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Dive into the research topics where James H. Stephens is active.

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Featured researches published by James H. Stephens.


Hospital Topics | 2010

Real Healthcare Reform: Focus on Primary Care Access

James H. Stephens; Gerald R. Ledlow

Abstract Primary care coverage for the uninsured is the first necessary step to reform and can be more cost effective and tolerable than a major system reform. By providing foundational care to the uninsured, more care resources are targeted to those that most need the services, while providing benefits such as increased productivity and reduced inappropriate emergency department utilization. The authors aimed to design a primary care coverage system in the United States for the uninsured using established reimbursement, budgeting, and compliance methods. Providing four primary care visits for acute care, four associated ancillary and four fulfilled pharmaceutical–treatment prescriptions, and one preventive primary care visit per year for nearly 48,000,000 uninsured would cost


American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine | 2015

The Influence of Race on End-of-Life Choices Following a Counselor-Based Palliative Consultation

Kathleen Benton; James H. Stephens; Robert L. Vogel; Gerald R. Ledlow; Richard J. Ackermann; Carol W. Babcock; Georgia McCook

36 per month for every working American and legal alien resident. Theoretical and empirical literature was reviewed and the authors applied practical knowledge based on their experience in healthcare systems to develop the Access America Program.


Hospital Topics | 2011

Sticker Shock: An Exploration of Supply Charge Capture Outcomes

Gerald R. Ledlow; James H. Stephens; Heidi Hulsey Fowler

Black Americans are more likely than whites to choose aggressive medical care at the end of life. We present a retrospective cohort study of 2843 patients who received a counselor-based palliative care consultation at a large US southeastern hospital. Before the palliative consultation, 72.8% of the patients had no restrictions in care, and only 4.6% had chosen care and comfort only (CCO). After the consult, these choices dramatically changed, with only 17.5% remaining full code and 43.3% choosing CCO. Both before and after palliative consultation, blacks chose more aggressive medical care than whites, but racial differences diminished after the counselor-based consultation. Both African American and white patients and families receiving a counselor-based palliative consultation in the hospital make profound changes in their preferences for life-sustaining treatments.


Hospital Topics | 2017

An Analysis of the Massachusetts Healthcare Law

James H. Stephens; Gerald R. Ledlow; Michael V. Sach; Julie Reagan

Abstract Do you find supply item charge stickers in shocking places in nursing units? Capturing supply item charges to increase net revenue or achieve break-even are based on efficiency. To determine practical efficiency for a hospital in supply charge capture, the authors examined the quantity of supply charge capture items, volume, and relative size of the hospital in 10 hospitals in the midwestern and southeastern United States. What differences in supply charge capture information can determine if a hospital can break even? Results show that hospital size and number of supply charge capture items to manage are important factors.


Hospital Topics | 2016

Converting ICD-9 to ICD-10.

James H. Stephens; Gerald R. Ledlow; Thomas V. Fockler

ABSTRACT Healthcare in the United States has been one topic of the debates and discussion in the country for many years. The challenge for affordable, accessible, and quality healthcare for most Americans has been on the agenda of federal and state legislatures. There is probably no other state that has drawn as much individual attention regarding this challenge as the state of Massachusetts. While researching the topic for this article, it was discovered that financial and political perspectives on the success or failure of the healthcare model in Massachusetts vary depending on the aspect of the system being discussed. In this article the authors give a brief history and description of the Massachusetts Healthcare Law, explanation of how the law is financed, identification of the targeted populations in Massachusetts for which the law provides coverage, demonstration of the actual benefit coverage provided by the law, and review of the impact of the law on healthcare providers such as physicians and hospitals. In addition, there are explanations about the impact of the law on health insurance companies, discussion of changes in healthcare premiums, explanation of costs to the state for the new program, reviews of the impact on the health of the insured, and finally, projections on the changes that healthcare facilities will need to make to maintain fiscal viability as a result of this program.


Archive | 2019

Decision Making, Analytics, and Communications in Health Organizations

Gerald R. Ledlow; James H. Stephens

Abstract Implementing the International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) to International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision (ICD-10) conversion on October 1, 2015, in the United States has been a long-term goal. While most countries in the world converted more than 10 years ago, the United States was still using ICD-9. Many countries in the world have a single-payer healthcare system, while there are thousands of different healthcare organizations (providers and payers) that presently exist in the United States. With so many different software platforms for healthcare providers and payers, the conversion had become that much more complicated and capital intensive for all healthcare organizations in the country. A few of the present delay reasons to the ICD-10 conversion in past years were the concurrent timelines for meeting meaningful use requirements for the electronic health record, testing with external payers and upgrades from vendors which added complexities and extra costs. The authors examine the reasoning behind the conversion as well as the delays, before making the conversion on October 1, 2015, and review the question regarding whether the governments decision to push the date back a year would have been helpful.


Archive | 2018

Leadership Models in Practice

Gerald R. Ledlow; James H. Stephens; David E. Schott


Archive | 2017

Understanding the Executive Roles in Health Leadership

Gerald R. Ledlow; James H. Stephens


Archive | 2017

Challenges of Today Requiring Health Leadership

Gerald R. Ledlow; James H. Stephens; David E. Schott; William A. Mase


Archive | 2017

Health Care Provider Practices around Emergency Contraception: An Analysis of a Nationwide Provider Survey

H. Pamela Pagano; James H. Stephens; Haresh Rochani; Julie Reagan; Lauren B. Zapata; Maura K. Whiteman; Kate Curtis

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Gerald R. Ledlow

Georgia Southern University

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Hani M. Samawi

Georgia Southern University

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Julie Reagan

Georgia Southern University

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Carol W. Babcock

Medical Center of Central Georgia

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H. Pamela Pagano

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Lauren B. Zapata

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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