment

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 61 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m.

MQV, RP Measurable Impact on the Opioid Overdose Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Epidemic: Pieces of the Puzzle from Big Data Elizabeth Cliff, University of Michigan WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six) The Effect of Transparency of Negotiated Prices on Hospital Procedure Prices Chair and Discussant: Elizabeth Habermann, Mayo Clinic Anjali Gopalan, Kaiser Permanente Northern California Speakers: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Financial Incentives and Aylin Altan, OptumLabs Messaging to Increase Healthy Food Purchases Do Providers Have the Information They Need to Avoid Co- Prescribing of Opioids and Benzodiazepines? Using EHR Data Mitesh Patel, University of Pennsylvania to Identify a Critical Safety Issue Effect of Loss-Framed Financial Incentives and Personalized Goal-Setting on Physical Activity among Ischemic Heart Molly Jeffery, Mayo Clinic Disease Patients Using Wearable Devices: The ACTIVE Federal Guideline Change and Its Effects on Concurrent Use Reward Randomized Clinical Trial of Opioids and Benzodiazepine Anna Sinaiko, Harvard University Kun Zhang, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The Impact of Reference-Based Pricing for Imaging Services Measuring and Characterizing the Duration of Concurrent on Choice of Provider and Spending in a National Health Plan Use of Opioids and Benzodiazepines in Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Data, 9 States in 2015 Victoria Wagner, New York State Department of Health Effectiveness of a Multilayered Engagement Approach on Research Panel: Researchers from Mayo Clinic, CDC, and Increasing Colorectal Cancer Screening Rates in a Rural OptumLabs will examine the opioid epidemic using three Population of Medicaid Managed Care Enrollees in New York observational datasets (claims, PDMP, and EHR data). The State session will present a behind-the-scenes look at challenges in using observational data to study concurrent opioids and Call for Abstracts Session: Financial incentives and other benzodiazepines use, a factor in one-third of annual opioid strategies that leverage behavioral economic principles are overdose deaths. increasingly being used to influence the health and health care decisions of consumers. This session will present RR The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid cutting edge research on this topic. Services Research Findings WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) PDS, PR The Evolution of Alternative Payment Chair: Keri Apostle, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Models Under MACRA WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Speakers: Karyn Kai Anderson, Mindy Cohen, Kevin Chair: Nancy Delew, U.S. Department of Health and Human Hodges, and Carla Shoff, Centers for Medicare and Services Medicaid Services Speakers: Sarah Selenich and Wafa Tarazi, U.S. Research Resources: CMS will present findings from recent Department of Health and Human Services; Gregory Woods, internal health services research. Panelists will present on Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation; Rachael topics spanning different aspects of the Medicare and/or Zuckerman, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning Medicaid programs. and Evaluation Supported in part by CMS Policy Roundtable: This session covers the current and CCI, CP Empirical Evidence on the Impact of future state of Alternative Payment Models (APMs) in a Incentives on Consumer Health Behaviors and rapidly changing landscape, including opportunities for new Health Care Decisions models in CMMI, the role of APMs under the new physician WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) Quality Payment Program, and physician-focused payment models submitted to the Physician-Focused Payment Model Chair: Jeffrey Kullgren, Department of Veterans Affairs, Technical Advisory Committee. Ann Arbor

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CD NISGP: Small Grants with Big Impacts: MCR, CP Value-Based Initiatives in Medicare Research from Five New Investigators WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Chair: Mark Unruh, Weill Cornell Medical College Chair: Christine Gunn, Boston University Discussant: John McHugh, Columbia University Speakers: Danielle Atkins, University of Central Florida; Amanda Brewster, Yale University; Cara McDermott, Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: University of Washington; Caitlin Murphy, University of Texas Dmitry Khodyakov, RAND Southwestern Medical Center; Sayeh Nikpay, Vanderbilt Value-Based Insurance Design: Early Implementation University Experiences of Medicare Advantage Organizations

Career Development Workshop: The NISGP supports Jun Li, University of Michigan the careers of new health services researchers, and Effects of Major Joint Replacement Bundled Payments on provided research funding in 2017 for the promising six Medicare and Commercial Post-Discharge Spending new investigators participating in this session. This session Joshua Liao, University of Washington and University of features AcademyHealth NISGP Awardees, and showcases Pennsylvania their innovative research in health policy, health care Physician Perspectives in Year 1 of Macra and Its Merit- utilization, access and disparities. Awardees will discuss Based Payment System: A National Survey how they have leveraged the NISGP mechanism to fund their research and identify successful strategies for obtaining Adam Markovitz, University of Michigan grant funding as an early career investigator. Changes in Coded Severity under Accountable Care

Call for Abstracts Session: Value-based initiatives in Medicare SP 20 Years of QUERI: From Clinical share the goals of improving health care for individuals, improving Implementation to Healthcare System population health, and reducing health care costs. The studies Sustainability in this panel examine value-based initiatives in both Traditional WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Medicare and Medicare Advantage that create incentives for Chair: Amy Kilbourne, University of Michigan patients and providers to achieve these goals. These include TUESDAY evaluations of value-based insurance design in Medicare , Department of Veterans Affairs, Discussant: Anne Sales Advantage, physician perspectives of the Medicare Access and Ann Arbor and University of Michigan CHIP Reauthorization Act and the Merit Based Incentive Payment Speakers: Allen Gifford, Department of Veterans Affairs, Boston System, Bundled Payments for Care Improvement and post- and Boston University; George Jackson, Duke University; JoAnn discharge spending, and coded severity of illness for beneficiaries Kirchner, Department of Veterans Affairs, QUERI attributed to Accountable Care Organizations.

Special Session: VA’s Quality Enhancement Research Initiative SP Just Putting Opioids in the Title Won’t Get (QUERI) was established in 1998 to more rapidly translate Your Projects Funded: Developing an HSR Agenda research evidence into practice. Initially focused on disease- for Opioid Research specific priorities, QUERI evolved to a 40+ Center national WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) network as of 2018. This panel highlights key initiatives from QUERI’s evolution in response to the changing needs of Veterans, Chair: David Meyers, Agency for Healthcare Research advent of learning healthcare systems, and the growing appetite and Quality for implementation methods. The panel will highlight QUERI Speakers: Pam Owens, Agency for Healthcare Research and initiatives over the past two decades that support 1) more Quality; Michael Parchman, Kaiser Permanente Washington frontline providers implementing evidence-based practices using Health Research Institute quality improvement methods, 2) rigorous evaluations of national programs and policies, and 3) deployment of implementation Special Session: The United States is in the grip of an opioid strategies. epidemic. In 2017 HHS declared a public health emergency and announced a 5-point strategy to combat the opioid crisis: Supported in part by the Department of Veterans Affairs Health Services Better addiction prevention, treatment and recovery services, Research & Development Service better targeting of overdose reversing drugs, better data,

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 63 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m.

better pain management, and better research. The session 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m. will briefly highlight how AHRQ is already contributing to the HHS strategy before opening a discussion to address how Concurrent Sessions HSR, including a focus on a 360 degree whole person view, ADL, CP Thinking Broadly - The Interaction can help reverse the national epidemic and how specifically of Supportive Services, Caregiving, and AHRQ can advance this important field. Socioeconomic Status with Health and Aging Supported in part by AHRQ WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) Chair: David Stevenson, Vanderbilt University HW, CP Care Teams Seeking to Provide Patient- Centered Care: Roles of Different Clinical Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Professions Amy Davidoff, Yale University WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) The Effect of Health Shocks on Financial Outcomes f Chair: Hilary Barnes, University of Delaware or Older Adults

Discussant: Erin Fraher, University of North Carolina at Robert Hest, State Health Access Data Assistance Center Chapel Hill Elderly Medicaid Ltss Eligibility Stable over Time, Driven By Asset Restrictions Rather Than Income Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Jennifer Craft Morgan, Georgia State University Wei Song, University of Rochester and Canandaigua VA Evaluating the Impact of Medical Assistant Role Expansion on Medical Center Primary Care Practices Evaluating the Impact of VHA Caring for Older Adults and Caregivers at Home (COACH) Program Avi Dor, George Washington University The Impact of Nurse and Support Staff and Relative Sarah Szanton, Johns Hopkins University Contributions to Patient Satisfaction Outcomes: A Production Reducing Disability among Low Income Older Adults: Results Function Approach to Determining Optimal Staffing from the Capable Trial

Clese Erikson, George Washington University Ginger Zielinskie, Benefits Data Trust The Evolution of the Health Workforce in Next Generation Strategies to Improve the Health of Older Adults by Accountable Care Organizations Addressing Social Determinants of Health

Kira Ryskina, University of Pennsylvania Call for Abstracts Session: The experiences of aging Post-Acute Care Outcomes and Costs for Patients Treated and living with disability can be influenced by a number of By Physicians and Advanced Practitioners Who Specialize in factors. In this session, presenters share how enhancing Nursing Home Practice one’s individual capacity, improving the home environment, participating in a supplemental nutrition assistance program, Call for Abstracts Session: Increasingly, the provision and attending to the needs of both older adults and their patient-centered care aimed at optimum outcomes and caregivers can improve outcomes, as measured by reduced satisfaction requires teams in which professions perform disability, lower utilization, and reductions in short-term new and varied tasks. Roles may vary by profession (e.g. mortality. In addition, presenters discuss the influence of medical assistants, nursing staff, physicians, advanced individual’s health on their socioeconomic status, and how practice providers) and specialization. Two presentations in varying measures of socioeconomic status and eligibility this session examine the process by which health systems criteria for Medicaid LTSS could influence receipt of expand roles of professionals serving on outpatient teams. supportive services and Medicaid spending. Two additional presentations utilize secondary data to examine the association of utilization of staff with different backgrounds or specialties on patient-centered outcomes in the hospital and skilled nursing facility settings respectively.

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PCR, CE Translating Clinical and Patient- DTH Using and Improving EHRs for Care Delivery Reported Data to Shared Decision Reports with and Communication Predictive Analytics: Lessons for the Learning WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) Healthcare System Chair: Julia Adler-Milstein, University of California, San WSCC - Room 2B (Level Two) Francisco Chair: Patricia Franklin, University of Massachusetts Discussant: Genna Cohen, Mathematica Policy Research Speakers: Danielle Lavallee, University of Washington; Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Celeste Lemay and Hua Zheng, University of Massachusetts Ragnhildur Bjarnadottir, University of Florida Panel on Critical and Emerging Issues in HSR: Learning More than Point-and-Click: Identifying Hospital Nurses’ healthcare systems are dependent upon transformative Knowledge of Fall-Related Patient and Organizational Factors informatics and operational standards that place patients in EHR Progress Notes and clinical decisions at the center. This panel will present Dorothy Hung, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute early lessons learned in translating national cohort data into Watching Physicians as They Work: Observations Using patient-clinician shared decision reports with predictive Time-Stamped EHR Data analytics to guide knee and hip arthritis care in clinic. Megan Lafferty, University of Michigan COV, CP Medicaid Enrollment, Effects of Managed Challenges of One-Way Communication Technologies Care, and Pharmacy Outcomes in Healthcare: A Qualitative Study of Physician-Nurse WSCC - Room 4C-3 (Level Four) Communication Practices on Medical-Surgical Units Chair: Michel Boudreaux, University of Maryland Courtney Segal, University of Washington Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Providers as End-Users of Patient-Reported Outcomes Puneet Chehal, University of Chicago Integrated into Electronic Medical Records Medicaid Managed Care Market Places and Hospital Quality Call for Abstracts Session: This session highlights how TUESDAY Zhanlian Feng, RTI International clinicians use EHRs and other technologies to care for Loss of Medicaid Eligibility by Medicare-Medicaid Dual Eligible patients and communicate with each other. The first two Beneficiaries: Frequency, Potential Causes, and Implications presentations draw on EHR data to provide a window into primary care physicians’ work and nurses’ assessments, as Jonathan Levin, Johns Hopkins University well as the underlying data mining and validation techniques. Did the ACA Affect Opioid Pain Reliever and Buprenorphine The last two presentations use qualitative methods to explore Use? Evidence from All-Payer Pharmacy Data user preferences for integrating patient-reported outcomes into EHRs and for electronic communication, providing Andrew Mulcahy, RAND insight into how EHRs are used for specific purposes and Estimating the Impact of Health Insurance Coverage on opportunities for improvement. Medication Adherence

Eric Seiber, Ohio State University MS Social Network Analysis in Health Services Why Did the Medicaid Enrollment Differential for Citizen Research and Implementation Science Immigrant Children Disappear between 2008 and 2015? WSCC - Room 605-606 (Level Six) Chair: Barbara Bokhour, Department of Veterans Affairs, Call for Abstracts Session: The papers in this session CHOIR examine the link between coverage and health, in medication adherence, coverage of vulnerable populations, as well as Speakers: A. Rani Elwy, Department of Veterans in hospital quality of care. The first two papers examine how Affairs, Boston; Miruna Petrescu-Prahova, University of insurance impacts medication adherence, while the next Washington; Anne Sales, University of Michigan two papers study eligibility and enrollment in Medicaid for vulnerable groups (children of immigrants, and dual eligible beneficiaries); the fifth paper examines how Medicaid managed care affects access to high quality hospitals.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 65 2018 CONCURRENT SESSIONS: 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m.

Methods Session: Relationships between providers, patients BH, RP Prescribers, Pharmacists, & the Opioid and significant others are important for providing optimal Dilemma: A Multi-Site Qualitative Study care and obtaining optimal health outcomes. For patients this WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) includes understanding relationships and influences from Chair: Katharine Bradley, Kaiser Permanente family, friends and community. For providers this includes relationships among health care teams and for medical Speakers: decision making. Social network analysis (SNA) has become Geoffrey Curran, University of Arkansas for Medical an increasingly important tool for both understanding and Sciences identifying areas where communication and relationships can “Caught in the Middle”: Community Pharmacists’ Beliefs about be enhanced especially with regard to the implementation Dispensing Opioids in the Midst of an Opioid “Epidemic” of evidence based treatment and practices. In this workshop we will describe social network theory and provide examples Karen Drummond, University of Arkansas for Medical of its use in examining patient and provider behavior and Sciences communication and studies of implementing best practices. Primary Care Providers’ Attitudes toward Prescribing We will also discuss relevant SNA tools, software and analytic Buprenorphine approaches. Mark Edlund, RTI International Level of Difficulty: Beginner/Intermediate Factors That Influence Primary Care Providers’ Opioid Prescribing CP Late-Breaking Session: Opportunities and Challenges for Improving Outcomes among Patricia Freeman, University of Kentucky Vulnerable Populations Utilization of Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs for WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six) Prescribing and Dispensing Decisions Chair: Brad Wright, University of Iowa Research Panel: This research panel will present results from the NIDA funded “Prescribers, Pharmacists, & the Opioid Discussant: Ninez Ponce, University of California, Los Angeles Dilemma: A Multi-Site Qualitative Study” (R01 DA034627). Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: The overarching goal of this project is to enhance our David Fraser, University of Wisconsin understanding of the opioid prescribing and dispensing Using Modest Financial Incentives to Low Income Pregnant decision-making processes of primary care providers and Women to Engage in Smoking Cessation and Improve Post- pharmacists. Birth Abstinence MET, CP Methods to Enhance Patient-Centered Lawrence Kleinman, UH Rainbow Babies and Children’s Outcomes Research and Communication Hospital and Case Western Reserve University WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Disparity Adjusted Performance Measurement: A New Imperative Chair and Discussant: Kelly Devers, NORC at the University Qian Luo, George Washington University of Chicago Team-Based Care and Quality of Care in Community Health Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Centers: A Production Function Approach Laura Esmail, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute Anne Markus, George Washington University Complex Interventions in Patient-Centered Outcomes Predicting the Impact of Transforming the Medicaid Program Research: Developing Methodological Standards on Health Centers’ Revenues and Capacity to Serve Medically David Hickam, Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute Underserved Communities Using Public Comments and Stakeholder Engagement to Call for Abstracts Session: Racial/ethnic and socioeconomic Advance Methodology Standards for Patient–Centered disparities are a persistent blight upon the U.S. health care Outcomes Research system. Three of the papers presented in this session examine novel strategies for addressing these disparities at the provider and patient level, while a fourth considers some of the potential challenges that may lie ahead.

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Suchitra Iyer, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality CD Best of ARM Hot Topics: Innovative Policy Enriching the Patient Perspective: Social Media and Online Evaluations for Optimizing Health, Health Care Discussion Forums Financing, Access, and Equity WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Milisa Manojlovich, University of Michigan A Feasibility Test of the Video Reflexive Ethnography Method (VRE) Chair: Emily Williams, Department of Veterans Affairs, to Capture Communication between Physicians and Nurses Denver and Seattle Center of Innovation for Veteran-Centered Value Driven Care Call for Abstracts Session: Patients and other stakeholders’ perspectives are critical to understand when designing and Discussant: John McDonough, Harvard University implementing health care research and interventions. This Speakers: panel focuses on the methods for eliciting patients and Karen Finnegan, Institute for Community Health stakeholders’ views. Two panelists focus on the development of the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute’s Immigrants Contributed $25.1B More to Private Insurers (PCORI) Methodology Guidance and Standards, including the Than They Took out in 2014 solicitation and analysis of over 1,500 individual comments Vicki Fung, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard on draft standards. Two other panelists discuss novel methods University for understanding patients and clinicians’ perspectives, The Potential Impact of Repealing the Individual Mandate on particularly through Social Media and Online Discussion the Individual Insurance Market in California Forums and Video Reflexive Ethnography to study physician and nurses’ communication in routine clinical settings. Jeanne Sears, University of Washington, Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center, and Institute for Work and Health CD Dissemination Strategies in the Research Opioid Overdose Hospitalization Trajectories in States with Process and without Opioid Dosing Guidelines WSCC - Room 611 (Level Six) Jesus Leal Trujillo, Deloitte Chair: Jonathan Purtle, Drexel University Does the Structure of Physician Referral Networks Matter for

Physician Cost Performance? Evidence from Medicare TUESDAY Speakers: Chistina Bethell, Johns Hopkins University; Brent Langellier, Drexel University; Zachary Meisel, Best Of: With issues spanning immigration, consumer University of Pennsylvania; Stephanie Taylor, University of choice, opioid safety, and optimal care structures, this California, Los Angeles session tackles four policy-relevant questions using highly- innovative designs. Career Development Workshop: The majority of researchers do not consider dissemination until research PPH, PR Does Good Health Mean Good Business? is complete, and often it is limited to articles and presentations. This panel will offer concrete advice for Exploring the Interplay among Business Investment, considering your dissemination strategy across the research Economic Activity, and Population Health continuum, including identifying objectives, stakeholders, WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) messaging, vehicles, and translation for different audiences. Chair: Mona Shah, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Participants will share the creative approaches they’ve used to incorporate dissemination into the research Speakers: Roy Ahn, NORC at the University of Chicago; process at multiple touchpoints in order to make health Neil Goldfarb, Greater Philadelphia Business Coalition on services research accessible to policymakers, providers, Health; Paul Mattessich, Wilder Research; Eileen McNeely, and consumers. The panel will also discuss the science of Harvard University dissemination and research methods to inform, and assess Policy Roundtable: Businesses and business-related the effectiveness, of different dissemination strategies. policies play an important role in influencing the health of individual employees and communities at-large. This policy roundtable will explore a range of issues at the nexus between economic and population health, drawing on the perspectives of panelists and members of the audience.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 67 2018

PDS, CP Payment and Delivery System Reform HC, CP Approaches to Care Coordination for High for High Cost Patients Cost High Need Populations/Coordinating the WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Care of HCHN populations Chair and Discussant: David Howard, Emory University WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Chair: Julie Bynum, Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Clinical Practice Alex Federman, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Patients Receiving Hospital-at-Home with 30-Day Post- Discussant: Clemens Hong, Harvard University and Discharge Care Had Fewer Readmissions and Greater Massachusetts General Hospital Satisfaction with Care than Hospitalized Patients Call for Abstracts Session Speakers: Katy Kozhimannil, University of Minnesota Amy Flaster, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Partners Cesarean Delivery Rates and Costs of Childbirth in a State Healthcare, and Harvard University Medicaid Program after Implementation of a Blended Does Panel Size Matter? Informing the Efficiency / Effectiveness Payment Policy Debate for High Risk Care Management Programs

Miranda Lam, Harvard University, Brigham and Women’s Lynn Garvin, Boston University Hospital, and Dana Farber Cancer Institute Advancing VA Partnership with Community Healthcare Early Results of ACO Spending on Patients with a Cancer Systems under the Veterans Choice Act: A Model of Diagnosis Interorganizational Care Coordination of Dual Eligibles

Zhuo Shi, Harvard University David Meltzer, University of Chicago Quality of Care for Acute Respiratory Infections during Direct- Effects of a Comprehensive Care Physician (CCP) Program on to-Consumer Telemedicine Visits Patient Satisfaction, Health Status, and Hospital Admissions in Medicare Patients at Increased Risk of Hospitalization: Call for Abstracts Session: There are ample opportunities Initial Findings of a Randomized Trial to reduce costs and overuse among high cost patient populations, but these groups are especially vulnerable to John Schurrer, Mathematica Policy Research reforms that reduce access to high value care. In this session Medicare’s Chronic Care Management (CCM) Payment researchers will present results from four studies that Policy Moves the Needle on Acute Care Use and Medicare evaluate the impact of changes in payment incentives and Expenditures delivery system reform on costs and health care use. Call for Abstracts Session: Care for people with high needs and costs is often complex, involving multiple providers. Many initiatives try to provide care coordination to improve outcomes and costs. This session examines the impact of care coordination interventions.

68 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 NOTES 2018 NOTES Resources

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Bold Real Resources TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 SPEAKER INDEX

Barnett, Kevin 31 Bundorf, Kate 32, 35 Cohen, Steven 17 A Barnett, Michael 25, 48 Burgette, Jacqueline 24 Compton-Phillips, Amy 47 Abir, Mahshid 37 Barrett, Marguerite 60 Burke, Laura 37 Cooper, Emily 43 Abrams, Melinda 43 Bartee, Stephanie 50 Burke, Robert 48 Corcoran, Peter 58 Adirim, Terry 19 Barton, Jennifer 50 Burns, Alice 41 Crear-Perry, Joia 54 Adler-Milstein, Julia 43, 56, 66 Basu, Anirban 37, 48 Buttorff, Christine 41 Crespin, Daniel 59 Agarwal, Sumit 46 Beal, Anne 44, 45 Bynum, Julie 50, 69 Crow, Bruce 19 Ahn, Roy 68 Beaulieu, Nancy 27 Cunha-Cruz, Joana 40 Alarcon, Giovann 34 Beidas, Rinad 62 C Curran, Geoffrey 67 Allison, Jeroan 22 Belanger, Emmanuelle 20 Curwick, Kevin 22 Altan, Aylin 63 Bergman, Alicia 32 Califf, Robert 44, 45 Amezcua, Guillermo 58 Bernheim, Susannah 29 Call, Kathleen 47, 52 D Amtmann, Dagmar 58 Best, Thomas 25 Callegari, Lisa 52 Anderson, Karyn Kai 63 Bethell, Chistina 29, 58, 68 Carey, Evan 48, 62 Dane, John 25 Apaydin, Eric 46 Bhandari, Neeraj 59 Carlos, Ruth 29 Daniel, Imtiaz 58 Apostle, Keri 63 Bhattacharya, Manami 45 Carlson, Kathleen 21 Danielson, Elizabeth 21 Arispe, Irma 51 Bhuiya, Aunima 34 Carman, Kristin 36 Davenport, Stoddard 57 Arling, Greg 56 Bindman, Andrew 29, 38 Carroll, Aaron 17 Davidoff, Amy 65 Arntson, Emily 36 Bir, Anupa 30 Cartwright-Smith, Lara 44 Davis, Anna 20 Asch, Steven 35 Bjarnadottir, Ragnhildur 66 Chanfreau, Catherine 37 Davis, Karen 41 Assael, Leon 25 Blewett, Lynn 34 Chang, Ji 56 DeBar, Lynn 53 Atkins, Danielle 64 Bobo, William 56 Charron, Elizabeth 53 Degenholtz, Howard 56 Atkins, David 43 Boggess, Scott 50 Chazin, Stacey 25 Delew, Nancy 31, 63 Au-Yeung, Caroline 56 Bohnert, Amy 21 Chehal, Puneet 66 Devers, Kelly 39, 67 Avritscher, Elenir 35 Bokhour, Barbara 66 Chen, David 59 Dieleman, Joseph 36 Ayele, Roman 21 Bolen, Shari 26 Chen, Jie 57 Dine, Sarah 37 Bond, Amelia 49 Chen, Lena 24, 31, 54 Dor, Avi 65 Borondy Kitts, Andrea 29 Chen, Melissa 29 Dorr, David 25, 35 B Borzecki, Ann 42 Cheng, Tsung-Mei 41 Dorsey, Rashida 30, 50 Bachhuber, Marcus 25 Boudreaux, Michel 52, 65 Chessley, Francis 42 Downing, Greg 47 Baicker, Katherine 29 Bowblis, John 18 Chettipally, Uli 48 Dreyer, Kathryn 39 SPEAKER INDEX Bailey, Charles 47 Bradley, Katharine 25, 67 Chhatre, Sumedha 47, 60 Drye, Elizabeth 57 Baker, Laurence 30 Branham, Keith 46 Chiam, Tze 51 Drummond, Karen 67 Ballweg, Ruth 24 Brasher, Susan 32 Chokshi, Dave 44, 45 Du, Shawn 59 Bandara, Sachini 57 Braun, Patricia 24 Clark, Cheryl 20 Du, Yuxian 39 Banegas, Matthew (Mateo) 30 Brennan, Niall 47 Classen, David 42 Dudley, R. Adams 46 Banerjee, Souvik 54 Brenner, Lisa 19 Cliff, Elizabeth 29, 63 Dummit, Laura 24 Banta-Green, Caleb 37 Brewster, Amanda 56, 64 Close, Sharron 32 Duncan, Mark 23 Bao, Yuhua 58 Brown, Meagan 54 Clyatt, Courtney 36 Duseja, Reena 31 Bardach, Naomi 40, 49 Brunette, Mary 21 Cohen, Deborah 21, 31 Dusetzina, Stacie 26 Barnes, Andrew 51 Brunisholz, Kimberly 52 Cohen, Genna 31, 66 Dwyer-Lindgren, Laura 36 Barnes, Hilary 65 Buist, Diana 53 Cohen, Mindy 63 Dymek, Christine 43

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 69 2018

Frogner, Bianca 61 Guise, Jeanne-Marie 24 Holl, Jane 42, 54 E Fry, Carrie 39 Gunn, Christine 64 Hollin, Ilene 43 Edlund, Mark 67 Fuji, Kevin 52 Guy, Gery 54 Holman, Russell 42 Edmunds, Margo 30 Fung, Vicki 59, 68 Holzer, Jessica 37 Edwards, Hillary 32 H Hong, Clemens 42, 69 Hotchkiss, Lia 36 Elliott, Julian 24 Habermann, Elizabeth 63 G Howard, David 53, 69 Elliott, Marc 34, 51, 58 Haffajee, Rebecca 37, 42 Gala True, Jennifer 21 Howell, Elizabeth 54 Elwy, A. Rani 66 Hahn, Erin 53 Galantowicz, Sara 62 Hsieh, Dennis 42 Epstein, Arnold 22, 26 Hair, Nicole 49 Galarraga, Jessica 30 Hsu, John 28, 35 Erikson, Clese 65 Hall, Diane 33 Garabedian, Laura 59 Hughes, Dora 17 Erwin, Kim 49 Hall, Jean 19 Garcia, Macarena 33 Hung, Dorothy 18, 66 Esmail, Laura 31, 67 Hamilton, Morris 52 Garcia Mosqueira, Adrian 22 Hung, Peiyin 53 Esposito, Dominick 17, 59 Hammill, Bradley 35 Garrido, Melissa 43, 50 Hussein, Mustafa 47 Essien, Utibe 55 Hannon, Peggy 54 Garrison, Louis 40, 46, 60 Hynes, Denise 30 Everson, Porsche 44, 45 Hansen, Jennifer 38 Garvin, Lynn 69 Hardeman, Rachel 30, 54 Gauthier, Anne 41 Harris, Jeff 58 F Geiger, Ann 28 I Harris, Katherine 20 Gellad, Walid 46 Ibrahim, Andrew 30 Favreault, Melissa 34 Harrison, Jordan 19, 35 Gerhardt, Geoff 50 Iyer, Suchitra 68 Federman, Alex 69 Hart, Nick 50 Ghaferi, Amir 17, 19 Feng, Zhanlian 54, 61, 66 Harte, Rory 32 Giannitrapani, Karleen 46 Ferdinand, Alva 26 Hartung, Daniel 32 Gidwani-Marszowski, Risha 50 J Ferris, Lindsey 25 Hasnain-Wynia, Romana 49 Gifford, Allen 64 Jackson, George 64 Fertig, Angela 52 Hass, Zachary 61 Gionfriddo, Michael 50 Jacobs, Elizabeth 34 Figueroa, Jose 20, 27, 46 Hassol, Andrea 21 Glied, Sherry 41, 46 Jacobson, Gretchen 22 Finlay, Andrea 57 Hayford, Tamara 47 Gold, Rachel 20 James, Cara 58 Finnegan, Karen 34, 68 He, Fang 26 Goldberg, Daniel 23 Janakiram, Chandrashekar Flaherty, Stephen 40 Heard-Garris, Nia 62 Goldfarb, Neil 68 46 Flaster, Amy 69 Heaton, Heather 21 Gollust, Sarah 23 Jasuja, Guneet 58 Flatley Brennan, Patricia 38 Hebert, Paul 62 Goold, Susan 21 Jayadevappa, Ravi 60 Flores, Efren 29 Helfrich, Christian 56 Gopalan, Anjali 63 Jeffery, Molly 63 Fohner, Alison 20 Hellmich, Thomas 21 Gordon, Cathy 24 Jensen, Kristin 27 Forsgren, Ethan 46 Hempel, Susanne 61 Goudie, Anthony 28 Jha, Ashish 42, 45 Fournier, Deborah 34 Hernandez, Inmaculada 57 Gozalo, Pedro 50 Johnson, Beth 30 Fraher, Erin 65 Hernandez-Boussard, Tina 51 Grabowski, Dave 23, 34 Johnson, Emily 31 Frakt, Austin 24, 38, 41, 45 Herring, Bradley 62 Grady, April 39 Johnson, Tracy 51 Frank, Richard 44, 58 Hest, Robert 65 Graham, Garth 50 Johnston, Kenton 32, 54 Franklin, Patricia 66 Hewitt, Brock 22 Gray, Bradley 19 Jones, Audrey 35 Fraser, David 67 Hickam, David 25, 67 Green, Lisa 62 Jones, Cheryl 51 Fraser, Irene 29 Hockenberry, Jason 53 Grembowski, David 31 Jordan, Neil 59 Freeman, Patricia 67 Hodges, Kevin 50, 63 Grimes, Katherine 29 Jung, Hyeyoung 51 Fried, Brett 27 Hoerger, Thomas 21

70 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Miake-Lye, Isomi 61 K L M Miller, Benjamin 39 Kabdiyeva, Aigerim 38 Lafferty, Megan 66 Maciejewskim Matthew 20, 37 Miller, George 40 Kahanna, Gopal 42 Lagisetty, Pooja 25 Makam, Anil 56 Mills, Amy 52 Kahn, Michael 25 Lam, Miranda 30, 69 Mamaril, Cezar Brian 22 Minegishi, Taeko 38, 43 Kahn, Tamkeen 26 Landes, Sara 19 Manojlovich, Milisa 68 Mirel, Lisa 51 Kahvecioglu, Daver 24 Langellier, Brent 68 Marino, Miguel 32 Mittman, Brian 31 Kan, Kristin 34 Larson, Eric 17, 19, 53 Markel, Frank 49 Mohamoud, Shamis 39 Kandilov, Amy 35 Lau, Denys 22 Markovitz, Adam 43, 64 Moniz, Michelle 38 Karpman, Michael 23 Laugesen, Miriam 22 Markus, Anne 67 Montori, Victor 50 Kazley, Abby 18 Lavallee, Danielle 66 Marrufo, Grecia 24 Moon, Lisa 43 Kennedy Lesch, Julie 36 Le, Phuc 26 Marshall, Jaclyn 24 Mor, Vincent 53 Kennedy-Hendricks, Alene Leal Trujillo, Jesus 22, 68 Martin, Katie 45 Morgan, Jennifer Craft 65 53 Leas, Brian 27 Martsolf, Grant 22 Morris, Megan 27 Keohane, Laura 47 Lee, Joy 52 Mattessich, Paul 68 Morris, Michael 61 Khodyakov, Dmitry 64 Lee, Lois 45 Mays, Glen 25 Moseley, Connor 51 Kieffer, Edith 28 Lee, Yuna 46 McClellan, Sean 60 Moucheraud, Corrina 42 Kilbourne, Amy 64 Lemay, Celeste 66 McConnell, John 17, 30, 57 Moy, Ernest 51 Kim, Bo 41 Leppin, Aaron 51 McCullough, Mac 19, 46 Muench, Ulrike 52 King, Monica 50 LeRouge, Cynthia 48 McDermott, Cara 64 Mulcahy, Andrew 66 Kirchner, JoAnn 64 LeRoy, Lisa 21 McDonough, John 68 Mulvaney-Day, Norah 53 Kirsh, Susan 61 Leung, Lucinda 39 McGarry, Brian 59, 61 Munro, Shannon 24 Kirzinger, Ashley 23 Levey, Noam 17 McGinnis, J. Michael 28 Murphy, Caitlin 37, 64 Klasnja, Predrag 62 Levin, Jonathan 66 McHugh, John 64 Murray, Christopher 36 Kleinman, Lawrence 67 Levinson, Zachary 23 McInerney, Melissa 47 Klesges, Lisa 28 Lewis, Cara 61 McIntyre, Adrianna 23, 45 N Kloomok, Hannah 58 Li, Jun 64 McKee, Michael 27 Kocher, Keith 27 Liao, Joshua 19, 26, 64 McLaughlin, Catherine 17, Nabhani, Jamal 32 Kohn, Julia 45 Limcangco, Rhona 60 31 Navathe, Amol 37, 49, 54 Koller, Christopher 37 Lin, Sunny 43 McMenamin, Sara 41 Ndumele, Chima 41 Kominski, Gerald 27 Lindeblad, MaryAnne 58 McMorrow, Stacey 46 Needleman, Jack 19, 46 SPEAKER INDEX Konetzka, Tamara 47, 61 Lindrooth, Richard 31 McNeely, Eileen 68 Negrusa, Brighita 26 Kozhimannil, Katy 45, 69 Lippmann, Steven 59 McWilliams, J. Michael 24 Negrusa, Sebastian 22, 26 Kronstadt, Jessica 22 Lipton, Brandy 32 Meddings, Jennifer 30 Neprash, Hannah 28, 39 Kulie, Paige 62 Liu, Chuan-Fen 23 Mehrotra, Ateev 57 Newhouse, Robin 44 Kullgren, Jeffrey 63 Liu, Jodi 56 Meisel, Zachary 68 Nicholas, Lauren 32 Kunisch, Joseph 42 Lloyd, Danielle 57 Mello, Michelle 26 Nguyen, Christina 54, 60 Kyanko, Kelly 42 Loan, Lori 36 Meltzer, David 54, 69 Nguyen, Kevin 47 Lowell, Kristina 59 Menachemi, Nir 31 Nikpay, Sayeh 64 Luo, Gang 52 Mertz, Elizabeth 40 Norful, Allison 52 Luo, Qian 67 Meyers, Catherine 53 Norman, Ian 37 Lyman, Kristin 35 Meyers, David 35, 43, 64 Norris, Tyler 57

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 71 2018

Porchia-Albert, Chanel 54 Rush, Carl 34 Simon, Gregory 19, 53 O Post, Brady 49 Ryskina, Kira 65 Simpson, Lisa 17, 24, 29, 37 O’Brien, Robert 19 Pourat, Nadereh 24, 40 Sinaiko, Anna 63 O’Malley, Ann 20 Powell, Byron 62 S Sir, Mustafa 21 O’Rourke, Erin 57 Prewitt, Turner 42 Skillman, Susan 61 Oelschlaeger, Allison 50 Priest, Elisa 35 Sabbatini, Amber 30, 48, 54 Skrine Jeffers, Kia 60 Ornstein, Katherine 56 Proctor, Enola 41 Sales, Anne 17, 64, 66 Slade, Eric 57 Otten, Jennifer 22 Puddy, Richard 33 Saloner, Brendan 26 Smith, Jaime 57 Owens, Pam 64 Purtle, Jonathan 68 Samson, Lok Wong 23, 31 Smith, Laura 53, 59 Sandberg, Shana 36 Smith, Shawna 41, 54 Saunders, Robert 21 Snyder, Lynne Page 30 P Q Savitz, Lucy 28, 31, 38 Sommers, Ben 28 Panagiotou, Orestis 35 Quanbeck, Andrew 49 Sayers, Jennifer 51 Song, Wei 36, 65 Pandya, Ankur 40 Quigley, Denise 35 Scanlon, William 25 Song, Zirui 30, 49 Paode, Pooja 39 Quinones, Ana 50 Scharf, Deborah 48 Spencer, Merianne 51 Papadakis, Eleni 61 Schilling, Lisa 35 Spetz, Joanne 17, 34 Papanicolas, Irene 39, 45 R Schiltz, Nicholas 59 Squires, Allison 35 Parcham, Cheryl 40 Schmittdiel, Julie 59 Staiger, Becky 28 Parchman, Michael 64 Raifman, Julia 26 Schpero, William 40 Standish, Melanie 57 Park, Jeongyoung 52 Ramanathan, Tara 44 Schurrer, John 69 Stein, Michael 43 Park, Sungchul 35 Ramoni, Rachel 43 Schuster, James 48 Stempel, Hilary 23 Pascale, Joanne 52 Romano, Patrick 22 Schwartz, Aaron 53 Stevenson, David 65 Pasupathy, Kalyan 21 Rao, Preethi 32 Schwartz, Margot 35 Steventon, Adam 39 Patel, Mitesh 44, 46, 63 Rawson, James 29 Scott, Victoria 18 Stinchcomb, David 30 Patzer, Rachel 20 Reed, Mary 49 Sears, Erika 40 Stocks, Carol 60 Pauly, Mark 41 Reid, Robert 49 Sears, Jeanne 58, 68 Stransky, Michelle 27 Pelech, Daria 47 Rice, Ketra 39 Segal, Courtney 66 Sullivan, Jennifer 41 Penfold, Robert 53, 62 Rinehart, Deborah 47 Segal, Kathryn 56 Surdu, Simona 40 Pereyda, Margarita 42 Roberts, Eric 24, 30, 54 Seiber, Eric 66 Swanson, Kristi 41 Perez, Susan 40 Robinson, June 34 Selenich, Sarah 63 Szanton, Sarah 65 Perlin, Jonathan 42 Roby, Dylan 27 Semanskee, Ashley 27 Perloff, Jennifer 57 Rodriguez, Hector 60 Seyedzadeh Sabounchi, T Perraillon, Marcelo 61 Romaire, Melissa 62 Shabnam 24 Peter, Doris 51 Root, Elisabeth 62 Shafer, Paul 23 Tai-Seale, Ming 17 Petrescu-Prahova, Miruna 66 Rose, Adam 60 Shah, Mona 68 Talbert, Jeffery 57 Pezzino, Gianfranco 19 Rose, Danielle 18 Sherry, Tisamarie 32 Tan, Ronnie 50 Phibbs, Ciaran 29 Rose, Sherri 52 Shi, Zhuo 69 Tanielian, Terri 17 Phillippi, Julia 38 Rosenbach, Margo 62 Shin, Andrew 54 Tarazi, Wafa 63 Phillips, Aryn 62 Rowland, Diane 26 Shoemaker, Sarah 21, 46 Taylor, Stephanie 68 Phillips, Kathryn 40 Rubenstein, Lisa 61 Shoff, Carla 63 Tedesco, Dario 51 Pollock, Harold 49 Rudin, Robert 43 Shuvo, Sohul 48 Teigland, Christie 20, 43 Polsky, Dan 27 Rudolph, Noemi 30 Siegel, Joanna 48 Telford, Robin 20 Ponce, Ninez 20, 67 Ruhter, Joel 31 Silver, Benjamin 54 Temkin-Greener, Helena 50

72 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Teno, Joan 51 White VanGompel, Emily 38 Terhune, Chad 17 V Wilcox, Adam 25, 38, 40 Y Thirukumaran, Caroline 59 Veazie, Peter 52 Williams, Emily 53, 68 Yan, Jiali 59 Thomas, Angela 36 Venkatesh, Arjun 30 Williams, Julie 43 Yang, Zhiyou 51 Thompson, Joe 39 Vest, Joshua 22 Williams, Venice 59 Ye, Zhiqiu 48 Thorsness, Rebecca 32 Vimalananda, Varsha 56 Williamson, Alanna 62 Yee, Christine 38 Toledo, Paloma 42 Wolff, Jennifer 60 Yoo, Kiwon 42 Topmiller, Michael 37 Wong, Charlene 21, 41 Young, Alexander 53 Trish, Erin 17, 27 W Wong, Edwin 19, 52, 59 Young, Andrea 33 Trombley, Matthew 24 Wagner, Victoria 63 Wong, Herbert 60 Young, Gary 31, 56 Tsilimingras, Dionyssios 60 Wallace, Paul 28, 37, 47 Wong, Shale 23 Yu, Hao 49 Tung, Gregory 31 Wang, Scarlett 39 Wong, Winston 58 Yu, Jiani 49 Wang, Virginia 43 Woods, Gregory 63 U Washington, Donna 30 Wovcha, Sarah 40 Washko, Michelle 61 Wright, Brad 67 Z Unutzer, Jurgen 39 Weiner, Bryan 39, 62 Wu, Shannon 48 Zhang, Kun 63 Unruh, Mark 23, 64 Weissman, Joel 20 Wysocki, Andrea 49 Zhang, Yongkang 46 Uwemedimo, Omolara 59 Wennerstrom, Ashley 34 Zheng, Hua 66 Wheeler, Stephanie 51 X Zhou, Chao 62 Whelan, Ellen-Marie 23 Zhu, Xi 25 White, Chapin 49, 62 Xu, Huiwen 61 Zielinskie, Ginger 65 White, Lindsay 37, 56 Xu, Xiao 39 Zuckerman, Rachael 63 Xue, Ying 52 Zuckerman, Stephen 17 Zullig, Leah 45 SPEAKER INDEX

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 73 2018 PARTICIPATING FEDERAL AGENCY PROFILES

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services - (AHRQ) Office of Minority Health (CMS OMH) www.ahrq.gov go.cms.gov/cms-omh

The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s (AHRQ) CMS OMH serves as the principal advisor to CMS on the mission is to produce evidence to make health care safer, special needs of minority and disadvantaged populations higher quality, more accessible, equitable, and affordable, and coordinates activities within the agency to improve and work within the U.S. Department of Health and Human minority health and eliminate health disparities. CMS OMH Services and with other partners to make sure that the defines disadvantaged populations to include beneficiaries evidence is understood and used. experiencing health care inequities due to race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, disability, CDC’s Office of the Associate Director for Policy geography, and socio-economic status. The CMS OMH (OADP) session will highlight the goals and priorities of CMS OMH www.cdc.gov/policy and discuss cutting-edge research findings. OADP’s mission is to identify and advance opportunities Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to use policy, leverage health system transformation and Health Services Research & Development Service engage other sectors to improve the public’s health by (HSR&D) identifying high-value prevention and public health policies www.hsrd.research.va.gov and interventions; increasing the understanding and use of credible evidence of prevention’s impact by policy makers, The VA HSR&D identifies and evaluates innovative strategies health care and public health; and catalyzing collaboration that produce accessible, high-quality, cost-effective among public health, health care and other sectors, with healthcare for Veterans. HSR&D is an intramural program that special focus on those opportunities expanded by the funds an array of peer-reviewed projects and professional Affordable Care Act. development opportunities focused on improving the health and care of Veterans. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) www.cms.hhs.gov www.ahrq.gov/research/data/hcup/index.html

CMS is the federal agency that provides health care servies HCUP is a family of healthcare databases and related for one-in-four Americans enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid, software tools and products developed through a Federal- and CHIP, enforces quality standards, and establishes State-Industry partnership and sponsored by AHRQ. HCUP payment policies. The Center for Strategic Planning conduct databases bring together the data collection efforts of HCUP research and produce information that shapes current and Partners to create the largest collection of longitudinal future programs. hospital care data in the United States, with all-payer, encounter-level information, enabling research on a broad range of health policy issues. National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) www.cdc.gov/nchs

NCHS provides statistical information that guides actions and policies to improve the health of the American people. As the Nation’s principal health statistics agency, NCHS leads the way with accurate, relevant, and timely data. The NCHS exhibit will feature the latest publication and data releases.

