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Dive into the research topics where Marc B. Rosenman is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc B. Rosenman.


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2012

Transitions in Care for Older Adults with and without Dementia

Christopher M. Callahan; Greg Arling; Wanzhu Tu; Marc B. Rosenman; Steven R. Counsell; Timothy E. Stump; Hugh C. Hendrie

To describe transitions in care of persons with dementia with attention to nursing facility transitions.


Journal of General Internal Medicine | 2009

Adequacy of Hospital Discharge Summaries in Documenting Tests with Pending Results and Outpatient Follow-up Providers

Martin C. Were; Xiaochun Li; Joe Kesterson; Jason Cadwallader; Chite Fredrick Asirwa; Babar A. Khan; Marc B. Rosenman

ABSTRACTBACKGROUNDPoor communication of tests whose results are pending at hospital discharge can lead to medical errors.OBJECTIVETo determine the adequacy with which hospital discharge summaries document tests with pending results and the appropriate follow-up providers.DESIGNRetrospective study of a randomly selected samplePATIENTSSix hundred ninety-six patients discharged from two large academic medical centers, who had test results identified as pending at discharge through queries of electronic medical records.INTERVENTION AND MEASUREMENTSEach patient’s discharge summary was reviewed to identify whether information about pending tests and follow-up providers was mentioned. Factors associated with documentation were explored using clustered multivariable regression models.MAIN RESULTSDischarge summaries were available for 99.2% of 668 patients whose data were analyzed. These summaries mentioned only 16% of tests with pending results (482 of 2,927). Even though all study patients had tests with pending results, only 25% of discharge summaries mentioned any pending tests, with 13% documenting all pending tests. The documentation rate for pending tests was not associated with level of experience of the provider preparing the summary, patient’s age or race, length of hospitalization, or duration it took for results to return. Follow-up providers’ information was documented in 67% of summaries.CONCLUSIONDischarge summaries are grossly inadequate at documenting both tests with pending results and the appropriate follow-up providers.


Medical Care | 2012

A Survey of Informatics Platforms That Enable Distributed Comparative Effectiveness Research Using Multi-institutional Heterogenous Clinical Data

Dean F. Sittig; Brian Hazlehurst; Jeffrey R. Brown; Shawn N. Murphy; Marc B. Rosenman; Peter Tarczy-Hornoch; Adam B. Wilcox

Comparative effectiveness research (CER) has the potential to transform the current health care delivery system by identifying the most effective medical and surgical treatments, diagnostic tests, disease prevention methods, and ways to deliver care for specific clinical conditions. To be successful, such research requires the identification, capture, aggregation, integration, and analysis of disparate data sources held by different institutions with diverse representations of the relevant clinical events. In an effort to address these diverse demands, there have been multiple new designs and implementations of informatics platforms that provide access to electronic clinical data and the governance infrastructure required for interinstitutional CER. The goal of this manuscript is to help investigators understand why these informatics platforms are required and to compare and contrast 6 large-scale, recently funded, CER-focused informatics platform development efforts. We utilized an 8-dimension, sociotechnical model of health information technology to help guide our work. We identified 6 generic steps that are necessary in any distributed, multi-institutional CER project: data identification, extraction, modeling, aggregation, analysis, and dissemination. We expect that over the next several years these projects will provide answers to many important, and heretofore unanswerable, clinical research questions.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2011

Exploring potential noninvasive biomarkers in eosinophilic esophagitis in children

Girish Subbarao; Marc B. Rosenman; Lyo E. Ohnuki; Ann Georgelas; Miriam Davis; Joseph F. Fitzgerald; Jean P. Molleston; Joseph M. Croffie; Marian D. Pfefferkorn; Mark R. Corkins; Joel R. Lim; Steven J. Steiner; Elizabeth Schaefer; Gerald J. Gleich; Sandeep K. Gupta

Background and Aims: Eosinophilic esophagitis (EE) continues to present clinical challenges, including a need for noninvasive tools to manage the disease. To identify a marker able to assess disease status in lieu of repeated endoscopies, we examined 3 noninvasive biomarkers, serum interleukin (IL)-5, serum eosinophil-derived neurotoxin (EDN), and stool EDN, and examined possible correlations of these with disease phenotype and activity (symptoms and histology) in a longitudinal study of children with EE. Subjects and Methods: Children with EE were studied for up to 24 weeks (12 weeks on 1 of 2 corticosteroid therapies and 12 weeks off therapy). Twenty children with normal esophagogastroduodenoscopies with biopsies were enrolled as controls. Serum IL-5, serum EDN, and stool EDN were measured at weeks 0, 4, 12, 18, and 24 in children with EE, and at baseline alone for controls. Primary and secondary statistical analyses (excluding and including outlier values of the biomarkers, respectively) were performed. Results: Sixty subjects with EE (46 [75%] boys, mean age 7.5 ± 4.4 years) and 20 normal controls (10 [50%] boys, mean age 6.7 ± 4.1 years) were included. Significant changes in serum EDN (significant decrease from baseline to week 4, and then rebound from week 4 to week 12) occurred. Serum EDN levels were stable after week 12. Serum IL-5 and stool EDN levels in subjects with EE were not statistically different from those of the control subjects when each time point for the cases was compared with the controls’ 1-time measurement. Conclusions: Serum EDN levels were significantly higher in subjects with EE than in controls, and the results suggest a possible role, after additional future studies, for serum EDN in establishing EE diagnosis, assessing response to therapy, and/or monitoring for relapse or quiescence.


Journal of Pediatric Hematology Oncology | 2005

Hospital resource utilization in childhood cancer.

