Patricia A. Cowper
Duke University
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Featured researches published by Patricia A. Cowper.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1996
Joseph T. Hanlon; Morris Weinberger; Gregory P. Samsa; Kenneth E. Schmader; Kay M. Uttech; Ingrid K. Lewis; Patricia A. Cowper; Pamela B. Landsman; Harvey J. Cohen; John R. Feussner
PURPOSE To evaluate the effect of sustained clinical pharmacist interventions involving elderly outpatients with polypharmacy and their primary physicians. PATIENTS AND METHODS Randomized, controlled trial of 208 patients aged 65 years or older with polypharmacy (> or = 5 chronic medications) from a general medicine clinic of a Veterans Affairs Medical Center. A clinical pharmacist met with intervention group patients during all scheduled visits to evaluate their drug regimens and make recommendations to them and their physicians. Outcome measures were prescribing appropriateness, health-related quality of life, adverse drug events, medication compliance and knowledge, number of medications, patient satisfaction, and physician receptivity. RESULTS Inappropriate prescribing scores declined significantly more in the intervention group than in the control group by 3 months (decrease 24% versus 6%, respectively; P = 0.0006) and was sustained at 12 months (decrease 28% versus 5%, respectively; P = 0.0002). There was no difference between groups at closeout in health-related quality of life (P = 0.99). Fewer intervention than control patients (30.2%) versus 40.0%; P = 0.19) experienced adverse drug events. Measures for most other outcomes remained unchanged in both groups. Physicians were receptive to the intervention and enacted changes recommended by the clinical pharmacist more frequently than they enacted changes independently for control patients (55.1% versus 19.8%; P <0.001). CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates that a clinical pharmacist providing pharmaceutical care for elderly primary care patients can reduce inappropriate prescribing and possibly adverse drug effects without adversely affecting health-related quality of life.
Journal of General Internal Medicine | 1995
Morris Weinberger; M. Sue Kirkman; Gregory P. Samsa; E. Anne Shortliffe; Pamela B. Landsman; Patricia A. Cowper; David L. Simel; John R. Feussner
AbstractOBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of a nurse-coordinated intervention delivered to patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus between office visits to primary care physicians. DESIGN: Randomized, controlled trial. SETTING: Veterans Affairs general medical clinic. PATIENTS: 275 veterans who had NIDDM and were receiving primary care from general internists. INTERVENTION: Nurse-initiated contacts were made by telephone at least monthly to provide patient education (with special emphasis on regimens and significant signs and symptoms of hyperglycemia and hypoglycemia), reinforce compliance with regimens, monitor patients’ health status, facilitate resolution of identified problems, and facilitate access to primary care. MEASUREMENTS: Glycemic control was assessed using glycosylated hemoglobin (GHb) and fasting blood sugar (FBS) levels. Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) was measured with the Medical Outcomes Study SF-36, and diabetes-related symptoms were assessed using patients’ self-reports of signs and symptoms of hyper- and hypoglycemia during the previous month. MAIN RESULTS: At one year, between-group differences favored intervention patients for FBS (174.1 mg/dL vs 193.1 mg/dL, p=0.011) and GHb (10.5% vs 11.1%, p=0.046). Statistically significant differences were not observed for either SF-36 scores (p=0.66) or diabetes-related symptoms (p=0.23). CONCLUSIONS: The intervention, designed to be a pragmatic, low-intensity adjunct to care delivered by physicians, modestly improved glycemic control but not HRQOL or diabetes-related symptoms.