74 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 PRIVATE SPONSOR PROFILES

Altarum Institute Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation altarum.org www.moore.org

Altarum is a national nonprofit whose mission is to create a The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation fosters path- better, more sustainable future through ideas and action that breaking scientific discovery, environmental conservation, transform health and health care in America. @ALTARUM patient care improvements and preservation of the special character of the Bay Area. For patient care, the program aims American College of Radiology (ACR) to improve the experience and outcomes people have with www.acr.org their health care. Follow @MooreFound ACR® is a leading professional medical society dedicated Health Affairs to serving patients and society by empowering radiology www.healthaffairs.org professionals to advance the practice, science, and professions of radiological care. ACR Accreditation and Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal at the Appropriateness Criteria are the standards for safe imaging intersection of health, health care, and policy. Published by and patient care. The ACR’s 38,000 members include Project HOPE, the peer-reviewed journal appears monthly in radiologists, radiation oncologists, nuclear medicine print, online, on mobile and on iPad. Additional and late- physicians and medical physicists. breaking content is found at www.healthaffairs.org in Health Affairs Today, Health Affairs Blog, Health Policy Briefs, Videos American Dental Association Health Policy and Podcasts, and more. Institute (ADA HPI) www.ada.org/hpi Heath Care Systems Research Network (HCSRN) www.hcsrn.org The ADA HPI is a thought leader and trusted source for critical policy knowledge on the U.S. dental care system. HPI HCSRN is a consortium of 18 research centers based in achieves this by generating, synthesizing, and disseminating real-world health care delivery systems. Since 1994, the innovative research on a variety of topics that are relevant HCSRN has conducted rigorous and innovative research that to policymakers, health care advocates, and dental care leverages the resources and capabilities of learning health providers. care systems. We are the nation’s preeminent source of population-based research that measurably improves health FAIR Health and health care. www.fairhealth.org IBM Watson Health FAIR Health is a national, independent, nonprofit organization www.ibm.com/watson/health/government dedicated to bringing transparency to healthcare costs and health insurance information for all stakeholders. Its IBM Watson Health helps governments improve the value database of billions of privately billed medical and dental of Health and Human Services, lower costs and have a healthcare claims powers comprehensive data products, meaningful impact on people’s lives. We provide healthcare consumer resources and health systems research support. data, analytics, and consulting services, to help transform business and clinical outcomes. Georgia Health Policy Center www.gsu.edu/ghpc IMPAQ International, LLC www.impaqint.com/health The Georgia Health Policy Center, housed within Georgia State University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, IMPAQ Health, a division of IMPAQ International, provides provides evidence-based research, program development, research, implementation, data resources, advanced and policy guidance. We work locally, statewide, and analytics, and support services to help clients make the SUPPORTERS nationally to improve health status at the community level. nation’s health system more effective and efficient. PRIVATE

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 75 2018

Kaiser Permanente PhD Program in Health Services, University of share.kaiserpermanente.org Washington School of Public Health depts.washington.edu/hservphd Kaiser Permanente is recognized as one of America’s leading health care providers and not-for-profit health plans. We The mission of the University of Washington’s PhD program currently serve more than 11.7 million members in eight in Health Services is to educate the next generation of health states and the District of Columbia. Founded in 1945, our services researchers and prepare them to provide leadership mission is to provide high-quality, affordable health care in the field. The program is designed to prepare graduates for services and to improve the health of our members and the research careers in universities, policy-making organizations, communities we serve. Care for members and patients is health care industry, and government. focused on their total health and guided by their personal physicians, specialists and team of caregivers. Our world- Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies class medical teams are supported by industry-leading School of Medicine technology advances and tools for health promotion, disease University of California, San Francisco prevention, care delivery and chronic disease management. healthpolicy.ucsf.edu Our vision: We are trusted partners in total health, collaborating with people to help them thrive and creating For over 40 years, the Institute has contributed to the solution communities that are among the healthiest in the nation. of challenging health policy problems through leadership in: health policy and health services research, education Lewin Group and training, technical assistance, and public service. We www.lewin.com conduct, synthesize, and translate trans-disciplinary research to provide evidence-based information to decision makers in The Lewin Group, part of OptumServe, is a nationally health and health care, including consumers of health care. recognized health care and human services policy research, We provide information about policy decisions that affect analytics and consulting firm, with nearly 50 years of people’s health and lives, from improving clinical decision- experience finding answers and solving problems for leading making at a patient’s bedside, including research on shared organizations in the public, non-profit and private sectors. patient decision-making, to assessing the impact of health legislation, such as the ACA, and measuring quality and Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center outcomes, through the Center on Healthcare Value. We also for the Science of Health Care Delivery train students and fellows in the health professions and other www.mayo.edu/research/centers-programs/robert-d- disciplines for leadership roles in academia, government at patricia-e-kern-center-science-health-care-delivery all levels, and the non-profit and private sectors. Through developing, analyzing and rapidly diffusing solutions RAND Health for the transformation of health care, the Kern Center will www.rand.org/health drive the transformation of the Mayo Clinic practice to achieve high-value patient-centered care and serve as a RAND Health, a division of the RAND, is the nation’s global leader in the discovery, translation and application of largest independent health policy research program. Its innovative solutions. broad research portfolio focuses on topics central to the conversation about health care in the United States and Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute globally, including the Affordable Care Act, new models www.pcori.org of payment and delivery, chronic disease prevention, and PCORI is an independent, non-profit organization authorized improving population health. by Congress to fund research that will provide patients, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation their caregivers and clinicians with the evidence-based www.rwjf.org information needed to make better-informed healthcare decisions. PCORI’s work is continuously guided by input For more than 40 years the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation from a broad range of healthcare stakeholders to see that has worked to improve health and health care. We are its research is timely, useful, and addresses outcomes that working with others to build a national Culture of Health matter to patients. enabling everyone in America to live longer, healthier lives. Follow the Foundation on Twitter at www.rwjf.org/twitter or on Facebook at www.rwjf.org/facebook.

76 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

RTI International Vanderbilt University Department of Health Policy www.rti.org www.vumc.org/health-policy

RTI International is an independent, nonprofit research Vanderbilt University Department of Health Policy brings institute dedicated to improving the human condition. We together a broad group of health policy scholars devoted combine scientific rigor and technical expertise in social to developing health policy solutions to our nation’s most and laboratory sciences, engineering, and international pressing healthcare challenges. We offer a Master’s degree development to deliver solutions to the critical needs of program in public health and are launching a Ph.D. program clients worldwide. this year. University of Washington Center for Health Westat Workforce Studies (UW CHWS) www.westat.com depts.washington.edu/fammed/chws Westat offers innovative professional services to help clients CHWS is one of only seven Health Workforce Research improve outcomes in health, education, social policy, and Centers funded by the Health Resources & Services transportation. We are dedicated to improving lives through Administration to conduct policy-relevant research on health research. workforce issues. Along with developing and refining health workforce research methods, UW CHWS informs workforce West Health planning and policy, and advices both local and national www.westhealth.org policy makers. Solely funded by philanthropists Gary and Mary West, West University of Washington WWAMI Rural Health Health includes the nonprofit and nonpartisan Gary and Mary Research Center West Health Institute and Gary and Mary West Foundation in San Diego, and the Gary and Mary West Health Policy depts.washington.edu/fammed/rhrc Center in Washington, D.C. These organizations are working Established in 1988, the WWAMI Rural Health Research together toward a shared mission dedicated to enabling Center (RHRC) performs policy-oriented regional and national seniors to successfully age in place with access to high- research on rural health care. The WWAMI RHRC is one of quality, affordable health and support services that preserve eight RHRCs funded by the Federal Office of Health Policy. and protect their dignity, quality of life and independence. For more information, follow @westhealth. University of Washington Department of Family Medicine Research Wharton Research Data Services (WRDS) depts.washington.edu/fammed/research www.whartonwrds.com

An internationally-recognized research organization focused WRDS provides the leading business intelligence and on increasing the quality, effectiveness, accessibility and powerful research platform to global institutions dedicated sustainability of primary care. We conduct research and to enabling comprehensive thought leadership and historical develop methods to answer vital healthcare questions in analysis. WRDS offers unparalleled access to healthcare collaboration with colleagues in diverse disciplines and data, analytical tools, and insight into the latest innovations settings. We disseminate results to health practitioners and in research. Supporting 50,000+ commercial, academic, and policymakers locally, nationally and internationally, aiming to government users in 35+ countries—WRDS is the global inform practice and policy. gold standard in data management and research, all backed by the credibility and leadership of the Wharton School. Urban Institute [email protected] www.urban.org SUPPORTERS Urban Institute Health Policy Center scholars are among PRIVATE the nation’s leading experts on health and health reform. We have helped lawmakers understand the scope of the country’s healthcare problems and costs, evaluated how public policies affect health for individuals and communities, and provided insights about payment and service delivery reforms.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 77 2018 Exhibit Program and Profiles

Exhibit Program American Dental Association Health Policy Institute (ADA HPI) WSCC - Exhibit Hall 4 A/B (Level Four) Booth: 404

The exhibit program includes university-based and other The ADA HPI is a thought leader and trusted source for health services and policy research programs, professional critical policy knowledge on the U.S. dental care system. HPI and trade associations and research affiliates, research achieves this by generating, synthesizing, and disseminating consulting firms, federal agencies, foundations, publishers, innovative research on a variety of topics that are relevant software companies, and other commercial vendors. to policymakers, health care advocates, and dental care providers. www.ada.org/hpi Take advantage of the learning and networking opportunities in the exhibit hall. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Booths: 203, 205 Hours Sunday, June 25 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. AHRQ’s mission is to produce evidence to make health care safer, higher quality, more accessible, equitable, and Monday, June 26 8:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. affordable, and work within the U.S. Department of Health 4:00 p.m. – 8:15 p.m. and Human Services and with other partners to make sure that the evidence is understood and used. www.ahrq.gov Display of exhibitors’ materials at AcademyHealth’s Annual Research Meeting or advertising in the Agenda Book does not constitute or imply endorsement by AcademyHealth. Altarum Institute Booth: 201 NOTE: Child under the age of 16 are not permitted in the exhibit hall. Altarum is a national nonprofit whose mission is to create a better, more sustainable future through ideas and action that transform health and health care in America. @ALTARUM | Exhibitor Profiles www.altarum.org Abt Associates Booths: 502, 504 American Institutes for Research (AIR) Booth: 608 Abt Associates is an engine for social impact, dedicated to moving people from vulnerability to security. Harnessing the AIR is one of the world’s largest behavioral and social science power of data and our experts’ grounded insights, we provide research and evaluation organizations. AIR’s overriding research, consulting and technical services globally in the goal is to use the best science available to bring the most areas of health, environmental and social policy, technology effective ideas and approaches to enhancing everyday life. and international development. www.abtassociates.com www.air.org

AcademyHealth Arbor Research Collaborative for Health Booth: 6ABC Foyer (Level Six) Booth: 300

As the professional home for health services research, Arbor Research Collaborative for Health is committed AcademyHealth connects researchers, policymakes, and to improving patient care through research that shapes providers in pursuit of higher quality, more accessible. medical policies and practice. Arbor Research conducts Higher value health care. Together with our more than 5,000 health outcomes research on chronic disease and end-stage members, AcademyHealth promotes and facilitates the organ failure, with expertise in biostatistical analysis, clinical application of research to improve health and health care practice, health economics, public policy, and database across the research and policy arenas. management and integration. www.ArborResearch.org www.academyhealth.org

78 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 EXHIBITOR Blackstone Group, Inc. FAIR Health PROFILES Booth: 514 Booth: 503

The Blackstone Group is an NCQA Certified research FAIR Health is a national, independent, nonprofit organization and consulting firm. Over 30 years it has been providing dedicated to bringing transparency to healthcare costs research and insights to Fortune 500 companies, and health insurance information for all stakeholders. Its Government agencies, universities and policy organizations. database of billions of privately billed medical and dental Our comprehensive resources include mixed mode data healthcare claims powers comprehensive data products, collection, processing, analysis. Expertise in planning, consumer resources and health systems research support. executing challenging, complex research projects and www.fairhealth.org maintain high standards. www.bgglobal.com General Dynamics Health Solutions Bureau of Economic Analysis Booth: 510 Booth: 408 The CMS Chronic Condition Data Warehouse (CCW) and The Bureau of Economic Analysis is the world’s trusted, Virtual Research Data Center (VRDC) provides researchers impartial source of comprehensive data about the U.S. with Medicare and Medicaid data linked by beneficiary. economy. BEA’s economic statistics, free and accessible to Managed by HealthAPT (joint venture between NewWave all, inform decision making by businesses, entrepreneurs, Technologies and General Dynamics Health Solutions), consumers and governments. www.bea.gov healthcare management services include: database architecture, data access/dissemination, applications, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid security, and data science services. www.gdhealth.com Services (CMS) Booth: 508 Georgia Health Policy Center Booth: 604 The Office of Enterprise Data and Analytics (OEDA) within the CMS is responsible for helping harness the wealth of data The Georgia Health Policy Center, housed within Georgia State that CMS collects. OEDA develops publicly available data and University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, provides information products from CMS data and supports secure and evidence-based research, program development, and policy appropriate access to CMS data resources. www.cms.gov guidance. We work locally, statewide, and nationally to improve health status at the community level. ghpc.gsu.edu Creighton University Center for Health Services Research and Patient Safety (CHRP) Harvard University Ph.D. Program in Health Policy Half Table: 6-B Table: 3

CHRP is an interprofessional team of faculty focused on The Ph.D. in Health Policy, awarded by the Faculty of Arts and research collaboration and faculty research development. Sciences, is a collaborative program of six Harvard University CHRP actively works to conduct and advance health services faculties. Enrolled students take courses throughout the research that will improve patient safety and quality of care university, and they concentrate in one of five academic provided across the health care spectrum. chrp.creighton.edu disciplines: decision sciences, economics, evaluative science and statistics, management, or political analysis. www.healthpolicy.fas.harvard.edu

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Health Affairs IBM Watson Health Booth: 411 Booth: 501

Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal at the IBM Watson Health helps governments improve the value intersection of health, health care, and policy. Published by of Health and Human Services, lower costs and have a Project HOPE, the peer-reviewed journal appears monthly in meaningful impact on people’s lives. We provide healthcare print, online, on mobile and on iPad. Additional and late- data, analytics, and consulting services, to help transform breaking content is found at www.healthaffairs.org in Health business and clinical outcomes. www.ibm.com/watson/ Affairs Today, Health Affairs Blog, Health Policy Briefs, Videos health/government and Podcasts, and more. www.healthaffairs.org IMPAQ International, LLC Health Care Cost Institute Booths: 509, 511 Booth: 515 IMPAQ Health, a division of IMPAQ International, provides HCCI is an independent, non-profit research institute with research, implementation, data resources, advanced a mission to produce and promote access to clear and analytics, and support services to help clients make the compelling information about the drivers of U.S. health nation’s health system more effective and efficient. care spending. HCCI also enables world class research by www.impaqint.com providing external researchers with access to its data. www.healthcostinstitute.org Institute for Accountable Care Health Services Research (HSR) Table: 8 Booth: 502 The Institute for Accountable Care is a non-profit organization HSR is HRET’s flagship publication and an official journal of whose mission is to build the evidence on the impact of AcademyHealth. Rated as one of the top journals in the field, accountable care delivery strategies on quality and cost, and to HSR publishes outstanding articles reporting the findings disseminate best practices to improve population health. The of original investigations that expand understanding of the Institute strives to quickly translate research into actionable wide-ranging field of health care and help improve the health resources for healthcare organizations working with private, of individuals and communities. www.hsr.org federal, and state payers. www.institute4ac.org

The Hilltop Institute at University of Maryland, Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation Baltimore County (UMBC) (IHPI) at the University of Michigan Booth: 410 Booth: 200

The Hilltop Institute is a nonpartisan research organization With over 500 faculty members from many disciplines, IHPI at UMBC, dedicated to improving the health and wellbeing galvanizes the efforts of the University of Michigan’s health of people and communities. We conduct sophisticated services research community. IHPI fosters members’ efforts data analytics and cutting-edge translational research on to improve the quality, safety, equity and affordability of behalf of government agencies, foundations, and nonprofit health care services, capitalize on intellectual synergies and organizations to inform public policy at the national, state, collaborations, and establish public and private partnerships. and local levels. www.hilltopinstitute.org www.ihpi.umich.edu; Twitter: @UM_IHPI

80 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 EXHIBITOR Health Infrastructures and Learning Systems solutions. The department achieves this through research, PROFILES (HILS) at the University of Michigan education and practice in areas of health services research Booth: 200 and policy, health and public policy, health economics and policy, bioethics and health policy, and leadership and The HILS Program at the University of Michigan is the first management. www.jhsph.edu/departments/hpm graduate program in the nation focused on the science and methods of learning health systems. This unique program has emphasis on information and social sciences to improve L&M Policy Research, LLC the health of individuals and populations by designing, Table: 4 implementing, and evaluating innovative change and L&M is a boutique, minority- and women-owned research improvement of health systems. www.medicine.umich. firm committed to health care access, cost and quality issues edu/dlhs-hils; Twitter: @UMichDLHS facing high-need populations, and communication strategies that support informed health care and coverage decisions. Health Services Organization and Policy (HSOP) at We offer interdisciplinary, multi-method approaches to health the University of Michigan services, outcomes, policy, and consumer research for public Booth: 200 and private clients. www.lmpolicyresearch.com

The HSOP doctoral program at the University of Michigan Lewin Group prepares students for careers in research, teaching, and Booth: 204 policy analysis. The program’s primary objective is to provide students with the conceptual and analytic skills to address The Lewin Group, part of OptumServe, is a nationally a broad spectrum of health services and policy issues. The recognized health care and human services policy research, HSOP program considers the key bodies of theory to be the analytics and consulting firm, with nearly 50 years of social sciences including economics, sociology, organizational experience finding answers and solving problems for leading studies, political science, finance, and operations research/ organizations in the public, non-profit and private sectors. decision science. www.sph.umich.edu/hmp www.lewin.com

Johns Hopkins University LiveStories Center for Health Services and Outcomes Booth: 414 Research (CHSOR) Half Table: 5-B LiveStories drives outreach and better decisions using civic data—how communities live, learn, work, and play. Our The CHSOR conducts multidisciplinary research on health data communication platform makes it easy to analyze care policies and practices, with a special focus on their local data, get benchmarks, and create interactive stories. impact on quality of care and patient-centered outcomes. Our customers span public and private sectors including Effort is devoted to generating and using evidence to the Gates Foundation, California Health and Human accomplish positive change, with particular attention to Services Agency, ShotSpotter, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, vulnerable populations. www.jhsph.edu/research/centers- LOS ANGELES, Maricopa County, and many local health and-institutes/health-services-outcomes-research departments. Learn more and get your free community report on our website. www.livestories.com Johns Hopkins University Department of Health Policy and Management Half table: 5-A

The Department of Health Policy and Management seeks to advance the public’s health through the development, implementation, and evaluation of effective health and social policies emphasizing the importance of sound management and creative leadership in finding effective and equitable

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Mathematica Policy Research National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) Booths: 212, 214 Booth: 213

Mathematica is a pioneering nonpartisan research The NCHS provides statistical information that guides actions organization dedicated to improving public well-being. Our and policies to improve the health of the American people. 1,200+ experts conduct policy research, data collection, and As the Nation’s principal health statistics agency, NCHS leads data analytics that meet the highest standards of quality and the way with accurate, relevant, and timely data. The NCHS objectivity, working with decision makers across the public exhibit will feature the latest publication and data releases. and private sectors. www.mathematica-mpr.com; www.cdc.gov/nchs Twitter: @MathPolResearch National Library of Medicine (NLM) Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center Booth: 415 for the Science of Health Care Delivery Booths: 309, 311 The NLM provides free authoritative information for health services researchers, policy makers and health professionals. Through developing, analyzing and rapidly diffusing solutions Get tips on searching PubMed/MEDLINE, HSRProj, NICHSR for the transformation of health care, the Kern Center will ONESearch, as well as databases on drugs, genetics and drive the transformation of the Mayo Clinic practice to health data standards. Stop by the booth and visit us online. achieve high-value patient-centered care and serve as a www.nlm.nih.gov; www.nlm.nih.gov/hsrinfo global leader in the discovery, translation and application of innovative solutions. www.mayo.edu/research/centers- NORC at the University of Chicago programs/robert-d-patricia-e-kern-center-science- Booth: 210 health-care-delivery NORC at the University of Chicago is a non-partisan, objective Milbank Memorial Fund research institution that delivers reliable data and rigorous Booth: 314 analysis to guide critical programmatic, business, and policy decisions. Since 1941, NORC has conducted groundbreaking The Milbank Memorial Fund is an endowed operating foundation studies, created and applied innovative methods and that works to improve the health of populations by connecting tools, and advanced principles of scientific integrity and leaders and decision makers with the best available evidence collaboration. www.norc.org and experience. Founded in 1905, the Fund engages in nonpartisan analysis, collaboration, and communication on Ohio Colleges of Medicine Government significant issues in health policy. It does this work by publishing Resource Center high-quality, evidence-based reports, books, and The Milbank Table: 7 Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal of population health and health policy; convening state health policy decision makers Housed at The Ohio State University, GRC is a public on issues they identify as important to population health; and university-based center for applied health policy research building communities of health policymakers to enhance their and technical assistance. GRC engages expert faculty and effectiveness. www.milbank.org staff at all of Ohio’s Colleges of Medicine and partners with state health and human services agencies to improve the Minnesota Population Center health and health systems for all Ohioans. grc.osu.edu Booth: 609 Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute IPUMS provides census and survey microdata integrated Booth: 409 across time and space. In addition to microdata, IPUMS integrates and disseminates the nation’s most PCORI is an independent, non-profit organization authorized comprehensive database of area-level census data and by Congress to fund research that will provide patients, electronic boundaries describing census geography. The their caregivers and clinicians with the evidence-based IPUMS data collection includes the NHIS, MEPS, ACS, CPS, information needed to make better-informed healthcare and GeoMarker, a new geocoding platform. pop.umn.edu

82 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 EXHIBITOR decisions. PCORI’s work is continuously guided by input PhRMA Foundation PROFILES from a broad range of healthcare stakeholders to see that Half Table: 9-A its research is timely, useful, and addresses outcomes that matter to patients. www.pcori.org The PhRMA Foundation has supported the careers of scientific investigators, faculty members, and physicians in fields of health economics and drug discovery for over PhD Program in Health Services, University of 50 years. Funding the research of more than 2,400 young Washington School of Public Health scientists, the Foundation continues to pave the way for the Booth: 104 future of patient care. www.phrmafoundation.org The mission of the University of Washington’s PhD program in Health Services is to educate the next generation of health RAND Health services researchers and prepare them to provide leadership Booth: 108 in the field. The program is designed to prepare graduates for research careers in universities, policy-making organizations, RAND Health, a division of the RAND, is the nation’s health care industry, and government. largest independent health policy research program. Its depts.washington.edu/hservphd broad research portfolio focuses on topics central to the conversation about health care in the United States and globally, including the Affordable Care Act, new models Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies of payment and delivery, chronic disease prevention, and School of Medicine improving population health. www.rand.org/health University of California, San Francisco Half Table: 2-A Research Data Assistance Center (ResDAC), For over 40 years, the Institute has contributed to the solution University of Minnesota of challenging health policy problems through leadership Booths: 508 (with CMS) in: health policy and health services research, education and training, technical assistance, and public service. We ResDAC, a CMS contractor located at the University of conduct, synthesize, and translate trans-disciplinary research Minnesota, provides free assistance to researchers interested to provide evidence-based information to decision makers in in requesting and using CMS data. ResDAC resources outline health and health care, including consumers of health care. the strengths, weaknesses, and applications of CMS data. We provide information about policy decisions that affect ResDAC services include individual consultation by phone people’s health and lives, from improving clinical decision- or email, online training and resources, and in-person making at a patient’s bedside, including research on shared workshops. www.resdac.org patient decision-making, to assessing the impact of health legislation, such as the ACA, and measuring quality and Responsive Survey Design (RSD): A Research outcomes, through the Center on Healthcare Value. We also Education Program train students and fellows in the health professions and other Booth: 100 disciplines for leadership roles in academia, government at all levels, and the non-profit and private sectors. The RSD research education program seeks to train anyone healthpolicy.ucsf.edu collecting survey-like data in state-of-the-art methodologies for improving the efficiency of these data collections. Via 11 half-day or one-day short courses, participants will receive comprehensive hands-on training in the use of these methodologies. rsdprogram.si.isr.umich.edu

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Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) StataCorp LLC Booths: 109, 208 Booths: 401, 403, 405

For more than 40 years the RWJF has worked to improve Stata provides everything health researchers need for health and health care. We are working with others to build data analysis, data management, graphics, and statistical a national Culture of Health enabling everyone in America to programming. Whether you prefer a GUI, command line, or live longer, healthier lives. Follow the Foundation on Twitter scripts, Stata puts the statistics you want at your finger tips. at www.rwjf.org/twitter or on Facebook at www.rwjf.org/ No separate modules. Perpetual licenses. www.stata.com facebook. www.rwjf.org University of California, Berkeley Health Services RTI International and Policy Analysis Ph.D. Program Booth: 302, 304 Table: 10

RTI International is an independent, nonprofit research The Health Policy (HP) PhD Program is a full-time academic institute dedicated to improving the human condition. We doctoral degree program that prepares students for research combine scientific rigor and technical expertise in social careers in health policy and management. The HP PhD and laboratory sciences, engineering, and international program provides students with expertise in interdisciplinary development to deliver solutions to the critical needs of social sciences, and the faculty membership spans the clients worldwide. www.rti.org University. The program is administered through the School of Public Health, and students augment their training Rural Health Research Gateway University through skills and knowledge from UC Berkeley’s top-ranked of North Dakota Economics, Political Science, and Sociology departments, as well as the Haas School of Business and the Goldman School Booth: 413 of Public Policy. PhD students receive a solid grounding in The Rural Health Research Gateway is an online library of health services research methods and the applications of research and expertise. It’s free to use, searchable, and these methods to the analysis of global and domestic health provides access to the work of all ten federally-funded Rural policy and management issues. berkeleyhealthpolicy.com Health Research Centers and Policy Analysis Initiatives. www.ruralhealthresearch.org University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Health Policy and Management State Health Access Data Assistance Center Half table: 6-A (SHADAC), University of Minnesota The UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES FSPH Booth: 202 Department of Health Policy and Management aims to advance Affiliated with the University of Minnesota, SHADAC is a the effectiveness, efficiency, and equity of health services multidisciplinary health policy research center with a focus for both personal and population health. By combining the on state policy. Our staff members represent a broad range of diverse strengths and resources of our faculty, the Department expertise, ranging from economics, statistics and evaluation prepares students to address the challenging, multi- to sociology and journalism. We are passionate about the dimensional issues facing health care today. importance of using sound data to inform policy decisions, hpm.ph.University of California, Los Angeles.edu and work collaboratively with our clients as thought partners to achieve results. SHADAC strives to produce rigorous, policy- driven analyses. We translate complex findings into actionable information that is accessible to a broad audience. Thanks to our long history of working with state agencies and foundations, we’ve developed a deep understanding of the unique challenges and opportunities states face. www.shadac.org

84 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 EXHIBITOR University of Chicago and Northwestern University of Pennsylvania PROFILES University Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (LDI) Booth: 308 Booth: 305

The Institute for Public Health and Medicine at Northwestern LDI was established in 1967 with a mission to catalyze University is home to research centers and education programs and facilitate research collaborations and educational aimed at advancing health services and outcomes research and programs to expand knowledge and shape policy for a more improving the health of patients and populations. The Center effective health system. LDI is driven by a vision of healthy for Education in Health Sciences offers Ph.D., M.P.H., M.S., patients and communities resulting from a health system certificate, and fellowship programs that harness the expert that provides affordable, high-value health care to all and faculty of the Feinberg School of Medicine and the resources of effectively engages its patients and its most vulnerable Chicago to train tomorrow’s research leaders. This year’s exhibit populations. Our 283 Senior Fellows and 146 Associate booth includes the UCANU fellowship program, a pre- and post- Fellows conduct collaborative, multidisciplinary research doctoral training program run jointly by the University of Chicago programs exploring the management, organization, finance, and Northwestern. feinberg.northwestern.edu/ipham and delivery of health care through the integration of various perspectives and disciplines – including medicine, University of Iowa, College of Public Health, economics, business, nursing, communications, and law. Our high-impact research is data driven, with a focus on policy Department of Health Management & Policy and action. ldi.upenn.edu Half table: 1-A

The Department’s mission is to improve health and health University of Pittsburgh, Graduate School of services by preparing future leaders for, and advancing Public Health knowledge in, health management, policy, and research. Half Table: 2-B Degree Programs: PhD in Health Services and Policy, Master of Health Administration, Executive MHA Track, Combined The mission of the HPM Doctoral Program in HSRP is to Degree’s, MPH in Policy, and MS in Health Policy. train students to contribute to health policy development www.public-health.uiowa.edu/hmp and improvement of healthcare systems by designing and conducting health services research and policy analysis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC- advocating for effective policy solutions, and teaching and mentoring future health services researchers and policy CH), PhD in Health Policy and Management scholars. www.publichealth.pitt.edu Table: 11

UNC-CH’s PhD Program in Health Policy and Management University of South Florida (USF), School of Aging is a top-ranked program with a number of unique features, Studies including strong matches on admission between students Booth: 315 and faculty nationally recognized for policy-relevant research; a student-centered culture; and an emphasis on professional The School of Aging Studies at USF offers degrees in development skills that are essential to our graduates’ Aging Sciences and Long Term Care Administration at the long-term success. sph.unc.edu/hpm/hpm-degrees-and- undergraduate level, a Masters degree in Gerontology, certificates/hpm-doctor-of-philosophy-phd-residential and a Ph.D. in Aging Studies, as well as several certificate programs. Our interdisciplinary programs include innovative coursework, research, and internship experiences, taught by award-winning faculty. Online options are available. www.agingstudies.usf.edu

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University of Utah, School of Medicine VA Information Resource Center (VIReC) Booth: 105 Booth: 605

Population Health Sciences at the University of Utah, School The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Information of Medicine provides methodological expertise to advance Resource Center (VIReC) is a Health Services Research the capacity for population health scientists to pursue and Development resource center. It was established to impact-driven research and allow clinical professionals to improve the quality of VA research that utilizes databases provide better patient and population-oriented care in a and information systems. VIReC provides database and complex health care delivery system. The PHS PhD program informatics expertise, education programs, HelpDesk support offers emphases in: Biostatistics, Clinical and Translational and consultation, information products, and advocacy for Epidemiology, and Health Systems Research. researchers using VA databases and information systems. medicine.utah.edu/population-health-sciences www.virec.research.va.gov

University of Washington, Health Services PhD Vanderbilt University, Department of Health Policy Booth: 104 Booth: 505

The mission of the University of Washington’s PhD program Vanderbilt University Department of Health Policy brings in Health Services is to educate the next generation of health together a broad group of health policy scholars devoted services researchers and prepare them to provide leadership to developing health policy solutions to our nation’s most in the field. The program is designed to prepare graduates for pressing healthcare challenges. We offer a Master’s degree research careers in universities, policy-making organizations, program in public health and are launching a Ph.D. program health care industry, and government. this year. www.vumc.org/health-policy depts.washington.edu/hservphd Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Department of Veterans Affairs Healthcare Policy and Research Health Services Research & Development Service Booth: 500 (HSR&D) Booth: 601, 603 The Department of Health Behavior and Policy offers two Ph.D. programs, Healthcare Policy and Research and The Department of Veterans Affairs, Health Services Social and Behavioral Sciences. Our research identifies the Research and Development Service (HSR&D) identifies and behavioral, social, organizational, and policy factors that evaluates innovative strategies that produce accessible, affect the health of individuals and populations. We utilize high-quality, cost-effective healthcare for Veterans. HSR&D is rigorous quantitative and qualitative methods and engage an intramural program that funds an array of peer-reviewed diverse communities to develop and evaluate programs and projects and professional development opportunities focused policies designed to promote health, improve health care on improving the health and care of Veterans. delivery, and reduce health disparities. Our research findings www.hsrd.research.va.gov inform the translation of effective programs and policies into practice. Department of Veterans Affairs Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) The Ph.D. program in Healthcare Policy and Research Booth: 601, 603 trains students to use economic and statistical frameworks and methods to address important health policy issues. In VA’s Quality Enhancement Research Initiative (QUERI) applies preparation for academic careers or senior research positions innovative strategies to more rapidly implement effective in government or the private sector. The Ph.D. program in treatments and other evidence-based system improvements in Social and Behavioral Sciences equips students with an routine care, and works to evaluate the results of those efforts. understanding of health as the intersection of structural, QUERI’s goal is to improve the health and care of Veterans by cultural, social, behavioral and biological factors. The supporting the application of critical evidence into practice. program offers strong methodological and theoretical training www.queri.research.va.gov/default.cfm to prepare students to make meaningful, independent scientific contributions to public health.

86 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 EXHIBITOR The department is located within the School of Medicine on Westat PROFILES the VCU health sciences campus. This urban setting is within Booth: 101 easy walking distance of the Virginia Department of Health, the State Legislature, VCU’s teaching hospital and the James Westat offers innovative professional services to help clients River. The City of Richmond boasts historical architecture improve outcomes in health, education, social policy, and and a moderate cost of living, and consistently ranks among transportation. We are dedicated to improving lives through the best places to live and work according to Forbes, Money research. www.westat.com Magazine and Business Week. www.healthpolicy.vcu.edu Wharton Research Data Services (WRDS) Weill Cornell Medicine Booth: 310 Booth: 211 WRDS provides the leading business intelligence and The Department of Healthcare Policy and Research at Weill powerful research platform to global institutions dedicated Cornell Medicine trains the next generation of leading to enabling comprehensive thought leadership and historical researchers and practitioners seeking to develop the most analysis. WRDS offers unparalleled access to healthcare effective ways to organize, coordinate, manage, finance, and data, analytical tools, and insight into the latest innovations deliver high quality care. Study with us and complete your in research. Supporting 50,000+ commercial, academic, and degree in one of our four masters or certificate programs in government users in 35+ countries—WRDS is the global just twelve months. hpr.weill.cornell.edu/education gold standard in data management and research, all backed by the credibility and leadership of the Wharton School.

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 87 2018 EXHIBIT HALL FLOOR PLAN

88 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 Posters by Session

Poster Session A Maliha Ali, George Washington Alessandra Bassalobre Garcia, University, #A-7 and #A-8 University of North Carolina at Chapel Sunday, June 24 Determinants of Unmet Clinical and Hill, #A-16 and #A-17 12:15 p.m.–1:45 p.m. Social Needs in Frequent Utilizers of Can Formulary Antimicrobial Restriction Emergency Departments Policies Reduce Methicillin-Resistant and Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA) Cases in The Role of Social Determinants and US Hospitals? – Results from a Cost- Student Posters Care Continuity in the Frequent Use of Utility Analysis Cilgy Abraham, Columbia University, #A-1 Emergency Departments in Medicaid and The Cost Effectiveness of Advanced Is Patient Safety Culture Related to Elizabeth Allen, University of North Central Line-Associated Blood Stream Practice Registered Nurses in Chronic Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-9 Disease Management of Adult Patients: Infections and Catheter-Associated Objective Measurement of Pain in Urinary Tract Infections? A Systematic Review Nursing Home Residents with Dementia: Harry Adams, University of North The Promise of Movement Patterns Diane Berish, Miami University, #A-18 Is There a Woodwork Effect? Addressing Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-2 Monir Almotairy, University of North Predictors of Chronic Stress and Mental a 200 Year Debate on the Impacts of Carolina at Greensboro, #A-10 Expanding Community-Based Services Health Outcomes in Low Income An Examination of the Relationship Mothers between Organizational Safety Climate Rendelle Bolton, Department of Session A Poster Rantimi Adetunji, Johrns Hopkins and Registered Nurses’ Job Enjoyment Veterans Affairs, CHOIR, #A-19 University, #A-3 Some of These Teams Are Not like Wafa Alnakhi, Johns Hopkins the Others: How Interprofessional Does Positive Future Orientation University, #A-11 Moderate the Relationship between Relationships Shape Team-Based Care Total Number of Trips for Patients from for HIV Perceived Discrimination and Drug the United Arab Emirates Seeking Use Among Young Adults in the United Medical Treatment Abroad Sponsored Mark Bounthavong, University of States By Dubai Health Authority during 2009 Washington, #A-20 Marvellous Akinlotan, Texas A&M - 2016 Is Naloxone Prescribing Behavior Associated with Providers’ Perception University, #A-4 Élise Arsenault Knudsen, University of Mapping the Distribution of Dentists in with Academic Detailing and Opioid Wisconsin—Madison, #A-12 Overdose Education? Texas Nurses’ Perception of Practice Change: Ellesse Roselee Akre, University of A Descriptive Qualitative Study Lilian Bravo, University of North Maryland, #A-5 and #A-6 Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-21 LauraEllen Ashcraft, University of Effects of Pain on Function, Fatigue Health Care Access and Sexual Orientation: Pittsburgh, #A-13 Before and after the Implementation of the & Health Related Quality of Life in Parent Empowerment in Pediatric Pediatric Cancer Patients Affordable Care Act Healthcare Settings: A Systematic and Review of Qualitative Research Gayle Brekke, University of Kansas, What Can I Do with Nothing: Meaningful #A-22 Engagement in Health Policy Decision Juha Baek, Texas A&M University, #A-14 How Direct Primary Care Benefits Making Among Members of the Regional Disparity between Diabetes Complex Patients: DPC Physicians’ Learning Network for Health and Human Prevalence and Diabetes Education Perspectives on This Alternative Rights Programs in Texas Payment Model Casey Balio, Indiana University, #A-15 Patient-Centered Medical Home Patients Have Fewer Hospitalizations: An Analysis Using MEPS Data

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Daniel Brook, The Ohio State University .Ying-Yi Chou, National Taiwan Do Small Changes to Medicaid Eligibility Medical Scientist Training Program, University, #A-31 Matter? Evidence from the ACA #A-23 Does Provider Volume Threshold Medicaid Expansion in New York. Survey of Medicaid Medical Directors for Heart Failure Exist? the Volume- on Approaches to Social Determinants Outcome Relationship for Hospital Cassandra Dictus, University of North of Health Volume, Physician Volume and 30- Day Carolina, #A-39 Mortality Contraception Use Patterns Among Brittany Brown-Podgorski, Indiana Women with Prediabetes, Undiagnosed University, #A-24 Lily Cook, Oregon Health & Science Diabetes, and Diagnosed Diabetes State Medicaid Reimbursement Laws University, #A-32 and Diabetes Self-Management Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)- Andrew Dierkes, University of Education and Training (DSME/T) Based Screening Recommendations: Pennsylvania, #A-40 Program Availability A Comprehensive Review of The Impact of Hospital Magnet® Recommendations from the Developed Recognition and Nurse Practice Selena Caldera, University of Texas at Countries Environment on Postsurgical Sepsis Austin, #A-25 Family or Income: Multinomial Logistic Christina Crabtree-Ide, State Twylla Dillion, University of Rochester, Model of Long-Term Care Decisions University of New York at Buffalo, #A-33 #A-41 Happy Family: Bringing Together Breastfeeding Initiation and Duration: A Pooja Chandrashekar, Harvard Stakeholder Engagement, Health Personality Theory Based Explanation of University, #A-26 Information Technology, and Variation in Outcomes Impact of Access to After-Hours Primary Implementation Science to Benefit Rural Care: Quantifying the Value Provided by Cancer Survivors Justinna Dixon, Rutgers, The State a Student-Faculty Clinic Serving a Low- University of New Jersey, #A-42 Income Population Megan Czerwinski, University of Does Unmet Need for Health Care Michigan, #A-34 Services Among Children with Anxiety Joseph Chen, UTHealth, #A-27 U.S. Primary Care Market: The Role Affect Family Time Burden? Variations in Utilization for Asthma and of Provider Market Diversification for Other Chronic Respiratory Conditions in Quality Blake Dobrich, Rush University, #A-43 Texas Was the Opioid Crisis Emboldened By Marguerite Daus, University of H.C.a.H.P.S. Surveys and Unnecessary Brian Chin, University of Washington, Pennsylvania, #A-35 Physician Prescriptions? #A-28 Social Support Significantly Improves Assessing Trends in Physical Therapy Diabetes Self-Care, but Only When Michelle Doose, Rutgers, The State Services Among Injured Workers with Living with Others University of New Jersey, #A-44 Low Back Pain in Washington State The Association between Non-Oncology Emilia De Marchis, University of Physician Involvement during Cancer Sugy Choi, Boston University, #A-29 California, San Francisco, #A-36 Care and Cancer Care Outcomes Characteristics of Young Adult Patients Patient-Reported Assistance with with Opioid Use Disorder at an Urban Health-Related Social Needs in Richard Dorritie, Columbia University, Safety-Net Hospital Federally-Funded Primary Care Clinics #A-45 Legal Epidemiology of Nursing Yoon Sun Choi, University of Maryland, Alina Denham, University of Rochester, Practice and Population Health: An #A-30 #A-37 and #A-38 Integrative Review Disparities in Health Insurance Uptake Are Acute Myocardial Infarction after the Affordable Care Act By Limited Hospitalizations Related to Oludolapo Fakeye, Johns Hopkins English Proficient (LEP) Asians and Unconventional Natural Gas University, #A-46 Latinos in California Development? Early Evidence from Impact of a Statewide Multi-Payor Pennsylvania Patient-Centered Medical Home and Program on Antihypertensive Medication Adherence

90 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Neil Fleming, Baylor Health Care Ching-I Hsieh, National Yang-Ming Yamini Kalidindi, Penn State University, System, #A-47 University, #A-55 #A-63 Impact on Patient’s Mental Health Determinants Affecting the Intensity Provider-Administered Chemotherapy Status When Health Care Professionals of End-of-Life Care for Patients with Spending Difference By Site of Care in Counsel Patients to Exercise or Eat Advanced Dementia Medicare Healthy Dorothy Hughes, University of Kansas, Maningbe Keita, Johns Hopkins Dana Fletcher, Colorado School of #A-56 University, #A-64 Public Health, #A-48 Regional Differences in Rural General Development of the Consumerist Trends in the Growth and Distribution Surgeon Supply Attitudes in Healthcare Survey (CAHS) of US Cardiac Rehabilitation Programs Used By Medicare Beneficiaries Sharon Hwee, Kaiser Permanente Mary Killela, University of North Following Increased Reimbursement Washington Health Research Institute, Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-65 #A-57 Using Social Media for Social Support Evan Goldstein, The Ohio State U.S. Opioid Prescribing Trends for Among Caregivers of Children with University, #A-49 Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Cancer: A Systematic Review Marketplace Coverage and Access to Patients in Last Year of Life, 2002 - Care Among Employed Beneficiaries: 2016: A Study from the Clare Project Hyunmin Kim, University of Memphis, #A-66 SESSION A

Evidence from Ohio POSTER Ashley Jamison, Clemson University, Influence of Personal Health Records Elizabeth Golembiewski, Indiana #A-58 on Breast Cancer and Cervical Cancer University, #A-50 Access to Health Care in South Screening Among Women with a Family Creating a Lexicon to Support Carolina: Impacts on the Employment of History of Cancer Identifying Patients with Homelessness Individuals with Disabilities through Natural Language Processing of Kyung Mi Kim, University of California, Clinical Notes Bobbie Johannes, Penn State San Francisco, #A-67 University, #A-59 and #A-60 Comparative Cost-Effectiveness of Use Elizabeth Greener, University of A Qualitative Analysis of Facebook of Antibiotic-Impregnated Bone Cement Rochester, #A-51 Posts Published By Electronic Nicotine Effect of Medicaid Expansion on Delivery System (ENDS) Proprietors in Lyoung Hee Kim, Brandeis University, Specialty Substance Use Treatment “College Towns.” #A-68 Utilization By Pregnant Women with and The Relationship between Language Opioid Use Disorder Patient Perspectives on the Ethics Proficiency and Health Outcomes for Regarding Patient Reported Outcomes Asian Immigrants in California Dan Han, Pardee RAND Graduate (PROs) and Electronic Health Record School, #A-52 (EHR) Implementation and Research Nam Hyo Kim, University of The Impact of the 340B Drug Pricing Wisconsin—Madison, #A-69 Program on Critical Access Hospitals Hannah Johnson, University of Antidiabetic Drug Utilization, Washington, #A-61 Expenditures, and Adherence Among Rose Hardy, Colorado School of Public Towards a Strategic Framework for Childless Adults Experiencing Medicaid Health, #A-53 Building, Optimizing, and Managing Coverage Expansion in Wisconsin Understanding the Association Primary Care Panels between Provider Relationships and Youngran Kim, UTHealth, #A-70 Hospitalizations Among Young Adults Maurice Johnson, Jr., George Mason Declining Adolescent Pregnancy and with Congenital Heart Disease in University, #A-62 Its Association with Decrease in Low Colorado Community Readmissions: An Birthweight Rates Exploratory Spatial Data Analysis Simone Herzberg, Oregon Health & Examining the Relationship between Science University, #A-54 Neighborhoods and 30-Day Measured Teamwork Predicts Medical Readmissions Errors in Clinical Teams

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Benjamin Kirby, UT Southwestern Shyama Mahakalanda, Oregon State Sonal Parasrampuria, Johns Hopkins Medical Center, #A-71 University, #A-79 University, #A-86 and #A-87 Potential Impact of the Site-Neutral Impact of Abolishing of Gender Rating Comparing Access to Mental Health Payment Policy on Long-Term Acute in the Private Insurance Market Under Services in Medicare Advantage and Care Hospital Use: A National Study of the Affordable Care Act on Females Medicare Fee-for-Service Medicare Beneficiaries and Erin Mobley, University of Iowa, #A-80 Insurance Expansions and Chronic Sonam Kumari, University of Impact of the Dependent Coverage Disease Outcomes: The Effect of California, Davis, #A-72 Mandate on Stage at Diagnosis for an Employer Mandate on Cancer Healthcare in the San Joaquin Valley: Rural Young Adults with Lymphoma Diagnosis and Survival Current Challenges and Successful Strategies Teraisa Mullaney, University of Sungchul Park, University of Rochester, #A-81 Washington, #A-88 Sandra Lamm, Virginia Substance Abuse Treatment Facility Development of an Alternative Model Commonwealth University, #A-73 Resources and Opioid Overdose for Risk Adjustment of Capitation Rural Underemployment and Multiple Deaths By State Payments: Accounting for Service- Job Holding: Implications for Health Level Propensity Scores to Reduce Care Access and Outcomes Diana Naranjo, University of Service-Level Selection Washington, #A-82 Min Jee Lee, University of South Implementing and Sustaining Canada Parrish, University of Carolina, #A-74 Complex Interventions: Stakeholder Washington, #A-89 Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Perspectives on the Washington State U.S. Outpatient Maternal Healthcare Colonoscopy Use Persisted Despite Innovation Models Test Award Processes By Patient Race Cost-Sharing Reduction Among Medicare Beneficiaries Helen Newton, Dartmouth Institute Laura Prater, The Ohio State for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, University, #A-90 Meng Li, University of Washington, #A-83 Advance Care Planning Documentation #A-75 Laying the Ground for DSRIP: The in the Electronic Health Record Among Do Cancer Treatments Have Option Relationship between Behavioral Patients at the End of Life Value? Real-World Evidence from Health Treatment Capacity and Need Metastatic Melanoma in NY Amanda Raffenaud, Adventist University of Health Sciences, #A-91 Sara Long, Brown University, #A-76 Manka Nkimbeng, Johns Hopkins Work-Family Conflict: A Comparative The Relationship between Length of University, #A-84 Analysis of Staff, Managerial and Nursing Home to Emergency Department Differences in the Prevalence of Lower Executive Nurses Transfer Correspondence and Emergency and Upper Extremity Limitations Among Department Length of Stay Foreign and Native-Born Older Blacks in Mya Roberson, University of North the United States: Analysis of 2010- Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-92 William Patrick Luan, Uniformed 2014 National Health Interview Survey. Characterizing Reasons for Delaying Services University of the Health Medical Care in Adult Cancer Survivors Sciences, #A-77 Eunjeong Noh, University of By Geographic Region Using the 2014 Using Compulsory Relocation to Minnesota, #A-85 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Understand Drivers of Geographic A Typology of Hospitals Based on System Variation of Healthcare Utilization in Partnerships for Population Health the U.S. Military Management Samantha Ross, Oregon State University, #A-93 Siyu Ma, Brandeis University, #A-78 Cross-System Service Receipt in The Impact of Medicare Part D Drug Relation to Health Service Needs Coverage on Prescription Drug and Education Outcomes for Young Expenditure Among Cancer Patients in Children with Special Health Care 2014 Needs