Marc B. Rosenman; Terry A. Vik; Siu L. Hui; Philip P. Breitfeld

To describe the patterns and predictors of hospital resource utilization in a cohort of children with newly diagnosed cancer, a retrospective cohort study of 195 consecutively diagnosed children with cancer at a single large Midwestern childrens hospital was conducted. Patients were diagnosed between November 1995 and March 1997. All hospital encounters for these patients starting from the time of diagnosis to 3 years from diagnosis were identified using hospital administrative data. The patients were categorized into four diagnostic groups: lymphoid malignancies (acute lymphoblastic leukemia and lymphoma), myeloid leukemias (acute myeloid leukemia and chronic myeloid leukemia), central nervous system tumors, and solid tumors. Hospital charges and length of stay for patients in each diagnostic category were described. Predictive models for total resource consumption (total hospital charges) and intensive care use were derived. One hundred sixty-five of the 195 were admitted to Riley Hospital for Children at least once during the 3-year period following diagnosis. Among these 165, mean age at diagnosis was 6.9 years (minimum newborn, maximum 18.7 years). The ratio of boys to girls was 99:66 (1.5:1). The distribution of 165 diagnoses was as follows: 65 (39%) with lymphoid malignancy, 13 (8%) with myeloid leukemia, 36 (22%) with central nervous system tumors, and 51 (31%) with solid tumors. Sixty-two patients (38%) used the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) at least once; 22 patients (13%) underwent stem cell transplantation. Sixty-five patients (39%) entered clinical trials. One hundred thirty-nine patients (84%) were alive at the end of 3 years. Three-year cumulative hospital charges were


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2010

Volume of home- and community-based Medicaid waiver services and risk of hospital admissions.

Huiping Xu; Michael W. Weiner; Sudeshna Paul; Joseph Thomas; Bruce A. Craig; Marc B. Rosenman; Caroline Carney Doebbeling; Laura P. Sands

16 million-almost


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2009

Concomitant use of anticholinergics with acetylcholinesterase inhibitors in Medicaid recipients with dementia and residing in nursing homes.

Ankita Modi; Michael W. Weiner; Bruce A. Craig; Laura P. Sands; Marc B. Rosenman; Joseph Thomas

100,000/child hospitalized. Half of these charges were incurred in the first 4.5 months after diagnosis. Half of all hospital charges accrued to only 12.7% of patients; these patients were more likely to have a diagnosis of myeloid leukemia, to have undergone stem cell transplantation, and to have used the PICU. There were three independent predictors of hospital charges (log transformed): stem cell transplantation, PICU utilization, and death within 3 years of diagnosis. PICU utilization was predicted by tumor type (myeloid leukemia and central nervous system tumors were positive predictors of PICU utilization; lymphoid malignancy and solid tumors were negative predictors), stem cell transplantation, and death within 3 years of diagnosis. The authors conclude that hospitalization for childhood cancer is common, costly in the short term, and to some extent predictable. These data suggest that failures of current treatment not only lead to death but also add significantly to hospital resource utilization.


Medical Care | 2013

Lower provider volume is associated with higher failure rates for endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography

Gregory A. Cote; Timothy D. Imler; Huiping Xu; Evgenia Teal; Dustin D. French; Thomas F. Imperiale; Marc B. Rosenman; Jeffery Wilson; Siu L. Hui; Stuart Sherman

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate whether type and volume of Medicaid Home‐ and Community‐Based Services (HCBS) waiver program are associated with risk of hospitalization and whether this association changes over time.


Pediatrics | 2011

Chlamydia Screening Among Young Women: Individual- and Provider-Level Differences in Testing

Sarah E. Wiehe; Marc B. Rosenman; Jane Wang; Barry P. Katz; J. Dennis Fortenberry

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the extent of concomitant use of anticholinergic and cholinesterase inhibitor medications in Medicaid recipients with dementia residing in nursing homes.


Pediatrics | 2006

Shortcomings in infant iron deficiency screening methods

Paul G. Biondich; Stephen M. Downs; Aaron E. Carroll; Antoinette L. Laskey; Gilbert C. Liu; Marc B. Rosenman; Jane Wang; Nancy Swigonski

Background:Among physicians who perform endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP), the relationship between procedure volume and outcome is unknown. Objective:Quantify the ERCP volume-outcome relationship by measuring provider-specific failure rates, hospitalization rates, and other quality measures. Research Design:Retrospective cohort. Subjects:A total of 16,968 ERCPs performed by 130 physicians between 2001 and 2011, identified in the Indiana Network for Patient Care. Measures:Physicians were classified by their average annual Indiana Network for Patient Care volume and stratified into low (<25/y) and high (≥25/y). Outcomes included failed procedures, defined as repeat ERCP, percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography or surgical exploration of the bile duct⩽7 days after the index procedure, hospitalization rates, and 30-day mortality. Results:Among 15,514 index ERCPs, there were 1163 (7.5%) failures; the failure rate was higher among low (9.5%) compared with high volume (5.7%) providers (P<0.001). A second ERCP within 7 days (a subgroup of failure rate) occurred more frequently when the original ERCP was performed by a low-volume (4.1%) versus a high-volume physician (2.3%, P=0.013). Patients were more frequently hospitalized within 24 hours when the ERCP was performed by a low-volume (28.3%) versus high-volume physician (14.8%, P=0.002). Mortality within 30 days was similar (low=1.9%, high=1.9%). Among low-volume physicians and after adjusting, the odds of having a failed procedure decreased 3.3% (95% confidence interval, 1.6%–5.0%, P<0.001) with each additional ERCP performed per year. Conclusions:Lower provider volume is associated with higher failure rate for ERCP, and greater need for postprocedure hospitalization.

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Jane Wang

Regenstrief Institute

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