Circulation | 1995
Eric D. Peterson; Patricia A. Cowper; James G. Jollis; Judith D. Bebchuk; Elizabeth R. DeLong; Lawrence H. Muhlbaier; Daniel B. Mark; David B. Pryor
BACKGROUND Coronary artery bypass graft surgery is increasingly common in patients of age > or = 80 years. Single-institution reviews have cited a wide range of mortality results after bypass surgery in this age group, in part because of limited sample sizes. Using claims data, we examined recent national trends in the use and outcomes of bypass surgery in the very elderly. METHODS AND RESULTS From an examination of Medicare data from 1987 through 1990, we identified 24,461 patients of age > or = 80 years who underwent bypass surgery. We compared surgical outcomes in these patients with those in Medicare patients of age 65 to 70 years. We found that the national use of bypass surgery in patients of age > or = 80 years increased 67% between 1987 and 1990. Compared with patients of age 65 to 70 years, the very elderly had significantly longer postoperative hospital stays (mean, 14.3 versus 10.4 days), higher charges (mean,
Circulation | 2006
Daniel B. Mark; Charlotte L. Nelson; Kevin J. Anstrom; Sana M. Al-Khatib; Anastasios A. Tsiatis; Patricia A. Cowper; Nancy E. Clapp-Channing; Linda Davidson-Ray; Jeanne E. Poole; George Johnson; Jill Anderson; Kerry L. Lee; Gust H. Bardy
48,200 versus
Circulation | 1998
Daniel B. Mark; Patricia A. Cowper; Scott D. Berkowitz; Linda Davidson-Ray; Elizabeth R. DeLong; Alexander G.G. Turpie; Robert M. Califf; Beth Weatherley; Marc Cohen
38,000), and greater costs (mean,
Medical Care | 1994
Morris Weinberger; M. Sue Kirkman; Gregory P. Samsa; Patricia A. Cowper; E. Anne Shortliffe; David L. Simel; John R. Feussner
27,200 versus
Catheterization and Cardiovascular Interventions | 2000
Tift Mann; Patricia A. Cowper; Eric D. Peterson; Gabriela Cubeddu; Josie Bowen; Luis Giron; Warren J. Cantor; William Newman; Joel E. Schneider; R. Lee Jobe; Michael J. Zellinger; Gregory C. Rose
21,700). In-hospital (11.5% versus 4.4%), 1-year (19.3% versus 7.9%), and 3-year mortality rates (28.8% versus 13.1%) after bypass surgery were also significantly higher in patients of age > or = 80 years compared with younger patients. Although their initial surgical risk was high, octogenarians who underwent bypass surgery had a long-term survival rate similar to that of the general US octogenarian population. CONCLUSIONS The use of bypass surgery in patients of age > or = 80 years in increasing. These very elderly patients face high surgical risks and accumulate significant hospital expenses. Further research is indicated to determine whether the long-term benefits from bypass surgery in the very elderly outweigh the increased procedural risks.
American Journal of Public Health | 1993
Morris Weinberger; Deborah T. Gold; George W. Divine; Patricia A. Cowper; Lynne Gershenson Hodgson; Pamela J. Schreiner; Linda K. George
Background— In the Sudden Cardiac Death in Heart Failure Trial (SCD-HeFT), implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) therapy significantly reduced all-cause mortality rates compared with medical therapy alone in patients with stable, moderately symptomatic heart failure, whereas amiodarone had no benefit on mortality rates. We examined long-term economic implications of these results. Methods and Results— Medical costs were estimated by using hospital billing data and the Medicare Fee Schedule. Our base case cost-effectiveness analysis used empirical clinical and cost data to estimate the lifetime incremental cost of saving an extra life-year with ICD therapy relative to medical therapy alone. At 5 years, the amiodarone arm had a survival rate equivalent to that of the placebo arm and higher costs than the placebo arm. For ICD relative to medical therapy alone, the base case lifetime cost-effectiveness and cost-utility ratios (discounted at 3%) were
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1991
Miriam C. Morey; Patricia A. Cowper; John R. Feussner; Robert C. DiPasquale; Gail M. Crowley; Gregory P. Samsa; Robert J. Sullivan
38 389 per life-year saved (LYS) and
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 1991
Morris Weinberger; Gregory P. Samsa; Joseph T. Hanlon; Kenneth E. Schmader; Marti E. Doyle; Patricia A. Cowper; Kay M. Uttech; Harvey J. Cohen; John R. Feussner
41 530 per quality-adjusted LYS, respectively. A cost-effectiveness ratio <