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Savitha Sangameswaran, University Andrew Shooshtari, Penn State Aluem Tark, Columbia University, of Washington, #A-94 University, #A-103 #A-110 Social Support Needs of Parents of Differences in Care Spending Among Integration of Infection Management Overweight and Obese Adolescents Cancer Patients with Chemotherapy in Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Use By Site of Care in Medicare Treatments (POLST) Samuel Savitz, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-95 L. Morgan Snell, Virginia Alberta Tran, University of North Evaluation of Patient-Clinician Commonwealth University, #A-104 Carolina, #A-111 Communing during Decision Making Associations between Mental Health, Providing Staff for Care Delivery: for Stable Angina Financial Stress, and Attempts to Quit Supplemental Registered Nurse Use Conventional Cigarette Use: Evidence and Its Impacts Sayeeda Amber Sayed, University of from the 2013-2016 National Health Calgary, #A-96 Interview Survey (NHIS) Eline van den Broek, University of Cervical Cancer Screening Among Colorado, Anschutz Medical campus, Young Women in Alberta, Canada: A Ryan Sterling, University of #A-112 Case of over Screening? Washington, #A-105 #Healthinsurance: Using Text Mining to Consumer-Driven Telehealth: What Identify Sentiments Regarding Health Nicole Schwalbe, University of Can We Learn from Early Adopter Insurance and Health Care Providers Washington, #A-97 Organizations of Virtual Care Clinics? and the Intention to Switch SESSION A POSTER Medicaid Integrated Purchasing for Physical and Behavioral Health: Omolola Taiwo, University of Shira Winter, University of California, Effects of Payment Reform on Provider Maryland, #A-106 San Francisco, #A-114 Organizations The Effectiveness of a Comprehensive Nurse Practitioner Contribution in Sexual Violence Education and Pediatric Specialty Care Roya Sherafat Kazemzadeh, Prevention Program for Greek Affiliated Brandeis University, #A-98 College Students Shannon Wu, Johns Hopkins Investigating Disparities in Surgical University, #A-115 Intervention for Diabetic Patients Kelly Tan, University of North Carolina Medicare Advantage and Nursing with Morbid Obesity Using National at Chapel Hill, #A-107 and #A-108 Facility Quality Inpatient Sample Dataset Depressive Symptoms Among Young Adults with Diabetes in a U.S. Annie Yang, Rutgers, The State Morgan Shields, Brandeis University, Population-Based Sample University of New Jersey, #A-116 #A-100, #A-101, and #A-102 and Critical Choices: What Information Consumers’ Past Experiences of Positive and Negative Affect and Do Patients Want When Selecting a Inpatient Psychiatry and Opinions Health in Informal Cancer Caregivers Hospital for Cancer Surgery? about Peers As Staff and Wei Ling Katherine Tan, University of Irina Zainullina, University of Quality of Inpatient Psychiatric Care: Washington, #A-109 Minnesota, #A-117 and #A-118 The Relationship Among CMS’ Quality A Natural Language Processing Employer-Provided Supplemental Measures, Complaints, and Ownership System to Identify Lumbar Spine Health Insurance and the Health Care and Imaging Findings Related to Low Back Consumption in Russia Self-Injurious Behavior Among Adults Pain from Radiology Reports and with and without Autism Spectrum Mental Health Consequences of Job- Disorder: Comparing Differences in Loss and Unemployment Duration Hospital Admissions, Lengths of Stay, and Costs

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Child and Family Karen Finnegan, Institute for Henry Lee, Stanford University, #A-136 Community Health, #A-127 Hospital Costs in the First Year of Life Health Impact of Medical Scribes on for Preterm Infants and the Contribution Productivity, Face-to-Face Time and of Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia Ephrem Abebe, Johns Hopkins Patient Comfort with Scribes in Primary University, #A-119 Care Ashley Leech, Tufts Medical Center, Exploring Constraints to Family #A-137 Caregivers Managing Medications for Anuj Gangopadhyaya, Urban Institute, Family and Caregiver Health-Related Children with Medical Complexity #A-128 Quality of Life from Cancer: A

The Effect of the Children’s Health Systematic Review of the Literature Salva Balbale, Northwestern University, Insurance Program on Teen #A-120 Contraception Use Jesse Lichstein, Health Resources Integration of Young Adults with IBD and Services Administration, Maternal into Adult-Centered Care: Stakeholder Anthony Goudie, Arkansas Center for and Child Health Bureau, #A-138 and Perspectives Health Improvement, #A-129 #A-139

Early Life Infection and NOT Antibiotics Access to the Medical Home Among Justin Blackburn, University of Is a Predictor of Childhood Obesity Children with and without Special Alabama at Birmingham, #A-121 Health Care Needs An Assessment of Quality of Care Joanna Guo, University of California, and for Children with Mental Health San Francisco, #A-130 Children with Genetic Conditions in the Hospitalizations Ten-Year Trends in Pediatric Patients United States: Estimates from the 2016

with Traumatic Brain Injury: An National Survey of Children’s Health Mersine Bryan, University of Evaluation of Emergency Department Washington, #A-122 and Hospital Revisits and Readmissions, Biing-Hwan Lin, Economic Research Association between Vaccination Status 2005-2014 Service-USDA, #A-140 and Resource Utilization during ED and New School Food Standards Inpatient Visits for Acute Respiratory Shivani Gupta, Saint Louis University, Substantially Increase Whole Grain Illnesses #A-131 Consumption Among School-Aged

Late Preterm Birth Beyond the Perinatal Children Timothy Callaghan, Texas A&M Period: Hospital Cost? University, #A-123 Frances Lynch, Kaiser Permanente, Parents As Policy Entrepreneurs: Autism Laura Henkhaus, University of #A-141 Mandates and Political Mobilization Southern California, #A-132 Characterizing Foster Youth and

Child Sexual Abuse and Adult Health Their Healthcare Needs in Oregon’s Katy Ellis Hilts, Indiana University, Care Access Community Health Centers #A-124

Evaluating Environmental Tobacco Carolina Herrera, Boston University, Michael McManus, Boston Children’s Smoke Exposure Among Persistent #A-133 Hospital and Harvard University, #A-142 Pediatric Asthma Patients Using Health Non-Urgent Teen & Young Adult ED Visualizing Differences in Pediatric and Information Exchange Visits after the ACA: Social Determinants Adult Hospital Care Systems

of Health or Access Issues? Ngozi Enelamah, Boston College, George Miller, Altarum, #A-143 and #A-125 Mariam Kayle, Northwestern University, #A-144 Structural and Family Factors and the #A-134 Appropriateness of Neonatal Care in a Association between Food Insecurity, Health Care Utilization during Transition Medicaid Managed Care Population the Plastic Brain and Child Wellbeing to Adult Care in Sickle Cell Disease and

Modeling Economic Impacts of Stephanie Ettinger de Cuba, Boston Gwen Lapham, Kaiser Permanente Childhood Lead Remediation Policies University, #A-126 Washington Health Research Institute, Health Care Hardships and Associations #A-135 with Health and Food Insecurity Among Exploring Women’s Use of Cannabis Families with Young Children during Pregnancy

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Anita Morris, Boston Medical Center, Erin Shigekawa, California Health Adam Atherly, Colorado School of #A-145 Benefits Review Program,#A-153 Public Health, #A-162 Using Failure Modes and Effects Exploring a Universal Lead Screening Factors Predicting Enrollment in the Analysis to Examine Implementation Requirement: A California Case Study Non-Group Market on and Off the Barriers to Common Workflows in Exchange Integrated Pediatric Care Vijaya Vemulakonda, University of Colorado, #A-156 and #A-157 Aaron Baum, Icahn School of Medicine Anna Olczyk, University Hospitals, Parent and Surgeon Perspectives on at Mount Sinai, #A-163 #A-146 Their Roles in Treatment Decisions for Lasting Population Health Impacts of Off-Label Use of Common Behavioral/ Infants with High-Grade Hydronephrosis a Transient Health Care Supply Shock: Mental Health (BMH) Medications in and Quasi-Experimental Evidence from a Children and Young Adults in New York Physician-Reported Factors in Natural Disaster State (NYS) Medicaid Treatment Decisions for Infants with Suspected Ureteropelvic Junction Shari Bolen, Case Western Reserve Sarika Parasuraman, U.S. Health Obstruction University, #A-164 Resources and Services Administration, A Statewide Hypertension Quality Maternal and Child Health Bureau, #A-147 Traci Yates, Atrium Health, #A-158 Improvement Project in Primary Care Health Care Utilization and Unmet Need Patient, Parent, and Provider Clinics Perceptions of Shared Decision-Making SESSION A

Among Youth with Special Health Care POSTER Needs Tools for Pediatric Nephrotic Syndrome Angel Bourgoin, John Snow, Inc., #A-165 Rebecca Peters, Urban Institute, Joseph Zickafoose, Mathematica The Benefits Divide: Workers at Lower- #A-148 Policy Research, #A-159 Wage Firms and Employer-Sponsored Provider Continuity during Maternity Parent Partners: A Novel Peer-Support Insurance (ESI) in Massachusetts Care and the Role of Enhanced Prenatal Intervention for the Caregivers of Care Programs Children Hospitalized for Behavioral Keith Branham, Office of the Assistant Health Conditions Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Ciaran Phibbs, Center for Innovation #A-166 to Implementation (Ci2i), Department of Opioid Use Disorder and Treatment in Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto, #A-149 Coverage, Access, and the Health Insurance Exchange Partitioning Neonatal Costs and Mortality By Gestational Age and Medicaid Kathleen Call, State Health Access Congenital Anomalies Ayoola Adigun, University of Pittsburgh, Data Assistance Center, #A-167 #A-160 The Ups and Down of Health Insurance Kristin Ray, University of Pittsburgh, Use of Urgent Care Centers and Coverage in One State: Health Insurance #A-150 and #A-151 Emergency Department Visits for Non- Coverage in Minnesota, 2013 to 2017 Quality of Care for Acute Respiratory Urgent Health Conditions: An Analysis Infections during Direct-to-Consumer of Beneficiaries from a Managed Care Timothy Callaghan, Texas A&M Telemedicine Visits By Children Organization University, #A-168 and The Role of Community Health Workers Trends in Visits By Children to Primary Andrew Admon, University of Michigan, in Hispanic Health Access in Texas Care Physicians, 2008-2015 #A-161 The Effects of Medicaid Expansion Pinyao Rui, National Center for Health on Severe Exacerbation Rates of Statistics, #A-152 Ambulatory Care Sensitive Chronic Characteristics of Prenatal Visits Made Conditions to Family Medicine and Obstetrics/ Gynecology Physician Practices, By Metropolitan Status: Findings from the 2008-2015 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey

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Evan Carey, Eastern Colorado Health Stephen Flaherty, Northeastern Mark Gritz, University of Colorado, Care System, #A-169 University, #A-177 #A-185 Identifying Gaps in the VA Community Trends in Diagnostic Imaging for Assessment of Targeted Rate Increase Care Network By Leveraging Commercially Insured Massachusetts By Colorado Medicaid for Ambulatory Authorization Success Data and Residents 2009-2013 Surgery Center Physician Services and Bayesian Spatial Methods Vision Services Carrie Fry, Harvard University, #A-178 Qi Chen, Center for Healthcare Medicaid Expansion and Health Jenny Guadamuz, University of Illinois Organization and Implementation Outcomes for Individuals with at Chicago, #A-186 Research, #A-170 Depression Availability of Pharmacies Participating The Efficient Use of Scheduler in the 340b Drug Pricing Program, 2016 Resources May Improve Access to Care: Kimberley Geissler, University of Lessons Learned from the Veterans Massachusetts, #A-179 Munira Gunja, The Commonwealth Health Administration (VA) Changes in Medicaid Acceptance By Fund, #A-187 and #A-188 Substance Use Treatment Facilities from Health Care Affordability in the Kathryn Clark, Harvard University, 2000 to 2016 Individual and Employer Markets: #A-171 Findings from the Commonwealth Health Reform and Early Changes in Susan Goold, University of Michigan, Fund Health Care Affordability Tracking Health Insurance Coverage Under the #A-180 Survey, 2014-2016 Trump Administration Primary Care, Health Promotion and and Disease Prevention in Michigan’s Women’s Experiences in the ACA Megan Cole, Boston University, #A-172 Medicaid Expansion Marketplaces and Medicaid: Findings The Role of Health Insurance in Access from the Commonwealth Fund to Care for Community Health Center Sarah Gordon, Brown University, Affordable Care Act Tracking Survey, Patients Post-ACA #A-181 March-June 2017 Who’s Dropping out of Coverage? Risk Julia Costich, University of Kentucky, Factors for Early Disenrollment from an Adrianne Haggins, University of #A-173 Affordable Care Act Marketplace Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy Impact of Medicaid Expansion Reflected and Innovation, #A-189 in State Trauma Registry Data April Grady, Manatt Health Strategies, Michigan Medicaid Expansion Enrollees: #A-182 Primary Care Experiences and Antoine El Khoury, Janssen Scientific Bridging the Medicaid Data Gap: How Emergency Department Use Affairs, LLC, #A-174 Manatt Health Leveraged Data to Is a Gap in Medicaid Coverage Provide State-Specific Medicaid Reform Alyssa Hartsell, Vizient, #A-190 Associated with Higher Healthcare Insights Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Resource Utilization and Worse Quality Elective Inpatient Surgery in the Vizient of Care in Patients with Schizophrenia? Janessa Graves, Washington State Clinical Database University, Spokane, #A-183 Ethan Evans, Center for Health Policy Geographic Disparities in Access Heather Holderness, Oregon Health & and Research, #A-175 to Pharmacy Services for Medicaid Science University, #A-191 All-Hands-on-Deck: Lessons from Enrollees Initial Source of Outpatient Services Enrollment Assistance in California after Implementation of the Affordable Margaret Greenwood-Ericksen, Care Act Medicaid Expansion in Oregon Ezra Fishman, HealthCore, Inc., #A-176 University of Michigan, #A-184 Effect of Health Homes on Ambulatory Trends in Emergency Department Mara Hollander, University of Care Sensitive Admissions and Costs in Utilization By Rural and Urban Pittsburgh, #A-192 Two States Populations in the United States Emergency Department and Outpatient Utilization Among the Medicaid Expansion Population in Pennsylvania

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Peter Huckfeldt, University of Siying Liu, IMPAQ International, LLC, Jennifer Mosst, Los Angeles County Minnesota, #A-193 #A-202 Department of Public Health, #A-210 Health Care Utilization, Costs, and Patient Cost-Sharing and Healthcare Building Sustainable Payment Models Quality in Minnesota’s Medicaid Utilization: Evidence from the ACA’s for Coverage of the National Diabetes Accountable Care Organization Program Medicare Preventive Benefits Prevention Program in Los Angeles County Zeynal Karaca, Agency for Healthcare Melissa Lurie, New York State Research and Quality, #A-194 Department of Health, #A-203 Aimee Moulin, University of California, Medicaid Accountable Care Identifying Subgroups of Adult High- Davis, #A-211 Organizations and Childbirth Outcomes Utilizers Among Medicaid Members Changing Patterns of Emergency in New York State Using Latent Class Department Use and Payer Mix in Laura Keohane, Vanderbilt University, Analysis California #A-195 Geographic Variation in Medicaid Wei Lyu, University of Iowa, #A-204 David Muhlestein, Leavitt Partners, Participation Among Low-Income Differences in the Impact of the #A-212 Medicare Beneficiaries Affordable Care Act on Access to Cancer Nationally, Individual and Group Market Screening By Health Provider Supply Costs Increasingly Similar Ashley Kranz, RAND, #A-196 and #A-197 Elham Mahmoudi, University of Daniel Nelson, University of Michigan, SESSION A POSTER Impact of Care Management on the Michigan, #A-205 #A-213 Reduction of Infant Mortality Among Gaining Medicaid Coverage during ACA Do Healthy Behavior Incentive Programs Ohio Medicaid Beneficiaries Implementation: Effects on Access to in Medicaid Improve Health? and Care and Preventive Services Unmet Specialty Care Needs Among Allison Norful, Columbia University, Health Center Patients: Documenting Sean McClellan, Abt Associates, #A-214 Barriers and Strategies #A-206 The Impact of Nurse Practitioner and Acceptance of New Clients By Mental Physician Assistant Workforce Supply on Annie Larson, Oregon State University, Health Clinicians in Massachusetts: Chronic Disease-Related ED Visits and #A-198 Findings from a State-Wide in-Patient Hospitalizations of Medicaid Effect of Rurality on Preventive Health Representative Survey Beneficiaries in New York State Service Utilization Among New Medicaid Enrollees in Oregon Stacey McMorrow, Urban Institute, Patrick O’Mahen, VA HSR&D Center #A-207 for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness, Michael Laxy, Centers for Disease Proximity to Health Centers and Health and Safety, #A-216 Control and Prevention, #A-199 Care Access, Use and Affordability Effects of Medicaid Expansion on The Impact of Insurance Status on Among Low-Income Adults VA Dual-Enrollment and Emergency Quality of Diabetes Care in the United Department Use States Taylor Melanson, Emory University, #A-208 Hyesung Oh, MITRE, #A-215 Phuc Le, Cleveland Clinic, #A-200 Medicaid Expansion and Nephrology Medicaid Expansion and Trends in Increase in Demand for Emergency Care Among Incident ESRD Patients Financial Security for Adults Department Visits Among Lower Income People Following Medicaid Expansion Martha Meyer, University of Colorado, Areen Omary, University of Missouri, #A-209 #A-217 Zachary Levinson, University of Understanding the Effect of Care Multinomial Logistic Regression Model Michigan, Ann Arbor, #A-201 Coordination in a Medicaid Program to for Predicting Disparities in Health Impact of Insurance Coverage for in- Reduce 30-Day Hospital Readmission Coverage Among Psychiatric Inpatients Vitro Fertilization on Access to Advanced Fertility Care

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IWen Pan, Baylor College of Medicine, Prevalence and Correlates of Pharmacy and #A-218 Closures in the United States, 2009- Reducing Disparities through Medicaid Insurance Instability and Healthcare 2015 Enrollment Among Previously Uninsured Utilization for Children with Refractory Americans - United States, 2008-2014 Epilepsy Sara Redd, Emory University, #A-228 Medicaid Family Planning Expansions: Jeral Self, Tulane University, #A-237 Rajib Paul, University of North Carolina The Effect of State Plan Amendments on Can Health Savings Accounts Work at Charlotte, #A-219 and #A-220 Postpartum Contraceptive Use in a Medicaid Expansion Population? A Longitudinal Cohort Study of Foster Evaluation of the Arkansas Experience Youth in the Midwest: Timeliness of Dylan Roby, University of Maryland, Biannual Preventive Dental Screenings #A-229 and #A-230 Veri Seo, Massachusetts General and Insurance Type and Access to Health Care Hospital, #A-238 Identifying Locations of Limited Access Providers and Appointments Under the Access to Care Among Medicaid and to Diabetes Self-Management Education Affordable Care Act Uninsured Patients in Community Health Centers Using Spatial Cluster Analysis and Centers Patient Access to Providers before and Jeffrey Pearson, Arbor Research after the Affordable Care Act’s Temporary Paul Shafer, University of North Collaborative for Health, #A-221 Medicaid Primary Care Fee Increase Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-239 and Effects of the Affordable Care Act and #A-240 Medicaid Expansion on Incident End- Mary Rogers, University of Michigan, How Did Affordable Care Act Exchanges Stage Renal Disease Patients #A-231 Affect Individuals’ Willingness to Quit Interruptions in Commercial Health Their Jobs? Rebecca Peters, Urban Institute, Insurance in Working Age Adults with and #A-222 Type 1 Diabetes in the United States The Trump Effect: Post-Inauguration Midwifery and Birth Center Care Under Changes in Marketplace Enrollment State Medicaid Programs Sonali Saluja, The Gehr Center for Health Systems Science, #A-232 Sundar Shrestha, Centers for Disease Stephen Pitts, Emory University, Barriers to Healthcare after the Control and Prevention, #A-241 #A-223 Affordable Care Act – a Qualitative Medical Expenditures Associated The Emergency Department As Setting Study of Los Angeles Safety Net with Diabetes Among Adult Medicaid for Female Pelvic Examination Patients’ Experiences with Insurance Enrollees in Eight U.S. States and Healthcare Thalia Porteny, Harvard University, Anna Sommers, RTI International, #A-224 George Sayre, Department of Veterans #A-242 Changes in Health Insurance and Affairs, #A-233 Health Professional Capacity Adjustment Access to Care Among Documented and Implementing My VA Access: A View to Meet Increased Health Services Undocumented Immigrants in California from the Field Demands in Ohio Post-ACA Medicaid Under the Affordable Care Act Expansion George Sayre, Department of Veterans Austin Porter, University of Arkansas Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-234 Deniz Soyer, DC Department of Health for Medical Sciences, #A-225 Virtual Integrated Multisite PACT Team Care Finance, #A-243 Analyzing the Impact of the ACA and (V-IMPACT): Evaluation of a Novel Integrating Medicaid Claims and Private Option on Chronic Disease- Method of Providing Primary Care in the Enrollment Data to Identify HIV Cases Related Admissions VHA Missing from Surveillance Data in the District of Columbia Dima Qato, University of Illinois, Joel Segel, Penn State University, #A-226 and #A-227 #A-235 and #A-236 Donna Spencer, The Lewin Group, Pharmacy Closures and Adherence to Changing Dynamics of Health Insurance #A-244 Cardiovascular Medications Among and Utilization for Individuals Diagnosed Post-ACA Health Care Coverage and Older Adults in the United States with Cancer: Effects of the Affordable Access Among Children, Adolescents, and Care Act and Young Adults

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Rachel Springer, Oregon Health & Leif Wellington Haase, LWH Jinoos Yazdany, University of Science University, #A-245 Consulting, #A-253 California, San Francisco, #A-261 Opioid Medication Expenditures in Fixing Individual Health Insurance The Biosimilar Paradox: Higher out-of- Oregon Medicaid Enrollees after the Markets: Lessons from California Pocket Costs for Rheumatoid Arthritis Affordable Care Act Expansion Treatment in Medicare Part D Stephanie Wheeler, University of North Kathleen Thomas, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-254 Zhiqiu Ye, University of Rochester, #A-262 Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-246 Comparative Cost Effectiveness of Coaching and Making PCP Follow-up State Marketplace Insurance Plan Mailed Reminders with and without Appointments in the ED Correspond to 40 Features and Family- and Plan-Paid Fecal Immunochemical Tests (FIT) in Percentage Point Reduction in 30-Day ED Expenditures for Children with Mental the Medicaid Population: A Pragmatic Revisit Rates Health Conditions Randomized Controlled Trial Dahai Yue, University of California, Los Justin Timbie, RAND, #A-247 Gus White, University of Tennessee, Angeles, #A-263 Strategies to Improve Primary Care/ Knoxville, #A-255 Effects of Medicaid Expansion on Patients Specialty Service Integration in US The Medicaid Expansion: Modeling of with Diabetes Community Health Centers Important Factors in State Decision Making Naomi Zewde, Columbia University, Jennifer Tsui, Rutgers, The State #A-264 SESSION A POSTER University of New Jersey, #A-248 Andrew Wilcock, Harvard University, The Antipoverty Effects of Medicaid are The Effects of Primary Care Utilization #A-256 Growing with State Program Expansions on Total Cost of Care Among Medicaid The Effect of the ACA Insurance Cancer Patients Expansions on the Experiences Mark Zocchi, Brandeis University, #A-265 of Previously Insured Medicare Three-Year Effect of the Affordable Care Peter Veazie, University of Rochester, Beneficiaries Act’s Medicaid Expansion on Emergency #A-249 Department Visits and Payer Mix Understanding How Psychosocial Michelle Wilson, Minnesota Variables Are Associated with Provider Department of Health, Health Economics Visits Program, #A-257 Disparities and Health Variation in Affordability of Employer Andrew Wang, Northwestern Sponsored Coverage: A Simulation Equity University, #A-250 Study in Minnesota Leslie Adams, University of North Review of the Effects of Health Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-266 Insurance and Social Determinants on Vanisha Wilson, , Stakeholders Perceptions of Black Health, Mortality, and Care Utilization #A-258 Men’s Depression and Health Care Effect of Medicaid Expansion on the Engagement: A Concept Mapping France Weaver, Xavier University, Utilization of Reproductive Health Approach #A-251 Services Effect of State Medicaid Generosity with Kathryn Azevedo, Department of Home and Community-Based Services Jacqueline Wiltshire, University of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto, #A-267 and on Healthcare Expenditures: Do the South Florida, #A-259 #A-268 Strategies Adopted By States Matter? Trends and Differences in Mental Health Piloting STAIR Delivered Via Telehealth Symptoms By Ability to Afford Care and for Rural Women Veterans Who John Wedeles, DC Department of Insurance Status Have Experienced Sexual Assault: Health Care Finance, #A-252 Implications for Reducing Health Building Stronger Provider-Patient Wendy Xu, Ohio State University, #A-260 Disparities Relationships through a Customized The High Financial Burden from out-of- and Attribution Methodology Pocket Costs Under the Affordable Care Act

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The Career Development Award Alejandra Casillas, University of Disparities in Cervical and Colorectal Enhancements Initiative (CDAei): California, Los Angeles, #A-276 Cancer Screening Rates in HRSA- Working to Increase Diversity in the VA’s Tracking a “Warning Sign” for Cognitive Funded Community Health Centers Scientific Workforce Decline in the United States: Racial/ Ethnic Variation in Self-Reported Sukyung Chung, Palo Alto Medical Nasim Baghban Ferdows, Brown Memory Problems Among Middle-Aged Foundation Research Institute, #A-285 University, #A-269 and Older Adults in the National Health Racial Disparities in Patient’s Availability of Care and the Rural-Urban and Examination Survey (NHANES), Perspectives on Shared Decision Disparities in Mortality Rate 1999 to 2014 Making in Medication Treatment

Samuel Baxter, University of North Tongtan Chantarat, University of Robin Cohen, National Center for Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-270 Minnesota, #A-300 Health Statistics, #A-286 Psychosocial Correlates of Frequent #Tinyblacklivesmatter: Exploring the Urban Vs Rural: A Look at Disparities in Emergency Room Use Among Black Men Association between Structural Racism Health Care Access and Utilization Using and Inequities in Preterm Birth in Data from the National Health Interview Caryn Bell, University of Maryland, Minnesota Survey #A-271 Health and Health-Related Resources in Karen Chaves, Agency For Healthcare Megan Cole, Boston University, #A-287 Suburban Contexts: The Role of Changing Research and Quality, #A-279 Disparities in Receipt of Preventive Demographics and Racial Segregation Disparities in the Quality of Prenatal and Services for Insured and Uninsured Perinatal Care for Women Living in Rural Community Health Center Patients Sarah Benatar, Urban Institute, #A-272 U.S. Areas Post-ACA Gestational Diabetes: Enhanced Prenatal Care May Reduce Incidence for Strong Jessica Chen, Department of Veterans Bradley Corallo, National Association of Start Participants Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-280 Community Health Centers, #A-288 Understanding Variation in Availability Telehealth Use Among Community Julia Berenson, Columbia University, and Use of Minimally Invasive Health Centers, 2016 #A-273 Hysterectomy: A Qualitative Study Identifying Policy Levers and Opportunities of Department of Veterans Affairs Samuel Cykert, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Action across States to Achieve Health Gynecologists for Health Services Research, #A-289 Equity A Multi-Faceted Intervention to Reduce Xiao Chen, University of California, Los Black-White Disparities in the Treatment Jane Bolin, Texas A&M University, #A-274 Angeles, #A-281 of Early Stage Lung Cancer: Final Diabetes in Rural America: Diabetes The Impact of HRSA-Funded Health Results. Mortality in Rural South a Significant Centers in Health Care Delivery in Rural Cause for Concern Communities Kemi Doll, University of Washington, #A-290 Kyle Campbell, HSAG, #A-275 Deena Chisolm, The Ohio State Racial Disparities in Endometrial Performance of Social Risk Factors University, #A-282 Cancer: Postmenopausal Bleeding in Risk Adjustment of an Inpatient Teen Literacy in Transition: Are Racial Recognition and Evaluation Prior to Psychiatric Facility Readmission Measure Disparities in Transition Care Explained Diagnosis By Youth Health Literacy? Ruth Carlos, University of Michigan, Michelle Doose, Rutgers, The State #A-277 and #A-278 Keri Christensen, National Committee University of New Jersey, #A-291 Breast Cancer Screening Prevalence for Quality Assurance (NCQA), #A-283 Patient Factors That Contribute to Racial Among Eligible Women with Different Patients Report Unmet Social Need Even Disparities in Early-Stage Breast Cancer BMI in Neighborhoods with Low Social Risk Treatment and Pattern of Colon Cancer Screening Emmeline Chuang, University of Usage Among Sexual Minorities California, Los Angeles, #A-284 Organizational Factors Associated with

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Kacie Dragan, New York University, Elizabeth Howell, The Mount Sinai Innovation Accelerator Program, #A-292 Medical Center, #A-302 Promoting Community Integration Gentrification, Mobility, and Health Impact of Maternal Race and Ethnicity on through Long-Term Services and Severe Maternal Morbidity and Postpartum Supports Elizabeth Durkin, University of Readmissions in New York City Hospitals Chicago, #A-293 Grace Kollannoor Samuel, Minnesota Implementation of Health Equity M. Courtney Hughes, Relias Institute, Department of Human Services, #A-310 Interventions: Influence of External #A-303 Risk of Diabetes Related Long-Term Organizational Context Health Behaviors and Related Complications Among the Minnesota Disparities of Insured Adults with a Health Care Program Beneficiaries with Ruth Etzioni, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Health Care Provider in the United Type 2 Diabetes Research Center, #A-294 States, 2015—2016 Should Black Men be Screened for J. Wyatt Koma, NORC at the University Prostate Cancer More Intensively Than Sarah Humble, Washington University, of Chicago, #A-311 the General Population? #A-304 Sexual Orientation Disparities in HIV Health Insurance for Asian Americans, Testing Among White, Black, Latina/o, Ellen Francis, Clemson University, #A-295 Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders Asian, and Native Young Adult U.S. Impact of Prior Insurance on Healthcare Under the Affordable Care Act: Coverage Women and Men Gains and Narrowing of Disparities SESSION A

Utilization Among the Long-Term POSTER Uninsured Cyrus Kosar, Brown University, #A-312 Teresa Janevic, The Mount Sinai Residents with Higher Expected Length Gilbert Gonzales, Vanderbilt University, Medical Center, #A-305 of Stay in the Nursing Home Are Less #A-296 Racial-Ethnic Disparities in Very Preterm Likely to Receive High-Quality Post- Disparities & Health Equity in Health Infant Morbidity Are Larger Than Acute Care Policy Training Programs Previously Reported Keren Lehavot, Department of Veterans Nancy Gordon, Kaiser Permanente Molly Jarman, Johns Hopkins Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-313 Division of Research, #A-297 University, #A-306 Race and Sexual Orientation Disparities Race/Ethnic Disparities in Health and Factors Mediating Demographic in Mental Health, Discrimination, and Social Determinants of Health in a Non- Determinants of Injury Mortality Social Support Among Women Veterans Safety Net Population Ravishankar Jayadevappa, University Corinne Lewis, The Commonwealth Lauren Goss, University of Alabama at of Pennsylvania, #A-307 Fund, #A-314 Birmingham, #A-298 Association between Continuity of In Their Own Words: Barriers and Modifiable Factors That Improve Health Care and Racial and Ethnic Disparity in Solutions to Achieving High-Quality Care Equity with ERAS Prostate Cancer Care for Low-Income Patients

Brandn Green, JG Research & Audrey Jones, Department of Veterans Chien-Ching Li, Rush University, Evaluation, #A-299 Affairs, Salt Lake City, #A-308 #A-315 Adjusting for County-Level Risk of Tailoring Care Reduces Differences Racial Disparities in Qualifications for Substance Use Related Hospitalization in Healthcare Experiences between Low-Dose Computed Tomography Lung in a Comprehensive Planning Homeless and Non-Homeless Patients Cancer Screening: Results from Health Framework for Substance Abuse Care in the Veterans Health Administration and Retirement Study Systems Yin Li, University of Florida, #A-316 Sara Heinert, University of Illinois at Olivia Jung, Abt Associates, Inc., Racial and Ethnic Differences in Chicago, #A-301 #A-309 Surgical Outcomes The Champions Network: Training Facilitating Partnerships between Chicago High School Students As Health Health and Housing State Agencies: Alyson Littman, Department of Advocates to Improve Health Equity Results of an Evaluation of the Medicaid Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-317

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Variation in Perceived Access to John McHugh, Columbia University, Judy Ng, National Committee for Care Among Rural Veterans and #A-326 Quality Assurance (NCQA), #A-335 Sociodemographic, Health, and Higher Concentration of Referrals from Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Mental Geographic Correlates of Access Hospital in Skilled Nursing Facility Health Among Diverse Groups of Associated with Lower Risk Patients at Medicare Advantage Beneficiaries Anouk Lloren, Yale University, Center Admission for Outcomes Research and Evaluation Weiwen Ng, University of Minnesota, (CORE), #A-318 and #A-319 Miquell Miller, Stanford University, #A-336 Measuring Disparities in Outcomes By #A-327 Racial Disparities in Quality of Life Social Risk Factors within Hospitals Assessment of Cultural Competency in Among Nursing Facility Residents: and Surgical Professionals and Trainees: A Decomposing the Roles of Individual The Influence of Social Risk Factors on Systematic Review and Facility Characteristics in Explaining Payments Following Elective Total Hip the Disparity and/or Knee Arthroplasty Sarah Miner, New York University, #A-328 and #A-329 Christina Nguyen, Harvard University, Maichou Lor, Columbia University, Detecting Disparities in Medication #A-337 #A-320 Management with Low English Comparison of Health Care Delivery Color-Encoding Visualizations As a Tool Proficiency Home Health Patients Systems in Lower- and Higher-Income to Assist a Non-Literate Population and Communities Complete Health Surveys Understanding and Responding to Health Disparities in Medication Literacy Kevin Nguyen, Brown University, #A-338 Chenjuan Ma, New York University, for Low English Proficient Home Health Social Risk Factors and Ambulatory Care- #A-321 Patients Sensitive Hospitalizations in Nonelderly Exploring Home Healthcare Services Medicare Beneficiaries Delivery Patterns in English and Non- Alisha Monnette, Tulane University, English Speaking Patients with Dementia #A-330 Oanh Nguyen, UT Southwestern Medical Post-ACA Racial Disparity of Eye Exams Center, #A-339 Ammarah Mahmud, RAND, #A-322 Among the U.S. Non-Institutionalized Scheduled Vs. Emergency-Only Dialysis in Examining Health Centers’ Integration Population with Diabetes: 2014 – 2015 Undocumented Immigrants with End- with Social Service Organizations and Its Stage Renal Disease: A Natural Experiment Association with Quality of Care Christina Mrukowicz, Maricopa County Department of Public Health, #A-331 Priscilla Novak, AHRQ, #A-340 Cassondra Marshall, Kaiser Permanente Emergency Department Use in Maricopa Racial and Ethnic Differences in Number Northern California, #A-323 County Suggests Racial and Ethnic of Opioid Scripts Filled Among People Improving Thiazide Diuretic Dosing Among Disparities in Access to Primary Care with and without Serious Psychological Blacks Using an Embedded Query Tool: Distress, 2015 The Influence of Facility-Level Factors on a Micheal Mugerwa, Aga Khan Health Health System Intervention Services, Tanzania, #A-332 Samuel Opoku, Georgia Southern Community Health Worker Coverage for University, #A-341 Olive Mbah, University of North Maternal and Newborn Health Services Association between Race and Gender Carolina, #A-324 in Mwanza, Tanzania Concordance in the Patient-Provider The Affordable Care Act and Disparities Relationship and out of Pocket Costs for in Colorectal Cancer Screening Among Kimberly Narain, University of Office-Based Visits Individuals 50 – 64 Years Old California, Los Angeles, #A-334 Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Specialty Yolanda McDonald, Vanderbilt Behavioral Healthcare Treatment University, #A-325 Patterns and Expenditures Among Environmental Justice: Drinking Water Commercially Insured Patients in Violations in the United States, 2011- Managed Behavioral Healthcare Plans 2015

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Gezzer Ortega, Howard University, Maricruz Rivera-Hernandez, Brown Aaron Spaulding, Mayo Clinic, #A-359 #A-342 and #A-343 University, #A-350 and #A-351 Disparities in the Routes of National Trends in Socioeconomic Racial and Ethnic Disparities in 30-Day Hysterectomy for Endometrial Cancer in Disparities of Hernia Presentation at Readmission Rates for Acute Myocardial Florida Emergency Departments Infraction, Heart Failure, and Pneumonia and in Medicare Advantage and Medicare Lisa Spees, Cecil B. Sheps Center for The Impact of Insurance on Emergency Fee-for-Service Health Services Research, #A-360 Department Visits for Children with and Distance to Care Differentially Umbilical Hernias Racial Differences in Rates and Influences Initiation of Treatment Among Nursing Home Quality Among Medicare Cervical Cancer Patients in Rural and IWen Pan, Baylor College of Medicine, Residents Newly Admitted to Nursing Urban North Carolina #A-344 Homes with Alzheimer’s Disease and Disparities in Diagnostic Workup and Related Dementias Sivan Spitzer-Shohat, Bar-Ilan Surgical Treatment Among Children with University, #A-361 Refractory Epilepsy Eric Roberts, University of Pittsburgh, Inside the Black Box of Creating an #A-352 Equitable Health Care Organization Kim Peterson, Department of Veterans The Medicare Value-Based Payment Affairs, Portland, #A-345 Modifier: Program Outcomes and Alek Sripipatana, Health Resources Implications for Disparities and Services Administration, #A-362 SESSION A

Mortality Disparities in Racial/Ethnic POSTER Minority Groups in the Veterans Health HRSA-Funded Health Centers Reduce Administration: An Evidence Review Dylan Roby, University of Maryland, Disparities in Medical, Dental and and Map #A-353 and #A-354 Mental Health Care for Uninsured and Impact of the Affordable Care Act on Low-Income Populations Ninez Ponce, University of California, Health Care Access and Utilization Los Angeles, #A-346 Among Latinos Wafa Tarazi, U.S. Department of Health Capturing Racial/Ethnic Diversity and and Human Services, #A-363 in Population-Based Surveys: Data The ACA Reduced Health Care Wealth and Access to Care Among Disaggregation of Health Data for Asian Disparities Among Low- to Middle- Medicare Beneficiaries American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Income Adults Islanders (AANHPIs) Andrew Taylor, University of Elizabeth Rogers, University of Washington, #A-364 Nadereh Pourat, University of California, Minnesota, #A-356 Modeling the Effects of Criminal Justice Los Angeles, #A-347 Treatment Burden, Medication Stigma on Health: Implications from a Assessing the Impact of Patient-Centered Adherence, and Social Vulnerability in Systematic Review Medical Home Principles on Outcomes of Hypertension Care Among Patients with Hypertension in Yhenneko Taylor, Carolinas HealthCare HRSA-Funded Health Centers Janice Sabin, University of Washington, System, #A-365 #A-357 Racial Residential Segregation and Use Ana Progovac, Harvard University, Implementation and Evaluation of of Prenatal Care in an Urban County #A-348 Education for Faculty on Implicit Bias in Differences in Rates of Suicidal Ideation the Clinical and Learning Environment and Potential Suicide Attempt Among Caroline Thirukumaran, University of Disabled and Gender Minority Medicare Rochester, #A-366 Beneficiaries from 2009-2014 Lina Song, Harvard University, #A-358 Are Safety-Net Hospitals at a Jennifer Richmond, University of North Unraveling the CRC Disparity Imbroglio: Disadvantage in the Comprehensive Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-349 Spill-over Effects of Managed Care and Care for Joint Replacement Program Minority Patient Preferences Regarding Detection of CRC Among Black and Shared Decision-Making after White Medicare Beneficiaries Implementation of the Affordable Care Act: A Systematic Review

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Vanessa Torres, University of Robert Weech-Maldonado, University Medicare Washington, #A-367 of Alabama at Birmingham, #A-374 Vida Pura: Results from a Randomized Community Socio-Economic Status and Alicia Arbaje, Johns Hopkins University, Control Trial of Culturally Adapted Nursing Home Quality #A-381 Screening and Brief Intervention to Senior Services in US Hospitals and Reduce Unhealthy Alcohol Use Among Kirsten Weisbeck, Primary Care Readmission Risk in the Medicare Latino Day Laborers Development Corporation, #A-375 Population Primary Care Access and Associations Elizabeth Tung, University of Chicago, with Health Status and Socioeconomic William Bleser, Duke University, #A- #A-368 Deprivation: A Regional Analysis of New 382 Racial and Ethnic Disparities in York State What Causes Accountable Care Geographic Access to Trauma Care: An Organizations to Leave the Medicare Exploration of America’s Urban Trauma Alanna Williamson, George Shared Savings Program? a Deserts Washington University, #A-376 Longitudinal Survival Analysis, 2013- Identifying and Addressing Patients’ 2016 Yu-Chi Tung, National Taiwan Social Determinants of Health: What Do University, #A-369 Clinicians Say? Daniel Blumenthal, Massachusetts Impact of Pay for Performance on Urban General Hospital, #A-383 and Rural Disparities in Care Processes Lauren Wisk, Boston Children’s Predictors of 90-Day Standardized and Outcomes for Diabetes Hospital and Harvard University, #A-377 Spending Following Hospitalization for Inequalities in Young Adult Health Acute Myocardial Infarction Maria Villarroel, National Center for Insurance Coverage and Access to Health Statistics, #A-370 Health Care Post-Federal Health Reform Sandra Chao, University of Maryland, Health Care Utilization Among American #A-384 Indians and Alaska Natives with a Usual Michelle Wong, Department of Quality of Care Profile of Medicare Place of Care Veterans Affairs, Los Angeles and VA Advantage Plans with High HSR&D Center for the Study of Health Disenrollment Rates Lauren Wallace, University of Alabama Care Innovation, Implementation & at Birmingham, #A-371 Policy, #A-378 Hsueh-Fen Chen, University of Social Factors, Public Policies and Infant Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Arkansas for Medical Sciences, #A-385 Mortality Mortality across the Veterans Health Rethinking the Hospital Readmissions Administration Reduction Program: Evaluation of Donna Washington, Department of Hospitals in the US-Mexico Border Veterans Affairs, Los Angeles and VA Brad Wright, University of Iowa, #A- Region and Mississippi Delta Region HSR&D Center for the Study of Health 379 Care Innovation, Implementation & Racial, Geographic, and Gender Thomas Christian, Abt Associates, Inc., Policy, #A-373 Disparities in the Use of Medicare #A-386 National Mortality Differences By Socio- Observation Stays within Hospitals Trends in Medicare Utilization during Economic Status in the Veterans Health Hospice Election Gaps Administration Wendy Xu, Ohio State University, #A- 380 Disparities in Cost-Related Drug Nonadherence Under the Affordable Care Act

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Hildie Cohen, National Opinion Yevgeniy Feyman, Harvard University, Geoffrey Hoffman, University of Research Center, #A-387 #A-395 and #A-396 Michigan School of Nursing, #A-403 The Medicare Current Beneficiary Quality of Provider-Offered Medicare The Accuracy of Readmission Prediction Survey (MCBS): New Data Products and Advantage Plans Models Does Not Substantially Increase Recent Enhancements to the Definitive and with Inclusion of Patient Health and Survey on Medicare Beneficiaries Variation in Medicare Advantage Social Factors Networks over Time Megan Comerford, Providence St. Monir Hossain, Department of Veterans Joseph Health, #A-388 Betty Fout, Abt Associates, #A-397 and Affairs, #A-404 Provider Perspectives on Barriers to #A-398 Identifying the Characteristics of Annual Wellness Visits for Medicare Characteristics of Home Health Prescription Drug Users Among VHA and Advantage Beneficiaries Agencies Serving Multiple Episode Medicare Dual Enrollee Veterans: Dual Home Health Users Versus Single System Users Cheryl Damberg, RAND, #A-389 and When Does Hospital-Physician Trends in the Home Health Quality Amol Karmarkar, University of Texas, Integration Influence Performance? of Patient Care Star Ratings and #A-405 Evidence from Diverging Trends in Component Measures after Two Years Differentiation in Hospital Readmission Hospital-Physician Integration across By Post-Acute Settings in Medicare Ishani Ganguli, Harvard University, Beneficiaries. SESSION A

States POSTER #A-399 Amy Davidoff, Yale University, #A-390 Impact of the Medicare Annual Wellness Brystana Kaufman, Duke Clinical Integration between Medical and Visit on Mammography Rates Research Institute, #A-406 Prescription Drug Benefits within The Medicare Shared Savings Program Medicare and Association with Access, Paul Hebert, Department of Veterans and Outcomes for Stroke Patients: Spending, and Satisfaction Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-400 Findings from the Get with the Reliance on Medicare-Providers By Guidelines-Stroke Registry Ellen Denzen, National Marrow Donor Veterans after Becoming Age-Eligible Program/Be The Match, #A-391 for Medicare Is Associated with More Leah Kemper, Washington University in Healthcare Reimbursement and Service Outpatient Service Use St. Louis, #A-407 Utilization for First Year Post-Allogeneic Trends and Characteristics of Rural Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation Inmaculada Hernandez, University of Beneficiaries Enrolling in Medicare Among Medicare Beneficiaries Ages 65 Pittsburgh, #A-401 Advantage Plans and Older with Acute Myeloid Leukemia Dose-Response Association between Concurrent Opioid and Benzodiazepine Niharika Khanna, University of Edward Drozd, Inovalon, #A-392 Use and Risk of Opioid- Related Maryland, #A-408 Effect of Chronic Condition Special Overdose Primary Care Practices in the Garden Needs Plan Enrollment on Outcomes for Practice Transformation Network Medicare Beneficiaries with Diabetes Laura Higginbotham, University of Gearing up for Value Based Models North Carolina, #A-402 Under the Maryland All Payer Model Stacie Dusetzina, Vanderbilt University Uptake of Immunotherapy Among Medical Center, #A-394 Medicare Beneficiaries with Advanced Yeunkyung Kim, University of Coverage and out-of-Pocket Spending Melanoma Rochester, #A-409 on Brand Versus Generic/Biosimilar Greater Reductions in Readmissions Specialty Drugs in Medicare Part D Achieved By Hospitals Participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program

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Peter Kirk, University of Washington, Chih-Ying Li, University of Texas Tracy Mroz, University of Washington, #A-410 Medical Branch, #A-418 #A-426, #A-427, and #A-428 Understanding Readmission Policy Association of Co-Calibrated Admission Differences in Populations and Services Implications for U.S. Hospitals Functional Score and Subsequent Post- Provided between Post-Acute and Performing Major Surgery Acute Discharge Settings Community-Entry Home Health Care for Rural Medicare Beneficiaries Jessica Knott, FEi Systems, Inc., #A- Robert Lieberthal, University of and 411 Tennessee, Knoxville, #A-419 Rehabilitation Services in Home Health Using Medicare Data to Identify Opioid A Predictive Modeling Approach to for Lower Extremity Joint Replacement Use and Potential Misuse Among Dual Fraud Management in Medicare Claims and Quality Outcomes for Rural Medicare Eligibles – Beneficiary and Prescriber Beneficiaries Perspectives Kimberly Lind, Macquarie University, and #A-420 The Impact of Medicare’s Rural Add-on Amit Kumar, Brown University, #A-412 The Effect of Direct Cognitive Payments on Access to Home Health Care Comparing Post-Acute Rehabilitation Assessment in the Medicare Annual Use, Length of Stay and Outcomes Wellness Visit on Cognitive Impairment Purna Mukhopadhyay, Arbor Research Experienced By Medicare Fee-for- Diagnosis Collaborative for Health, #A-429 Service and Medicare Advantage Bundled Payments and Payer Mix: Beneficiaries with Hip Fracture Angela Liu, Institute for Health Metrics Anemia Outcomes Under the Dialysis and Evaluation, #A-421 Prospective Payment System (PPS) Yong-fang Kuo, University of Texas Estimating Public Insurance, Private Medical Branch, #A-413 Insurance and out-of-Pocket Spending Yanick Brice, Brown University, #A-430 Retail Clinic Use By Medicare in the US By Health Condition, 1996- Hospital Quality Star Ratings and Beneficiaries 2013 Hospital’s Average Spending Levels during a Medicare Spending per Jennifer Le, Xcenda, #A-414 Blake McGee, Emory University, Beneficiary Hospitalization Episode: Do Medicare Part D Spending Trends #A-422 Hospital Ratings Matter? Among Enrollees in Employer Group Prescription Drug Spending and Acute Waiver Plans Compared to Non-Low- Care Use in Heart Failure Jennifer Nooney, Westat, #A-431 Income Subsidy Enrollees The Effect of Participation in Community Arpit Misra, Centers for Medicare and Wellness Programs: Evidence from Tham Le, University of Maryland Medicaid Services, #A-423 and #A-424 Survey and Claims Data Baltimore, #A-415 Have Counties with Large Financial Concomitant Opioid and Sedative Incentives Under Medicare Advantage Giulia Norton, Abt Associates, #A-432 Use and Risk of Death in Medicare Experienced Increased Enrollment and Insurer Experiences Implementing Beneficiaries with Chronic Obstructive Decreased Premiums? CMS’s Oncology Care Model Pulmonary Disease and Service Use and Expenditures after Sungchul Park, University of Min Jee Lee, University of South Annual Wellness Visit (AWV) Among Washington, #A-433 Carolina, #A-416 Medicare Fee-for-Service Beneficiaries Variations in Plan Switching between The Effect of the Affordable Care Act Traditional Fee-for-Service Medicare on Receipt of Colonoscopy Among Brant Morefield, L&M Policy Research, and Medicare Advantage Plans: Costs Medicare Beneficiaries #A-425 and Disease Diagnosis Assessing the Impact of the MD-Value Valerie Lewis, Dartmouth Institute in Prevention Model on Diabetes Daria Pelech, Congressional Budget for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Office,#A-434 #A-417 Payments to Medicare Advantage Plans Developing and Validating a Measure and Plan Generosity before and after the to Predict Poverty in Medicare Affordable Care Act Administrative Data

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Evan Perlman, IMPAQ International, Darin Ullman, The Lewin Group, #A- Miriam Bender, University of California, LLC, #A-435 444 Irvine, #A-450 Proximity of Medicare Part D Impact of the Comprehensive End- Implementing Complex Interventions: Beneficiaries to Network Pharmacies in Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Care (CEC) The Intersection of Theory and 2016-2017 Model on Quality Outcomes Contingency

Jeremy Pickreign, Capital District Virginia Wang, Duke University, #A- Shari Bolen, Case Western Reserve Physicians’ Health Plan, #A-436 445 University, #A-451 A New Tool in the Toolbox: A Data- Variable Impacts of Medicare Dialysis Reducing Regionwide Disparities in Driven Approach to Identifying New Bundled Payment Reform on Patient Blood Pressure Control: A Positive Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment Utilization of Peritoneal Dialysis Deviance Approach Opportunities Lianna Weissblum, UMN HSRPA PhD Rachel Breman, University of Maryland, Michael Plotzke, Abt Associates, Inc, Candidate, #A-446 #A-452 #A-437 Was Skilled Nursing Facility Clinician Perspectives on Factors How Transitioning the Medicare Home Participation in the Medicare Bundled Influencing Decisions to Admit Low Risk Health Prospective Payment System Payment Initiative Associated with Pregnant Woman in Labor to the Home Health Groupings Model Changes in Quality of Care for Long- Could Impact Payments Made to Home Stay Residents? Priyanka Desai, University of Health Agencies Minnesota, #A-453 Stephen Zuckerman, Urban Institute, Risk of Bias and the Dissemination of Stephen Shortell, University of #A-441 Clinical Trials: How Frequently Are High California, Berkeley, #A-438 Did Medicare Advantage Payment Risk of Bias Trials Cited? Medical Group Characteristics and the Cuts Affect Beneficiary Access and Cost and Quality of Care for Medicare Affordability? Caitlin Dorsey, Kaiser Permanente Beneficiaries Washington Health Research Institute, #A-455 Shazia Siddique, University of Psychometric Evaluation of SESSION A Translation, POSTER Pennsylvania, #A-439 Implementation Measures: A Systematic Variability in Readmission Rates, Length Dissemination, Review of Inner Setting Constructs of Stay, and Mortality Among Patients Implementation, and with Gastrointestinal Bleeding in a Keith Green, University of Chicago, Medicare Population Impact #A-456 Elizabeth Austin, University of “There’s No Superhighway to Carol Simon, The Lewin Group, #A-440 Washington, #A-447 and #A-448 PrEP”: Illuminating Challenges of Seasonality in Medicare Part D A Health Systems Framework for Dissemination and Uptake of Pre- Payments in PDE Data Evaluating Different Approaches to Exposure Prophylaxis for HIV Predicting Readmission Risk Nathan Smith, Leavitt Partners, #A-442 and Erick Guerrero, University of Southern Market Factors Associated with An Enterprise Approach to Assessing the California, #A-457 Medicare Costs and Cost Growth Fit of Technical Solutions for Patient- Organizational Capacity in Emergency Reported Outcomes (PROs) Systems Care to Implement Practices to Respond Caroline Thirukumaran, University of to the Opioid Epidemic Rochester, #A-443 Laura-Mae Baldwin, University of The Impact of the Hospital Washington, #A-449 Jeanne-Marie Guise, Scientific Readmissions Reduction Program on Creating a Nomenclature for Describing Resource Center for the AHRQ 30-Day Readmissions Following Hip and Implementation Strategies Used Evidence-Based Practice Center Knee Replacements By Practice Facilitators in a Large, Program, #A-458 Pragmatic, Clinical Trial Understanding Health-Systems’ Use of and Need for Evidence to Inform Decisionmaking

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Roman Gulati, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Cara Lewis, Kaiser Permanente Jennifer Palmer, Hebrew SeniorLife, Research Center, #A-459 Washington Health Research Institute, #A-473 Implications of Novel Biomarker-Based #A-466 Barriers and Facilitators to Tests for Early Detection: The Case of A Systematic Review of Empirical Implementing a Pragmatic Trial to Prostate Cancer Screening Studies Examining Mechanisms of Improve Advance Care Planning in Two Dissemination and Implementation in Large Nursing Home Systems Christian Helfrich, Department of Health Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-460 Erin Peacock, Tulane University, #A- Can We Change Readiness to Change? Aaron Lyon, University of Washington, 474 Change Commitment and Change #A-467 A New Self-Report Antihypertensive Efficacy over Time in a Workplace Health- Beliefs and Attitudes for Successful Medication Adherence Tool (K-Wood-4) Promotion Trial Implementation in Schools (BASIS): Is Associated with Blood Pressure A Theory-Driven, Individual-Level Control Among Hypertensive Adults Margaret Holland, Yale University, #A-461 Implementation Strategy to Enhance Creation of Comparison Group to Evaluate Adoption of Evidence-Based Practices Amanda Petrik, Kaiser Permanente Community Implementation of a Home Center For Health Research, #A-475 Visiting Program Marina McCreight, Department of The STOP CRC Cluster Randomized Veterans Affairs, Eastern Colorado, Pragmatic Clinical Trial: A Direct-Mail L. Michele Issel, University of North #A-468 Colorectal Cancer Screening Program in Carolina at Charlotte, #A-462 Designing for Dissemination: Mulit- Federally Qualified Health Centers Use of Organizational Constructs in Level Approaches to Improving Care Implementation Science Research: Is Coordination in the Veterans Health Julia Raifman, Boston University, #A- the Intended Target of the Intervention Administration 476 or Guiding Framework Indicative of the A Clinical HIV Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Degree of Use? Christopher Miller, Department of Education Intervention Among MSM Veterans Affairs, Boston, #A-469 Carrie Klabunde, National Institutes of Scale-up and Spread of Collaborative James Ralston, Kaiser Permanente Health, #A-463 Care for General Mental Health Teams Washington Health Research Institute, Why Don’t Physicians Respond to #A-477 Surveys? Insights from a Non-Response Jessica Moreau, VHA HSR&D Center Capacity for Practice Change and Follow-Back Survey of Oncologists for the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Participation in Educational Outreach Implementation & Policy (CSHIIP), #A- Visits in Primary Care Keith Kocher, University of Michigan, 470 #A-464 Prediabetes Awareness and Rohit Ramaswamy, University of North Measuring Baseline Performance and Management: Provider and Patient Carolina, #A-478 Practice Variation in a Novel, Statewide, Perspectives from the VA Empower Assessing Readiness of Health Facilities Physician-Payer Quality Network Diabetes Prevention Program to Implement Quality Improvement Partnership for Opportunities to Improve Interventions in Himachal Pradesh, India Emergency Care Quality: Benchmarking David Muhlestein, Leavitt Partners, the Michigan Emergency Department #A-471 Nadia Safaeinili, Stanford University, Improvement Collaborative (MEDIC) A Framework for Understanding Health #A-479 Care Markets: What Matters and Why Operationalizing the Consolidated Holly Lanham, University of Texas Framework for Implementation Health Science Center San Antonio, Sarah Ono, Oregon Health & Science Research (CFIR) to Facilitate Spread #A-465 University, #A-472 of Primary Care 2.0, a Primary Care Application of the Workflow Elements Contextual Factors Influence the Scale Transformation Model to Examine the Relationship and Spread of Evidencenow between Health Information Technology and Ambulatory Care Workflow Redesign Using a Complexity Science Framework

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Anju Sahay, Department of Veterans Jeremy Snider, Fred Hutchison Cancer Jennifer Villani, NIH Office of Disease Affairs, Palo Alto, #A-480 Research Center, #A-487 Prevention, #A-495 Formative Evaluation of Strategies The Potential Value of Biomarker-Targeted At the Intersection of Health Services to Facilitate the Adoption of Best Lung Cancer Screening Strategies: A Cost- Research and Prevention Science: An Implementation Practices By VA Effectiveness Analysis Analysis of NIH Funding and Impact Pharmacists Callie Walsh-Bailey, Kaiser Permanente Andrew Solomon, Arizona State Washington Health Research Institute, George Sayre, Department of Veterans University, #A-488 #A-496 Affairs, #A-481 Characterizing Workflow in EDs of a Health Tracking Adaptation and Implementation Developing ‘Best Practices’ for VHA System Prior to EHR Conversion of the Blues Program: A Pilot Study Specialty e-Consultation to Develop Three New Measures in Aaron Spaulding, Mayo Clinic, #A-489 Implementation Karen Schoelles, ECRI Institute, Implementation and Evaluation of #A-482 Electronic Patient Reported Outcomes Andrew Wang, Northwestern University, A Framework for Conceptualizing #A-497 Evidence Needs of Health Systems Susan Stockdale, Department of Veterans Impact of Practice Facilitation in Primary Affairs, #A-490 Care to Improve Chronic Disease Care Sarah Shoemaker, Abt Associates, Inc., Facilitating Evidence-Based Quality Process and Outcomes: A Systematic #A-483 Improvement for VHA’s Patient-Centered Review A Framework for Implementation Medical Home: Structured Priority Setting Research on Opioid Management in and Leadership Engagement As Facilitation Gregory Wozniak, American Medical Health Care Strategies Association, #A-499 Can Hypertension Control be Improved Sundar Shrestha, Centers for Disease Deonni Stolldorf, Vanderbilt University, within a Short Time Frame?: Results from Control and Prevention, #A-484 #A-491 Implementing the Measure Accurately, Act Risk Levels for Diabetes and Program Implementation of a Medication Rapidly and Partner with Patients (MAP) Selections for Type 2 Diabetes Reconciliation Toolkit (MARQUIS): A Mixed Program Prevention: A Cost-Effectiveness Methods Evaluation Study SESSION A POSTER Analysis Kathleen Thies, Community Health Center, Women’s Health Kia Skrine Jeffers, UNIVERSITY OF Inc., #A-492 CALIFORNIA, LOS ANGELES, #A-485 Content and Thematic Analysis of Project Omonyele Adjognon, Department of Shared Decision-Making for Diabetes Echo Chronic Pain Transcripts: Treatment Veterans Affairs, Boston, #A-500 Prevention: 1-Year Results from the Options, Opioids, and Confounding Patient Getting Intimate Partner Violence Prediabetes Informed Decision and Psychosocial Issues Screening Implementation Right: Education (PRIDE) Study Identifying Best Clinical Practices, Tainayah Thomas, University of North Implementation Strategies and Jeffrey Smith, Department of Veterans Carolina at Charlotte, #A-493 Contextual Factors for Success Affairs, QUERI, #A-486 Scaling up Diabetes Prevention Programs Scoping Review to Identify the in North Carolina: Perceptions of Demand Lindsay Admon, University of Michigan, Spectrum of Activites Applied in from Potential Program Recipients and #A-501 Implementation Facilitation Strategies Providers Amphetamine- and Opioid-Affected Births: Incidence, Outcomes and Costs, Tyson Smith, Camden Coalition of Leah Tuzzio, Kaiser Permanente United States 2003-2014 Healthcare Providers, #A-498 Washington, #A-494 Breaking Down Barriers to Jail- Tailoring Implementation Strategies for Marvellous Akinlotan, Texas A&M Healthcare Collaboration CVD Risk Calculation in Primary Care University, #A-502 Practice: Working to Accelerate Adoption of Racial/Ethnic Differences in Barriers to Evidence-Based Practice Screening Mammography Compliance Among a Group of Uninsured Women

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Sarah Benatar, Urban Institute, #A-503 Catherine Chanfreau, Department of Jacqueline Ellison, Boston University, Low Risk C-Section and Vaginal Birth Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #A-520 after Delivery Rates Among Medicaid #A-512 Confidentiality and Insurance- Beneficiaries Receiving Enhanced How Do We Improve Women Veterans reimbursed Utilization of Sexual and Prenatal Care Care If Their VA Providers Are Reproductive Health Services by Young Uncomfortable Handling Their Mental Adult Women With Policyholder Versus Alicia Bergman, Department of Health Needs? Parental Coverage Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #A-504 Mark Clapp, Massachusetts General Shahariar Mohammed Fahim, Auburn Delivering Primary Care to Women Hospital, #A-513 University, #A-521 Veterans with Histories of Military Obesity and Maternal Mortality in the Variations in Screening Mammography Sexual Trauma: Patient Suggestions for United States Utilization By Age and Geographic Trauma-Sensitive Communication Region Among Female Medicare Caitlin Cross-Barnet, Center for Beneficiaries and Beneficiaries with Mandar Bodas, Virginia Commonwealth Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, Breast Cancer in 2002-2012. University, #A-506 #A-514 Do Cultural Practices Affect Women’s Low-Dose Aspirin to Prevent Laura Gressler, University of Maryland, Bodyweight? Evidence from India Using Preeclampsia and Preterm Birth: #A-522 Longitudinal Data Challenges to Practice Transformation Prevalence of Opioid Use Disorder, Treatment, Treatment Type Among Julian Brunner, Department of Rachel Cusatis, Medical College of Pregnant Women, and Adverse Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, Wisconsin, #A-515 Outcomes in Newborns By State #A-507 Too Much Time? Associations between Criminal or Civil Statues Pertaining Not Just Inconvenience: Healthcare Time Spent in Family-Building Decision to Gestational Opioid Use in a System “Hassles” Among Women Tasks and Fertility-Related Quality of Life Commercially Insured Pregnant Veterans Population Vanessa Dalton, University of Elena Byhoff, Tufts University, #A-508 Michigan, Ann Arbor, #A-516 Nathan Hale, East Tennessee State Gender Differences in the Prevalence Impact of Cost Sharing Elimination on University, #A-523 and Probability of Social Determinants Women’s Use of Preventive Services By Use of Highly Effective Reversible of Health across the Life Course in the Household Income Contraception in Title X Clinics: Variation United States. By Selected State Characteristics Pratik Doshi, University of Kentucky, Sepheen Byron, National Committee #A-517 Jing Hao, Geisinger Health System, for Quality Assurance (NCQA), #A-509 Trends and Patterns in Use of #A-524 Testing a Prenatal Immunizations Prescription Opioids in Pregnant Women Economic Burden of Preeclampsia: Measure for Women Enrolled in in a Commercially Insured Population in Maternal and Infant Healthcare Costs Commercial and Medicaid Health Plans the US Louise Henderson, University of North Megan Cahn, Oregon State University, Karen Dyer, Department of Veterans Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-525 #A-510 Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #A-518 Evaluating Mammography Facilities Birth Control Use and the Great Tailoring an Evidence-Based Lifestyle Response to the NC Breast Density Recession Intervention to Meet the Needs of Notification Legislation Women Veterans with Prediabetes: Lisa Callegari, University of Patient Perspectives and Preferences Willi Horner-Johnson, Oregon Health & Washington, #A-511 Science University, #A-526 Receipt of Preconception Counseling Natalia Egorova, Icahn School of Early Pregnancy Care of Women with to Prevent Poor Birth Outcomes Among Medicine at Mount Sinai, #A-519 Disabilities: Miscarriage Occurrence and Women Veterans: Data from the Hospital Variation in Severe Prevention National Ecuun Study Maternal Morbidity and Post-Partum Readmissions

110 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Laura Houdeshell, Institute for Health Ruth Klap, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Policy, #A-527 Health Services Research & Development Respect the Story: A Mixed Methods The Experiences of Medicaid-Eligible Center for the Study of Healthcare Analysis of Predictors of High Versus Low African American Mothers Innovation, Implementation & Policy, Utilization of Unscheduled Care in Pregnant #A-535 Women with Substance Use Disorder Hui-Min Hsieh, Kaohsiung Medical Enrollment of Women Veterans in VA- University Hospital, #A-528 Funded Studies: What Can We Learn from Michelle Mengeling, Department of Association between Community-Based Clinicaltrials.Gov Data Veterans Affairs, Iowa City, #A-544 Cancer Screening Expansion Policy and Gender Differences Among Post-Deployed the Participation of Cervical and Breast Julia Kohn, Planned Parenthood Iraq/Afghanistan Reserve/National Guard Cancer Screening in Taiwan Federation of America, #A-536 Service Members: Military Exposures, Telemedicine and Women’s Reproductive Behavioral Health Screens, and Mental Sarah Huf, University of Pennsylvania, Health Care: Results from a National Health Care Use #A-529 Survey Predictors of Breast Screening Michelle Moniz, University of Michigan, Participation; An Online Population Tsai-Ling Liu, Atrium Health, #A-537 #A-545 Survey Receipt of Long-Acting Reversible Cost-Sharing and Utilization of Postpartum Contraceptives Among Young Women: Intrauterine Devices and Contraceptive Peiyin Hung, Yale University, #A-530 Does Insurance Matter? Implants Hospital Obstetric Unit Closures and Obstetric Care - Access, Procedure, and Lisbet Lundsberg, Yale School of Van Nghiem, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Outcomes Medicine, #A-538 Research Center, #A-546 Use of Low-Interventional Approaches in Economic Evaluation of the Pap See-and- Bonnie Jerome-D’Emilia, Institute for Obstetric Care: Variation Among Hospitals Treat Strategy for the Management of Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Cervical Precancer Research, Rutgers, The State , #A-531 Schelomo Marmor, University of The Rising Rate of Contralateral Minnesota, #A-539 Susan Perez, California State University, Prophylactic Mastectomy at an Trends in Lobular Carcinoma in Situ Sacramento, #A-547 SESSION A POSTER Academic Medical Center Treatment: Hormone Therapy Use in Engaging Consumers to Reduce California and New Jersey Unnecessary C-Sections Jodie Katon, US Department of Veterans Affairs Puget Sound, #A-532 Anna Matthews, University of North Ciaran Phibbs, Stanford University, and #A-533 Carolina at Chapel Hill, #A-540 #A-548 and #A-549 Contribution of Site of Care to Comorbid Diabetes/Hypertension Among Declining Attrition of New Women Veteran Disparities in Minimally Invasive Women of Reproductive Age: Prevalence Patients after Implementation of VA Hysterectomy in the US Department of and Disparities Comprehensive Women’s Health Care Veterans Affairs Policy and Kimberly McKee, Department of and Women Veterans’ Path through VA Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Women’s Health Primary Care Providers: Maternity Care: Experiences with Michigan, #A-541 Antidote to Attrition from VA Among Access and Utilization National Trends in Mental Health Women Veterans New to VA? Conditions Identified Among Delivering Jaya Khushalani, Centers for Disease Women, United States 2003-2014 Julia Phillippi, Vanderbilt University Control and Prevention, #A-534 School of Nursing, #A-550 Utilization and Cost of Breast Cancer Pooja Mehta, Louisiana State University Comparing Labor Interventions and Screening Among Commercially Insured Health Sciences Center-Louisiana Outcomes in Low-Risk, Multiparous Women Aged 50 to 64 Years Department of Health Consortium for Women between U.S. Hospitals with Health Transformation, #A-542 and and without Midwives: A Consortium on #A-543 Safe Labor Investigation High Utilization of Unscheduled Care during Pregnancy in Massachusetts, 2002-2013

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Xuanzi Qin, University of Minnesota Loren Saulsberry, Harvard University, Claire Than, Department of Veterans Twin Cities, #A-551 #A-558 Affairs, #A-565 Women’s Perceptions of the Benefits The Impact of Breast Density Understanding Gender Sensitivity and Harms of Mammograms and Their Notification Laws on Supplemental Among Veterans Health Administration Attitudes about Getting Mammograms Breast Imaging and Breast Biopsy Primary Care Providers Who See Few Women Suja Rajan, UT School of Public Health, Laura Sherman, Substance Abuse and #A-552 Mental Health Services Administration Ellen Tilden, Oregon Health & Science Comparative and Cost-Effectiveness (SAMHSA), #A-559 University, #A-566 of Long-Acting Versus Short-Acting The Impact of State-Level Prenatal Using the Robson Ten-Group Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factors Substance Use Policies on Substance Classification System in US Hospitals in Elderly Women with Breast Cancer Use Disorder Treatment Admissions to Compare Hospitals with and without Midwives Deborah Rinehart, University of Amay Singh, Claremont Graduate Colorado School of Medicine, #A-553 University, #A-560 James Torner, University of Iowa, Developing a Peer-Led Sexual Health An Evaluation of the Implementation #A-567 Navigation Intervention for Women in of Pharmacist-Prescribed Hormonal Residual Effects of Multiple Head Opioid Medication-Assisted Treatment Contraceptives in California Injuries in Two Women Veteran Groups

Lee Anne Roman, Michigan State Debra Stulberg, University of Chicago, Lakshmi Venkitachalam, University of University, College of Human Medicine, #A-561 Missouri-Kansas City, #A-568 #A-554 Severe Maternal Morbidity Among Self-Monitoring of Blood Pressure in The Prenatal and Interconception Women with Medicaid Hospitalized for a Community-Based Healthy Lifestyle Period: A Missed Opportunity for Miscarriage or Ectopic Pregnancy Program Among African-American Women’s Health in Medicaid-Insured Women African American Women Erica Tartaglione, Department of Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound, #A-562 Liyang Xie, University of Maryland, Danielle Rose, Veterans Health Realizing Patient-Centered Family #A-569 Administration Greater Los Angeles Planning Counseling and Care in the Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Healthcare System, #A-555 Veteran Health Administration: Practices Contraceptive Use: Evidence from Prevalence and Predictors of and Perspectives of Primary Care Delaware and Maryland Healthcare-Related Difficulties Among Providers Women Veterans Emmeline Taylor, Department of Poster Session B Anne Sadler, University of Iowa Carver Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto, #A-563 College of Medicine, #A-556 and Receipt of Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Monday, June 25 #A-557 Use Disorder By Female Justice- 8:00 a.m.–9:15 a.m. A Comparison of Sexual Assault Risk in Involved Patients in the Veterans Health Deployed and Non-Deployed Locations Administration Among Operation Enduring Freedom/ Behavioral Health Iraqi Freedom Active Component and Yhenneko Taylor, Carolinas HealthCare Reserve/National Guard Servicewomen: System, #A-564 Traci Abraham, University of Arkansas Implications for Population Health and Care Patterns of Healthcare Use and Receipt for Medical Sciences, #B-1 and of Contraception Among Women Developing Online Therapy Tools for The Relationship between US Military Receiving Care in a Large Integrated Supporting Rural VA Mental Health Officer Leadership Behaviors and Healthcare System Providers in Delivering CBT to Veterans Risk of Sexual Assault of Reserve, with Anxiety Disorders, PTSD and National Guard, and Active Component Depression Servicewomen in Nondeployed Locations

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Andrea Acevedo, Tufts University, #B-2 Clifford Bersamira, University of Xiaoxue Chen, HealthCore, Inc., #B-19 Disparities in Criminal Justice Outcomes Chicago, #B-10 Effectiveness of Prescriber Focused after Treatment for Substance Use Stakeholder Perspectives on the Opioid Educational Mailing in Reducing Disorders Epidemic and Implementation of Controlled Substance Dispensing Addiction Treatment Under State-Level Volumes and Number of Prescribers Barbara Andraka-Christou, University Health Policy Reforms: A Qualitative of Central Florida, #B-3 and #B-4 Study Ken Cheung, Columbia University, A Qualitative Study Comparing #B-20 Physician-Reported Barriers to Treating Amanda Borsky, Agency for Healthcare Enhancing User Engagement By Using Addiction Using Buprenorphine and Research and Quality, #B-11 an App Recommender System for the Extended-Release Naltrexone Unmet Behavioral Health Needs: Missed Treatment of Depression and Anxiety and Opportunities for Depression Screening College Student Preferences with and Treatment Julia Costich, University of Kentucky, Respect to Educational Videos about #B-21 Substance Use Disorder and Treatment Keri Brady, Boston University, #B-12 Assessing the Impact of Expanded Perceived Barriers and Facilitators Access to Inpatient Behavioral Health Holly Andrilla, WWAMI Rural Health to Implementing Behavioral Health Care for Medicaid Beneficiaries Research Center, #B-5 Integration in Pediatric Primary Care: A Potential Contributions of Nps and Pas Qualitative Study Caitlin Cross-Barnet, Center for for Opioid Use Disorder Treatment in Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, Rural Areas Timothy Brown, University of California, #B-22 Berkeley, #B-13 Obesity Counseling for Medicare Sarah Axeen, University of Southern The Causal Effect of Psychological Participants: Challenges to Preventive California, #B-6 Distress in the Development of Chronic Care State-Level Variation in Emergency Pain Department Treatment of Patients with Gracelyn Cruden, University of North Mental Health Diagnoses Linh Bui, Oregon State University, Carolina at Chapel Hill, #B-23 #B-14 Adolescent Behavioral Health Service SESSION B POSTER Laura-Mae Baldwin, University of Receiving Mental Health Care Reduces Use Trends before and after the Washington, Institute of Translational Health Care Expenditure of Patients with Affordable Care Act Health Sciences, #B-7 Chronic Physical Health Conditions Increasing Capacity for Substance Use Alina Denham, University of Rochester, Disorder Research in the NIDA Clinical Timothy Callaghan, Texas A&M #B-24 Trials Network By Building Collaborations University, #B-16 Association between Opioid-Related with Primary Care Practices Dunning-Kruger Effects and the Hospitalizations and Unconventional Endorsement of Anti-Vaccine Policy Natural Gas Development: Early Terri Barrera, VA Center for Innovation Attitudes Evidence from Pennsylvania in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety (iQuESt), #B-8 Devon Check, Kaiser Permanente, Lauren Denneson, Department for Developing and Implementing a Process #B-17 Veterans Affairs, Portland, #B-25 to Transition the Care of Stabilized and Caring for the Whole Patient: Patient Responses to Reading Their Recovered Veterans from Specialty Opportunities to Improve Recognition Mental Health Notes Online: Benefits Mental Health to Primary Care and Treatment of Depression Among and Negative Emotional Responses Women with Breast Cancer Kara Bensley, Department of Veterans Marisa Domino, University of North Affairs, Denver and Seattle Center of Xiao Chen, University of California, Los Carolina at Chapel Hill, #B-26 Innovation for Veteran-Centered Value Angeles, #B-18 The Influence of an ACO on Care Driven Care, #B-9 Expanding Capacity in HRSA-Funded for Medicaid-Enrolled Children with Patterns of Alcohol Use Among Patients Health Centers to Address the National Behavioral Health Conditions Living with HIV in Urban, Large Rural, Opioid and Substance Abuse Crisis and Small Rural Communities

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Amy Edmonds, University of Ezra Golberstein, University of Kevin Heslin, Agency for Healthcare Washington, #B-27 Minnesota, #B-35 Research and Quality, #B-43 Geographic Differences in Receipt of Understanding Psychiatrists’ Decisions From Abuse to Unspecified Use: Evidence-Based Treatment for Alcohol to Opt-out of Medicare Payment Inpatient Alcohol Abuse Diagnoses Use Disorders (AUD) in a National Sample Decreased after the Introduction of ICD- of Patients from the U.S. Veterans Health Laura Gressler, University of Maryland, 10-CM in the U.S. Administration with AUD #B-36 The Effect of Psychotropic Load on Mara Hollander, University of Richard Epstein, University of Chicago, Adverse Outcomes Among Veterans Pittsburgh, #B-44 #B-28 Using Opioids Financial Relationships with Predicting First Psychiatric Pharmaceutical Companies Are Related Hospitalization Among Youth in out-of- Rebecca Haffajee, University of to Increased Opioid Prescribing Home Care Michigan, #B-37 and #B-38 Behavioral Health Workforce Grace Hong, WA Department of Social Andrea Finlay, VA HSR&D Center for Implementation Challenges Related to and Health Services, #B-45 Innovation to Implementation (Ci2i), Medication Assisted Treatment Cannabis-Related Emergency Department of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto, and Department (ED) Visits Among Medicaid #B-29 and #B-30 Characterizing U.S. Counties with High Enrollees before and after Legalization Barriers to and Facilitators of Opioid-Related Overdose and Low of Recreational Marijuana in Washington Pharmacotherapy for Opioid Use Disorder Medication-Assisted Treatment Supply State in Veterans Health Administration Residential Treatment Programs Daniel Hartung, Oregon Health & Roya Ijadi-Maghsoodi, Department of and Science University, #B-39 Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, Facility-Level Changes in Receipt Opioid Prescriptions Prior to Admission #B-46 and #B-47 of Pharmacotherapy for Opioid Use for Heroin or Prescription Opioid Use Homeless Families with Parental Disorder Among Veterans from Fiscal Disorder Treatment Substance Use Disorders: Recognizing Years 2015-2016 the Unique Mental Health and Housing Susan Heil, American Institutes for Needs Michael Flores, Harvard University, Research, #B-40 and #B-31 Preparing Primary Care Providers in Understanding the Experiences and The Impact of Health Homes on Rural Oklahoma to Offer Medication Barriers to Community Integration Health Service Use Among Medicaid Assisted Treatment for Opioid Use Among Homeless Veteran Families Beneficiaries with Serious Mental Illness Disorder Natrina Johnson, Boston University, Nora Fritz, National Committee for Lorens Helmchen, George Washington #B-48 Quality Assurance, #B-32 University, #B-41 Collaboration in the Implementation Low Follow-up Care after Emergency The 2014 Medicaid Expansions and of Behavioral Healthcare Delivery Department Visits for Substance Abuse Opioid-Related Deaths and Hospital Innovations: Lessons from the Chart and Mental Illness Among Commercial, Visits Investment Program Medicaid and Medicare Beneficiaries Rachel Henke, Truven Health Analytics, Jenna Jones, IBM Watson Health, Hayley Germack, Yale University, #B- IBM Watson Health, #B-42 #B-49 33 and #B-34 The Influence of Employee and Family Late-Onset First Episode Psychosis Medical/Surgical Patients with Co- Member Mental Health and Substance Among Older Adults: Patient Occurring Serious Mental Illness Have a Use on Employee Work Presenteeism, Characteristics and Treatment Utilization Higher Rate of Readmissions Absences, and Healthcare Expenditures Patterns and Systematic Review of Medical Surgical Readmissions in Patients with Co- Occurring Serious Mental Illness

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Shashi Kapadia, Weill Cornell Medicine, Andrea Larson, University of Chelsea Lyons Katz, University of #B-50 Wisconsin—Madison, #B-58 Rochester, #B-66 Non-Medical Use of Prescription Mischaracterizing, Misunderstanding, Trends in Differential Rates of Painkillers and Perceived Risk of Trying and Ignoring Uncertainty in Child Mental Cardiovascular Procedures Among Heroin By Heroin Non-Users Health Care: Using FDA’s Pediatric Patients with a Comorbid Mental Illness Antidepressant Warning to Anticipate Who Are Admitted for Acute Myocardial Michelle Keller, University of California, Consequences of the Real-World Infarction Los Angeles, #B-51 Evidence Provision of the 21st Century Effect of Psychiatric Diagnoses on the Cures Act Jeanne Madden, Northeastern Selection of Behavioral Health Insurance University, #B-67 Coverage Plan Benefits Zachary Levin, Robert Graham Center, Accessing Providers and Coping with #B-59 Disruptions in Employer-Sponsored Bo Kim, Department of Veterans Affairs, Characteristics of Training and Practice Insurance: Experiences of People with Boston, #B-52 Associated with Opioid Prescribing in Bipolar Disorder Improving Reentry Support for Veterans Primary Care with Mental Health and Substance Use Michelle Mengeling, Department of Disorders Leaving Incarceration Chien-Ching Li, Rush University, #B-60 Veterans Affairs, Iowa City, #B-68 Smoking Trajectories and Cognitive Iraq/Afghanistan Reserve/National Dominique Kinnett-Hopkins, Function in Older Americans: Results Guard Service Members Military Northwestern University, #B-53 from Health and Retirement Study Exposures, Perceived Readjustment, The Feasibility of a Patient Informed, and Mental Healthcare Use Post- Racially Targeted, Home-Based Exercise Ching-Ching (Claire) Lin, Health Deployment Program for Black Individuals with Resources And Services Administration, Multiple Sclerosis #B-61 Christopher Miller, Department of Mental Health Specialist Care: Impact Veterans Affairs, Boston, #B-69 J. Wyatt Koma, NORC at the University on Emergency Department Visits and Enactment of Collaborative Care in of Chicago, #B-54 Hospitalizations of Adult Medicaid Outpatient Mental Health Teams Trends in Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Beneficiaries with Co-Occurring SESSION B POSTER Consumption Among Children in the Diabetes and Depression. Patience Moyo, University of Pittsburgh United States By Supplemental Nutrition Health Policy Institute, #B-70 Assistance Program Eligibility Status Junqing Liu, National Committee for Patterns of Opioid Prescriptions Quality Assurance, #B-62 Received Prior to Unintentional Pooja Lagisetty, Center for Clinical Low Access to Substance Use Prescription Opioid Overdose among Management and Research, Ann Arbor Treatment Among Medicaid and Veterans VA, #B-55 Commercial Plan Beneficiaries Care Coordination and Adverse Opioid Norah Mulvaney-Day, Truven Health Related Outcomes: The Role of the Christine Lu, Harvard University and Analytics, an IBM Company, #B-71 Usual Provider Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, The Impact of Behavioral and Physical #B-63 Health Integration on Outpatient Jessica Lang, Massachusetts Health The Impact of Consumer-Directed Services for Medicaid Beneficiaries Policy Commission, #B-56 and #B-57 Health Plans on Medication Use Among Coordinating Care for Drug Court Patients with Bipolar Disorder Linh Nguyen, University of Texas Health Participants: A Case Study of Science Center at Houston, #B-72 Collaboration between a District Drug Frances Lynch, Kaiser Permanente, Evaluation of the Impact of an Court and Community Hospital #B-64 and #B-65 Integrated Primary and Behavioral and Substance Use Disorders and Risk Health Care Program Under the Network Coordinating Outpatient Care for of Suicide Mortality in a General US Access Improvement Program (NAIP) Pregnant and Postpartum Women with Population Opioid Use Disorder: Lessons from the and Coachh Program Understanding Health Care Service Use and Cost for Anxious Youth

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Peggy O’Brien, Truven Health Analytics, Sarah Rinn, Minnesota Department of Minji Sohn, Ferris State University, an IBM company, #B-73 Human Services, #B-81 #B-88 Health Plan Best Practices and Barriers It’s Shorter Than You Think: Antipsychotic Polypharmacy Among to Engaging People with Substance Use Understanding How Quickly Acute Children and Young Adults in Disorders in Treatment Opioid Use Can Convert to Chronic and Office-Based or Hospital Outpatient Why Department Settings Lindsay Overhage, Massachusetts General Hospital, #B-74 Heather Saunders, Virginia Claudia Solis-Roman, New York Attitudes about Psychiatric Medications Commonwealth University, #B-82 University, #B-89 and Adherence Among Patients with Characteristics of Buprenorphine Evaluate the Impact of Clubhouse Model: Serious Mental Illness Providers Who Accept Medicaid. Experience of Fountain House Programs

Jacob Painter, Department of Veteran Kaitlin Sheedy, Abt Associates, #B-83 Ellen Squires, Henry J. Kaiser Family Affairs, #B-75 A Model Supporting State Efforts Foundation, #B-90 The Role of Race/Ethnicity in Opioid to Integrate Physical and Mental Mental Health Care Service Utilization By Prescribing Among Veterans with Health: Promising Approaches from Provider Type Among Privately and Public Chronic Non-Cancer Pain the Medicaid Innovation Accelerator Insured Adolescents with Major Depressive Program Episodes Megan Phillips, Arizona State University, #B-76 Jay Shen, University of Nevada, Las Rebecca Sripada, University of Michigan, Developing a Community-Based Policy Vegas, #B-84 #B-91 Initiative to Reduce Suicide Rates Opioid-Associated Hospitalizations: Mental Health Service Utilization before Among Arizona Veterans National Trends and Socio-Behavioral and after Receipt of a Service Connected Disparities, 2005 - 2013 Disability Award for PTSD: Findings from a Hermine Poghosyan, Northeastern National Sample University, #B-77 Laura Sherman, Substance Abuse and Social Determinants of Smoking Status Mental Health Services Administration, Ryland Stucke, Dartmouth-Hitchcock and Quit Attempts Among Adults Living #B-85 Medical Center, #B-92 in 12 US States, 2015 Diagnosis of Postpartum Depression Impact on Prescribing Habits for Elective and Timing and Types of Treatment Surgical Patients Following Mandatory Harold Pollack, University of Chicago, Received Differ for Women with Private Prescription Drug Monitoring Program Use #B-78 and Medicaid Coverage Reverse Sting Deflection of Chicago Scott Stumbo, Kaiser Permanente Drug Users Jenna Sirkin, Abt Associates, #B-86 Northwest, #B-93 Disparities in Access to Outpatient Buprenorphine or Methadone Treatment Nadereh Pourat, University of Mental Health Services in within One Year Following Diagnosis of California, Los Angeles, #B-79 Massachusetts: Findings from a Mixed Opioid Use Disorder Among Adolescents Identifying Primary Care Approaches Methods Study and Emerging Adults to Improve Outcomes of Care Among Patients with Co-Morbid Mental Carissa Smock, Case Western Reserve Katherine Susman, America’s Essential Health Conditions and Substance Use University, #B-87 Hospitals, #B-94 Disorders Assessing Health Care Clinicians The Opioid Crisis: Hospital Prevention and Attitudes Toward Placed-Based Exercise Response Alexis Rendon, University of North Referrals: Exploratory Factor Analysis of Texas Health Science Center, #B-80 a Newly Developed Survey Instrument Myduc Ta, Public Health - Seattle & Are People Who Are Honest about Their King County, #B-95 Substance Use More Likely to Choose to Trend and Characteristics of Marijuana Work on Substance Use Goals? Use Among Grade 10 Students — King County, WA, 2004-2016

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Andrea Tentner, University of Chicago Lauren Wisk, Boston Children’s Andreea Balan-Cohen, Deloitte Center Health Lab, #B-96 Hospital and Harvard University, #B-104 For Health Solutions, #B-111 Identifying Chicago’s High Users of Parental Views on State Cannabis Laws Shift of Hospital Services to Outpatient Emergency Services and Marijuana Use for Their Medically Settings: Does Value-Based Care Play Vulnerable Children a Role? Maria Vazquez Arreola, Arizona State University, #B-97 Sasha Zhou, University of Michigan, Tanima Banerjee, University of Patient Service Utilization Among #B-105 Michigan, #B-112 and #B-113 Individuals with Co-Occurring Physical Perception of Campus Climate and Excess Medical Costs Associated and Behavioral Health Conditions: A Variations in Mental Health and with Possible Acute Appendicitis Comparison of Two Models of Care Treatment Utilization across Students Misdiagnosis Among Emergency Coordination of Color Department Visits and Lauryn Walker, Virginia Commonwealth Julia Zur, Henry J. Kaiser Family Medical Costs Associated with University, #B-98 Foundation, #B-106 Emergency Department Return Visits New Opioid Treatment Delivery System Medicaid’s Role in Addressing the in Virginia Offers Promise of Superior Opioid Epidemic Juliana Barnard, University of Colorado Care Anschutz Medical Campus, #B-114 Pediatric Patient and Family Caregiver Rajvi Wani, University of Nebraska Improving Safety, Experiences of Pain Following Spine Medical Center, #B-99 Surgery: Preventable Harms Post-ACA Burden of Costs of Thirty-Day Quality, and Value Readmissions and Hospitalizations for Ephrem Abebe, Johns Hopkins Lorrie Blanchfield, Mayo Clinic, Substance Use-Related Disorders in the University, #B-107 #B-115 US Identifying Gaps for Patient-Centric Surgical Waste in an Orthopedic Surgery Model of Medication Management Operating Room: A Five Year Experience Christine Whitmore, Vanderbilt

during Care Transitions SESSION B University, #B-100 Daniel Blumenthal, Massachusetts POSTER Lessons Learned: A Qualitative Linda Aiken, Center for Health General Hospital, #B-116 Assessment of State Opioid Policies Outcomes & Policy Research, University Association between Hospital Coronary of Pennsylvania, School of Nursing, Care Unit (CCU) Volume, 30-Day Kelly Williams, UPMC Center for High- #B-108 Mortality, and 30-Day Standardized Value Health Care, #B-101 Hospital Work Environments and Patient Costs of Care Among Ccu Patients The Impact of Behavioral Health Homes Safety: A Panel Study of 535 Hospitals on Cost and Utilization Outcomes Daniel Brinton, Medical University of Elizabeth Austin, University of South Carolina, #B-117 Kimberly Williams, Christiana Care Washington, #B-109 Issues in Using EMR Data for Severity Health System, #B-102 Engaging Cross-Setting Stakeholders Adjustment for Quality Improvement Accuracy of an Opioid Withdrawal Risk to Improve the Quality of Post-Acute Studies: Baseline Sofa Scores in the ICU Assessment (OWRA) Screening Tool for Care Transitions: Results of the Transfer Hospital Patients Alerts and Communication (TAC) Benjamin Brown, University of Transition Tool Washington, #B-118 Amy Windham, Truven Health Analytics, Are American Indians / Alaska Natives an IBM company, #B-103 Marianne Baernholdt, Virginia in Washington State at Higher Risk of Use of Medication-Assisted Treatment Commonwealth University, #B-110 Urgent Surgery? for Opioid Use Disorders in Employer Longitudinal Effects of Preventive Care Sponsored Health Insurance Interventions on Pressure Ulcers in Martha Buie, Premier, Inc., #B-119 Rural and Urban Nursing Units. Association between Patient and Family Engagement Criteria and Adverse Events

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Megan Cahn, Oregon State University, and Ryann Engle, Department of Veterans #B-120 Potentially Avoidable Replacements Affairs, Boston, Center for Healthcare Implementation of a Decision Support of Primary Prevention Implantable Organization and Implementation Tool to Reduce Unneeded CT Angiogram Cardioverter-Defibrillators Research, #B-137 Use in the ED Middle Managers: Key Influencers and Samuel Cykert, Cecil G. Sheps Center Drivers in Lean Management Systems Sumedha Chhatre, University of for Health Services Research, #B-130 Implementation Pennsylvania, #B-121 Organizational Factors Are Associated Comparison of Cost and Survival with the Effect of Practice Facilitation on Olivia Evanson, University of Southern Outcomes for High Risk Prostate Cancer Improvements in Hypertension Control: California, #B-138 Patients A Report from the North Carolina Comparison of Patient Satisfaction with Experience in AHRQ’s Evidencenow Telehealth and with Automated Remote David Chin, University of Initiative Monitoring for Comorbid Depression Massachusetts, Amherst, #B-122 Care Management Serious Reportable Events in Acute Claudia Dahlerus, University of Care Hospitals; Lessons Learned from Michigan, Kidney Epidemiology and Eleanor Fitall, Avalere Health, #B-139 California’s Public Reporting Program Cost Center, #B-131 Advancing Quality Improvement Among Limited Impact of Comorbidity Burden Hospitalized Elderly: Lessons from the Elizabeth Ciemins, AMGA, #B-123 on Vascular Access Type in Maintenance Malnutrition Quality Improvement Initiative Characterizing Clinical Inertia in the Hemodialysis Patients: An Analysis of Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes in a Large, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Jennifer Gala True, Department of National Clinical Database Services (CMS) Data Veterans Affairs, #B-140 The Role of Caregivers in Supporting Jeannie Cimiotti, University of Florida, Darwyyn Deyo, San Jose State Quality, Patient-Centered Care for Post- #B-124 University, #B-132 9/11 Veterans: Findings from a Photovoice Surgical Outcomes in Hospitals Known Just What the Doctor Ordered: Study for Good Nursing Care Tort Reforms and Hospital Imaging Utilization Chris Gillespie, Department of Veterans Jan Clement, Virginia Commonwealth Affairs, #B-141 and #B-142 University, #B-125 Nicolae Done, Veterans Health De-Implementing Inhaled Steroids to Skilled Nursing Facility Readmission Administration, #B-133 Improve Care and Safety in COPD: Post Rates and Profitability Comparative Effectiveness and Safety of Intervention Interviews with Primary Care Direct Oral Anticoagulants Providers Elizabeth Cliff, University of Michigan, and #B-126 Sarah Donelson, Genentech, #B-134 Veteran Experiences with Lung Cancer Attitudes about Consumer Behaviors Systematic Review of Shared Decision Screening and Motivations for Adherence Among Americans in High-Deductible Making in Cancer Care to Screening and Surveillance Health Plans David Dorr, Oregon Health & Science Laura Gold, University of Washington, Martin Cohen, Kennell and Associates, University, #B-135 #B-143 #B-127 Understanding Implications of New Low Back Pain and Cancer: Are We Lessons Learned in Providing Feedback Heart Health Guidelines on Practices: Imaging in a Timely Manner? Data to CMMI Model Participants Are You Ready to Risk Score? Amanda Goldman, Catholic Health Ashley Collinsworth, Baylor Scott & Muhamad Elrashidi, Mayo Clinic, Initiatives, #B-144 White Health, #B-128 and #B-129 #B-136 The Impact of Nutrition-Focused Quality Association of Opioid-Related Adverse Depression and Anxiety Among Patients Improvement Interventions on Length Drug Events with Outcomes of on Chronic Opioid Therapy Enrolled in of Stay and Readmission Rates Among Surgical Patients in a Large Integrated Controlled Substance Agreements Hospitalized Malnourished Patients Healthcare Delivery System

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Davide Gori, University of Bologna, Christine Hartmann, Boston University, Sophia Kazakova, Centers for Disease #B-145 #B-152 Control and Prevention, #B-161 Evaluating Existing Quality Measures for Impact of Evidence-Based Blended- Examining the Associations between Prostate Cancer Care: Identify Gaps in Facilitation Intervention to Improve Antibiotic Consumption and Hospital- the Utilization of Clinically Meaningful Nursing Home Resident-Staff Onset Clostridium Difficile Infection Measures Interactions and Resident Engagement Rates in U.S. Acute Care Hospitals, 2006-2012 Kevin Griffith, Department of Veterans Ian Hill, Urban Institute, #B-153 Affairs, Boston, #B-146 Better Preparing Women for Childbirth: Tamkeen Khan, American Medical The Affordable Care Act & Patient- Strong Start Innovations Association, #B-162 Reported Health: Evidence from the First A Hypertension Quality Improvement Three Years Samuel Hohmann, Vizient, #B-154 Pilot Program: Experiences and Blood Drivers of Hospital Aquired Condition Pressure Outcomes from Physician Peter Griffiths, University of Rates in Hospitals Practices Southampton, #B-147 Nurse staffing levels, missed vital signs Laura Houdeshell, Institute for Health Sara Khor, University of Washington, observations and mortality in hospital Policy, #B-155 #B-163 wards:modelling the consequences and Home Health Care Nurses’ Perceptions Picking the Winners in Spine Surgery: costs of variations in nurse staffing and of Health Information Exchange A Statewide Evaluation of Functional skill mix. Outcomes across Hospitals and David Howard, Emory University, Surgeons Mika Hamer, University of Colorado, #B-156 #B-148 Cutting Payment Levels to Discourage Jeffrey Kullgren, Department of Implementing the Primary Care Low Value Care Veterans Affairs, Ann Arbor, #B-164 and Redesign Model to Improve Preventive #B-165 Care Service Utilization and Chronic Yolanda Huang, Columbia University A National Survey of Older Americans Disease Management: A Difference-in- Medical Center, #B-157 about Overuse of Health Care Services Differences Estimation Healthcare Resource Utilization and and SESSION B POSTER Epidemiology of Simple Febrile Seizure- Older Patients’ Views of Choosing Michelle Hamline, University of Associated Hospitalizations, United Wisely® Recommendations to Limit California, Davis, #B-149 States, 2003-2012 Use of Low-Value Health Care Services An Iterative Quality Improvement Process to Improve Pediatric Discharge Vanessa Hurley, University of Virender Kumar, Westat, Inc, #B-166 Efficiency California, Berkeley, #B-158 Association of Learning Source and Improving Treatment Certainty for Confidence in Managing Type 2 Xinxin Han, George Washington Hip and Knee Osteoarthritis Patients Diabetes University, #B-150 through Shared Decision Making within The Use of Care Coordination Activities the High Value Healthcare Collaborative Raymond Kuo, National Taiwan in ACOs Vs. Non-ACOs University, #B-167 Sandra Jackson, Centers for Disease The Association of Quality of Primary Krista Harrison, University of California, Control and Prevention, #B-159 Care and the Potentially Avoidable San Francisco, #B-151 Clinician-Reported Implementation Emergency Department (ED) Visit The Development and Testing of a of Self-Measured Blood Pressure Quality Improvement Needs Assessment Monitoring, 2015-2016 Eileen Lake, University of Pennsylvania, Survey for Home Based Primary Care #B-168 and #B-169 and Palliative Care Shelley Jazowski, University of North Hospital Readmission Linked to Missed Carolina, #B-160 Nursing Care Identifying Off-Label Promotion of and Cancer Pain Management Opioids in Patient Safety in Pediatric Acute Care Open Payments and the Clinical Work Environment

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Michelle Lampman, VISN 23 Patient Graham Martin, University of Leicester, Ahmed Ullah Mishuk, Auburn Aligned Care Team Demonstration Lab, #B-178 University, #B-186 #B-170 Making Soft Intelligence Hard: A Multi- Effects of U.S. Federal and State Examining the Effects of Telephone Site Qualitative Study of Challenges Generic Drug Policies on Drug Use, Visits and Rurality on Veterans Relating to Voice about Safety Concerns Spending, and Patient Outcomes- a Perceptions of Access to Primary Care Systematic Review Olena Mazurenko, Indiana University- Brandyn Lau, Johns Hopkins School of Perdue University Indiannapolis, #B-179 Ulrike Muench, University of California, Medicine, #B-171 Perceptions of Hospitalists and Inpatient San Francisco, #B-187 Reducing Emergency Department Nurses on Pain Care: A Qualitative Study Opioid-Prescribing Outcomes in Boarding Time, Hospital Length of Focused on Opioid Therapy Medicare Patients: Is It Safer to See an Stay, and Inpatient Mortality after NP or MD? Implementation of an EHR-Integrated Kerry McCole, Yale New Haven Health Throughput Dashboard Services Corporation, #B-180 David Muhlestein, Leavitt Partners, Hospital Safety: What Is Priority for #B-188 Ju Sung Lee, Texas A&M University, Patients, Providers, and Patient Safety The State of “Value” in U.S. Health Care #B-172 Experts? Individual and Regional Determinants Meghan Murray, Columbia University, Affecting Hospital Length of Stay Among William McConnell, University of #B-189 Patients with Diabetes in Texas: A Multi- Evansville, #B-181 Challenges and Successes of Level Analysis Assessment of an Audit and Feedback Antimicrobial Stewardship Program Program to Improve Quality in Implementation in Pediatric Long-Term Natalie Leland, University of Pittsburgh, Anesthesia Care Care #B-173 Patient Care Priorities and Clinical Terri Menser, Houston Methodist Britt Newsome, Colorado Kidney Care, Documentation: Directions for Research Institute, #B-182 #B-190 Improvement Patient Portal Usage during Hurricane A Coordinated Care Approach to Harvey Improve Dialysis Vascular Access Barbara Lerner, Department of Veterans Outcomes Affairs, Boston, #B-174 Ashley Meyer, Houston Veterans Implementing Lean in a Complex Affairs Center for Innovations in Quality, Priscilla Novak, AHRQ, #B-191 Healthcare System: Lessons from the Lean Effectiveness and Safety, Michael E. Teamstepps for Office Based Care Enterprise Transformation (LET) Pilot Sites DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Online Course Pilot Evaluation Center and Baylor College of Medicine, David Lomascolo, University of Chicago, #B-183 and #B-184 Brant Oliver, Dartmouth Hitchcock #B-175 Evaluating the P.T.T. Advisor Mobile Medical Center, #B-192 Advancing a Safety Culture in Child Welfare Application for Improvement of Clinical Improving Multiple Sclerosis Care Laboratory Test Ordering and Diagnosis Quality – Initial Experiences from the Malini Mahendra, University of California, and First Continuous Quality Improvement San Francisco, #B-176 Pediatric Provider Perspectives on Learning Health System Collaborative in Insights into Hospital Resource Utilization Communicating Diagnostic Uncertainty Multiple Sclerosis in Term and Near-Term Infants Using Machine Learning Algorithms Karl Minges, Center for Outcomes Michael Parchman, Kaiser Permanente Research & Evaluation, Yale New Haven Washington Health Research Institute, Jill Marsteller, Armstrong Institute Health Services Corporation, #B-185 #B-193 for Patient Safety and Quality of Care, How Do Hospitals That Serve a Assessing Quality Improvement #B-177 High Proportion of Patients of Low Capacity in Primary Care: An The Messy Work of Innovating in Patient Socioeconomic Status Achieve Low Evidencenow Study Safety Heart Failure Readmission Rates?: An Exploratory Study

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Saehwan Park, University of North Danielle Rose, Department of Veterans Margaret Smith, University of Texas Health Science Center, #B-194 Health, Greater Los Angeles, #B-202 Michigan, #B-212 Impacts of Methicillin-Resistant Patterns of VA and Medicare Use Understanding the Human Factors Staphylococcus Aureus on Health and Ambulatory Care Sensitive Contributing to Failure to Rescue Outcomes Among Texas Hospital Hospitalizations Among Veterans with Inpatients Using ICD10CM Codes Type II Diabetes Mellitus Melony Sorbero, RAND, #B-213 Relative Cost-Effectiveness of Non- Patricia Patrician, University of Alabama Anne Sales, University of Michigan, Surgical Interventions for Chronic Low at Birmingham, #B-195 #B-203 Back Pain How Do Components of a Professional Using the Organizational Readiness to Practice Model Influence Patient and Nurse Change Assessment (ORCA) to Design Andrea Sorensen, University of Outcomes in Acute Care Military Hospitals? Implementation Interventions California, Los Angeles, #B-214 Transitions in Care for Patients in Dani Purvis, Yale/Yale New Haven Health Lori Schirle, Vanderbilt University, #B-204 Skilled Nursing Facilities: Contribution - Center for Outcomes Research and and #B-205 of Clinical Pharmacists in Reducing Evaluation, #B-196 Opioid Prescribing and Consumption Post Utilization through Improved Medication Incorporating Present on Admission Codes Discharge in Surgical Patients Management into the 30-Day Pneumonia Mortality and Measure Risk Model Work Environment Perceptions of Nurse Alex Sox-Harris, Department of Anesthetists and Potential Influence on Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto, #B-215, Priya Ramar, Mayo Clinic, #B-197 Perioperative Care #B-216, and #B-217 Healthcare Utilization Among Patients Cross-Validation of the American Joint on Controlled Substance Agreements for John Schrom, One Medical, #B-206 Replacement Registry Risk Prediction Chronic Opioid Therapy Group Visits Improve Symptoms and Calculator Lower Utilization in Primary Care Patients and Natasha Reese-McLaughlin, with Anxiety Developing Prediction Models for Massachusetts Health Policy Commission, Complications Following Elective Total #B-198 Misha Sharp, United Hospital Fund of Joint Arthroplasty Using NSQIP Data SESSION B POSTER Practice Variation By Provider Organization New York, #B-207 and in Massachusetts The Right Prescription: Assessing Low Value Preoperative Testing for Potentially Inappropriate Use of Antibiotics Patients Undergoing Cataract Surgery in Joshua Richardson, RTI International, Among New York’s Medicaid Population the Veterans Health Administration #B-199 The Impact of Practice Facilitation on Kanaka Shetty, RAND, #B-208 Laura Spece, University of Washington, Cardiovascular Preventive Care in Small Hospital Quality Improvement Efforts and #B-218 and Medium-Sized Primary Care Practices Performance on CMS Quality Measures Reassessment of the Need for Supplemental Oxygen in Veterans with Douglas Roblin, Mid-Atlantic Euichul Shin, The Catholic University of COPD Permanente Research Institute, #B-200 Korea, #B-209 The Contribution of Patient, Primary Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Lumbar Jack Sung, National Yang-Ming Care Physician, and Primary Care Clinic Disc Herniation Treatment Approaches University, #B-219 Factors to Good Bone Health Using National Health Insurance (NHI) Post-Discharge Care Experience Among Claims Data. Stroke Patients Under The National Elisabeth Root, The Ohio State Health Insurance Program In Taiwan: Do University, #B-201 Jaime Smith, Surescripts, #B-211 Health Professional And Their Relatives Creating a Hospital GIS to Evaluate the Answering the Call to Address the Have Better Experiences? Association of Room Characteristics Opioid Crisis in America: National and with Risk of Hospital-Onset Clostridium State-Level Adoption of Electronic Difficile Acquisition Prescribing of Opioids

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Pauline Swiger, University of Alabama Tsung-Hsien Yu, National Taipei Joanna Khoo, University of Wollongong, at Birmingham, #B-220 University of Nursing and Health, #B-235 Discovering Relationships between #B-227 Alignment between Hospital Use of Army Nursing Practice Environments The Effects of Report Card: Who Get the High-Needs Patients and Disease and Patient Outcomes Benefits? Management Priorities of Australian Private Health Insurers: A Mixed- Dario Tedesco, University of Bologna, Steven Zeliadt, Veterans Health Methods Study #B-221 Administration, #B-228 Including Readmissions Improves Reducing Inappropriate and Dong Jun Kim, Soonchunhyang Patient Safety Indicator’s Ability Unnecessary Care By Targeting University, #B-236 to Detect Deep Vein Thrombosis/ Radiologists to Improve Clarity of Association of Individual and Regional Pulmonary Embolism Following Reports to Ordering Providers Level Factors with Stomach Cancer Orthopedic Procedures Survival; Using 12 Years of NHIS National Sample Cohort Data Hsin-Yun Tsai, National Taiwan University, Lessons from Abroad #B-222 Jungyeon Kim, Harvard University, Explore the Trajectories of Hospice Yara Asi, University of Central Florida, #B-237 Utilization and Associated Characteristics #B-229 Performance of National Tuberculosis in Patients with Lung Cancer – a Promoting Gender Equality with Health Programs: Analysis of Tuberculosis Care Population-Based Study in Taiwan Information Technology in Low- and Cascades Among High-Burden and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) Non-High-Burden Countries Soumya Upadhyay, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, #B-223 Jasmine Blanks Jones, University of Siyuan Liang, Peking University, Does Hospital-Physician Financial Pennsylvania, #B-230 #B-240 Integration Affect Patient Safety Learning from Liberia: Street Theatre The Impact of Reorganization of Primary Outcomes? and Local Feedback for Global Healthcare Professionals on Under-5 Prevention and Intervention Mortality in Rural China Neeltje van den Berg, University Medicine Greifswald, #B-224 Nicole Boyer, University of Glasgow, Huei-Xin Lou, Ministry of Health, Improving Medication Adherence with #B-231 #B-241 Telemedical Care in People with Severe Population Health Economic Evaluation Exploring Pharmaceutical Care Services Mental Illness: Results of a Randomized of the School-Based Roots of Empathy for Geriatric Clients in Community Trial Program in Northern Ireland (centre-based care)

Ryan Vega, Veterans Affairs Center for Sih-Ting Cai, New York University, Guy Martin, Imperial College London, Innovation, #B-225 #B-232 UK, #B-242 Diffusion of Excellence: A Model for The Challenges Ahead- the Burden of Effective Healthcare Cybersecurity and Innovation across the Country’s Largest End-Stage Renal Disease in Taiwan to Resilience Is Fundamental to Patient Integrated Health Care Delivery System the Year 2040 Safety: Redefining the Challenge and Identifying Policy, Practice and Research Xiao (Joyce) Wang, University of Seongwon Choi, University of Alabama Priorities Massachusetts, Boston, #B-226 at Birmingham, #B-233 Rising Tides Lift “Relevant” Boats: Patient Health Service Utilization with Nicole Nicksic, Virginia Commonwealth Improved Post-Acute Care Leads to Universal Health Coverage: The Case of University, #B-243 Improved Long-Term Care Quality in South Korea Global Policy Surrounding Increasing Nursing Homes Hookah Use: Implications for US Max Geraedts, Philipps-Universitaet Marburg, #B-234 Cost and Revenue Relationship in Orthopedic and Trauma Surgery Patients in Relation to Body Mass Index

122 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Brianna Osetinsky, Brown University, Caroline Soi, University of Washington, Measuring Safety, #B-244 #B-251 Analyzing the Need for Integrating Delivering the Human Papilllomavirus Quality, and Value Hypertension Care into HIV Services to (HPV) Vaccine in Mozambique: A Case Olufunmilola Adisa, Emory University, Improve Access to Care in Kenya Study of the Demonstration Phase #B-258 Partnership Model Association of Psychosocial Factors with Irene Papanicolas, London School of Hospital Readmissions Among Dialysis Economics, #B-245 and #B-246 Maike Tietschert, Stanford Medical Patients Global Inpatient Mortality for Acute School, #B-252

Myocardial Infarction, Stroke, and Lessons for Each Other: International Duaa Aljabri, Mayo Clinic, #B-259 Pneumonia Comparison of Patient-Perceived Role of Treatment Intent in Measuring and Integrated Care Value in Radiation Oncology Healthcare Utilization in the U.S. and

Comparisons to Other High Income Roosa Tikkanen, The Commonwealth Matt Austin, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Countries: Implications for Health Fund, #B-253 #B-260 Spending To What Extent Does Health Insurance A Comparison of Two Structured Provide Financial Protection? Comparing Taxonomic Strategies in Capturing Jianchao Quan, University of Hong the U.S. to Three High-Income Countries Adverse Events in U.S. Hospitals Kong, #B-247 That Achieve Universal Health Care

Avoidable Hospital Admissions through Commercial Insurance Nathan Bahr, Oregon Health & Science from Diabetes Complications in University, #B-261 Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Tomone Watanabe, National Cancer Metrics of Resuscitation Management Communities Outside Beijing Center, #B-254 Associated with Teamwork Economic Burden of Five Common

S. Raquel Ramos, New York University, Cancers in Japan Rebecca Balder, Massachusetts Health #B-248 Policy Commission, #B-262 Use of a Pictorial Aid to Assess Liana Woskie, Harvard University, Price Variation for Chemotherapy Drugs Feasibility, Comprehension, and #B-255 in Massachusetts Preference of Likert-Type Response Health and Social Spending: Where

Anchors in a Sample of Ghanaian Does the US Stand Kathleen Balestracci, Yale New Haven Caregivers of Children Living with HIV Health Services Corporation, #B-263 Myoungsoon You, Seoul National Voluntary Patient-Reported Outcome Yusuke Sasabuchi, Jichi Medical University, #B-256 Data Collection for the Development University, #B-249 Salience of Public Leaders’ ‘Meaning of a Total Hip and Knee Replacement Effect of the 2016 Kumamoto Making’ in News Coverage of a Crisis Quality Measure Earthquakes on Preventable Hospital

SESSION B Admissions: A Retrospective Cohort Ferhat Zengul, University of Alabama at Naomi Bardach, University of POSTER Study Birmingham, #B-257 California, San Francisco, #B-264 Turkish People’s Attitude Towards the Testing a New AHRQ Quality Measure: Yi-Jung Shen, National Yang-Ming Development Health Tourism: The Case Variation in Pediatric Asthma Emergency University, #B-250 of Ankara Department Visits Diagnosis, Timing, and Type of 30-Day

Readmission after Hospitalization for Jennifer Barton, Department of Heart Failure, Stroke, and Hip Fractures Veterans Affairs, Portland and Oregon Under a Single-Payer Health Care Health & Science University, #B-265 System Quality of Care Among U.S. Veterans

with Rheumatoid Arthritis Receiving Care in VA

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Miriam Bender, University of California, Tiffany Chang, Centers for Disease Kim Danforth, Kaiser Permanente Irvine, #B-266 Control and Prevention, #B-274 Southern California, #B-281 Measuring Consistency in Quality Trends in the Accuracy of ICD-9-CM and Risk Factors for Delayed Follow-up Outcomes over Time: Application of the ICD-10-CM Codes: The Paul Coverdell of Abnormal Labs within a Large Robust Interrupted Time Series Model National Acute Stroke Program, 2014- Integrated Health System 2017 Andy Bogart, RAND, #B-267 Billie Davis, University of Pittsburgh, Medicare Advantage Plan Hsueh-Fen Chen, University of #B-282 Characteristics Associated with Higher Arkansas for Medical Sciences, #B-275 Variation in Mortality Rates after Levels of Performance Relative to Fee- Variation in Performance in the Hospital Admission to Long-Term Acute Care for-Service Medicare Readmissions Reduction Program Hospitals for Ventilator Weaning within the Mississippi Delta Region Michael Bogart, GlaxoSmithKline, Anna Dermenchyan, University of #B-268 Raja Cholan, Oregon Health & Science California, Los Angeles, #B-283 Predictive Ability of the Asthma University, #B-276 Characteristics of Mortality Cases with Medication Ratio in Medicare and Implications of Changing Electronic Advance Care Planning Issues Medicaid Patients Health Record Vendors on Electronic Clinical Quality Measure Submissions Karen Domino, University of Cindy Brach, Agency for Healthcare from Small Primary Care Practices Washington, #B-284 Research and Quality, #B-269 Measuring Patient Safety in Anesthesia Recommended Organizational Health Laurie Coots Daras, RTI International, through Malpractice Claims: Application Literacy Measurement Set: A Resource #B-277 of Mixed Methods to Identify Factors for Evaluating and Informing Quality Assessing Inpatient Rehabilitation Contributing to Adverse Anesthetic Improvement Initiatives Facilities’ Hospital Readmission Rates Outcomes for Medicare Beneficiaries Treated Laura Burke, Beth Israel Deaconess Following a Stroke Elizabeth Drye, Yale/Yale New Haven Medical Center and Harvard University, Health - Center for Outcomes Research #B-270 and #B-271 Emily Cramer, University of Kansas, and Evaluation, #B-285 Healthy Days at Home: A Population- #B-278 Partnering with Patients and Family Based Quality Measure Among Exploring the Relationship between Caregivers to Define Hypoglycemia Medicare Beneficiaries Nursing Specialty Certification and and Surgical Site Infections Ryan Ellis, Northwestern University, How Does the Healthy Days at Home #B-286 Measure Vary Among Healthcare Claudia Dahlerus, University of Are the Best Hospitals the Best for Markets? Michigan, Kidney Epidemiology and Every Patient? Evaluation of Changes Cost Center, #B-279 and #B-280 in Hospital Rankings By Differences in Lauren Campbell, University of Evaluating National Trends in Outcomes Patient Characteristics Rochester, #B-272 after Implementation of a Star Rating Association between Hospital-Acquired System: Results from Dialysis Facility Alexander Everhart, University of Infection Rates and Patient Ratings of Compare (DFC) Minnesota, #B-287 Hospital Cleanliness and Geographic Variation in the De-Adoption Perspectives from Patients and of Ineffective and Unsafe Treatments Catherine Chanfreau, Veterans Providers on Patient Reported Outcomes Affairs Informatics and Computing (PROs) for End Stage Renal Disease Alex Fauer, University of Michigan, Infrastructure, #B-273 (ESRD) Patients Receiving Maintenance #B-288 Impact of Professional Guidelines on Dialysis Adverse Patient Outcomes and Nursing Diagnosis and Treatment of Chronic Practice Environments in Ambulatory Myeloid Leukemia Among Veterans Oncology Settings

124 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Yevgeniy Feyman, Harvard University, Bradley Gray, American Board of Yuefeng Hou, 3M HIS, #B-303 #B-289 Internal Medicine, #B-296 The Association of Medication Do the Stars Align? Distribution of High- Diagnostic Knowledge Among Adherence in Two Regimes in a Cohort Quality Ratings of Health Care Sectors General Internists Is Associated with of Diabetic/Asthma Patients across US Markets Reduced 90-Day Mortality, Emergency Department Use, and Emergency Laura Houdeshell, Institute for Health Dan France, Vanderbilt University Hospitalizations Following Outpatient Policy, #B-304 Medical Center, #B-290 Evaluations for New Problems Meaningful Use: Does Physician The Association between Non-Routine Participation Move the Needle on Quality Events (NRE) and Adverse Outcomes Margaret Greenwood-Ericksen, Metrics? in Neonatal Surgical Patients: A Institute for Healthcare Policy and Preliminary Analysis Innovation, #B-297 Q. Lina Hu, American College of Surgeons, Association between Hospitalization, #B-305 Rebecca Freeman-Slade, Abt Transfer and Mortality at Rural and Why Do Some Places Not Improve Even Associates, #B-291 Urban Emergency Departments Among after Implementing an Enhanced Recovery Measurement for the Merit-Based Medicare Beneficiaries Pathway? Incentive Payment System (MIPS): Factors Associated with Clinician Brigit Hatch, Oregon Health & Science Reiping Huang, Northwestern University, Participation and Quality Reporting in University, #B-298 #B-306 2017 Clinic Factors Associated with Receipt Can Surgical Skill be Evaluated Objectively of Needed Preventive Services – and Reliably? a Video-Based Peer Review Christopher Frenier, Minnesota Application of a Prevention Index Tool for Assessing Technical Skill of Department of Health, #B-292 Attending Surgeons in Laparoscopic Estimating Inpatient Price Variation Fang He, Health Care Financing and Colectomy in the Minnesota All Payer Claims Payment Program, #B-299 Database Evaluating the Relationship between Orna Intrator, University of Rochester, Post-Acute Care Providers’ Performance #B-307 Sara Galantowicz, Abt Associates, Inc., on All-Cause Versus Potentially Applying a CMS “Ruler” to the Veterans #B-293 Preventable Hospital Readmission Health Administration: Experiences and The Outcome and Assessment Measures Findings Information Set (OASIS) Field Test: Methods, Design and Participants Jodi Heaps-Woodruff, University of Hannah Jang, Kaiser Permanente, Missouri St Louis, #B-300 #B-308 Louis Garrison, University of Metabolic Screening in a Medicaid Using a Robust Assessment Tool to Identify Washington, #B-294 Population Receiving Antipsychotic Delirium and Associated Predictors in A Health Economics Approach to U.S. Medications: Impact of Targeted Older Adults Compared to Younger Adults Value Assessment Frameworks – Population Health Managment SESSION B POSTER Summary and Recommendations of the Guneet Jasuja, Center for Healthcare Ispor Special Task Force Report Christopher Hollenbeak, Penn State Organization and Implementation University, #B-301 Research, #B-309 Lori Geary, Yale New Haven Health Cost-Effectiveness of Hepatitis C Use of Testosterone in Men Infected with Services Corporation, #B-295 Screening for Baby Boomers in a Low- Human Immunodeficiency Virus in the Challenges and Mitigation Strategies Income Population: Perspective of the Veterans Healthcare System for Meaningful Person and Family Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Engagement (PFE) in Quality Measure Services David Kelly, Minnesota Department of Development and Implementation Human Services, #B-310 Arthur Hong, University of Texas Big Crisis Meets Big Data: Provider- Southwestern Medical Center, #B-302 Level Analysis of Opioid Prescribing for Diagnostic Uncertainty and the Growth Minnesota Medicaid’s Opioid Prescribing in Observation Hospitalizations Improvement Program

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Tracy Kim, Medstar Health, National John Lin, Department of Veterans William McConnell, University of Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, Affairs, Palo Alto, #B-319 Evansville, #B-327 #B-311 Evaluating the Role of Past Clinical Patient Expectations of Post- Looking at the Bigger Picture: Analysis Information on Risk Adjustment Operative Pain and Ratings of Overall of Patient Safety Event Reports in Mental Anesthesiologist Performance: Health Units Michelle Lin, Icahn School of Medicine Implications for Pay-for-Performance at Mount Sinai, #B-320 Measures in Anesthesia Julia Kohn, Planned Parenthood Decrease in Emergency Department Federation of America, #B-312 Admission Rates Driven By High- Dominique Medaglio, Christiana Care Examining the Relationship between Variation Conditions, 2006-2014. Health System, #B-328 Clinical Quality Measures and Patient Primary Nonadherence Rates of Experience Scores at Planned Parenthood David Liss, Northwestern University, Discharge Medications Following #B-321 Revascularization Hye-Chung Kum, Texas A&M University, Variability in Quality Measurement #B-313 Reporting from Certified Electronic Jennifer Meddings, University of Emergency Department Patients Who Health Record Technology in a Primary Michigan, #B-329 and #B-330 Frequently Visit Three or More Different Care Quality Improvement Initiative Enhancing Pressure Ulcer Risk- Hospitals in One Year Adjustment Model with Census Data Suzanne Lo, University Hospitals, to Study Effect of Disability and Social Eileen Lake, University of Pennsylvania, #B-322 Determinants of Health #B-314 Potentially Dangerous Combinations and Missed Nursing Care in U.S. Neonatal of Behavioral/Mental Health (BMH) Enhancing the CMS Risk Adjustment Intensive Care Units Medications in Children in New York Models for Readmission after Hip and State (NYS) Medicaid Knee Replacement with Measures of Brian Leas, University of Pennsylvania, Disability and Social Determinants of #B-315 John Mafi, University of California, Los Health Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis Angeles, #B-323 (QCA) to Assess Multicomponent An Analysis of 44 Low-Value Health Emily Morden, National Committee for Interventions for Improving Asthma Care Services Using the Virginia All Payer Quality Assurance, #B-331 Claims Database Health Plan Strategies Supporting Chao Li, Auburn University, #B-316 the Safe and Judicious Use of Trends and Patterns of Potentially William Martinez, Vanderbilt University, Antipsychotics in Children and Avoidable Hospitalizations and Emergency #B-324 Adolescents Department Visits Among Medicare Assessing Healthcare Organizations’ Beneficiaries in 2002-2012 Speaking up Climates: Addition of the Patience Moyo, University of Suc-Prof and Suc-Safe Scales to the Pittsburgh, #B-332 Laney Light, IMPAQ International, LLC, Safety Attitudes Questionnaire Understanding Prescription Opioid #B-317 Quality Measurement in the Context of Psychometric Properties of a Quality of Rachael Matty, Yale New Haven Health Cancer Life Survey Instrument in a Sample of Services Corporation, #B-325 Medicare ESRD Beneficiaries Measure Agreement Among Hospital- Hillary Mull, Center for Healthcare Wide and Condition- and Procedure- Organization and Implementation Hana Yu-Shiuan Lin, National Taiwan Specific Readmission Measures Research, #B-371 University, #B-318 Improving Detection of Adverse Events Drug Price, Dosage and Effectiveness: John Matulis, Mayo Clinic, #B-326 in Outpatient Surgery Using Diagnosis- Real-World Evidence of Oral Hypoglycemic Association between Primary Care Based Triggers Agents Appointment Lengths and Need for Ambulatory Reassessment, Emergency Department Care, and Hospitalization

126 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Nisha Nataraj, Centers for Disease David Odell, Northwestern University, Danielle Rodin, Harvard University, Control and Prevention, #B-333 #B-341 #B-350 Understanding Opioid Prescribing Safe Reduction in Reliance on Blood Physician and Facility Drivers of Patterns Using Cluster Analysis Transfusion in Surgical Patients: A Spending Variation in Localized Prostate Longitudinal Trend Decomposition Cancer Larissa Nekhlyudov, Brigham & Analysis Women’s Hospital, #B-334 Adam Rose, RAND, #B-351 Developing a Framework for Measuring Rho Henry Olaisen, Case Western Regular Primary Care Visits Predict Quality of Cancer Survivorship Care Reserve University, #B-342 Beneficiary Outcomes Assessing the Validity of a Measure of Van Nghiem, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Primary Care Amy Rosen, Department of Veterans Research Center, #B-335 Affairs, Boston, #B-352 Value of Anti-Cancer Drugs in SWOG Serene Olin, National Committee for Expanding Network Access and Phase III Clinical Trials: Evidence from Quality Assurance, #B-343 Managing Risk: Severity Differences Multiple Evaluation Mechanisms Quality Measures for the Safe and between Veterans Receiving Care in Judicious Use of Antipsychotics in VHA Versus Those Receiving Care Christina Nguyen, Harvard University, Children and Adolescents through Community Provider Networks #B-336 Effects of Social Risk Adjustment on Sachiko Ono, The University of Tokyo, Lindsey Roth, National Committee for Quality Measures in a Commercial #B-345 Quality Assurance, #B-353 Population Association between Albuminuria Measuring Health Plan Quality Testing and Subsequent Change in Performance for Routine Adult Matthew Niedzwiecki, University of Estimated Glomerular Filtration Rate: A Immunizations Using Electronic California, Los Angeles, #B-337 Japanese Non-Elderly Cohort Study Clinical Data Emergency Department Bouncebacks: Separating Hospital Effects from Patient Irene Papanicolas, London School of Kira Ryskina, University of Effects Economics, #B-346 Pennsylvania, #B-354, #B-355, and Influence of Mortality on Hospital #B-356 Eugene Nuccio, University of Colorado Readmissions: How Much Variation in Hospitalist Vs. Non-Hospitalist Care Anschutz Medical Campus, #B-338 Hospital Readmission Rates Can be Outcomes and Costs for Patients Reliability and Validity Testing of Current Explained By Variations in Mortality? Discharged to Post-Acute Care in and Potentially New OASIS Items Skilled Nursing Facilities (SNFs) Matthew Pappas, Cleveland Clinic and William Nylander, VA National Surgery Center for Value-Based Care Research, Medicare Payments for Medicine Office,#B-339 #B-347 Subspecialist Consultations for Association of Wait Time with Estimating Correlation between Hospitalized Elderly Adults, 2014 Preoperative Comorbidity and Probability of Perioperative Cardiac and SESSION B POSTER Postoperative Mortality of Hip Fracture Events and Coronary Artery Disease Timing of Post-Acute Care Physician Procedures in VA Surgery Population Visits in Skilled Nursing Facilities Sandi Pruitt, University of Texas Ann O’Malley, Mathematica Policy Southwestern Medical Center, #B-348 Talya Salz, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Research, #B-344 Do Low-Income Participants in a Cancer Center, #B-357 Measuring the Comprehensiveness of Comprehensive Cancer Survivorship Trends in Receipt of Opioid Prescriptions Primary Care: Early Measure Program Visit the Emergency Among Cancer Survivors and Controls Development and Findings from the Department Less Frequently? Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative Rachel Salzberg, Massachusetts Thomas Radomski, Department of Health Policy Commission, #B-358 Tyler Oberlander, National Committee Veterans Affairs, Pittsburgh, #B-349 Site of Service for Community- for Quality Assurance, #B-340 Variation in Low Value Health Service Appropriate Discharges Following Challenges in Primary Care Safety: Look Use within the Department of Veterans Community Hospital Affiliations with to Medical Homes in the Military Affairs Larger Health Systems

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Lok Wong Samson, Office of the Marie Smith, University of Connecticut, Structural Characteristics and Patient Assistant Secretary for Planning and #B-367 Safety Perceptions: The Mediating Role Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health Application of Workflow Mapping to of Teamwork and Handoffs and Human Services, #B-359 Improve the Quality and Safety of Does Unmeasured Medical Complexity Primary Care Medication-Related Megan Vanneman, Department of Explain Higher Rates of Home Health Activities Performed By Nurses and Veterans Affairs, Salt Lake City, Readmissions and ED Visits Among Office Staff Members Informatics, Decision-Enhancement and Dually-Enrolled Medicare Beneficiaries? Analytic Sciences Center (IDEAS 2.0), Lina Song, Harvard University, #B-368 #B-377 Prachi Sanghavi, University of Chicago, Specialist-Hospital Integration and the Have Veterans’ Experiences with the #B-360 Quality of Colorectal Cancer Care: Veterans Choice Program Improved? Assessing the Quality of Patient Safety Smoothing the Low Performers Measurement in Nursing Homes Arjun Venkatesh, Yale New Haven Erica Spatz, Yale University, #B-369 Health Services Corporation, #B-378 Stephanie Schech, UnitedHealth Group, Community Factors and Hospital Wide Hospital Characteristics Are Not #B-361 Readmission Rates: A Contextual Associated with the CMS Overall Do Field-Based Care Management Analysis Hospital Quality Star Ratings Services Lower Readmission Rates and Healthcare Expenditures? Carol Stocks, Agency for Healthcare Varsha Vimalananda, Boston Research and Quality, #B-370 University, #B-379 Nicholas Schiltz, Case Western Observation Care for Nonspecific Chest Development and Psychometric Reserve University, #B-362 Pain Results in Fewer Hospital Revisits Assessment of a Novel Survey to Defining Polypharmacy As a Count of within 7 Days of Care: A Comparison of Measure Coordination of Care from the Medications: What Is the Optimal Emergency Department, Observation, Specialist’s Perspective Cut-Point? and Inpatient Visits Stacy Ward-Charlerie, Surescripts, Margot Schwartz, Brown University, Michael Taitel, Walgreen Co., #B-372 LLC, #B-380 #B-363 Dose Escalation in the Presence of Medication History Data – What’s How Do I Choose? Association between Medication Non-Adherence Among Included, What’s Meaningful? Patient Experience and Outcomes in Medicare Part D Patients Home Health Services Donna Woods, Northwestern University, Huong Trieu, Massachusetts Center for #B-381 and #B-382 Erika Sears, University of Michigan Health Information and Analysis, Developing a Workforce of Mastery Health System, #B-364 #B-373 Trained Quality Safety Leaders Variation in Nonsurgical Services for Emergency Department Visits after and Carpal Tunnel Syndrome across a Large Inpatient Discharge: A Statewide Discreet Choice Experiment to Assess Integrated Healthcare System Analysis of the All-Payer Adult Variation in Sepsi Diagnostics Population in Massachusetts Tetyana Shippee, University of Hayato Yamana, University of Tokyo, Minnesota, #B-365 Mark Unruh, Weill Cornell Medical #B-383 Provider Perceptions of the CMS 5-Star College, #B-374 Hospital Standardized Mortality Ratio Rating and Organizational Strategies to Physician Prices and the Cost and Using the Procedure-Based Severity Achieve Higher Scores Quality of Care for Commercially Index for Inpatients: Analysis Using the Insured Patients Japanese National Claims Database Sari Siegel, Westat, #B-366 In Their Own Words: An Assessment of Soumya Upadhyay, University of Alexis Zebrowski, University of Hospital Staff Open-Ended Question Nevada, Las Vegas, #B-375 and Pennsylvania, #B-384 Responses to a Pilot Administration of #B-376 Factors Relating to Receiving High the AHRQ Hospital Survey on Patient Does Hospital Cultural Competency Intensity Care in Older Adults with Blunt Safety Culture (Version 2.0) Influence Its Patient Safety Culture? Traumatic Injury and

128 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Junya Zhu, Johns Hopkins University, David Chen, Mayo Clinic, #B-392 Susan Goold, University of Michigan, #B-385 Predicting Time to First Treatment #B-399 Association of Magnet Status and Nurse for Patients Diagnosed with Chronic Does Deliberation Make a Difference? a Staffing with Improvements in Patient Lymphocytic Leukemia: Application of Randomized Trial of Deliberation about Experience with Hospital Care, 2008- Machine Learning Methods Medicaid Priorities 2015 Dorothy Cilenti, University of North April Grady, Manatt Health Strategies, Carolina at Chapel Hill, #B-393 #B-400 Methods Research Using System Dynamics Approaches The Promise of All Payer Claims to Drive Collective Learning, Decisions, Databases: Results from a 50 State Roshan Alemi, Advisory Board and Action: What Is the Evidence of a Capacity Survey Company, #B-386 Connection? The Mortality Index: A Comprehensive David Grembowski, University of Approach to Quantifying Patient Nicole Coomer, RTI International, Washington, #B-401 Prognosis #B-394 Evaluation of the State Innovation Understanding Differences in Claim Models (SIM) Project in Washington: Abimbola Ayorinde, University of Level Cost Calculation Methods for Conceptual Model and Study Design of Warwick, #B-387 Inpatient Rehabilitation Facilities and a Complex Intervention Publication Bias in Health Services and Long-Term Care Hospitals Delivery Research (HSDR): Analysis of Sandra Griffith, Flatiron Health, #B-402 Publication Status of Cohorts of Health Kristin De Groot, Edward Hines Jr. VA Development and Validation of a High- Services Research Studies Hospital, #B-395 Quality Composite Real-World Mortality Transforming Medicare Claims Data Endpoint Adam Batten, Veterans Health into the Omop Common Data Model: Administration, #B-388 Enhanced Data Tools to Facilitate Paul Guerino, Centers for Medicare and Innovative Methods to Validate Research Medicaid Services, #B-403 Latent Groups of High-Risk Primary Diagnosis Code Based Strategies for Care Populations Using Mixture- Robert Dembo, Brandeis University, Identifying Transgender Medicare Item Response Theory with Clinical #B-396 Beneficiaries Diagnoses Community Health Contexts and Special-Needs Students: A Geospatial Jenine Harris, Washington University in David Beiser, University of Chicago, Approach Bridging Health Services, St. Louis, #B-404 #B-389 Disability, and Education Research Coding2share: Examining and Improving Design and Parameterization of the Reproducible Research Practices in Communityrx Agent-Based Model Using Karen Dyer, VA HSR&D Center for Public Health Experimental and Secondary Data the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Sources Implementation and Policy, Department Alyssa Hartsell, Vizient, #B-405 SESSION B POSTER of Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, Variation in LOS, Cost, Comorbidities, Robert Burke, University of Colorado, #B-397 Complications and 30-Day #B-390 Primary Care Provider Engagement in Readmissions in Lung Transplant Identifying Short and Long-Term Research Patients Among Hospitals in the Vizient Nursing Home Stays in the VHA System Clinical Database Deborah Ehrenthal, University of Guido Cataife, IMPAQ International, Wisconsin—Madison, #B-398 Kai Hong, New York University, #B-406 #B-391 Integrating Data Systems to Expand the Two-Sample Instumental Variable Generalization of the Difference-in- Evidence-Base for Maternal and Child Estimates of the Effects of High School Differences Model for Applied Research Health Interventions Reforms on Health Behaviors

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Siddharth Jain, Childrens Hospital of Allison Norful, Columbia University, #B- Annie Simpson, Medical University of Philadelphia, #B-407 415 South Carolina, #B-423 Association Patterns of Provider Volume Measuring Nurse Practitioner-Physician Effect of Medicare Patients’ Pre- and Outcomes in Head and Neck Co-Management in Primary Care: Initial Stroke Treatment-Seeking Behavior on Cancer Patients Development and Psychometric Evaluation 12-Month Outcomes Post Stroke of the Provider Co-Management Index Hadi Kharrazi, Johns Hopkins University, Vessela Stamenova, Women’s College #B-408 Vijay Nori, Optum Labs, #B-416 Hospital, #B-424 A Comparison of Risk Adjustment Models Identifying Incident Alzheimer’s Disease Value Proposition Design in Digital Based on Traditional Statistical and from Claims Data Health: Finding a Model for Remote- Machine Learning Techniques in Predicting Monitoring in Chronic Obstructive Health Care Costs in Older Adults Yolande Pengetnze, PCCI, #B-417 Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients. A Predictive Model for Preterm Birth Risk Rahul Ladhania, Carnegie Mellon Improves Prospective Case Identification Aaron Tierney, Department of Veterans University, #B-409 Compared to Clinical Criteria in a Medicaid Affairs, Palo Alto, #B-425 Medication Adherence and Cost Exposure: Population Development and Validation of the Study A Story in Heterogeneity Quality Assessment of Design (SQUAD) Holger Pfaff, University of Cologne, Tool for Systematic Reviews Kanna Lewis, Arkansas Center for Health #B-418 Improvement, #B-410 Measuring Attributes of Health Literate Jaya Tripathi, MITRE, #B-426 Methodological Approach for the Health Care Organizations from the Identifying Risky Drug-Seeking Behavior at Evaluation of the Arkansas Health Care Patients’ Perspective: Development and the Point of Care Independence Program Validation of a Questionnaire to Assess Health Literacy-Sensitive Communication Maria Ukhanova, Oregon Health and David Manning, Brown University, #B-411 (HL-COM) Science University, #B-427 and #B-412 Polypharmacy Risk Among Working-Age Antibiotic Rocks and Hard Places: Sudha Raman, Duke University, #B-419 Adults with Different Combinations of Developing an Interview Guide to Assess Electronic Health Records (EHR) Vs Multiple Chronic Condition Patterns Facilitators and Barriers for Nursing Home Medicare Claims Data: Comparing Data Antibiotic Stewardship Completeness of a Linked Cohort Stephanie Veazie, AHRQ Scientific and Resource Center, #B-428 Building the Antibiotic Stewardship Tara Ramanathan, Centers for Disease Meeting the Evidence Needs of Foundation: Identifying Limitations to Control and Prevention, #B-420 Stakeholders through Leverage of Existing Nursing Home Data Alternative Public Health Data: Mining Resources: Lessons Learned from the Information from Health Departments on Agency for Healthcare Research and Wanda Montalvo, Columbia University, Public Health Laws Quality (AHRQ) Evidence-Based Practice #B-413 Center (EPC) Program Successful Strategies for the Recruitment Leon Cosler, State University of New York and Retention of Underrepresented Groups at Binghamton, #B-421 Jason Wang, Hofstra Northwell, #B-429 in Biomedical Research: A FQHC Based A Simulation Modeling Framework Using a Game Theory Model to Identify the Research Institute for Analyzing Non-Optimal Antibiotic Leadership in Decision Making Prescriptions for Acute Respiratory Richard Mularski, Kaiser Permanente, Infections (ARTIs) Scarlett Wang, New York University, #B-414 #B-430 Advancing the COPD Foundation Patient Nasser Sharareh, University of Utah Using Probabilistic Matching to Link New Powered Research Network Registry Health, #B-422 York City Rikers Island Admission Records - Linking Patient-Level EMR Data to Investigating Medicaid Access to to New York State Medicaid Claims: Patient-Reported Data: Methods Toward Primary Care through Simulation One Step Towards Analyzing Medicaid a Scalable Efficient Interoperable Modeling and GIS Mapping Utilization Among Social Service System Comprehensive Research Data Resource High-Utilizers in New York City

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Ben Wellner, MITRE Corporation, Kimberly Brunisholz, University of Dominick Esposito, Insight Policy #B-431 Utah, #B-439 Research, #B-447 Predicting Septic Shock Listening to the Field: Identifying Patient and Stakeholder Engagement Behavioral Factors That May Impact in the Eugene Washington Pcori Edwin Wong, Department of Veterans Scaling the Diabetes Prevention Engagement Award Portfolio—Investing Affairs, Puget Sound, #B-432 Program to Priority Populations within a in the Future of Patient-Centered Predicting Primary Care Use Among Learning Healthcare System Outcomes Research Patients in a Large Integrated Health System: The Role of Patient Experience Ruth Bush, University of San Diego, Patricia Franklin, University of Measures #B-440 Massachusetts, #B-448 Supporting Latino Families with Translating National Data to Predictive Dahai Yue, University of California, Children with Spina Bifida: A Community Analytics and Individual Shared Decision Los Angeles, #B-433 Academic Nursing Partnership Reports in the Learning Healthcare Synthetic Control Methods for Comparative System: Challenges and Solutions Case Studies in Health Services Research: Ken Cheung, Columbia University, Revisiting Massachusetts Health Care #B-441 Saira Ghafur, Center for Health Policy, Reform in 2006 Personalized Preferences for Institute of Global Health Innovation, Personalized Trials (N-of-1): A Imperial College London, UK, #B-449 Ferhat Zengul, University of Alabama at Hierarchical Conjoint Analysis What Can Healthcare Learn from Other Birmingham, #B-434 Industries about Patient Engagement Text Mining Analyses of Health Services Christie Clipper, Using Technology? and Policy Research University, #B-442 Use of Behavioral Engagement Model to Lauren Goss, University of Alabama at Improve Patient-Provider Relationship: Birmingham, #B-450 Patient-Centered Applications for Patient-Centered Care Post-Discharge Opioid Utilization after Colorectal Surgery Is Modified By ERAS Research Tumaini Coker, Seattle Children’s Pathways Mahshid Abir, University of Michigan, Research Institute, #B-443 #B-435 A Cluster RCT of a Telehealth-Enhanced Kevin Griffith, Department of Veterans Identifying Patient-Centered Referral System for Mental Health Affairs, Boston, #B-451 Interventions to Reduce Asthma-Related Predicting 5 and 10-Year Mortality Risk Pediatric Hospitalizations Heather Davila, University of in Veterans with Type 2 Diabetes Minnesota, #B-444 Naomi Bardach, University of Quality in Long-Term Services and Roman Gulati, Fred Hutchinson Cancer California, San Francisco, #B-436 Supports: Toward a More Inclusive View Research Center, #B-452 Prostate Cancer Screening Using

Patient and Family Safety Event SESSION B Karen Dyer, VA HSR&D Center for Personalized Testing Intervals and Reporting in the Inpatient Setting: Does POSTER Anonymity Empower or Inhibit? the Study of Healthcare Innovation, Cessation Age Implementation and Policy, Department Nina Bickell, Icahn School of Medicine of Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, Candace Hall, Patient-Centered at Mount Sinai, #B-437 #B-445 Outcomes Research Institute, #B-453 Does Training Oncologists to Have Goals Increasing Engagement of Women Addressing National Research Priorities of Care Discussions Affect Utilization Veterans in Research in Mental Health: A Systematic Analysis Among Patients with Advanced Cancer? of the PCORI Mental Health Portfolio Hillary Edwards, University of Susan Brasher, Emory University, #B-438 Maryland, Baltimore, #B-446 Liz Hart, National Committee for Quality Engaging Patients and Stakeholders in 10-Step: Mapping and Resourcing Assurance, #B-454 a Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Patient and Stakeholder Engagement Patient Engagement in Practice Institute Award to Address Transitioning in PCOR Improvement Among Patient-Centered to Adulthood in Autism Spectrum Medical Homes Disorder (ASD)

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Rory Harte, University of Pennsylvania, Celeste Lemay, University of Bing Ying Poon, University of California, #B-455 Massachusetts, #B-462 Berkeley, #B-469 Why Effective Interventions Don’t Work Patient Priorities for Real-Time Shared Patient Activation As a Pathway for All Patients: Exploring Variation Decision Reports of Patient-Reported to Shared Decision-Making for in Response to a Chronic Disease Outcomes Adult Patients with Diabetes and Management Intervention Cardiovascular Disease Thomas Mackie, Rutgers, The State Sophie Higgins, Harvard University, University of New Jersey, #B-463 Laura Prechter, National Network of #B-456 Eliciting Stakeholder Preferences in Public Health Institutes, #B-470 Patient Engagement in Multidisciplinary Outcomes Measurement: An Application The Science of Engagement: Lessons Teams: Examining Similarities and of Best-Worst Scaling to Prioritize from the Pipeline to Proposal Awards Differences in Perspectives Among Outcomes in Comparative Effectiveness Program Team Members Research Brian Roberson, America’s Essential Denise Hynes, VA Information Resource Jeanne Madden, Northeastern Hospitals, #B-471 Center, #B-457 University, #B-464 Use of Patient-Centered Outcomes Outcomes of a Patient Centered Medical Advocacy Community Engagement Research/Comparative Effectiveness Home for Chronic Hemodialysis Patients in a Mixed-Method Study of Health Research at Essential Hospitals Insurance Design and Bipolar Disorder Monica Jolles, University of Southern Kaitlynn Robinson-Ector, Patient- California, Los Angeles, #B-458 Richard Mularski, Kaiser Permanente - Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Learning What Matters in Clinical The Center for Health Research, #B-465 #B-472 Settings to Evaluate Medical Home Care Development and Status of the COPD Chronic Disease Management: The for Patients with Multiple Health Care Foundation Patient-Powered Research Use of Chronic Care Model Elements in Needs. Network: Patient-Driven Pcornet Patient Centered Outcomes Research Research Entity with Longitudinal Institute’s (PCORI) Comparative Benjamin Keeney, , Follow-up Data and Patient Engagement Effectiveness Research (CER) Trials #B-459 How Much Weight Do Morbidly Obese Nabil Natafgi, University of Maryland, Marisa Roczen, University of Colorado Patients Need to Lose to Improve #B-466 Anschutz Medical Campus, #B-473 Surgical Outcomes Meaningfully? Towards a Learning Healthcare System Promis - OASIS Comparison: First Steps Examples Using Total Knee v2.0 a.k.a. a Learning Health Care for Post-Acute Care Data Collection with Replacement Community Patient Reported Outcomes

Hye-Chung Kum, Texas A&M University, Sarah Ono, Department of Veterans Karen Schaepe, Mayo Clinic, #B-474 #B-460 Affairs, #B-467 Managing Patients with Progressive Patients’ and Stakeholders’ Perceptions When Study Participants Are Also Study Multiple Sclerosis: How Can We Better of Risks and Benefits of the Privacy Partners: Using Photovoice Methodology Address the Unmet Needs? Preserving Interactive Record Linkage to Engage Veterans in Research (PPIRL) Framework Claire Than, University of California, Laura Pinheiro, Weill Cornell Medicine, Los Angeles, #B-475 Emily Lawrence, Department of #B-468 Assessment of Provider Burnout in Veterans Affairs, Eastern Colorado, Using Self-Reported Health-Related Veterans Health Administration Primary #B-461 Quality of Life to Predict Incident Care Teams for Women Veterans Engaging Veterans in the Design and Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Refinement of a Transitions of Care Events Intervention for Non-VA Care

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Veronica Thomas, RTI International, Payment and Delivery Heidi Berthoud, Kaiser Permanente #B-476 Washington Health Research Institute, Advancing Shared Decision Making: Systems Innovations #B-491 Current State of the Science and Future Advancing High Performance in the Sumit Agarwal, Brigham and Women’s Directions Safety Net: Partnerships As a Key Hospital, #B-483 Facilitator for Success Under Value- Adoption of Enhanced Medicare Care Jamie Thompson, Kaiser Permanente Based Payment Management Codes in Primary Care Center for Health Research, #B-477

Using Boot Camp Translation to Inform Lane Burgette, RAND, #B-492 Ayse Akincigil, Rutgers University, a System-Based Intervention to Improve Practice Expense for Facility-Based #B-484 Rates of Colon Cancer Screening Physicians Customized Statewide Medicaid Among Latino Patients in Community Managed Care Program Improves Safe Health Centers Chiang-hua Chang, The Dartmouth and Judicious Use of Antipsychotic Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Medications for Children in Foster Care Matthew Thompson, University of Practice, #B-493

Washington, #B-478 Characteristics of Nursing Home Elaine Albertson, University of Advancing Patient Centeredness: Residents Attributed to Accountable Care Washington, #B-485 Which Patient Centered Outcomes Are Organizations A Mixed Methods Evaluation Important for Imaging Tests? of Washington State’s Practice Winnie Chi, RTI International, #B-494 Transformation Support Hub Edith Williams, Medical University of Historical Quality Performance of

South Carolina, #B-479 and #B-480 Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) Abdullah Alibrahim, Kuwait University, My Life with Lupus: Contextual Practices #B-486 Responses of African American Women A System Simulation of the Competitive with Systemic Lupus Participating in a Douglas Conrad, University of Effects of Accountable Care Peer Mentoring Intervention to Improve Washington, #B-495 Organizations on Private Healthcare Disease Self-Management Paying for Value Versus Volume in Federally Markets Using Agent-Based Modeling and Qualified Health Centers: The Washington

Understanding Quality of Life in African State Innovation Model Payment Redesign Rachelle Ashcroft, University of Americans with Lupus (UQAN) Toronto, #B-487 Samantha De Leon, New York City Developing an Incentive Model to Tsung-Hsien Yu, National Taipei Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, Improve Quality Care for Depression University of Nursing and Health, #B-496 and Anxiety in Interprofessional Primary #B-481 Estimating Costs to Conduct Patient Health Care Model Exploring the Relationship Among Engagement and Care Coordination

Patient Reported Experience and Fear of Activities in Primary Care Practices in NYC

Caroline Au-Yeung, State Health SESSION B Recurrence in Patients with Colorectal Access Data Assistance Center, #B-488 POSTER Cancer Nicolae Done, Veterans Health Advancements in Care Coordination: Administration, #B-497 Findings from an Evaluation of Dani Zionts, Stanford University, Development of a New Risk-Adjustment Minnesota’s State Innovation Model #B-482 Procedure for Primary Care Panels in Initiative What Disgusts Cancer Patients? A the Veterans Health Administration

Qualitative Study Exploring Negative Savannah Bergquist, Harvard Emotions in Cancer Care Paul Fishman, University of University, #B-490 Washington, #B-498 Intervening on the Data to Improve the A Systems Approach to Evaluating Performance of Health Plan Payment Changes in Health Service Delivery and Methods Finance: An Application to the Patient

Centered Medical Home

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Taressa Fraze, Geisel School of A. Jay Holmgren, Harvard University, Richard Kronick, University of California, Medicine, #B-499 #B-508 San Diego, #B-516 Comprehensive Primary Care Plus: Post-Acute Care Provider Participation The Effects of ‘making San Diego a Characteristics Associated with and Dropout in the Voluntary Bundled Heart Attack and Stroke Free Zone’ on Participation Payments for Care Improvement Medication Adherence, Cardiovascular Initiative Risk Factors, and Heart Attacks and Ishani Ganguli, Brigham and Women’s Strokes Hospital, #B-500 Jonathan Inselman, Mayo Clinic, An Evaluation of Direct Scheduling in #B-509 Jonah Kushner, Oregon Health & Science Primary Care Evaluation of Claims- and University, #B-517 Administrative-Derived Patient Factors Delivering Health-Related Services May Kimberley Geissler, University of in Predicting Cost and Outcomes in a be More Challenging Than Anticipated: Massachusetts, #B-501 Lower Extremity Joint Replacement Lessons from One State Team Formation and Performance: Bundled Payment Model Evidence from Healthcare Referral Samantha Larson, University of Florida, Networks Ulysses Isidro, University of #B-518 Pennsylvania, #B-510 Effect of Accountable Care Organizations Samantha Goldfarb, Florida State Program Participation and Policy on Non-Medicare Population: Evaluation University, #B-502 Evaluation without Administrative Data: of Health Services Utilization, Patient Health Service Utilization of Medicaid Is Homemade Really Better? Experience and Health Expenditure Among Enrollees with HIV in Standard Medicaid Individuals Aged 18-64 Plans Versus Specialty HIV Medicaid Audrey Jones, Department of Veterans Plans Affairs, Salt Lake City, #B-511 Cassandra Leighton, University of Homeless Veterans Assigned to Tailored Pittsburgh, #B-519 Monika Gulledge, RTI International, Primary Care Teams Report More Medicare ACO Network Adequacy and #B-503 Positive Experiences with Care Patient Panel Stability A Closer Look at Quality Measure Selection and Performance Benchmarks Zeynal Karaca, Agency for Healthcare Jing Li, University of Kentucky, #B-520 Under Alternative Payment Models Research and Quality, #B-512 and Impacting Hrrp—Transitional Care #B-513 Strategies, Achieve More By Doing Less? Jing Guo, Agency for Healthcare Health Insurance for Young Adults: Research and Quality, #B-504 Health Capital and Aging out Meng-Yun Lin, Boston University, Common Ownership in Hospitals and and #B-521 Post-Acute Sectors and Patients’ Medicare Accountable Care Physician-Hospital Integration and Utilization of Post-Acute Care Organizations and Inpatient Mortality Efficiency of Accountable Care Rates Organizations Christopher Halladay, Providence VA Medical Center, #B-505 Saleema Karim, University of Arkansas Michelle Lin, Icahn School of Medicine Targeting Social-Work Intervention in for Medical Sciences, #B-514 at Mount Sinai, #B-522 Primary Care to High-Risk Veterans Financial Performance of Hospitals Trends in Empanelment, Risk in the Appalachian Region Under Stratification and Care Management Mika Hamer, University of Colorado, the Hospital Readmission Reduction Among Comprehensive Primary Care #B-506 Program and Hospital Value-Based (CPC) Practices, 2013-2016 Effects of a Community Health Worker Purchasing Program Program on Cost and Utilization Among Sunny Lin, University of Michigan, Frequent Emergency Department Users David Kim, Tufts Medical Center, #B-523 #B-515 Hospital Participation in Medicare Fang He, RTI International, #B-507 Using Individualized Risk Prediction in Shared Savings ACOs Is Not Associated Comparing Characteristics of Physicians Incentive Program Design: The Example with Improved Readmission Rates, in CPC+ to Physicians Not in CPC+ of Lung Cancer Screening Regardless of the Quality of Hospital Care Transitions

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Jodi Liu, RAND, #B-524 David Muhlestein, Leavitt Partners, William Parish, RTI International, Aligning Practice Expense Payments in #B-532, #B-533, #B-534, #B-535, and #B-542 the Medicare Physician Fee Schedule #B-536 Aspects of Primary Care Initiatives That with Hospital Outpatient Relative Costs Accountable Care Organizations Are Contribute to Reduced Expenditures and Increasingly Led By Physician Groups Hospitalizations Yiyan Liu, RTI International, #B-525 Rather Than Hospitals or Health Transition Home Plus Program Reduces Systems Ashok Reddy, University of Washington, Medicaid Spending and Health Care and #B-543 Utilization for High-Risk Infants ACO Maturity Score – a Metric to Impact on High-Cost Healthcare Assess an Organization’s Progress in Utilization Due to Changes in Patient- Rachel Machta, Mathematica Policy Accountable Care Centered Medical Home Implementation Research, Inc., #B-526 and 2012 to 2015. Safety Net Hospital Membership in Engagement of Accountable Care Vertically Integrated Health Systems Organizations in Acute Care Redesign: Hector Rodriguez, University of Results of a National Survey California, Berkeley, #B-544 Brook Martin, University of Utah, and The Early Impact of the CMS State #B-527 Lessons from the 2017 Annual ACO Innovation Model Initiative on Alcohol Changes in Patient-Reported Outcomes Survey: What Do Current Trends Tell Us Misuse and Tobacco Use Among Adults Based on Hospital Participation in about the Future of Accountable Care? with Diabetes Bundle Payment Programs for Hip and and Knee Joint Replacement: An Analysis of Medicare Alternative Payment Models: Meredith Rosenthal, Harvard Data from a Multicenter Study Not Every Provider Has a Path Forward University, #B-545 Impact of Academic Medical Center Samuel Masters, RTI International, Amol Navathe, University of Primary Care Redesign on Utilization #B-528 Pennsylvania, #B-537 and Cost of Health Care Supporting the Flexible Delivery of Transforming Primary Care Payment in Primary Care: The Hybrid Payment of Hawaii: A Policy Trial Regina Rutledge, RTI International, the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus #B-489 Model Brock O’Neil, University of Utah, Different Medicaid Payment Models #B-538 in Round 1 State Innovation Model Brandon Maughan, The Lewin Group, Provider Practice Competition and Test States Generally Yield Better Use #B-529 Adoption of Medicare’s Oncology Care of Primary Care but Few Changes in Care Redesign Strategies for Model Utilization, Expenditures, or Quality Participants in the Comprehensive ESRD Care (CEC) Model: A Qualitative Analysis Andrew Oseran, Massachusetts Talya Salz, Memorial Sloan-Kettering General Hospital, #B-539 Cancer Center, #B-546 Thomas Meath, Oregon Health & Predictors of Participation in Bundled Integrating Patient-Reported Outcomes SESSION B POSTER Science University, #B-530 Payments for Care Improvement for and Clinical Practice Guidelines into The Early Effects of Medicaid Reform Cardiac Episodes Ongoing Care for Complex Cancer and Care Integration Among People with Survivors Serious Mental Illness Marietou Ouayogodé, Dartmouth, #B-540 Robert Saunders, Duke University, Aaron Mitchell, Cecil G. Sheps Center Factors Influencing Geographic Adoption #B-547 for Health Services Research, #B-531 of Payment Reforms State Employee Health Plans Can be Cancer Patients Receive Higher-Priced Leaders and Drivers of Value-Based Chemotherapy When Treated in Private Jennifer Palazzolo, Virginia Initiatives Practice Compared to Academic Commonwealth University, #B-541 Institutions Factors Associated with Preferred Affiliation Status of Skilled Nursing Facilities with Accountable Care Organizations

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Janelle Schrag, America’s Essential J. Mick Tilford, University of Arkansas Washington State Hospitals, #B-548 for Medical Sciences, #B-557 and Lessons Learned from Collaborative Variation in Hospital Penalties Under Improving Health for the Underserved: Value-Based Payment Arrangements the Hospital Readmission Reduction Developing a Conceptual Model for Care between Safety Net Providers Program Integration in North Seattle

Euichul Shin, The Catholic University of Justin Timbie, RAND, #B-558 Ferhat Zengul, University of Alabama at Korea, #B-549 Implementation of Patient-Centered Birmingham, #B-566 The Effect of Diagnosis-Related Groups Medical Homes in Small and Rural The Relationship between Hospital on the Shift of Medical Service from Practices: The Experience of Indian Technology and Expenses: Do Different Inpatient to Outpatient: The Korean Health Service Clinics Measures of High-Tech Services Experience. Matter? Neeltje van den Berg, University Noelle Siegfried, RTI International, Medicine Greifswald, #B-559 Hui Zhang, California Public Employees’ #B-550 The Delegation of Medical Tasks to Retirement System, #B-567 Providers’ Response to the Vermont Non-Physician Health Professionals The Longitudinal Payment and State Innovation Model (SIM) Initiative in Outpatient Pediatric Care – Need, Utilization Impact of a Commercial Acceptance and Concept Development Accountable Care Organization on Alissa Simon, Department of Veterans Outpatient Prescription Drugs Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #B-551 Lauryn Walker, Virginia Commonwealth Primary Care Providers with a Stronger University, #B-560 Proclivity to Use Interdisciplinary Concordance between Patient and Poster Session C Assistance to Care for High-Risk Provider Perspectives of Patient- Patients Have Higher Job Satisfaction Centered Medical Homes: Implications Monday, June 25 for Healthcare Outcomes 6:45 p.m.–8:15 p.m. Kit Simpson, Medical University of South Carolina, #B-552 Andrew Wang, Northwestern Comparison of Charge to Payment University, #B-561 Ratios across States, Payers, and Drgs Development of a Budget Impact Aging, Disability, and Analysis Model of a Culturally and Caroline Sloan, Duke University Linguistically Competent Clinical End-of-Life Medical Center, #B-553 Practice in Kidney Transplantation Using Fuad Abujarad, Yale University, #C-1 Impact of Medicare Dialysis Bundled Medicare Administrative Data E-Referral for Community Complex Care Payment Reform on Peritoneal Dialysis Response Team to Improve Geriatric Programs in US Dialysis Facilities Himali Weerahandi, NYU Langone Public Health Outcomes Hospital Brooklyn, #B-562 Nathan Smith, Leavitt Partners, #B-554 Risk of Readmission after Discharge Douglas Barthold, University of No Evidence That ACO Affiliated from Skilled Nursing Facilities Following Washington, #C-2 Hospitals Are Narrowing Their PAC Heart Failure Hospitalization Alzheimer’s disease risk reduction Networks among renin-angiotensin system acting Andrew Wilcock, Harvard University, anti-hypertensive medications in African David Steenhard, Humana, Inc., #B-563 American, Hispanic, and Caucasian men #B-555 Luck of the Draw: The Role of Chance and women Predicting Loneliness, a Social in the Assignment of Medicare Determinant of Health, in a Medicare Readmission Penalties Emmanuelle Belanger, Brown Advantage Population University, #C-3 and #C-4 Suzanne Wood, University of Internal Consistency and Factor Kristi Swanson, Mayo Clinic, #B-556 Washington, #B-564 and #B-565 Structure of the Patient Health Variations in Costs for Joint Accountable Care Implementation: Questionnaire-9 in US Nursing Home Replacement Bundles across a Building a Conceptual Model to Evaluate Residents Collaborative of Health Care Systems Policy Effects on Health Systems in

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and Shubing Cai, University of Rochester, The Spillover Effects of Medicare Prevalence of Pain As a Function of #C-12 Advantage on Quality for Long-Stay Self-Reported Vs. Observer-Rated Pain Hospital Readmissions Among Post- Nursing Home Residents Assessments Among Long-Stay US Acute Nursing Home Residents: Does Nursing Home Residents Obesity Matter? Robin Cohen, National Center for Health Statistics, #C-22 Justin Blackburn, University of Michael Cary, Jr., Duke University, Financial Barriers for Medical Care Alabama at Birmingham, #C-5 #C-13 Among Families with Older Adults: Does Black-White Differences in the Risk of How Does Caregiver Skills Training Living Arrangement Matter? Long-Term Nursing Home Placement Affect Caregiver Burden and Outcomes after Stroke for Functionally Impaired Veterans? Stacy Cohen, Health Resources and Results from a Randomized Controlled Services Administration, #C-23 Sarah Blake, Emory University, #C-6 Trial Understanding the Needs of Older and #C-7 Adults Receiving HIV Care and Emergency Preparedness Requirements Xi Cen, University of Rochester, #C-14 Treatment By the Health Resources for Medicare and Medicaid Participating Are Nursing Home Residents with and Services Administration’s Ryan Providers: Are Nursing Homes Ready? Mental Illness More Likely to Exhibit White HIV/AIDS Program: An Emerging and Aggressive Behaviors? Population Long Term Care Legionella Prevention and Control Strategies: Experiences of Angela Chang, Institute for Health Aubrey Collins, RTI International, Nursing Homes in Florida and Georgia Metric and Evaluation, #C-15 #C-24 A New Metric for Describing the Aging The Effect of the Vermont Support Anne Bowers, National Committee for of a Population and Services at Home Program on Quality Assurance, #C-8 Participant Falls with Injury Experiences of Medicaid Enrollees with Bradley Chen, National Yang-Ming Disabilities in the Transition to Managed University, #C-16 and #C-17 Portia Cornell, Brown University, #C-25 Care: Qualitative Analysis of Consumer Continuity of Care and Intensity of End- Trends in Hospital Admissions from Survey Responses of-Life Services in Older Adults with Veterans Administration Nursing Homes Dementia Becky Briesacher, Northeastern and Sarah Cross, Duke University, #C-26 University Bouvé College of Health Reducing Cost of Health Services at the The Impact of Hospice Market Sciences, #C-9 End of Life through Physician Incentives Concentration on Live Discharge Rates Validity of Nursing Home Self-Reported Antipsychotic Prescribing Latarsha Chisholm, University of Stephen Crystal, Rutgers, The State Central Florida, #C-18 University of New Jersey, #C-27 Timothy Brown, University of California, The Impact of Caregiving on the Health National and State-Level Reduction Berkeley, #C-10 of Older Caregivers in Nursing Home Antipsychotic Use: SESSION C POSTER Predicting Onset of Chronic Pain 7-10 Mixed-Methods Perspective on the Years into the Future: A Validated Thomas Christian, Abt Associates, Inc., Drivers of Change Questionnaire #C-19 A First Look at Trends in Post-Mortem Chandrika Derricho, Georgia State Julia Burgdorf, Johns Hopkins Visit Rates of the Medicare Hospice University, #C-28 and #C-29 University, #C-11 Benefit: A National Study An Examination of Community Family Caregiver Characteristics and Integration and Global Life Satisfaction Subsequent Hospitalization Among Michael Cohen, Yale University, #C-20 in Money Follows the Person Community-Dwelling Older Adults and #C-21 Participants Inappropriate Use of Anti-Psychotic and Medications in Nursing Homes: The Journey to Community Living The Role of Resident Versus Facility through the Lens of the Money Follows Characteristics the Person Program Participants and

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Jing Dong, IMPAQ International, #C-30 Pin Kuei Fu, Taichung Veterans General Geoffrey Hoffman, University of Moral Hazard and Long-Term Care Hospital, #C-38 Michigan, #C-46 Insurance Early and Late DNR Decisions in Interdependence in Physical Inactivity Terminal COPD Patients: A Retrospective and Poor Health Among Older Spouses Cynthia Drake, Colorado School of Study in the Last Year of Life Public Health, #C-31 Wolfgang Hoffmann, University Challenges in Heart Failure Emily Gadbois, Brown University, Medicine Greifswald, #C-47 Management in Nursing Homes: A #C-39 Effectiveness and Safety of Dementia Qualitative Study of Staff and Patient- Well, I Could Use a Lot More but That’s Care Management in Primary Care: A Caregiver Dyads All I Get: Multiple Sclerosis Patients’ Randomized Clinical Trial Experiences with Home and Community Yuxian Du, Texas A&M University, Based Services Siddharth Karanth, University of Texas #C-32 Health Science Center at Houston, Consumer “Star Ratings” of Nursing Melissa Garrido, James J. Peters VA #C-48 Homes and State Regulatory Sanctions: Medical Center, #C-40 Racial-Ethnic Disparities in End-of-Life What Does Each Tell Us about the Identifying and Addressing Mental Care Quality for Lung Cancer Patients: A Other? Health Needs of Hospitalized Seriously SEER-Medicare Based Study Ill Veterans Gabriel Escobar, Kaiser Permanente, Tamra Keeney, MGH Institute of Health #C-33 Kimberley Geissler, University of Professions, #C-49 EHR-Based Risk Adjustment of SNF Massachusetts, #C-41 Functional Trajectories for Persons with Rehospitalization and Post-Discharge Examining the Relationship between Cardiovascular Disease in Late Life Mortality Federal Disability Benefits and Health Care Utilization and Access Sarah Kler, Brown University, #C-50 Chanee Fabius, Brown University, and #C-51 #C-34 John Harris, University of Pittsburgh, Aging in an Expensive Place: The Racial Disparities Among Assisted Living #C-42 Association Between Housing Cost Residents The Relationship between Obesity at the Burden and Older Adults’ Health End of Life and Advanced Directives and and Shekinah Fashaw, Brown University, in-Hospital Death Identifying Meals on Wheels Clients at #C-35 Risk of Hospitalization: A Strategy for Exploring 30 Years of Changes in Krista Harrison, University of California, Allocating Extra Health Services Nursing Home Care Since the Omnibus San Francisco, #C-43 Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987 Social, Functional and Medical Glenn Landers, Georgia State Vulnerabilities of People with Severe University, #C-52 Beth Fields, University of Pittsburgh, Dementia at Home Versus Residential Putting the Home in Home and #C-36 Care Facilities: National Health Aging Community Based Services: Where Do Role of Family Caregivers’ Health and Trends Study 2011-2016 People Move? Literacy in Predicting Healthcare Communication and System Navigation Zachary Hass, Purdue University, Karen Lasater, University of #C-44 Pennsylvania, #C-53 Jori Fleisher, Rush University Medical Using a Semi-Markov Model and The Quality of End-of-Life Care in U.S. Center, #C-37 Simulation to Estimate the Medicaid Hospitals Barriers to Vaccination in Homebound Cost Savings Attributable to Minnesota’s and Non-Homebound People with Return to Community Initiative Tsai-Ling Liu, Atrium Health, #C-54 Parkinson’s Disease Caregiver Burden Among Patients and Jennifer Henry, Department of Caregivers Seeking Specialized Memory Veterans Affairs, #C-45 Care Integrating the Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST) Template into Current Processes in Community Living Centers

138 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Lacey Loomer, Brown University, Joshua Niznik, University of Pittsburgh, #C-55 and #C-56 Tracy Mroz, University of Washington, #C-71 Facility Characteristics Associated with #C-64 Adaptation and Initial Validation of the Implementation of an Advance Care Relationship between Medicaid Minimum Data Set (MDS) Mortality Risk Planning Video Intervention within the Expenditures on Home- and Index to MDS v3.0 Nursing Home Setting Community-Based Services and Use of and Community-Entry Home Health By Rural David Nyweide, Centers for Medicare Impact of an Alternative Risk- Medicare Beneficiaries and Medicaid Services, #C-72 Adjustment Method for Cognitive Status How Does Resource Use Differ over on Self-Care and Mobility Function Dana Mukamel, University of California, Time for Patients Who Mostly Visit Quality Measures in the Nursing Home #C-65 Primary Care Physicians Versus Medical Setting Certificate of Need and Home Health Specialists? Cost per Patient Nicole Marlow, University of Florida, Katherine Ornstein, Icahn School of #C-58 Shirley Musich, Optum, #C-66, #C-67, Medicine at Mount Sinai, #C-73 Evaluation of a Training Program to and #C-68 Receipt of Home-Based Medical Care Increase Awareness of Needs for Characteristics of New Onset Sleep in a National Sample of Older Medicare Persons with Disabilities Among Health Medication Users Among Older Adults Beneficiaries Professionals and Students and The Impact of Mobility Limitations on Andrew Potter, California State Ellen McCreedy, Brown University, Older Adults University, Chico, #C-74 #C-59 and Factors Associated with the Use and Establishing Rate of Conversion from Using Pain Medication Intensity to Non-Use of Caregiver Support Services Full Code to Do Not Resuscitate Status Stratify Back Pain Among Older Adults Among Long-Stay Nursing Home Claire Richards, Department of Residents Weiwen Ng, University of Minnesota, Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound, #C-75 #C-69 Quality of End-of-Life Care for Veterans Michael McKee, University of Michigan, Racial Disparities Among Minnesota with Advanced Kidney Disease #C-60 Nursing Facility Residents Are Hearing Health Equity: Social Inextricably Linked to Serious Mental Julie Robison, University of Determinants of Hearing Aid Use Illness: A Latent Class Analysis Connecticut Center on Aging, #C-76 Progress in Implementation of an David Meyers, Brown University, #C-61 Huong Nguyen, Kaiser Permanente Evidenced-Program (COPE) in a Nursing Homes with More Patients with Southern California, #C-70 Medicaid Waiver and State-Funded HIV Have Worse Outcomes Longitudinal Cohort Study of Patients Homecare Program: Perspectives of with Serious Illness Receiving Home- Different Stakeholders Miranda Moore, Emory University, Based Palliative Care in an Integrated SESSION C POSTER #C-62 Health Care System Joshua Rolnick, University of Opportunities for Systematic Cognitive Pennsylvania, #C-77 Screening Limited By Wide Variations Location of Death: Association with in Penetration of Medicare-Funded Patient Characteristics and Quality of Preventive Visits Life

Gyasi Moscou-Jackson, Patient- Nicholas Schiltz, Case Western Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Reserve University, #C-78 #C-63 Association of Specific Functional Advancing Care for Older Adults: Limitations and 30-Day Hospital A Review of the Patient-Centered Readmission Among Medicare Enrollees Outcomes Research Institute’s (PCORI) Research Portfolio

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 139 2018

Shawnda Schroeder, University of North Courtney Van Houtven, Duke Lindsay White, University of Dakota, #C-79 University, #C-88 Washington, #C-96 Dental Screening for Nursing Home A Family Caregiver Skills Training Health Insurance and out of Pocket Residents: A National Promising Practice Intervention to Improve Patient and Costs at the End of Life Among Caregiver Experiences: A Randomized Seriously Ill Patients Megan Shepherd-Banigan, Duke Trial University, #C-80, #C-81, and #C-82 Charlotte Wong, Agency for Integrated Interventions That Support or Involve Kristal Vardaman, Medicaid and CHIP Care, #C-97, #C-98, #C-99, and Caregivers or Families of Patients with Payment and Access Commission, #C-100 Traumatic Injury: A Systematic Review #C-89 End-of-Life Care Preferences in a and Understanding Spending and National Sample in Singapore PTSD Is an Important Predictor of Characteristics of High-Cost Medicaid and Dementia Onset Among Older Veterans: A Home- and Community-Based Services Individual, Clinical and System Factors Machine Learning Analysis Users Associated with Home Deaths: A Linked and National Database Study Which Characteristics Are the Most Joyce Wang, RTI International, #C-90 and Important Moderators of Informal Early Evidence on Nursing Facility Initiating, Implementing and Integrating Caregiver Skills Training on Patient Days Utilization in Demonstrations Under Advance Care Planning: Leading the in the Community? a Machine Learning CMS’s Financial Alignment Initiative Transformation of Norms Analysis Using Data from a Randomized and Controlled Trial Sijiu Wang, University of Rochester, Sustainable Implementation of Advance #C-91 Care Planning in Asia: An Interpretive- Joanne Spetz, Philip R. Lee Institute for Public Reporting of Antipsychotics and Systemic Framework for National Health Policy Studies at UCSF, #C-83 Hospital Readmissions Among Nursing Development Impact of Nurse Delegation Regulations Home Residents and Home Care Agency Policies on Community Living of Disabled People Melissa Wei, University of Michigan, Dongjuan Xu, Purdue University, #C-92 and #C-93 #C-101 Ian Stockwell, The Hilltop Institute, Multimorbidity and Long-Term Cognitive Quality of Life of Nursing Home #C-84 Functioning and Decline in Older Adults, Residents in Mainland China: The Role Community First Choice Implementation 2000-2014 of Children in Maryland, 2014-2016 and Multimorbidity and Long-Term Disability Traci Yates, Atrium Health, #C-102 Kaitlyn Tate, University of Alberta, #C-85 and Physical Functioning Decline in “Making the Abnormal Normal:” Identifying Available Quality Indicators Older Adults Identifying the Value of a Memory Clinic for Older Persons’ Transitions in Care: A for Dementia Caregivers Delphi Process. Jonathan Weiner, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, #C-94 Zhiqiu Ye, University of Rochester, Anna Tresidder, Eastern Washington Overuse By Health Status in #C-103 University, #C-86 Older Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Impact of Hospital Share of Nursing Aging in Rural Places: A Photovoice Home-Originating Hospitalizations on Project Documenting Aging in Rural Karen Wernli, Kaiser Permanente 30-Day Risk Adjusted CMS Hospital Washington State Washington Health Research Institute, Readmission Rates #C-95 Soumya Upadhyay, University of End of Life Care in a National Sample Yiyang Yuan, Univeristy of Nevada Las Vegas, #C-87 of Adolescent and Young Adult Cancer Massachussetts Life-Sustaining Procedures, Palliative Patients, 2001-2016 Socioeconomic and Geographic Care, and Cost Trends n Dying Lung Disparities in Accessing Nursing Homes Cancer Patients in U.S. Hospitals: 2005- with High Star Ratings: An Ecological 2014 Study

140 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Consumer Choice and Brad Finnegan, Cascadia Strategies, Thomas Hoerger, RTI International, Inc., #C-112 #C-120 Incentives How Do Individuals Eligible for Cost- Do Financial Incentives for Medicaid Sharing Reductions Select Health Beneficiaries Increase Use of Preventive Jessica Ancker, Weill Cornell Medical Plans? Services and Lower Expenditures? College, #C-104 Evidence from Ten States Effect of the Default Option on Talia Fish, IMPAQ International LLC, Disparities in Patient Access to Medical #C-113 Michal Horný, Emory University, Records Creating Innovative Consumer Tools #C-121

Using Direct Partnerships & Human- Surprise Medical Billing for Emergency David Becker, University of Alabama at Centered Design Principles Care: The Financial Implications for Birmingham, #C-105 Patients and Payers Do Large Copayments Reduce Alison Galbraith, Harvard University Emergency Department Visits for Low- and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Shari Hutchison, Community Care Severity Conditions Among Publicly Institute, #C-114 Behavioral Health, #C-122 Insured Children? Characteristics and Plan Choice Self-Direction in Healthcare Utilization

Experiences for Non-Group Enrollees on to Reduce Costs and Improve Recovery Kathryn Bliss, New York State and Off the ACA Marketplaces Outcomes Department of Health, #C-106

Enrollee Choice and Access to Providers Melissa Gosdin, University of Ilya Ivlev, Oregon Health & Science in NYS Medicaid Managed Care (MMC) California, Davis, #C-115 University, #C-123

How Covered California Members Use Patient Decision Aids Can Reduce Keith Branham, Office of the Assistant Information and Make Choices in a Utilization of PSA-Based Prostate Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, State-Operated Exchange Cancer Screening: A Systematic Review #C-107 and Meta-Analysis Premiums and Plan Selections in Rebecca Gourevitch, Harvard the 2018 Federal Health Insurance University, #C-116 Rose Kerber, Massachusetts Health Exchange Does Displaying Hospital Cesarean Policy Commission, #C-124

Section Rates Influence Women’s Out-of-Network Billing in Oliver-John Bright, The Lewin Group, Choice of Obstetric Hospital? Results Massachusetts: Implications for #C-108 from a Randomized Controlled Trial Patients, Payers, and Market Dynamics Investigating the Relationship between

Health Insurance Literacy and Access to Kevin Griffith, Department of Veterans Jeffrey Kullgren, Department of Health Care Affairs, Boston, #C-117 and #C-118 Veterans Affairs, Ann Arbor, #C-125

Diminishing Insurance Choices in the Facilitators of and Barriers to Xiaoxue Chen, HealthCore, Inc., Affordable Care Act Marketplaces: Engagement in Cost-Conscious

#C-109 SESSION C Where, When, and Why? Behaviors Among Americans in High- Understanding Medicare Advantage POSTER and Deductible Health Plans Members’ Health Plan Satisfaction The Feasibility of Managed Competition Using High-Dimensional Administrative for Hospital Services Allison Lipitz-Snyderman, Memorial Data Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, #C-126

Joachim Hero, Harvard Pilgrim Health Exploring Patients’ Experiences and Sunita Desai, NYU, #C-110 Care Institute, #C-119 Information Needs When Selecting a Shifting Patients from Higher-Price to Shopping Experiences and Satisfaction Hospital for Cancer Care Lower-Price Providers: What Are the of Vulnerable Populations on and off Potential Savings? Insurance Marketplaces in Three States Barry Merriman, LMI, #C-127

Building an out-of-Pocket Cost (OOPC) Kevin Erickson, Baylor College of Calculator for Medical Expenses Using Medicine, #C-111 the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey Market Consolidation and Mortality in (MEPS) Patients Initiating Hemodialysis

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Miranda Moore, Emory University, Digital Technologies Rizwana Biviji, Indiana University, #C-128 #C-144 Discussing out-of-Pocket Costs with and Health Factors Related to User Ratings and User Patients: Shared Decision-Making for Downloads of Mobile Apps for Maternal Abd Moain Abu Dabrh, Mayo Clinic, Sacubutril-Valsartan in Congestive Heart and Child Health (MCH) #C-136 Failure “No Waiting” in the “Waiting Room”: The Jason Brinkley, Abt Associates, #C-145 Self-Rooming Patient Pilot Study Dana Mukamel, University of California, Exploring the Metadata of Vaccine-

#C-129 Related Twitter Posts: Just How Much Alejandro Amill-Rosario, Penn State Where Do Patients Prefer to Obtain Care Activity Is There and Where Does It University, #C-137 for Minor Illnesses and Injuries? Come from? Telemedicine Use and Potential Barriers

Among Clinics – Evidence from Kristina Mycek, Consumer Reports, Jordan Budwick, University of Florida, Minnesota #C-130 #C-146

Development and Evaluation of an The Use of Mhealth Apps for Chronic Jessica Ancker, Weill Cornell Medical Outcomes Calculator for Informed Disease Self-Management Among College, #C-138 and #C-139 Decision-Making in Spine Surgery Economically and Educationally Early Adopters of Patient Data Upload in Disadvantaged Populations: A Policy an Electronic Patient Ortal Benjamin Shirley, IMPAQ International, Analysis and #C-131 Thinking about Teen Behavior Changes The Effects of Actuarial Value Threshold Christopher Bui, Humana Inc., #C-147 Attitudes about Parental Access to Teen Changes on Plan Benefit Design and Cost- Early Evaluation of a Remote Heart Medical Records Sharing for Vulnerable Individuals in New Failure Monitoring Program Using

York Claims-Based Outcomes Elizabeth Austin, University of

Washington, #C-140 Renuka Tipirneni, University of Michigan, Ruth Bush, University of San Diego, Characterizing the Diversity of Patient #C-132 #C-148 Generated Health Data Use across Health Insurance Literacy Is Associated Using EHR Audit Data to Examine Healthcare Settings: Implications for with Less Avoidance of Preventive, but Not Adolescent and Proxy Patient Portal Health Systems Non-Preventive, Health Services Utilization in an Pediatric

Department Juha Baek, Texas A&M University, Madhulika Vulimiri, Duke University, #C-141 #C-133 Alejandra Casillas, University of Factors Affecting Patients’ Adoption of A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis of Medicaid California, Los Angeles, #C-149 a Technology-Based Education Tool in Incentives for Smoking Cessation, and Portals of Change- a Meaningful Diabetes Self-Management Broader Implications for Evaluation of Portal Experience for English and

Healthy Behavior Incentives Limited English Proficient Patients with Luis Basurto, Urban Institute, #C-142 Cardiovascular Disease Risk in the Los Medicare EHR Incentive Program Victoria Wagner, New York State Angeles Safety Net Participation, Patient Volume, and Cost Department of Health, #C-134

Medicaid Managed Care Enrollees’ Barriers Jessica Chen, Department of Veterans Emily Belita, McMaster University, to Colorectal Cancer (CRC) Screening: Affairs, Puget Sound, #C-150 #C-143 Results from a Consumer Survey Barriers to Shared Decision Making Evidence-Informed Decision-Making for PTSD: A Qualitative Study Among in Cancer Prevention: Use of Online Kelly Williams, UPMC Center for High- Primary Care Mental Health Providers Knowledge Translation Strategies Value Health Care, #C-135 in 5 U.S. Veterans Health Administration

The Implementation of Two Shared Clinics Decision Making Approaches: Behavioral Health Service User and Prescribing Clinician Perspectives

142 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Megan Coffman, Robert Graham Center, Carrie Franciscus, Department of A. Jay Holmgren, Harvard Business #C-151 Veterans Affairs, Iowa City, #C-158 School, #C-166 Live Video Visit Attitudes and Integration Technical Design of an Online Horizontal Consolidation and Hospital with Primary Care: A Survey of Users Intervention for Female War Veterans Interoperability: Impacts of Health and Non-Users System Structure on Electronic Data Laura Garabedian, Harvard University Sharing Samantha Connolly, Department of and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Veterans Affairs, Boston, #C-152 Institute, #C-159 Jie Huang, Kaiser Permanente, #C-167 Veterans’ Attitudes Towards Smartphone Uptake and Participation in a Real-Time Patient-Provider Video Visits Application Use for Mental Health Mobile Glucometer-Based Diabetes in Patients with Diabetes Care: Examination of Rurality and Age Management Program Differences Ashish Jha, Harvard University, #C-168 Saira Ghafur, Center for Health Policy, Machine-Learned Epidemiology: Real- Tony Cuttitta, Arbor Research Institute of Global Health Innovation, Time Detection of Foodborne Illness at Collaborative for Health, #C-153 Imperial College London, UK, #C-160 Scale Remote Management Technologies for and #C-161 Peritoneal Dialysis Treatment Are Likely Impact of Sharing Electronic Health Samuel Kabue, Kaiser Permanente to be Well Received Despite Differences Records with Patients on Quality of Care Northern California, #C-169 in Priorities of Patients, Care Partners, and Safety – a Systematic Review Identifying Pharmacist-Relevant and Health Care Providers and Predictors of Adverse Events Among Patient-Facing Digital Technology: Type 2 Diabetes Patients Neeraj Dayama, University of Arkansas What Can Healthcare Learn from for Medical Sciences, #C-154 Non-Healthcare Industries to Improve Hadi Kharrazi, Johns Hopkins Health Information Technology Adoption Patient Engagement and the Adoption of University, #C-170 in Nursing Homes and Its Impact on Technology in Healthcare? Forecasting the Maturation of EHR Performance Functions Among US Hospitals Nancy Gordon, Kaiser Permanente, Steven Dobscha, Department for #C-162 Andrzej Kozikowski, Northwell Health, Veterans Affairs, Portland, #C-155 Prevalence of and Factors Influencing #C-171 A Web-Based Course for Mental Use of Online Resources for Health Staff Perspectives and Acceptance of Health Clinicians Decreases Clinician Information and Advice By Middle-Aged Telehealth in Scaling a House Calls Concerns and Improves Self-Reported and Older Adults Program Communication with Patients about Opennotes Lisa Grossman, Columbia University, Cynthia LeRouge, Florida International #C-163 University, #C-172 Kathleen Dwiel, Harvard University, Usability Testing a Patient-Facing Current and Retrospective Assessment #C-156 Application to Visualize PROMIS Clinical of Critical Success Factors in SESSION C POSTER Using Digital Health to Drive Patient- Outcomes Assessment Measures Telemedicine Centered Outcomes: The Caremessage and Omada Health Experience Shivani Gupta, Saint Louis University, Lenard Lesser, One Medical, #C-173 #C-164 Implementation of an Online Natalia Egorova, Icahn School of Level of EHR Adoption in High-Medicaid Rehabilitation Program for Medicine at Mount Sinai, #C-157 Nursing Homes in Missouri Musculoskeletal Problems in Primary Using Electronic Health Record Data to Care Enhance Risk Assessment for Hospital Christopher Harle, Indiana University, Fall Prevention #C-165 Courtney Lyles, University of California, Designing a User-Centered Electronic San Francisco, #C-174 Health Record Decision Support System A Randomized Trial to Train Vulnerable for Guideline-Concordant Opioid Primary Care Patients to Use an Online Prescribing Patient Portal Website

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Amelia Maiga, Tennessee Valley Linda Park, University of Wisconsin Ernie Shippey, Vizient, #C-192 Healthcare System Veterans Hospital, School of Medicine and Public Health, Practice and Policy Development in #C-175 #C-183 Telemedicine Postoperative Telephone Follow-up Is a Clinicians’ Experiences and Safe Way to Increase Access to General Characteristics in Relation to Their Cynthia Sieck, Ohio State University, Surgical Care Patterns of Use of a User-Centered #C-193 and #C-194 Clinical Decision Support Tool Categorizing Secure Messages from an Talar Markossian, Edward Hines Jr. VA Inpatient Portal Hospital, #C-176 Aline Pereira, Nova Southeastern, and Adoption and Use of Personal Health #C-184 Understanding Use of Secure Messaging Record Portals Among Veterans with HIT or Miss: Health Information in the Inpatient Environment Chronic Kidney Disease Resources Use and Immunization Decision-Making Among Caretakers of Claudia Solis-Roman, New York Russell McCord, Centers for Disease Children University, #C-195 Control and Prevention, #C-177 Villagecare Rango Program Evaluation 50-State Assessment: Exploring the Jodyn Platt, University of Michigan, Variations in State Telehealth Laws #C-185 Welmoed Van Deen, University of across the U.S. Willingness to Share: Public Perspectives Southern California, #C-196 on Expanding Health Information The Development and Evaluation of an Shivan Mehta, University of Exchange Audit and Feedback Dashboard in the ED Pennsylvania, #C-178 Setting Electronic Pill Bottles or Bidirectional Anthony Porto, Community Health Text Messaging to Improve Hypertension Center, Inc., #C-186 Jesse Wagner, Oregon Health & Management (Way 2 Text): A Impact of Electronic Consultations on Science University, #C-197 Randomized Controlled Trial Primary Care Practice for the Medically The Impact of Telehealth Consultations Underserved for Acute and Chronic Care: A Systematic MaryBeth Mercer, Cleveland Clinic, Review #C-179 Magaly Ramirez, University of Going the Distance: Patients’ California, Los Angeles, #C-187 Robert Weech-Maldonado, University Experiences with Virtual Visits at Primary Care Provider Adherence to an of Alabama at Birmingham, #C-198 Cleveland Clinic Alert for Intensification of Diabetes Blood The Relationship between EHR Pressure Medications before and after Utilization and Financial Performance in Andrea Millman, Kaiser Permanente, the Addition of a “Chart Closure” Hard High Medicaid Nursing Homes #C-180 Stop Patients with Complex Chronic Nizar Wehbi, University of Nebraska Conditions: Self-Reported Experience Douglas Roblin, Mid-Atlantic Medical Center, #C-199 with a Patient Portal Permanente Research Institute, #C-188 Implementing of a Technology Platform Multi-Modal Intervention for Improving in Community Pharmacies to Increase Nabil Natafgi, University of Maryland, Osteoporosis Treatment Initiation and Adult Immunizations #C-181 Adherence The Impact of Telemedicine on Justin Whetten, University of New Emergency Department (ED) Disposition: Joshua Rolnick, University of Mexico ACCESS, #C-200 A Pre-Post Study Design of an ED-Based Pennsylvania, #C-189 First-Year and Lifetime Cost- Telemedicine Program in Critical Access Use of Individual Provider Performance Effectiveness of a Neuro-Emergent Hospitals Reports By U.S. Hospitals Telemedicine Consultation Program in the Treatment of Acute Ischemic Stroke. Ingrid Nembhard, University of Sandhya Shimoga, Cal State Long Pennsylvania, #C-182 Beach, #C-191 Cynthia Williams, University of North The Influence of Peer Beliefs on Nurses’ Patient Engagement and Empowerment: Florida, #C-201 and #C-202 Use of New Technology Have Electronic Records Moved the Electronic Medical Records Output: An Needle for the Chronically Ill Patients? Information Quality Perspective

144 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

and Salva Najib Balbale, Northwestern What Influences Nurse Practitioners to The Effectiveness of Mhealth in University, #C-237 Employ a Patient-Centered Approach? Managing Cardiovascular Disease in Building a Medical Home for Patients an Examination of Provider and Practice Low- and Middle-Income Countries with with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Factors Low Peace: A Systematic Review Qualitative Study of the Development of the GRITT-IBD Program Timothy Capstack, Adfinitas Health, Kristen Wing, Department of Veterans #C-218 Affairs Office of Rural Health,#C-203 Alissa Bernstein, University of Expanded Physician Assistant Hospitalist Maine Veterans’ Perceptions of Health California, San Francisco, #C-210 and Staffing at a Community Hospital Yielded Information Exchange Participation and #C-211 Noninferior Outcomes at Substantially Consent Policies Building a Dementia Care Workforce: Lower Cost Understanding Primary Care Provider Case Wood, University of North Carolina, Practices Around Managing Patients Guann-Ming Chang, Cardinal Tien #C-204 with Neurocognitive Disorders Hospital, #C-219 The Impact EHR Implementation on and Associations of Intrinsic and Extrinsic Patient Care-Related Factors: A 3-Year Characterizing the Role of Care Motivating Factors with Job Satisfaction: Longitudinal Survey of Members of the Navigators for People with Dementia and A National Physician Survey Healthcare Team Their Caregivers Emmeline Chuang, University of Rafeek Yusuf, University of Texas Health Regis Blais, University of Montreal, California, Los Angeles, #C-220 Science Center at Houston, #C-205 #C-212 The Business Case for Redesigning the Assessing Socioeconomic Differences in Physician Shortages in Rural Regions: Role of Medical Assistants in Primary Information Technology Use for Patient- What Have We Learned from the OECD Care Provider Engagement Among Adult Policy Response? Americans with Multimorbidity YoonKyung Chung, The Robert Graham Erin Blakeney, University of Center, #C-221 Yasmin Zerhouni, Brigham and Washington, #C-213 Workforce Composition of Accountable Women’s Hospital, #C-206 Team Approaches to Transforming Care Organizations in the Medicare Pilot to Transfer the Unique Device Inpatient Heart Failure Care Shared Savings Program Identifier from the Point of Use to the Insurance Claim Rose Bono, Virginia Commonwealth Lorinda Coombs, University of University, #C-214 California, San Francisco, #C-222 Urban-Rural Disparities in HIV Workforce Nurse Practitioner Contribution to Health Workforce Capacity in the US South: A County-Level Oncology Workforce for Older Adults Analysis Fuad Abujarad, Yale University, #C-207 Mingliang Dai, The American Board of Impart Alliance: Supporting Personal Joanna Brooks, University of Kansas, Family Medicine, #C-223 SESSION C POSTER Care Aides Key to Increasing #C-215 Motivation for Continuing Certification Accessibility, Quality and Cost- Sharing Agendas: How Primary Care and Physician’s Well-Being Effectiveness of Home Care Physicians Learn to Balance Social, Medical, and Population Goals with Pamela de Cordova, Rutgers, The State David Armstrong, Center for Health Patients University of New Jersey, #C-224 Workforce Studies, #C-208 and #C-209 Filling the Gap: The Role of Advance Gender Differences in New Physician Margo Brooks Carthon, University of Practice Registered Nurses in Income Are Increasing Pennsylvania, #C-216 and #C-217 Addressing the Primary Care Physician and Level of Nursing Engagement and Shortage Health Workforce Data Collection: Staffing Key Determinants in Nurses’ Findings from a Survey of States Assessments of Patient Safety and

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Andrew Dierkes, University of Bianca Frogner, University of Ian Hill, Urban Institute, #C-243 Pennsylvania, #C-225 Washington, #C-234 and #C-235 Integrating Medical Residents into Group The Impact of Hospital Practice Commuting Patterns of Healthcare Prenatal Care: Challenges and Lessons Environment on Nurse Specialty Workers from the Strong Start Evaluation Certification and Emerging Roles and Occupations in the Andrew Hinzman, Westat, #C-244 Samuel Edwards, Oregon Health & Health Workforce Engaging Clinicians in Performance Science University, #C-226 Measurement Initiatives and Preventing Association of the Veterans Affairs Sheba George, Charles R. Drew Burnout Centers of Excellence in Primary Care University of Medicine and Science, Education with Quality of Care and #C-236 Alex Hoyt, MGH Institute of Health Utilization Community Health Workers in Clinical Professions, #C-245 Team-Based Models of Care: Challenges Do Nurse Practitioners Function As Josué Patien Epané, University of and Opportunities Primary Care Complements or Specialty Nevada, Las Vegas, #C-227 Extenders Among Patients with Multiple Children Hospitals’ Use of Hospitalists: Peter Griffiths, University of Sclerosis? a Private Insurance Claims Impact on Financial Performance Southampton, #C-238 Data Analysis. Nurse staffing, care assistants, Christine Everett, Duke University, #C- hospital mortality and length of stay: Angela Ingraham, University of 228 and #C-229 retrospective longitudinal cohort study Wisconsin, #C-246 Primary Care Teams and Coordination Analysis of Gaps in Emergency General and Jordan Harrison, University of Surgery Coverage in the United States Primary Care Usual and Supplemental Pennsylvania, #C-239 Provider Type: Are There Differences Operational Failures in Nursing: Jonathan Inselman, Mayo Clinic, in Patient’s Intermediate Diabetes Evaluating the Link between Work #C-247 Outcomes? Environment and Burnout Geographic Variation of Cardiologists and Affiliated Practices Raymond Fang, American Urological Christine Hartmann, Veterans Association, #C-230 Administration, #C-240 and #C-241 George Jackson, Department of Developing a Specialty-Wide Census Is Safety Climate in VA Nursing Homes Veterans Affairs, Durham, #C-248 Mechanism to Identify, Understand and Related to the Affiliated Hospital’s Utilization and Costs By Primary Care Track the Urology Workforce Patient Mix and Program Complexity? Provider Type: Are There Differences and Among Patients of Physicians, Nps, and Taressa Fraze, Geisel School of Medicine, Safety Climate in VA Nursing Homes Pas? #C-231 Nationally: Are Senior Managers in Where Do Nurse Practitioners Deliver Care? Agreement with Those Providing Yvonne Jonk, University of North Resident Clinical Care? Dakota, #C-249 Angela Freeman, Rush University Medical Center, #C-232 Nora Henrikson, Kaiser Permanente Ambulance Deserts: Addressing Transforming the Healthcare Workforce: Washington Health Research Institute, Geographic Disparities and Ensuring Evaluation of Disease-Specific and #C-242 Access While Minimizing Costs Behavioral Health Curriculum for Allied What Makes for an Effective Team? Health Professionals in a Collaborative Systematic Review of Team Composition Douglas Kamerow, Robert Graham Health System / Primary Care Network and Functions in Team-Based Care Center, #C-250 and #C-251 Interventions Characteristics of Young Family Teri Fritsma, Minnesota Department of Physician Hospitalists Health, #C-233 and The Mental Health Workforce: Comparing Will “Traditional” General Internal Market Outcomes of Licensed and Medicine Disappear By 2026? Non-Licensed Mental Health Program Graduates

146 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

fRyan Kandrack, University of North Tao Li, Oregon State University, #C-260 Melissa Miller, Yale New Haven Health Carolina at Chapel Hill, #C-252 Return on Investment of High School Services Corporation, #C-268 The Effect of Nurse Practitioner Scope Athletic Trainers: A Microsimulation Panel: Career Paths in Health Services of Practice Regulations on Nurse Analysis on Medical Claims Research and Health Policy with a Practitioner Labor Supply Master Degree Xinliang Liu, University of Central Pauline Karikari-Martin, Centers for Florida, #C-261 Pranita Mishra, Kaiser Permanente Medicare and Medicaid Services, Medicare Services Provided By Northern California, #C-269 #C-253 Pathologists in 2015 The Impact of Medical Scribes on The Graduate Nurse Education Project: Primary Care: A Randomized Case- An Innovative Approach to Increase the Yuhao Liu, Center for Health Workforce Crossover Study Pipeline of Advanced Practice Registered Studies, #C-262 Nurses (APRN) The Effect of Race, Ethnicity, and Aaron Mitchell, Cecil G. Sheps Center Gender on New Physicians’ Job Market for Health Services Research, #C-270 Samannaaz Khoja, University of Experiences Temporal Association of Pharmaceutical Pittsburgh, #C-254 Industry Payments and Prescribing Primary Care Physician Referral to Michel Lucie, IRDES French Institute for Changes in Oncology Physical Therapy: Analysis of the Health Services Research, #C-263 National Ambulatory Medical Care Peering into the Black Box of a Nursing Monica O’Reilly-Jacob, Brandeis Survey (2003-2014) Administrative Work: A Comparative University, #C-271 Analysis of Nurses’ Activities in Frequency of Low-Value Back Imaging Soichi Koike, Jichi Medical University, American and French Hospitals. in the Care of Medicare Beneficiaries: A #C-255 Comparison of Generalists, Specialists, Board Certification and Urban-Rural Robert Martiniano, SUNY - Albany, Nurse Practitioners & Physician Migration of Physicians in Japan #C-264 Assistants. Using Mandatory NP Data to Understand Linda Lacey, South Carolina Office for the Process for Collecting Workforce Ian Painter, University of Washington, Healthcare Workforce, #C-256 Data and Disseminating Findings #C-272 Changes in Physician Workforce Perceptions of Impact of 911 Call Center Behaviors and Locations Meriel McCollum, University of North Technology on Patient Safety Carolina at Chapel Hill, #C-265 Denys Lau, American Journal of Public Barriers and Facilitators to LPN-to-RN Esita Patel, University of North Carolina Health and CDC National Center for Transitions: Perspectives from Practicing at Chapel Hill, #C-273 Health Statistics, #C-257 LPNs How Are State Level Nurse Practitioner Presence of Physician Assistants and Scope of Practice and Access to Care Nurse Practitioners in Office-Based Matthew McHugh, University of Related? Physician Practices and the Clinical Pennsylvania, #C-266 SESSION C POSTER Tasks They Commonly Performed: California Nurse Staffing Mandate Michael Peabody, American Board of Results from the 2013-2015 National Associated with Better Patient and Nurse Family Medicine, #C-274 Ambulatory Medical Care Survey Workforce Outcomes: Then and Now The Relationship between Board Certification and Disciplinary Actions for Angela Lee, Stanford University, #C-258 Henry Michtalik, Armstrong Institute Family Physicians Gender and Specialty Disparities in for Patient Safety and Quality of Care, Physician Payments Made By Biomedical #C-267 Victoria Petermann, University of North Companies Association of Technological, Support Carolina at Chapel Hill, #C-275 Service, and Safety Climate Factors with Lessons Learned from New Zealand’s Sarah Leng, Foundation for Burnout: A Hospitalist Survey across 4 Demand-Side Approach to Workforce Advancement of International Medical Institutions Planning Education and Research, #C-259 International Medical Graduates’ Contribution to the US Health Workforce

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Lars Peterson, The American Board of David Schmitz, University of North Lia Winfield, Leavitt Partners, #C-294 Family Medicine, #C-276 Dakota, #C-285 Rural Physician Shortages Persist Program Characteristics Measuring the Commitment of Medical and Individual Resident Characteristics Schools to Rural Primary Care Liana Woskie, Harvard University, #C-295 Influence Family Physician Scope of Primary Care Composition of the Physician Practice Marta Simonetti, Universidad de los Workforce: How Does the US Compare to Andes, #C-286 Other High Income Countries? Patricia Pittman, George Washington Association of Nursing with Hospital Patient University, #C-277 and #C-278 Satisfaction in Chile Ying Xue, University of Rochester, #C-296 Nurse Practitioner and Physician Federally Qualified Health Centers Reduce Assistant Privileging in Acute Care Susan Skillman, University of Washington the Primary Care Provider Gap in Health Settings: Do Scope of Practice Laws Center for Health Workforce Studies, Professional Shortage Counties Matter? #C-287 and Medical Assistants’ Careers and Factors Wei Yen, Washington State Office of The Effects of 3 Types of State Nurse Affecting Retention Financial Management, #C-297 Staffing Laws on Registered Nurse and An Innovative Approach for Timely Measure Nurse Assistive Personnel Staffing in Jessica Smith, University of Pennsylvania, of Provider Supply U.S. Hospitals #C-288 The Organization of Nursing in Rural and Jana Zwilling, University of Nebraska, Erica Richman, University of North Urban U.S. Hospitals #C-298 Carolina at Chapel Hill, #C-279 The Association of Health Costs and Toward a Better Understanding of Social Casey Sweeney, MGH Institute, #C-289 Population Health with State Variation in Work Roles in Integrated Care: A Latent Utilization of Nurse Practitioners and Nurse Practitioner Scope of Practice Class Approach Physician Assistants in Multiple Sclerosis Care: An Analysis of Medicare Beneficiaries Kira Ryskina, University of High Cost, High Need Pennsylvania, #C-281 and #C-282 Ali Thaver, University of Chicago Medical Characterizing Physician Practice in Center, #C-290 Duaa Aljabri, Mayo Clinic, #C-299 the Nursing Home Using Claims-Based Generic Skepticism Among the Primary Toxicity and Outcomes Associated with Measures of Practitioner Concentration Care Clinician Workforce and Implications Radiation Oncology Patients Treated with and Specialization: Correlation for Improving Generic Prescribing or without Chemotherapy with Nursing Home Administrators’ Perceptions Jon Tilburt, Biomedical Ethics Program, Aylin Altan, OptumLabs, #C-300 and Mayo Clinic, #C-291 Rapid Response to a Public Health Crisis: State Scope of Practice Regulations and Opinions and Reactions to ACA An Integrated Framework for Managing Nurse Practitioner Practice in Nursing Implementation Among US Physicians Opioid Use and Chronic Pain for Health Homes: 2012-2015 2012-2017 Plans, Providers, and Delivery Systems

Janice Sabin, University of Washington, Hilary Titus, Oregon Health & Science Noel Barragan, University of California, #C-283 University, #C-292 Los Angeles, #C-301 Evaluation of a Search Committee Medical Students As Patient Navigators: Hospitalizations of Older Adults with a Training That Aims to Increase Workforce Self-Efficacy and Patient-Centeredness Co-Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease and Diversity in Academic Medicine in Medical Students Enrolled in a Novel Type 2 Diabetes Educational Program Carla Jackie Sampson, Temple University, #C-284 Marisa Torres, Patient-Centered Outcomes The Effect of Registered Nurse Supply Research Institute, #C-293 on Population Health Outcomes: A Team-Based Models and Access to Care: Distributed Lag Model Approach Linking Underserved Communities to Health Services

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Daniel Blumenthal, Massachusetts David Dorr, Oregon Health & Science Yvonne Grant, International Pre- General Hospital, #C-302 University, #C-310 Diabetes Center Inc, #C-319 Characteristics of Medicare Beneficiaries Self-Identified Confidence, Goals, Will the Implementation of a Diabetes Treated in US Coronary Care Units and Subsequent Needs for Primary Self-Management Education/Training and the Hospitals Where They Receive Care Practices Implementing Risk (DSME/T) Program in a Community Treatment Stratification Health Center (CHC) Improve Outcomes for Diabetes in a High-Risk Population? Anne Bowers, National Committee for Eva DuGoff, University of Maryland, Quality Assurance, #C-303 #C-312 Andrea Grimbergen, Patient Care Impact of Person-Centered Care Characteristics of Emergency Intervention Center, #C-320 Coordination on Patient-Reported Department Patients: Focus on Enabling Assessing Functional Status in the High Outcomes of High Cost, High Need Resources Among High-Need Older Need High Cost Population in Houston Medicaid Enrollees Adults TX – Results from Implementing the DLA-20 Tool Angela Chang, Institute for Health Elizabeth Egan, Minnesota Department Metric and Evaluation, #C-304 of Health, #C-313 Zachary Grinspan, Weill Cornell Medical How Much Are We Spending per Daly Concentration and Persistence in Health College, #C-321 in the United States? Estimation of the Care Spending in Minnesota (2013- Using Computable Phenotypes to Identify Expenditure-to-Burden Ratio from 1996 2014): Patient Characteristics. High-Need, High-Cost Patients to 2015 Yevgeniy Feyman, Harvard University, Krista Harrison, University of California, Shelley Chang, Parkland Center for #C-314 San Francisco, #C-322 Clinical Innovation, #C-305 Characteristics and Health Care Use of Visualizing the Invisible: Big Data and Social and Health Data Exchange High-Cost Patients in Seven Countries the Homebound across Sectors to Improve Chronic Disease Management Among Vulnerable Herbert Fillmore, 3M HIS, #C-315 Mary Homan, Medical College of Populations Can Important Gaps in Care Leading to Wisconsin, #C-323 High Costs be Identified with Population Use of Predictive Modeling to Identify Abigail Chapin, Institute for Health Health Tools? the Factors Associated with the Timing Metrics and Evaluation, #C-306 and Patient Outcomes of Clinical Ethics Estimating Spending on Musculoskeletal Jori Fleisher, Rush University Medical Consultation Disorders By Age, Sex, and Type of Care Center, #C-316 in the United States, 1990-2015 A Novel Model of Care for Advanced Megan Hoopes, OCHIN, #C-324 Parkinson’s Disease and Related Prevalence and Characteristics of Lihao Chu, Landmark Health, #C-307 Disorders: Interdisciplinary Home Visits Cancer Survivors in Outpatient Safety A House-Call Program That Reduces Net Clinics Unnecessary Variation in Utilization and Dennis Fried, Department of Veterans SESSION C POSTER Spending Among Patients with Poly Affairs, New Jersey, #C-317 Kristie Hsu, Stanford University, #C-325 Chronic Conditions The Costs of Department of Veterans Patient-Initiated Goals and Predictors Affairs Disability Compensation and of Goal Progress in a Veterans Affairs Tong Han Chung, University of Texas Healthcare Benefits for Vietnam War Intensive Outpatient Care Program for Health Science Center at Houston, Veterans High-Need Patients #C-308 and #C-309 Impact of Palliative Care Consultation on Lillian Gelberg, Department of Veterans Shari Hutchison, UPMC Center for High Hospital Costs Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #C-318 Value Healthcare, #C-326 and Remarkably Vulnerable: How Homeless A Successful Care Management Evaluation of Chronic Care Model in Veterans in Homeless-Specialized Intervention to Reduce Readmissions Primary Care Clinics: Effects of Chronic Primary Care Clinics Differ from and Improve Rates of Engagement in Care Management on Clinical Outcomes Homeless and Nonhomeless Veterans in Aftercare and Cost-Effectiveness Mainstream Primary Care

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Justeen Hyde, VA HSR&D Center Corinne Lewis, The Commonwealth Aimee Moulin, University of California, for Healthcare Organization and Fund, #C-335 and #C-336 Davis, #C-343 Implementation Research, #C-327 Financial Hardship and Access to Quality Substance Use, Homelessness, Mental “I Know It’s Not All in My Head”: Care Among High-Need Adults Illness and Medicaid Coverage; A Set up Understanding the Experience of and for High ED Utilization Healthcare for Veterans with Chronic Social Isolation and Access to Quality Multi-Symptom Illness. Care Among High-Need Adults Andrew Mulcahy, RAND, #C-344 Estimating Biosimilar Cost Savings in the Esti Iturralde, Kaiser Permanente Sarah Lewis, Office of the Assistant United States Northern California, #C-328 Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, From Patient Activation and U.S. Department of Health and Human James Naessens, Mayo Clinic, #C-345 Collaborative Care to Health Outcomes Services, #C-337 and #C-338 Utilization and Cost Analysis of Lung in Cardiovascular Disease Risk How Do Dual Status and Frailty Affect Transplantation and Survival after 10 Management: A Test of Mediation Medicare Costs, Utilization, and Years of Adopting the Lung Allocation Survival? Score (LAS). Janel Jin, Centers for Medicare and and Medicaid Services, #C-329 Prevalence of Chronic Conditions Richard Nelson, University of Utah, Paying Primary Care: Improving Care for Among Older and Younger Adults and #C-346 Patients with Complex Needs Associations with Health Care Spending Costs Associated with Healthcare Services Accessed through VA and in Robert Kaplan, Stanford University, Catherine Liang, Massachusetts the Community through Medicare for #C-330 General Hospital, #C-339 Veterans Experiencing Homelessness Is the Effect of Depression Co-Morbidity Use of Cardiovascular Medications and on Cost Additive or Multiplicative? Linkages to Primary Care in Patients Matthew Niedzwiecki, University of with Serious Mental Illness California, San Francisco, #C-347 Nandita Khera, Mayo Clinic, #C-331 Frequent Emergency Department Use “Cancer Is Bad, but Financial Burden David Liss, Northwestern University, Predicts Mortality: A Retrospective Is Worse”: A Qualitative Study for #C-340 Cohort Study Developing an Educational Intervention Development and Initial Implementation to Address Financial and Emotional of a Smartphone App That Uses Katherine Ornstein, Icahn School of Stress in Cancer Patients Location-Based Alerts to Coordinate Medicine at Mount Sinai, #C-348 Care Only 20% of Independence at Home Grace Kim, New York University, #C-332 Qualified Medicare Beneficiaries Receive The Dispersion of Physician Charges and Taylor Matyasz, Institute for Health Any Home Based Medical Care Allowed Amounts Metrics and Evaluation, #C-341 Forecasting Health Care Spending in the Jeffrey Pearson, Arbor Research Jungyeon Kim, Harvard University, United States By Age, Sex, Type of Care, Collaborative for Health, #C-349 #C-333 and Condition, through 2040 National Trends in Medicare Advantage The Next Step to Reducing ED Crowding: and End-Stage Renal Disease Engaging Specialist Physicians Jodi McCloskey, Kaiser Permanente Northern California, #C-342 Brian Powers, Brigham and Women’s Robert Kramer, Cigna Data Science, Using Primary Care Physician Input to Hospital and Harvard University, #C-350 #C-334 Enhance an Algorithm for Identifying Identifying Clinically and Operationally Community Support Program Complex Patients Significant Cohorts of High-Cost Medicare Advantage Patients

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Lok Wong Samson, Office of the J. Douglas Thornton, University of Ranjana Wickramasekaran, Los Assistant Secretary for Planning and Houston, #C-359 and #C-360 Angeles County Department of Public Evaluation, U.S. Department of Health Increased Healthcare Utilization and Health, #C-367 and Human Services, #C-352 Expenditures Associated with Chronic Evaluating the Potential Impact of Does Unmeasured Medical Complexity Opioid Therapy National Implementation of the Diabetes Account for Higher Spending on the and Prevention Program on Diabetes-Related Medicare Spending per Beneficiary Predictors of Transitioning to Incident Complications and Costs in the United Measure Among Dually-Enrolled Chronic Opioid Therapy Among Working- States: A Simulation Model Approach Medicare Beneficiaries? Aged Adults Michelle Wong, Department of Veterans Sundar Shrestha, Centers for Disease Maria Ukhanova, Oregon Health & Affairs, #C-368 Control and Prevention, #C-353 and Science University, #C-361 High-Needs, High-Cost Patient #C-354 Effects of Care Coordination on Perspectives on Their Experiences with Factors Contributing to Increases Polypharmacy Risk Among Working-Age VA Intensive Primary Care Teams in Diabetes-Related Preventable Adults with Multiple Chronic Conditions Hospitalization Costs Among U.S. Adults, Shannon Wu, Johns Hopkins University, 2001 to 2014 Megan Vanneman, University of Utah, #C-369 and #C-362 Predicting Functional Outcomes Trend in out-of-Pocket Payments for Treating Low Back Pain with Opioids and and Utilization within a Nationally Antidiabetic Medications Among US Complementary and Integrative Health Representative Medicare Cohort: Adults with Private Health Insurance Modalities for New Enrollees of the US Comparing Models Based on In-Person from 2003 to 2016: A Combined Veterans Health Administration Assessments of Frailty to Risk Measures Recursive Partition-Interrupted Time Derived from Insurance Claims Series Analysis Peter Veazie, University of Rochester, #C-363 Haichang Xin, University of Alabama at Joann Sorra, Westat, #C-355 Gecdac Refinement of Nosos Scores Birmingham, #C-370 Contextual Factors Predicting the for Comparative Effectiveness Studies The Association between Health Effectiveness of a Patient-Centered Among High-Risk High-Cost Veterans Outcome Improvement and Cost Medical Home Program Containment Rajvi Wani, University of Nebraska, Susan Stockdale, University of #C-364 Kai Yeung, Kaiser Permanente California, Los Angeles, #C-356 Nationwide Hospitalizations for Alcohol- Washington Health Research Institute, Perceived Impact and Value of Intensive Related Disorders Post-ACA: Predictions #C-371 Primary Care Teams As an Adjunct to of Costs of 30-Day Readmissions and Review of State Policies to Improve Veterans Health Administration (VHA) Recurrences Among Adults Access to Specialty Drugs Patient-Centered Medical Home Brian Ward, National Center for Health Jean Yoon, Department of Veterans SESSION C POSTER Kristi Swanson, Mayo Clinic, #C-357 Statistics, #C-365 Affairs, #C-372 Cost Savings Generated By Performing Physician Specialty and Office-Based Persistence of High Health Care Costs Pre-Emptive Kidney Transplantation Visits By Adult Patients with Diagnosed Among VA Patients over Traditional Dialysis Therapy: A Cost Multiple Chronic Conditions: United Analysis States, 2014-2015 Donna Zulman, Stanford University, #C-373 Caroline Thirukumaran, University of Launia White, Mayo Clinic, #C-366 Engaging High-Need Patients in Rochester, #C-358 Impact of Psychiatric Comorbidities on Intensive Outpatient Programs: A The Role of Medical and Functional Healthcare Costs Among Cancer Patients Qualitative Synthesis of Engagement Needs in the Costs of Geriatric Hip Strategies Fracture Care

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Oral Health Kristin Hoeft, University of California, Jean Moore, Oral Health Workforce San Francisco, #C-382 Research Center, #C-391 Courtnie Akande, University of Chicago, Pediatric Patient Acceptability and From the Complex to the Simple: #C-374 Adherence to a Home Care Products Translating Scope of Practice Research Building Understanding of the Oral within a Risk-Based Caries Prevention for Policy Makers Health of Hospitalized Patients: Program in a Large Dental Care Comparing University of Chicago Organization Ankit Sanghavi, Texas Health Institute, Medicine (UCM) Survey Respondents #C-392 and National Health and Nutrition Aubri Kottek, University of California, Inpatient Admissions for Dental Examination Survey (NHANES) San Francisco, #C-383 Conditions in Texas from 2004-2010 Respondents Comparative Analysis of Oral Health Systems Approaches to Preventing and Christina Scherrer, Kennesaw State Natalia Chalmers, DentaQuest Institute, Arresting Caries in a Pediatric Medicaid University, #C-393 #C-375 and #C-376 Patient Population Cost-Effectiveness of Fluoride Varnish in High-Risk Patients Experience Decrease the Primary Care Setting: A Simulation Risk for Oral Cancer When Visiting a Ashley Kranz, RAND, #C-384 with Sensitivity Analysis Dentist Impact of Medicaid Policy on the Oral and Health of Publicly Insured Children Claudia Solis-Roman, New York Pediatric Dental Rehabilitation in University, #C-394 Hospitals Helen Lee, University of Illinois at Measuring the Impacts of the Favorable Chicago, #C-385 and #C-386 Tax Treatment of Health Insurance Joana Cunha-Cruz, University of The High Cost of Severe Pediatric Caries Washington, #C-377 and Simona Surdu, Oral Health Workforce Changes in Organizational Readiness The Impact of Preventive Care Research Center, #C-395 to Implement Changes before and after Reimbursements on Use of Preventive Teledentistry: Reducing Oral Health Delivery and Payment Reform in a and Tertiary Oral Health Services Disparities for Children in Rural Areas Dental Care Organization Hyewon Lee, DentaQuest Institute, Cathleen Taylor-Osborne, Kansas Erin Duffy, RAND, #C-378 #C-387 Department of Health and Environment, Association between Type of Insurance Dental Services Utilization before Birth, #C-396 and Children’s Oral Health, Nhanes Associated with Lower Preterm Birth for Prevalence, Disparities and Health 2011-2014 Medicaid Beneficiaries Outcomes Associated with Unmet Oral Health Care Need Because of Cost Avni Gupta, Brigham and Women’s Sharity Ludwig, Advantage Dental Among Kansans- 2015-2016 Kansas Hospital, #C-379 Services LLC, #C-388 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Dental Care Access Among Pregnant Patient Engagement and Satisfaction System (BRFSS) Women Using Nationally Representative in Delivery and Payment Reform in a Data from 2009 to 2014: Disparities and Dental Care Organization Cynthia Tschampl, Brandeis University, Barriers #C-397 Elena Lumby, American Institutes for Pulling Back the Curtain: Identifying and Marcela Gutierrez, University of Texas Research, #C-389 Characterizing Adverse Downstream at Arlington, #C-380 Variations in Dental Care Access and Outcomes of Orofacial Pain A Model of Caregiver Participation in Its Association with Prescription Pain Early Childhood Oral Health Care Medication Misuse: Evidence from the Shen Wang, SUNY - Albany, #C-398 Ohio Medicaid Assessment Survey Developing Oral Health Rational Service Yara Halasa-Rappel, Brandeis Areas (RSAs) Using Medicaid Claims University, #C-381 Kopal Mathur, University of Chicago Data in New York State Broken Smiles: The Impact of Untreated Medicine, #C-390 Dental Diseases on Employment Oral Health Assessment Using Intraoral Cameras of Patients Hospitalized at the University of Chicago Medicine (UCM)

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Cassandra Yarbrough, American Dental Ohbet Cheon, Houston Methodist Research Jennifer Frehn, University of California, Association, #C-399, #C-400, and Institute, #C-408 and #409 Berkeley, #C-417 #C-401 Does Quality Assessment Drive Managerial Area-Level Influences on the Dentistry’s Role in Multiple Opioid Innovation?: The Case of US Nursing Establishment of School-Based Health Prescriptions Homes Centers in the United States and and Opioid Prescribing Practices By Type of Partnering with Community Providers: A Mika Hamer, University of Colorado, Dental Visit Practice to Reduce High Readmissions at #C-418 and Safety-Net Hospitals Characterizing Fidelity and Adaptations Trends in Opioid Prescribing Practices to a Primary Care Redesign Model Among Dentists in the U.S. from 2010 Emmeline Chuang, University of California, to 2015 Los Angeles, #C-410 Theresa Hoeft, University of Improving Primary Care Telephone Access: Washington, #C-419 How Variation in Telephone Management Innovative Collaborative Care Model to Organizational May Affect Primary Care Teams and Address Late-Life Depression in Sonoma Patients County: Factors Affecting the Success of Behavior and a Cross-Sector Collaboration to Improve Management Elizabeth Ciemins, AMGA, #C-411 Care Examining the Relationship between Health Abd Moain Abu Dabrh, Mayo Clinic, It and Ambulatory Care Workflow Redesign Sean Huang, Georgetown University, #C-402 #C-420 Patient Panel Size in Primary Care: A Meta- Douglas Conrad, University of Washington, Leveraged Buyouts of Hospitals: The Narrative Review #C-412 Impacts on Quality, Costs, and Prices Implementing an Integrated, Multi-Payer Mona Al-Amin, Suffolk University, #C-403 Data Platform for Value Based Payment: Sylvia Hysong, Michael E. DeBakey VA Determinants of Sustained Superior The Washington State Innovation Model Medical Center, #C-421 Performance on Readmission Rates Payment Redesign Model 4 Test Linking Coordination and Clinician Interaction to Clinical Performance in Bettye Apenteng, Georgia Southern Emily Cramer, University of Kansas, Primary Care Teams University, #C-404 #C-413 Strategies Adopted By Rural Hospitals in Impact of Nurse Managers on the Nursing Emmanuel Jadhav, Ferris State the US for Financial Sustainability Work Environment and Nurse and Patient University, #C-422 Outcomes Within Variation: Assessment of Vanessa Burshnic, University of South Leadership and Organizational Trends Florida, #C-405 Nathan Dong, Columbia University, #C-414 in Accredited SMALL and Large LOCAL Employee Attitudes Towards Aggression Senior Executive Compensation, Healthcare Health Departments. in Persons with Dementia: Readiness Service Quality and Charity Care Provision SESSION C POSTER for Wider Adoption of Person-Centered in Not-for-Profit Hospitals Bonnie Jin, Yale University, #C-423 Frameworks Who Joins Hospital Affiliation Networks? Jason Egginton, Mayo Clinic, #C-415 Identifying Predictors of Network Elena Byhoff, Tufts University, #C-406 Strategies for Promoting Health Membership You Can’t Scale Unicorns: Exploring and Reducing Enervation (SPHERE): Community Based Organizations’ Preventing Burnout in Allied Health Staff Michelle Keller, University of California, Perspectives on Health Care’s Social Los Angeles, #C-424 Determinants of Health Programming Kathryn Engelhardt, Northwestern Juggling Playing the Addiction Detective University, #C-416 and Trusting Provider: A Qualitative Ji Chang, New York University, #C-407 “Don’t be Afraid to Ask Questions”: Study of Clinician Use of Opioid Risk Urgent Care Coordination: Electronic A Qualitative Assessment of the Management Tools Health Information Exchange and Mentorship Component of a Surgical Referrals across the Ambulatory Care Quality Improvement Collaborative Sector

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Jung Kim, University of California, Michelle Lampman, VISN 23 Patient and Berkeley, #C-425 Aligned Care Team Demonstration Lab, The Organizational Factors of Successful Graduate Medical Education #C-432 Physician-System Integration: A Organizational Characteristics Organizational and Social Determinants Qualitative Study of Washington State Associated with Primary Care Training of Burnout Among Primary Care Health Executives in Community-Based Ambulatory Care Personnel in the VA. Settings William Opoku-Agyeman, University of Clara Lee, Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, Alabama at Birmingham, #C-442 Linda Kim, Department of Veterans #C-433 Hospital Group Purchasing Alliance and Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, #C-426 Variation in Lumbar Disc Herniation Financial Performance and #C-427 Surgery Rates Among Hospitals Leveraging Technology to Enhance Team Shin Hye Park, University of Kansas, Communication and Care Coordination: Cynthia LeRouge, Florida International #C-443 Findings from a VA Qualitative Study on University, #C-434 Missed Nursing Care and Nurses’ Interprofessional Primary Care Teams Development of a Model for Building an Perceptions of Job Satisfaction and and Analytics Based Decision Making Culture Intent to Leave What Makes Team Communication in Healthcare Organizations Effective: A Qualitative Analysis of Elena Platonova, University of North Interprofessional Primary Care Team’s Chenjuan Ma, New York University, Carolina at Charlotte, #C-444 Perspectives #C-435 Employee Job Satisfaction at for-Profit Roles of Home Healthcare Agency and Not-for-Profit Florida Hospitals Andrew Knighton, Intermountain Characteristics and Regional Health Healthcare, #C-428 Resources in Patient Outcomes Minakshi Raj, University of Michigan, Will It Work Here? Helping Learning #C-445 Healthcare Systems Prioritize Quality Isomi Miake-Lye, Department of Evolving Dynamics of Trust between Interventions to Improve Patient Care in Veterans Affairs, Greater Los Angeles, Physicians, Fellow Health Care Providers, a Value-Based Environment #C-436 and Health Information Technology Problem solved or just a quick fix?A Cyrus Kosar, Brown University, #C-429 qualitative analysis using organizational Tim Rappon, University of Toronto, Hospital-Skilled Nursing Facility Linkage learning theory to understand potential #C-446 Via Physicians Practicing in Both system solutions Context and Work Attitudes As Settings: Virtual Hospital-Based Skilled Antecedents of Change-Oriented Nursing Facilities Are Associated with Valerie Lewis, Dartmouth Institute for Citizenship in Care Aides Better Post-Acute Outcomes. Health Policy & Clinical Practice, #C-437 Models of Partnership: The Role of Julie Sakowski, Seton Hall University, Raymond Kuo, National Taiwan Management Partners in Accountable #C-447 University, #C-430 Care Organizations Organizational Structure, Physician The Closure of Taiwan’s Small Hospitals Practice Variation, and the Cost of Care and Changes in Patterns of Inpatient Ingrid Nembhard, University of Care, from 2003 to 2012 Pennsylvania, #C-438 Yunfeng Shi, Penn State University, Conversation Patterns in Care Teams #C-448 Megan Lafferty, University of Michigan, and Turnover: How Members Speak The Uses of Clinic Decision Support #C-431 Matters and the Experienced Barriers Among Work Environmental Factors Affecting Physician Practices Quality of Patient Care in Ambulatory Ann Nguyen, University of Washington, Oncology Settings: A Thematic Analysis #C-439 and #C-440 Ernie Shippey, Vizient, #C-449 of Clinicians’ Perspectives Organizational Factors and Theories Market Dynamics of Practice Diffusion of of Physician-System Integration: A New Medical Technologies Systematic Review

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Aaron Spaulding, Mayo Clinic, #C-441 Dunc Williams, University of North Factors in Small Rural Hospitals Three-Phase Patient Reported Outcomes Carolina, #C-457 Implementing Teamstepps Measurement (PRO) Implementation Rural Hospital Mergers: Identification, Study in a Consultation & Liaison Prevalence, and Post-Merger Financial Psychiatry (CL) Practice and Service Effects – 2005-2016 Public and Population Aaron Winn, Medical College of Melissa Steffen, VISN 23 Patient Wisconsin, #C-458 Health Aligned Care Team Demonstration Lab, Association between Chemotherapy Denis Agniel, RAND, #C-466 #C-450 Provider Competition and Access, Measuring Increased Risk of Opioid Primary Care Personnel Perceptions of Cost and Quality of Care for Medicare Misuse and Chronic Use in Family Leadership Support and Communication Beneficiaries with Cancer Members of Surgical Patients Styles Loong Mun Wong, Agency for Ray Agostinelli, FAIR Health, #C-467 Philip Sylling, Department of Veterans Integrated Care, #C-459 Tracking Variations in the Opioid Crisis in Affairs, Puget Sound, #C-451 Improving Referral to Nursing Home Five Key States with Private Claims Data Clinic Level Staffing and Burnout through Value Stream Mapping Associated with Perceived Access to Danielle Atkins, University of Central Primary Care Chiu-Mei Yeh, National Yang-Ming Florida, #C-468 and #C-469 University, #C-460 Examining the Relationship between Erica Tartaglione, Department of Changes in Patient-Sharing Networks Hospital Publicness and Population Veterans Affairs, Puget Sound, #C-452 Among Institution Providers Under the Health Bridging the Cultural Divide between Single-Payer System in Taiwan from and Oncology and Palliative Care 2000 to 2010 The Relationship between Physician Subspecialties: Clinicians’ Perceptions Specialty and Utilization of Physical on Team Integration Shu-Chuan Jennifer Yeh, National Sun Therapy or Prescription Opioids for Yat-sen University, #C-461 Treatment of Degenerative Joint Maike Tietschert, The Commonwealth Leaders’ Personality, Leadership, and Disease: Evidence from the Namcs Fund, #C-453 Organizational Efficiency Attention to Attention: Improving Deanna Barath, University of Maryland, Integrated Patient Care Kai Yeung, Kaiser Permanente #C-470 and #C-471 Washington Health Research Institute, Integrating Local Health Departments to Justin Timbie, RAND, #C-454 #C-462 Reduce Suicidal Ideation and Intentional Impact of Health System Affiliation on Relative Cost Burden of Absenteeism, Self-Inflicted Injuries Among People with Performance of Critical Access Hospitals Presenteeism, and Healthcare Substance Abuse Disorders Expenditures for Employees of Two and Connie Trinacty, Kaiser Permanente Large Healthcare Systems Navigating an Enhanced Rural Health Hawaii, #C-455 SESSION C Model for Maryland POSTER Leadership Perspectives on Prioritizing Jane Zhu, University of Pennsylvania, Healthcare Disparities in a High #C-463 David Beiser, University of Chicago, Performing Health System Hospital Strategies Under Bundled #C-473 Payment to Improve Care Coordination A Controlled Trial of Communityrx: Katie White, University of Minnesota, with Skilled Nursing Facilities Effects of Systematizing Personalized #C-456 Patient Referrals at the Point of Health Understanding Contagious Emotion in Xi Zhu, University of Iowa, #C-464 and Care to Community-Based Self-Care the Operating Room #C-465 Resources EHR-Based Communication Networks in a Human-Technological Ecosystem and What Influences Sustainment of Internal Facilitation Activities in Implementation? Analysis of Organizational and Team

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Alexandra Bhatti, Centers for Disease Tong Han Chung, University of Texas Wael ElRayes, University of Nebraska Control and Prevention, #C-474 and Health Science Center at Houston, Medical Center, #C-490 and #C-491 #C-475 #C-483 Do Community Health Indicators Exploring Vaccination Laws in The Impact of a 24-Hour Nurse Triage Predict Spending on Community Health Healthcare Settings and Their Impact on Line on Health Care Utilization and Costs Improvement Initiatives By Private Tax- Immunization Coverage Rates Exempt Hospitals and Elizabeth Ciemins, AMGA, #C-484 and National Assessment of Grace Period Screening Patients for Diabetes in a The Impact of Community Health and Provisional Enrollment School Large, National, Clinical Database Improvement Initiatives Spending Vaccination Laws and Public Health By Private Tax-Exempt Hospitals on Implications Allison Cole, University of Washington, Community Health Indicators #C-485 Michael Bryan, Mayo Clinic, #C-477 National Breast and Cervical Cancer Leigh Evans, Boston University, #C-492 Provider Driven Panel Management: Early Detection Program Grantees Geographic Accessibility of Community Improving Value in a Fee for Service Implementation of Intervention to Health Centers and Primary Care Environment Reduce Cancer Screening Disparities Utilization

James Buszkiewicz, University of Ashley Cole, University of North Carolina Jennifer Fink, University Wisconsin Washington, #C-478 at Chapel Hill, #C-486 Milwaukee, #C-493 Reassessing Seattle’s Supermarket Food Cost-Effectiveness of Neoadjuvant The Sequential Association between a Prices: Do Two Years of Higher Wages and Chemotherapy Versus Upfront Surgery Given Individual MetS Criteria Diagnosis an Increase to $15 Have an Impact on City- for Advanced Ovarian Cancer in an and Both the Eventual Complete MetS Level Food Prices? Aggressive Surgical Setting Diagnosis, As Well As Development of Associated Comorbidities. Evan Carey, Eastern Colorado Health Care Cory Cronin, Ohio University, #C-487 System, #C-479 Understanding Hospital Participation in Laura Graham, University of Alabama at Estimating Prevalence of Veterans Community Health Assessments before Birmingham, #C-494 Reporting Chronic Pain Among All Veterans the ACA The Effect of Community Characteristics in Primary Care between 2008-2016 on Weight Management Program Caitlin Cross-Barnet, Center for Participation Stephanie Castano, Oregon Primary Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, Care Association, #C-480 #C-488 Lois Greene, Rutgers University, #C-495 Collecting Social Determinants of Health Patient and Provider Barriers to Receipt Patient, Community, and Geographic Data in the Clinical Setting: Findings of Colonoscopy Characteristics of Patients Hospitalized from the Prapare Pilot for Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions Samuel Cykert, Cecil G. Sheps Center in the State of New Jersey in 2012 Stephanie Chan, U.S. Department of for Health Services Research, #C-489 Health and Human Services, #C-481 A Population Approach Using Cholesterol DaShawn Groves, Department of Health Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) for Imputation to Identify Adults with High Care Finance, #C-496 Preventing Transmission of HIV: Trends Cardiovascular Risk: A Report from The District of Columbia Department of in Patients, Prescribers, Uptake, and North Carolina on Ahrqs Evidence Now Health Care Finance’s Collective Effort Spending Initiative to Standardize Social Determinants of Health Data Roxana Chen, Public Health - Seattle & King County, #C-482 Joanna Guo, University of California, Linking and Sharing Data across San Francisco, #C-497 Sectors to Assess Impacts of Housing Ten-Year Trends in Traumatic Brain Redevelopment on Health Injury: An Evaluation of California Emergency Department and Hospital Revisits and Readmissions, 2005-2014

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Dennis Gurfinkel, University of Eli Kern, Public Health - Seattle & King Joseph Ladapo, University of California, Colorado, #C-498 County, #C-506 Los Angeles, #C-513 Centralized Vaccine Reminder/Recall to Towards Improving Evaluation Trends in Physician Prescribing of Improve Adult Vaccination Rates at an Methodology for Local Governmental Opioids to Patients at Increased Risk of Urban Safety Net Health System Health and Human Services Programs: Fatal Overdose in the United States Lessons Learned from a Jail-Based Nia Heard-Garris, Robert Wood Johnson Continuity of Care Program in King Kate LaForge, Oregon Health & Science Foundation Clinical Scholars Program, County, Washington University, #C-514 #C-499 “Having a Normal Life”: Client Goal- Health Care Utilization and Health Tamkeen Khan, American Medical Setting in a Community-Based Health Behaviors Among Young Adults with Association, #C-529 Navigation Program a History of Parental Incarceration – Referrals to CDC’s National Diabetes Results from a National Longitudinal Prevention Program in Primary Care Andrea Larson, University of Practices and Pharmacies: Drivers and Wisconsin—Madison, #C-515 Cesar Higgins Tejera, Oregon Health Barriers Variable Uptake of Medicaid-Covered and Science University, #C-500 Prenatal Care Coordination: The Application of an Intersectional Hadi Kharrazi, Johns Hopkins Relevance of Treatment Level and Framework to Understanding the University, #C-507, #C-508, #C-509, Service Context Association of Disability and Sexual and #C-510 Orientation with Suicidal Ideation Among A Systematic Review of Data Sources Michael Laxy, Centers for Disease Oregon Teens and Data Linkage Methods in Natural Control and Prevention, #C-516 Experiment Studies of Obesity Health Benefits and Cost Impact of Sandra Jackson, Centers for Disease and Paying for Type 2 Diabetes Prevention Control and Prevention, #C-501 Population-Level Comparison of Lifestyle Programs in Medicaid National Burden of Heart Failure Events Diagnostic Data Collected in EHRs Beneficiaries in the United States, 2006-2014 Versus Insurance Claims and Hyun-Sook Lee, Kongju National Molly Jarman, Brigham and Women’s Prevalence of Pediatric Fall Injuries: A University, #C-517 Hospital, #C-502 and #C-503 Statewide Study Factors Affecting Outcomes of Patients Environmental and Community and with Mood Disorders Determinants of Injury Mortality Using Hospital Discharge Summaries and to Measure the Incident and Predict Ju Sung Lee, Texas A&M University, Mapping Areas with Concentrated Risk Geriatric Falls in Maryland #C-518 of Trauma Mortality: A First Step Toward Disparities in Smoking Rates and Mitigating Disparities in Trauma Heather Kitzman, Baylor Scott and Access to Vape Shops in Texas from the White Health, #C-511 Harm Reduction Perspective - a Spatial Ara Jo, University of Florida, #C-504 Evaluating Population Health Approaches Analysis Approach SESSION C POSTER Identify an Optimal Non-Invasive Body in Low-Income Communities to Improve Composition Assessment to Develop Chronic Disease Risk and Inform Value- Jiang Li, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Cardiovascular Disease Risk Score Based Care Models Research Institute, #C-519 Barriers and Facilitators to Formal Nicole Katapodis, University of Georgia, Andrew Knighton, Intermountain Smoking Cessation Counseling after #C-505 Healthcare, #C-512 Lung Cancer Screening Guideline An Agent-Based Simulation Model Building the Case for Public/Private Change to Estimate the Impact of Improving Collaboration for Community Health: Access on Healthy Food Intake in a Rural Impact of a Clinical Team Warm Referral Community to an Evidence-Based Public Health Program on Enrollment Rates

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Denise Lillvis, University at Buffalo, Selena Ortiz, Penn State University, Lee Anne Roman, Michigan State #C-520 #C-531 University, #C-539 Practice-Level Policies to Promote Public Beliefs about Housing Affordability Population Health Efforts to Reach Pediatric Vaccination: A Pilot Study of As a Key Social and Economic High Risk Medicaid-Insured Women Western New York Determinant of Health: Results from a during Prenatal/Interconception Periods: Mixed-Methods National Survey Community-Clinical Linkages Lisa Lines, RTI International, #C-521 Part D Uptake and Outcomes Among Rajib Paul, University of North Carolina Ashley Rutherford, United States Air People with Colorectal Cancer: SEER- at Charlotte, #C-532 Force, #C-540 Medicare, 2007-2013 Modelling Individual Vulnerability to Political, Economic and Health System Hongji Liu, Westat, #C-522 Sexually Transmitted Infections to Determinants of Tuberculosis Incidence Unmet Needs of Mental Health Care Optimize Intervention Strategies Reflected in the MEPS Utilization Data Kira Ryskina, University of Miruna Petrescu-Prahova, University of Pennsylvania, #C-541 Peter Mallow, Xavier University, #C-523 Washington, #C-533 Association between Clinician Exploring Medication-Assisted Treatment Building Clinical-Community Linkages Specialization in Nursing Home Care and (MAT) Capacity and Unmet Treatment between Physical Therapists and YMCA Nursing Home Clinical Quality Metrics Need in High-Need Opioid Dependence Associations to Increase Older Adult Regions Physical Activity Loren Saulsberry, Harvard University, #C-542 Mac McCullough, Arizona State Mai Pho, University of Chicago, #C-534 Politicization of Cancer Prevention and University, #C-524 Big Data Approach to Opioid Overdose Preferences for HPV Vaccine Policy Local Government Spending and Surveillance: Linking Decedents’ Death, Alternatives Hospital Health Promotion Activities Are Prescription Monitoring, Hospitalization, Associated with Better Health Outcomes and Emergency Department Records Stylianos Serghiou, Stanford University, #C-543 Anna Mease, University of North Florida, John Poe, University of Kentucky, Cardiovascular Disease Prediction: #C-525 #C-535 A Machine-Learning-Based Risk- The Design of a Neighborhood Level Rural-Urban Differences in Delivery Stratification Tool for Health Claims Data Community Health Needs Assessment Systems for Population Health Activities Map Tool for Non-Profit Hospitals Sara Singer, Stanford University, Christy Pu, National Yang-Ming #C-544 Stephanie Morain, Baylor College of University, #C-536 The Engagement of US Corporations in Medicine, #C-526 Continuity of Care and Medication Promoting a Culture of Health New Disease, Old Challenges: Zika and Adherence for Diabetic Patients after Health System Responses to Emerging Diagnosis of Cancer: Analysis Using Minji Sohn, Ferris State University, Infectious Diseases Population-Based Data #C-545 Co-Prescription of Opioids and Naloxone Jennifer Mosst, Los Angeles County Chris Reist, University of California, in Office-Based, Hospital Outpatient Department of Public Health, #C-527 Irvine, #C-537 Department and Emergency Department Building a Sustainability Framework for Development of a Population Health Settings in the US the Scale up of the National Diabetes Approach to Improve Quality of Care in Prevention Program in Los Angeles First Episode Psychosis Lisa Spees, Sheps Center for Health County Services Research, #C-546 Megan Roberts, National Cancer Treatment Modalities of Guideline- Len Nichols, George Mason University, Institute, #C-538 Concordant Care Influenced By Distance #C-530 State Health Policies and Uptake of to Care Among Cervical Cancer Patients Social Determinants As Public Goods: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Vaccine: in North Carolina A New Approach to Financing Key A Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Investments in Healthy Communities Analysis

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Jennifer St. Sauver, Mayo Clinic, Melanie Ward, University of Michigan, Dongjuan Xu, Purdue University, #C-547 #C-551 #C-555 Rochester Epidemiology Project Data A System Dynamics Conceptual Model Trends in Fatal and Nonfatal Injuries Exploration Portal: Community-Based of Community-Level Substance Abuse Among Older Americans, 2004-2015 Data Sharing Outcomes Y. Tony Yang, George Mason University, Michael Stoto, Georgetown University, Jason Wasfy, Massachusetts General #C-556 #C-548 Hospital, #C-552 Examining the Spatiotemporal Evolution Best Practices in Population Health Relationship between Public Health and of Vaccine Refusal: Nonmedical Measurement for Community Health Voting Changes after the Presidential Exemptions from Vaccination in Improvement Election of 2016 California, 2000-2013

Yun Ru Tan, Agency for Integrated Care Christina Whang, Association of State Jiani Yu, University of Minnesota, Pte Ltd, Singapore, #C-549 and Territorial Health Officials,#C-553 #C-557 Community Networks for Seniors- a Understanding the State Public Health Using Electronic Health Records to Population Health Approach for Seniors Workforce’s Perceptions of Agency Examine HPV Vaccine Initiation and in Singapore Involvement in Impacting Health Equity Completion Rates and the Workforce’s Current Skills Rekha Varghese, IMPAQ International, Related to Health Equity Xi Zhu, University of Iowa, #C-558 LLC, #C-550 Mobilizing Cross-Sector Collaborations Evaluation of Howard County’s Journey Lia Winfield, Leavitt Partners, #C-554 to Improve Population Health in Rural to Better Health Program Social Determinants Matter, but Who Is Communities Responsible? 2017 Survey of Physicians on Social Determinants of Health

SESSION C POSTER

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 159 2018 BEST ABSTRACTS The following Abstracts were selected as the most outstanding research submitted for presentation in the Call for Papers Themes. Best Abstracts Consumer Choice and Incentives The following abstracts were selected as the most outstanding The Potential Impact of Repealing the Individual research submitted for presentation in the Call for Papers Mandate on the Individual Insurance Market in Theme. California

Presenter: Vicki Fung, Ph.D., Massachusetts General Aging, Disability, and End-of-Life Hospital Impact of the CMS Initiative to Reduce Avoidable Co-Authors: Catherine Liang, B.S., and Lindsay Hospitalizations Among Nursing Facility Residents Overhage, B.A., Massachusetts General Hospital; Julie Shi, Ph.D., Peking University; Alan Zaslavsky, Ph.D., on Mortality Harvard University; William Dow, Ph.D., University of Presenter: Zhanlian Feng, Ph.D., RTI International California, Berkeley; Bruce Fireman, M.A., and Stephen Derose, M.D., Kaiser Permanente; Michael Chernew, Co-Authors: Melvin Ingber, Ph.D., Micah Segelman, Ph.D., Ph.D., Harvard University; John Hsu, M.D., M.B.A., Nan Tracy Zheng, Ph.D., Nicole Coomer, Ph.D., Joyce Wang, M.S.C.E., Massachusetts General Hospital; Harvard M.P.H., Alison Vadnais, M.H.S., and Galina Khatutsky, M.S., University; Joseph Newhouse, Ph.D., Harvard University; A.B.D., RTI International The National Bureau of Economic Research; Harvard University; Harvard School of Public Health; Harvard Tuesday, June 26: 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Kennedy School WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) Tuesday, June 26: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

Behavioral Health WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) Effects of State Autism Mandate Age Caps on Health Service Use and Spending Among Coverage, Access, and Medicaid Adolescents The Impact of Medicaid Expansion on Presenter: Alene Kennedy-Hendricks, Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Preventable Hospitalizations University Presenter: Kenton Johnston, Ph.D., Saint Louis University, College for Public Health and Social Justice Monday, June 25: 5:15 p.m.–6:45 p.m. Co-Authors: Lindsay Allen, Ph.D., West Virginia WSCC - Room 608 (Level Six) University; Hefei Wen, Ph.D., University of Kentucky

Child and Family Health Sunday, June 24: 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m.

Expanding the Nurse-Family Partnership to WSCC - Room 615-617 (Level Six) Multiparous Women: Early Lessons Learned from a Pilot Study Digital Technologies and Health Presenter: Venice Williams, M.P.H. CHES, University of Colorado Watching Physicians As They Work: Co-Authors: Gregory Tung, M.P.H., Ph.D., Colorado School of Observations Using Time-Stamped EHR Data Public Health; David Olds, Ph.D., Mandy Allison, M.D., M.P.H., Carol Franco, and Connie Lopez, R.N., M.A., University of Colorado Presenter: Dorothy Hung, Ph.D., M.A., M.P.H., Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute Tuesday, June 26: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

WSCC - Room 607 (Level Six)

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Co-Authors: Qianyun Zhang, M.A., Quan Truong, M.P.H., High Cost, High Need and Harold Luft, Ph.D., Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute Effects of a Comprehensive Care Physician (CCP) Program on Patient Satisfaction, Health Status, Tuesday, June 26: 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m. and Hospital Admissions in Medicare Patients at Increased Risk of Hospitalization: Initial Findings WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four) of a Randomized Trial

Presenter: David Meltzer, M.D., Ph.D., The University of Disparities and Health Equity Chicago

Immigrants Contributed $25.1B More to Private Co-Authors: John Cursio, Ph.D., Andrea Flores, M.A., Insurers Than They Took out in 2014 Robert Gibbons, Ph.D., Xuejie Zhang, Ph.D., Thomas Best, Ph.D., Greg Ruhnke, M.D., Anshu Verma, M.D., Ram Presenter: Karen Finnegan, M.P.H., Institute for Community Krishnamoorthi, M.D., Joyce Tang, M.D., M.P.H., Audrey Health Tanksley, M.D., Grace Berry, M.D., Emily Perish, M.P.P., Co-Authors: Sharon Touw, M.P.H., Institute for Community CCP Research Group, Lauren Wiklund, Nicole Gier, Health; Steffie Woolhandler, M.D., M.P.H., City University of New L.C.S.W., C.C.M., Elizabeth Nida, M.A., L.S.W., Mary Harris, York School of Public Health at Hunter College; Leah Zallman, Cohen Ellen, M.P.P., Andrew Schram, M.D., M.B.A., and M.D., M.P.H., Cambridge Health Alliance; Institute for Community Arora Vineet, M.D., M.A., The University of Chicago Health; David Himmelstein, M.D., City University of New York School of Public Health at Hunter College Tuesday, June 26: 11:45 a.m.–1:15 p.m.

WSCC - Room 619-620 (Level Six) Monday, June 25: 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. WSCC - Room 4C-1 (Level Four) Improving Safety, Quality, and Value The Impact of Hospital Mergers on Clinical Quality Health Workforce of Care and Patient Experience Does the Structure of Physician Referral Presenter: Nancy Beaulieu, Ph.D., Harvard School of Networks Matter for Physician Cost Performance? Public Health Evidence from Medicare

Presenter: Jesus Leal Trujillo, Deloitte Sunday, June 24: 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m.

Co-Authors: Andreea Balan-Cohen, Ph.D., Deloitte Center WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) for Health Solutions; Gnana Kanisan, Deloitte Consulting Lessons from Abroad Sunday, June 24: 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Global Approaches to Readmission Reduction: WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Lessons from Other Countries?

Presenter: Irene Papanicolas, London School of Economics

Co-Authors: Liana Woskie, M.Sc., Harvard University; Ian Brownwood, OECD; Niek Klazinga, Amsterdam Medical Centre (AMC) - University of Amsterdam

Monday, June 25: 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m.

WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two)

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Measuring Safety, Quality, and Oral Health Value National Dental Opioid Prescriptions in Hospital The Problem of Excluding Observation Stays from Emergency Departments: A Systems Modeling Hospital Readmission Measures Approach

Presenter: Amber Sabbatini, M.D., M.P.H., University of Presenter: Shabnam Seyedzadeh Sabounchi, D.D.S., State Washington University of New York at Binghamton

Co-Authors: Brad Wright, Ph.D., University of Iowa; Anirban Co-Authors: A. Serdar Atav, Ph.D., Nasim S.Sabounchi, Basu, Ph.D., University of Washington Ph.D., and Leon Cosler, R.Ph., Ph.D., State University of New York at Binghamton Sunday, June 24: 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Sunday, June 24: 2:00 p.m.–3:30 p.m. WSCC - Room 4C-2 (Level Four) WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two)

Medicare Organizational Behavior and The Effects of Expert Recommendations on Management Choice Among Prescription Drug Insurance Plans\ Effects of the VA Patient Centered Medical Home Presenter: Kate Bundorf, Ph.D., National Bureau of Initiative on Healthcare Utilization: Results after Four Economic Research Years Co-Authors: Cheryl Stults, Ph.D., and Amy Meehan, M.P.H., Presenter: Edwin Wong, Ph.D., Department of Veterans Affairs, Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute; Maria Puget Sound Polyakova, Ph.D., and Roman Klimke, Stanford University; Ting Pun, Ph.D., Member of PCORI Patient Advisory Board; Co-Authors: Chuan-Fen Liu, Ph.D., M.P.H., University of Albert Chan, M.D., M.S., Sutter Health Office of Patient Washington; Eric Gunnink, M.S., Stephan Fihn, M.D., M.P.H., Experience; Ming Tai-Seale, Ph.D., University of California, and Paul Hebert, Ph.D., Department of Veterans Affairs San Diego Sunday, June 24: 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Sunday, June 24: 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. WSCC - Room 2A (Level Two) WSCC - Room 613-614 (Level Six) Patient-Centered Research Methods Research The Impact of Patient Engagement and Relational Natural Language Processing for the Surveillance Coordination on Improved Patient-Centered of Surgical Site Infections Outcomes of Care in ACO-Affiliated Practices

Presenter: Caroline Thirukumaran, Ph.D., M.B.B.S., M.H.A., Presenter: Hector Rodriguez, Ph.D., M.P.H., University of University of Rochester California, Berkeley

Co-Authors: Anis Zaman, M.S., Paul Rubery, M.D., Yue Li, Co-Authors: Steve Shortell, Ph.D., M.B.A., M.P.H., Jessica Ph.D., Casey Calabria, R.N., B.S.N., Wajeeh Bakhsh, M.D., Poon, AHRQ T32 Fellow, and Emily Wang, M.A., University of and Henry Kautz, Ph.D., University of Rochester California, Berkeley SPH

Tuesday, June 26: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Tuesday, June 26: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six)

162 academyhealth.org/arm/agenda TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018

Payment and Delivery Systems Translation, Dissemination, Innovations Implementation, and Impact A Pragmatic Policy Trial Testing Larger Bonus 12 Month Outcomes of a Cluster Randomized Sizes and the Behavioral Economic Principles of Implementation Trial to Enhance Uptake of a Loss Aversion and Social Pressure in Physician Mood Disorders Collaborative Care Model in Pay-for-Performance Community Practices

Presenter: Amol Navathe, M.D., Ph.D., University of Presenter: Shawna Smith, Ph.D., University of Michigan Pennsylvania Co-Authors: Katherine Prenovost, Ph.D., and Daniel Co-Authors: Kristen Caldarella, M.H.A., Shireen Eisenberg, Ph.D., University of Michigan; Mark Bauer, M.D., Matloubieh, M.P.H., Kevin Volpp, M.D., Ph.D., Amelia Bond, Harvard University; Amy Kilbourne, Ph.D., M.P.H., VA Quality and Zoe Lyon, B.A., University of Pennsylvania; Lee Sacks, Enhancement Research Initiaitve (QUERI); Celeste Liebrecht, M.D., Carrie Nelson, M.D., and Pankaj Patel, M.D., M.Sc., M.S.W., VA Ann Arbor Health System; Daniel Almirall, Ph.D., Advocate Physician Partners; Andrea Troxel, Ph.D., Perelman University of Michigan Institute for Social Research School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania; Ezekiel Emanuel, M.D., Ph.D., Leonard Davis Institute of Health Monday, June 25: 11:15 a.m.–12:45 p.m. Economics, University of Pennsylvania; Akriti Mishra, and Judy Shea, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania WSCC - Room 4C-4 (Level Four)

Monday, June 25: 3:15 p.m.–4:45 p.m. Women’s Health WSCC - Room 609-610 (Level Six) Explaining Unexplained Variation in Patient Outcomes: Cesarean Overuse and the Culture of Care Public and Population Health Presenter: Emily White VanGompel, M.D., M.P.H., University Opioid Overdose Hospitalization Trajectories in States of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine with and without Opioid Dosing Guidelines Co-Authors: Susan Perez, Ph.D., California State University, Presenter: Jeanne Sears, Ph.D., M.S., R.N., University of Sacramento; Avisek Datta, M.S., NorthShore University Washington Research Institute; Elliott Main, M.D., California Maternal Quality Care Collaborative, Stanford University; Jairo Chavez, Co-Authors: Deborah Fulton-Kehoe, Ph.D., M.P.H., and Beryl NorthShore University Research Institute Schulman, Ph.D., M.S.W., University of Washington; Gary Franklin, M.D., M.P.H., University of Washington; Washington Monday, June 25: 9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. State Department of Labor and Industries; Sheilah Hogg- WSCC - Room 612 (Level Six) Johnson, Ph.D., MMath, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College; Institute for Work and Health; University of Toronto

Tuesday, June 26: 8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m.

WSCC - Room 602-604 (Level Six)

academyhealth.org/arm/agenda 163

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HEALTHHEALTH DATA DATA POLICY POLICY ANDAND STRATEGY STRATEGY ORIENTATIONORIENTATION SeptemberSeptember 26-27, 26-27, 2018 2018 | |AcademyHealth, AcademyHealth, Washington Washington D.C. D.C. AcademyHealth’sAcademyHealth’s Health Health Data Data Policy Policy and and Strategy Strategy Orientation Orientation (HDPSO) (HDPSO) provides provides an an engaging engaging and and interac- interac- tivetive forum forum for for individuals individuals to togain gain a workinga working knowledge knowledge of ofpayment, payment, regulatory, regulatory, data data access access and and use use policies policies coupledcoupled with with the the opportunity opportunity to toexplore explore case case studies studies on on innovative innovative data data applications applications designed designed to tomeet meet emergingemerging needs needs in intransforming transforming health health care care delivery. delivery. It providesIt provides a uniquea unique opportunity opportunity for for the the exchange exchange of of data-centricdata-centric perspectives perspectives and and knowledge knowledge on on evidence-based evidence-based practices practices and and health health systems systems research. research. In Inits its inaugural inaugural year, year, the the orientation orientation will will equip equip attendees attendees with with practical practical knowledge knowledge intended intended to tohelp help informinform their their institution’s institution’s data-driven data-driven transformation transformation strategy, strategy, offer offer insights insights on on the the trends trends in infederal federal policiespolicies and and programs, programs, and and provide provide information information to tohelp help meet meet organizational organizational information information strategy strategy needs. needs. RegisterRegister Today Today academyhealth.org/hdpso academyhealth.org/hdpso

HealthHealth Policy Policy OrientationOrientation OctoberOctober 22-24, 22-24, 2018 2018 | |AcademyHealth, AcademyHealth, Washington Washington D.C. D.C. TakeTake a deepa deep dive dive into into all allaspects aspects of ofhealth health policy policy at atthe the Health Health Policy Policy Orientation. Orientation. Attendees Attendees explore explore the the manymany mechanisms mechanisms of ofthe the policy policy process, process, including including its its key key players players (from (from relevant relevant congressional congressional staff staff to to thethe three three branches branches of ofgovernment government and and federal federal agencies), agencies), an an overview overview of ofthe the federal federal budget budget process, process, and and insightsinsights into into state state health health policy, policy, public public opinion, opinion, and and more. more. TheThe program program includes includes presentations presentations by by well-known well-known experts, experts, interactive interactive panels panels and and group group discussions, discussions, and and hands-onhands-on tutorials. tutorials. Sessions Sessions are are intentionally intentionally small small – registration– registration is islimited limited to to50 50 participants participants – and– and de- de- signedsigned to toencourage encourage collaboration, collaboration, interaction, interaction, and and networking networking among among participants participants and and esteemed esteemed faculty. faculty. RegistrationRegistration opens opens in in early early July July academyhealth.org/orientationacademyhealth.org/orientation

11th11th Annual Annual Conference Conference

onon the the Science Science of of Dissemination Dissemination andand Implementation Implementation in in Health Health

DecemberDecember 3-5, 3-5, 2018 2018 | |Renaissance, Renaissance, Washington Washington D.C. D.C. TheThe Annual Annual Conference Conference on on the the Science Science of ofDissemination Dissemination and and Implementation Implementation in inHealth Health (D&I), (D&I), co-hosted co-hosted by bythe the NationalNational Institutes Institutes of ofHealth Health (NIH) (NIH) and and AcademyHealth, AcademyHealth, is theis the pre-eminent pre-eminent event event to tobridge bridge the the gap gap between between research,research, practice, practice, and and policy policy in inhealth health and and health health care. care. JoinJoin us us at atthe the D&I D&I Conference Conference to tolearn learn about about the the latest latest innovations innovations in inthe the science science of ofD&I; D&I; explore explore new new research research

WeWe are are accepting accepting abstract abstract submissions submissions until until July July 24. 24. Registration Registration opensopens on on July July 23. 23. academyhealth.org/DIscienceacademyhealth.org/DIscience Advertisements Vote for AcademyHealth’s Next Leaders

Voting is now open for AcademyHealth’s Board of Directors election. Visit the AcademyHealth Booth on Level Six to cast your vote.

Cheryl Damberg, PhD, MPH Distinguished Chair in Health Care Payment Michael J. O’Grady, PhD Policy; Principal Senior Researcher, RAND Senior Fellow, NORC at the University Corporation; Professor, Pardee RAND of Chicago; Principal, O’Grady Health Graduate School Policy, LLC

Atul Grover, MD, PhD, FACP, FCCP Lucy A. Savitz, PhD, MBA Vice President, Association of American Vice President, Health Research, Kaiser Medical Colleges (AAMC) Permanente Northwest

You will need your voter ID provided on the back of your badge to access the ballot.

To view candidate bios and statements of interest, visit academyhealth.org/voting. Helping public and private-sector clients develop solutions for health care and human services challenges for nearly 50 years

Health care and human services policy research, analytics and consulting — with real-world perspective

Visit the Lewin Group at booth #204 to learn more about our current research and employment opportunities.

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  Associate/Full Professor

Established in 1998, the Division of Learning and Knowledge Systems VA Information Resource Center (VIReC) Department of Learning Health Sciences supports researchers using VA data and

information systems. The Department of Learning Health Sciences at the University of Michigan Medical School is seeking a distinguished scholar for its Division

of Learning and Knowledge Systems.

The successful applicant will academically be eligible for appointment as Associate or Full Professor in the instructional (tenure) track. Up

to 50% of the position will be funded by the Quality Department of Michigan Medicine to advance the clinical enterprise of the University of Michigan.

Visit us at booth 605 to discuss your For additional information, and application data needs and questions. instructions, visit: https://medicine.umich.edu/ dept/lhs/news-events/jobs.

www.virec.research.va.gov

[email protected] The University of Michigan is an equal

opportunity/affirmative action employer.

Health Reform As part of the Urban Institute’s mission

to open minds, shape decisions, and Medicare and Medicaid offer solutions through economic and

Opioid social policy research, the Health Use Disorder Policy Center provides the answers State and local initiatives to improve population decisionmakers need to address health Social health problems in America. determinants of health

Payment and delivery system MORE AT HPC.URBAN.ORG reform

Reproductive Health 1 PROGRAMS AND RESEARCH GRANTS LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT

Kristine Madsen, MD; Phillip W. Graham, MPH, DrPH; and Regina Jackson; Interdisciplinary Research Leaders team from Oakland, California

SEEKING INNOVATORS FROM EVERY FIELD TO DISRUPT THE STATUS QUO ON HEALTH Funding, Collaboration, Opportunities to Build a Culture of Health

No matter what your area of expertise, profession, or field of study, you have a role in building a Culture of Health. Leaders seeking inspiration, growth, and opportunity for impact: Get paid to work and learn with peers from diverse fields and backgrounds, and receive high-level coaching and curriculum through our eight leadership development programs. Researchers interested in applying knowledge for change: Access funding for research that expands understanding of what most shapes health, and which interventions may have greatest potential for impact through our four research programs. Learn more and decide which program is right for you at www.rwjf.org/program-finder.

University of California, BERKELEY PhRMA Foundation Health Policy Value Assessment Initiative Doctoral Program

The PhRMA Foundation is continuing its Value Assessment program aimed at advancing the ongoing shift toward a value-driven health care system through better evidence The Health Policy (HP) Doctoral Program at the and value frameworks. We are seeking transformative, University of California, Berkeley is distinguished by multi-stakeholder-driven solutions to address challenges in its interdisciplinary application of the social science assessing the value of medicines and health care services disciplines to real-world health issues. Students select a major area of concentration from among three to improve patient outcomes and reduce inefficiency. disciplines (health economics, organizations and management, or population health), while receiving WE OFFER: exposure to all three tracks in addition to the fields This program offers three of politics & policy and behavioral & community different awards providing sciences. Students augment their training through over $1 million of support. skills and knowledge from UC Berkeley's top-ranked • Challenge Grants Economics, Political Science, and Sociology • Research Awards departments as well as the Haas School of Business • Center of Excellence Award and the Goldman School of Public Policy. Graduates For Details and Announcements: of the HP program are well prepared to assume PhRMAFoundation.org academic careers in research and teaching. About the PhRMA Foundation For over 50 years, the PhRMA Foundation has Please visit our website for more information at offered fellowships and grants to advance pharmaceutical science and support researchers http://berkeleyhealthpolicy.com at the beginning of their careers.

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A highly trusted source of objective health policy and health services research One of the largest independent health research organizations in the world A vibrant, multi-disciplinary community of researchers working to improve health care in the U.S. and around the world An amazing place to begin or build upon a career

Visit us at RAND’s exhibit booth to meet members of our research staff and learn how our researchers solve the most complex problems in health policy, quality, financing, and delivery and put their findings in the hands of key actors and top decisionmakers. http://www.rand.org/health MAYO CLINIC ROBERT D. AND PATRICIA E. KERN CENTER FOR THE SCIENCE OF HEALTH CARE DELIVERY

Building on Mayo Clinic’s more than 100 years of experience in applying scientific and engineering principles to health care delivery, the Mayo Clinic Robert D. and Patricia E. Kern Center for the Science of Health Care Delivery is transforming the way that patients everywhere receive and experience health care.

Visit Mayo Clinic’s booth at AcademyHealth’s Annual Research Meeting.

For more information visit mayoclinic.org To learn more about careers at Mayo Clinic visit: jobs.mayoclinic.org.

©2018 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research. Mayo Clinic is an equal opportunity educator and employer (including veterans and persons with disabilities).

CFSHCD_ACADEMYHEALTH_AD_BW_2018.indd 1 1/17/18 10:42 AM NationalNational InformationInformation CenterCenter onon HealthHealth ServicesServices ResearchResearch andand HealthHealth CareCare Technology (NICHSR)Technology (NICHSR) Serving the Information Needs of the Health Services Research Community

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Visit us at the AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting Booth #415

NLM Town Hall: Poster Session “Future of Scholarly Communication Winner of the “2018 HSRProj and HSR” Research Competition for Students: Dr. Patricia Brennan, moderator Identifying Research Gaps in HSR” Director, National Library of Medicine www.academyhealth.org/HSRProjStudent2018 June 25, 2018 @ 9:30–11:00am It’s a bird, it’s a plane … It’s the storytelling superhero!

Join us at booth 302 to see how you can become a storytelling superhero and how we all can help make our research stick.

Penn State Graduate Degrees in Health Policy and Administration Developing Intellectual Leaders to Improve Health Care DEGREES • Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) Doctoral options include Health Economics, Health Care Management and Organization, and Population Health • Master of Science (M.S.) • Dual M.S. or Ph.D. option in Health Policy and Administration and Demography RESEARCH STRENGTHS • Quality improvement • Financing and insurance • Socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities • Organizational structure and performance • Cancer prevention, treatment, and survivorship Funding available for graduate assistants and predoctoral fellowships

Department of Health Policy and Administration www.hhd.psu.edu/hpa • 814-863-9971 INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH POLICY

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PRACTICE WITH POLICY

The Kaiser Permanente Institute for Health Policy helps address critical health care questions by drawing upon Kaiser Permanente’s experience and research as well as its clinical and operational expertise. The Institute provides solutions to important national health care policy issues by providing objective research and analysis—all informed by Kaiser Permanente’s integrated care model and large, diversified member population.

@KPIHP kp.org/ihp Healthcare Cost and Utlization Project Poweful Data. Meaningful Answers.

The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) is a family of healthcare databases and related software tools and products developed through a Federal-State-Industry partnership and sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ). HCUP databases bring together the data collection efforts of HCUP Partners to create the largest collection of longitudinal hospital care data in the United States, with all-payer, encounter-level information, enabling research on a broad range of health policy issues.

Learn more at www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov MPH,degrees MSPH offered in the Department and of PhD

HealthCollaborations withPolicy the Department & of EconomicsManagement and Political Science, Emory School of Business, Medicine, Nursing, Law, and Theology.

The Department of Health Policy and Management (HPM) offers courses of study leading to the Masters of Public Health (MPH) and the Masters of Science in Public Health (MSPH) through the Rollins School of Public Health, and the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree through the Laney Graduate School. The HPM department offers a 24-month track in both Policy and Management, as well as a 12-month accelerated track in Management.

  The MPH degree in Health Policy and Management are oriented to professional public health  practice. Students will obtain a broad set of practical skills suitable for success as healthcare managers and policy analysts.

 The MSPH degree in Health Policy and Health Services Research focuses on building analytic skills for the assessment and development of health-related public policy.

 The Doctoral Program trains students to undertake original research, relying on social science theory and using sophisticated empirical analyses, to evaluate current issues in health policy; formulate policy options and interventions, and where appropriate evaluate their effectiveness and develop communication skills for both teaching and disseminating research findings at professional conferences. Students choose to specialize in either economics or political science and take most courses in the respective Graduate School department.

Inquiries concerning the Department of Health Policy and Management should be directed to: Linda Emerson, Rollins School of Public Health, 1518 Clifton Road NE, #618, Atlanta, Georgia 30322 404.727.3487 or [email protected]

http://www.sph.emory.edu/departments/hpm Our mission is to enable seniors to successfully age in place, with access to high-quality, affordable health and support services that preserve and protect their dignity, quality of life and independence. Learn more about our work: westhealth.org | @WestHealth An in-depth look at the implementation of health policy

A leading journal in its field, and the primary source of communication across the many disciplines it serves, the Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law focuses on the initiation, formulation, and implementation of health policy and analyzes the relations between government and health— past, present, and future.

Special sections include

The Politics and Policy of Health Reform This section provides useful information for practitioners, stakeholders, and academics involved in national- and state-level health reform legislation, regulation, implementation, and policy evaluation in the United States.

Beneath the Surface Eric M. Patashnik, editor This section analyzes and challenges empirical claims, theoretical assumptions, and taken-for-granted terms and concepts in health policy debates and literature to promote a better understanding of health policy realities.

Journal of Subscription information Six issues annually Health Politics, Online access is included with your print subscription. Individuals: $60* Policy Students: $35 and Law *Members of AcademyHealth are eligible for a $15 discount off the individual subscriber rate.

Canadian subscribers: Add applicable HST (including 5% GST) and $21 postage. Subscribers outside the US and Canada: Add $27 postage.

To place your order, visit dukeupress.edu/jhppl, call 888.651.0122 (toll-free in the US and Canada) or +1.919.688.5134, or email [email protected].

We are actively seeking publishing partnerships with academic journals in health policy and related fields. For more information about journal partnerships, please contact Erich Staib at [email protected]. How can we transform our systems of health and health care, especially for vulnerable populations? It begins by asking the right questions, conducting research that reveals uncommon insights, and delivering the practical assistance and guidance to make it work in the real world.

Learn more about us, and how we can help at Altarum.org

facebook.com/altarum twitter.com/altarum altarum.org Generate. Synthesize. Disseminate.

The Health Policy Institute (HPI) is a thought leader and trusted source for data and research on critical issues affecting the U.S. dental care system.

Who We Are • Health economists, statisticians, and researchers with extensive expertise in health services research. • Collaborative partners to academia and think tanks. • Recurring authors of studies in top health policy journals such as Health Affairs, NEJM, Health Ser- vices Research, Medical Care, and Health Economics.

Contact Us [email protected] • 312.440.2928

Learn more at ADA.org/HPI INSIGHT EXECUTIVE SEARCH RECRUITS RESEARCH AND EVALUATION PROFESSIONALS FOR THE NATION’S LEADING HEALTHCARE RESEARCH ORGANIZATIONS

AREAS OF HEALTHCARE RECRUITMENT:

HEALTH SERVICES PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH THE NATION’S LEADING ORGANIZATIONS POPULATION HEALTH HEALTH TECHNOLOGY TRUST INSIGHT EXECUTIVE SEARCH HEALTH BIOSTATISTICS TO SECURE THEIR COMMUNICATIONS RESEARCH LEADERS.

HEALTH ECONOMICS SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND AND FINANCING MENTAL HEALTH

To learn more about our services please contact Ari Ayares, Vice President. Phone: 949-271-2526 • Email: [email protected] www.insightexecutivesearch.com TIMELY EVIDENCE POLICY INSIGHT

DID YOU KNOW? Read or AcademyHealth members can subscribe submit to Health Affairs at the your work for these article series: discounted member rate.

Considering Health Spending new!

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Learn more @ www.healthaffairs.org/request-for-abstracts Evidence-based insights to help you transform healthcare

In an evolving marketplace, our consulting and research team can provide robust data and advanced analytics to help improve healthcare quality outcomes.

– Behavioral health research – Clinical decision support – Community living systems – Database design, development and strategy – Health economics – Quality and performance measurement – Web-based management and reporting tools

Visit us at booth #501

©2018 IBM Corporation. All rights reserved. GOV 18835 0418 ACR Patient- and Family-Centered Care Resources Elevate the Quality of Your Patient Engagement

Equip your practice or institution for more patient-focused care through a collection of free online tools and resources that prioritize the needs, wants, and values of patients and communities. • Engage patients and families as health care partners • Forge closer relationships with communities • Demonstrate value-based patient care

Choose from: • Articles, checklists, videos and training guides through the ACR Patient- and Family-Centered Care Toolkit • Imaging 3.0™ case studies • In-depth articles from the Journal of the American College of Radiology (JACR®) and the ACR Bulletin • Recommendations for other source websites

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04.18

M.S. in Healthcare Policy and Research Tracks in: Biostatistics and Data Science Health Informatics Health Policy and Economics

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Improving Health Care Together

AIR’s expertise and innovation in research, evaluation, and technical assistance spans many growing areas, including: ƒ Patient and Consumer Engagement ƒ Quality and Performance Measurement ƒ Delivery System Improvement ƒ Health Communications

As one of the world’s leading behavioral and social science research and evaluation organizations, AIR uses the best science available to offer effective solutions to promoting better health, health care, and well-being, with a special emphasis on the disadvantaged.

AIR is a proud member of AcademyHealth.

Find out more: Visit us at booth #608 and at www.air.org/health. 4239_4/18 National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and AcademyHealth Health Policy Scholars Program NEW! Conduct Research Using National Center for Health Statistics Data

PURPOSE This new Scholars Program promotes a wide variety of health services research that uses data from the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). The program also offers collective opportunities with AcademyHealth and NCHS.

AS A SCHOLAR, YOU WILL: < Conduct research at your home institution and access restricted data files through the

< Attend and present research at the

and < 2018 Call for Applications

[email protected].

CS238011 (02/13) 2018

Welcome to Seattle! NOTES

Celebrating 30 Years Celebrating 20 Years https://depts.washington.edu/fammed/rhrc/ https://depts.washington.edu/fammed/chws/ Established in 1988, the WWAMI Rural Health Established in 1998, the UW Center for Health Research Center (RHRC) performs policy-oriented Workforce Studies (CHWS) informs workforce regional and national research on rural health care. planning and policy, and advises both local and The WWAMI RHRC is one of eight Rural Health national policy makers. Research Centers funded by the Federal Offic of UW CHWS is one of seven Health Workforce Health Policy at the Health Resources and Services Research Centers funded by the National Center for Administration. Health Workforce Analysis at the Health Resources and Services Administration.

Presentations by our investigators: Sat, Jun 23, 2018 (2:30-6:30pm) Health Workforce Interest Group (HWIG) Meeting Health Workforce Data Collection, Analysis and Projections Tue, Jun 26, 2018 (8:00-10:30am) Annual Research Meeting Will Past Trends Help Us Predict the Future of the Health Workforce? Reflection on Twenty Years of Health Workforce Research

Please check out our posters: Sat, Jun 23, 2018 (12:30pm-2:30pm) Health Workforce Interest Group Contingent Workers in Long-Term Care Medical Assistants’ Careers and Factors Affecting Retention Emerging Roles and Occupations in the Health Workforce Mon, Jun 25, 2018 (6:30-8:00pm) Aging, Disability, and End-of-Life Theme C-64 Relationship between Medicaid Expenditures on Home- and Community-Based Services and Use of Community-Entry Home Health by Rural Medicare Beneficiaries Mon, Jun 25, 2018 (6:30-8:00pm) Health Workforce Theme C-234 Commuting Patterns of Healthcare Workers C-235 Emerging Roles and Occupations in the Health Workforce C-287 Medical Assistants’ Careers and Factors Affecting Retention

University of Washington - Department of Family Medicine Research Section https://depts.washington.edu/fammed/research/ Follow us on Twitter @uwfm, @wwamirhrc, and @uwchws using #wwamirhrc30 and #uwchws20 2018 Hi5 Ad FINALFINAL.pdf 1 5/30/18 8:12 AM

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www.cdc.gov/hi5 TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 NOTES 2018 NOTES TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 NOTES 2018 NOTES TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 NOTES 2018 NOTES TH ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING 2018 NOTES 2018 NOTES 2018 ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETING: WELCOME TO BEAUTIFUL SEATTLE! Welcome to the 2018 Annual Research Meeting (ARM), the premier forum for health services research (HSR). For 35 years, AcademyHealth has been convening professionals at the intersection of health, health care, and policy at the ARM. Together, we are driving toward improved health for individuals and communities by sharing important findings and showcasing the latest research on how the health system works, what it costs, and how to improve it. Over the next two and a half days, you will learn about new research and cutting-edge methods while participating in robust discussions about the impact of evidence on health policy and practice. We are thrilled that you have joined us in Seattle for our 35th anniversary to lead the charge to transform delivery systems and health care in a rapidly changing landscape.

ATTENDEE RESOURCE CENTER GETTING SOCIAL Need additional information while on-site at the ARM? Visit our Attendee Resource Center: acadmyhealth.org/arm/arc AT THE ARM

Join the conversation on Twitter using the CONTINUING EDUCATION CREDITS hashtag #ARM18 and follow @AcademyHealth ARM attendees are eligible to earn continuing medical education (CME) and continuing nursing to get the latest conference information. education (CNE) credits for attending approved sessions. For additional information, visit academyhealth.org/arm/credits. Connect with us year-round via our social media channels: • Facebook: AcademyHealth DOWNLOAD THE ARM CONFERENCE APP • Twitter: @AcademyHealth Navigate ARM like a pro with the conference app, powered by Core-apps. To download, search • LinkedIn: Join the AcademyHealth group “AcademyHealth Events” on your phone’s app store.

Supported in part by Westat

AGENDA HIGHLIGHTS CODE OF CONDUCT This year’s ARM is packed with diverse and dynamic sessions on relevant, AcademyHealth is committed to providing a safe, hospitable and high-quality health services research and its implications for policy and practice. productive meeting environment for everyone attending our events. We are committed to providing a harassment-free environment for everyone, New This Year: regardless of gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, ethnicity, • Inaugural Reinhardt Lecture: In partnership with HSR Journal, this new yearly lecture honors the work and legacy of health services research (HSR) champion Uwe Reinhardt. religion, disability, physical appearance or other group identity. As such, AcademyHealth prohibits intimidating, threatening or harassing conduct Some of This Year’s Special Sessions Include: during our meetings. This prohibition applies to all participants, including • Navigating the Swell of Data, Surging Data Science and Rising Delivery System attendees, speakers, volunteers, staff, exhibitors and volunteers. If an Demand for Insights individual engages in harassing behavior, AcademyHealth reserves the • Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act: 10-year Anniversary • The State of U.S. Health and Healthcare Expenditures right to remove the individual from the meeting or take other appropriate • Building a Culture of Diversity: Approaches for Building a Diverse and Inclusive Workforce action. • Who Will Benefit from Advances in Health Care

MARK YOUR CALENDAR FOR FUTURE QUESTIONS? If you have any questions, please contact us at ANNUAL RESEARCH MEETINGS [email protected]. June 2–4, 2019 - Washington, DC June 14–16, 2020 - Boston, MA June 13–15, 2021 - Baltimore, MD

JEFFERSON COLLEGE OF POPULATION HEALTH Learn from a National Leader in Population Health

Jefferson College of Population Health is the first college of its kind, providing graduate education supported by evidence-based research, scholarship and publications. All programs have been designed to meet the needs of experienced healthcare professionals.

On-campus programs • Master of Public Health (MPH) or Graduate Certificate – CEPH accredited • PhD in Population Health Sciences

Online programs • Master of Science in Population Health (MS-PopH) • Master of Population Health Intelligence (MS-PHI) • Master of Science in Health Policy (MS-HP) • Master of Science in Healthcare Quality & Safety (MS-HQS) • Master of Science in Applied Health Economics and Outcomes Research (MS-AHEOR) • Certificates in Population Health, Health Policy, Healthcare Quality & Safety, Applied Health Economics and Outcomes Research, Population Health Intelligence and Operational Excellence

Jefferson.edu/PopulationHealth 215-503-5305