Research Topics
| J H WassonSummaryAffiliation: Dartmouth Medical School Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
The medium is the (health) measure: patient engagement using personal technologiesJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Lebanon, NH 03766, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 35:109-17. 2012....
Postscript: health disparity and collaborative careJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:233-4. 2006..Technology for patient-centered, collaborative care alone will not remedy the problem of health disparity...
Technical notes: when all things are not equalJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:235-7. 2006....
Patients use an internet technology to report when things go wrongJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, USA
Qual Saf Health Care 16:213-5. 2007..As patients directly experience harm from adverse events, investigators have proposed patient-report to complement professional reporting of adverse events...
Who is in charge? Even affluent patients suffer consequences of fragmented careJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Centerra Parkway, Lebanon, NH 03766, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 31:35-6. 2008
The impact of primary care patients' pain and emotional problems on their confidence with self-managementJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 31:120-7. 2008..Their confidence is impacted by their pain or emotional state and strongly associated with their medical care experiences and some outcomes of care...
Multiple Health Problems in Elderly People: Adapting what is knownJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, 35 Centerra Parkway, Suite 300, Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766, USA
BMJ 336:950-1. 2008
Clinical microsystems, part 2. Learning from micro practices about providing patients the care they want and needJohn H Wasson
Center for the Aging, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire, USA
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 34:445-52. 2008..Pati ents should be able to report that they receive "exactly the care they want and need exactly when and how they want and need it."..
Balanced measures for patient-centered careJohn H Wasson
Centers for Health and Aging, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, NH
J Ambul Care Manage 32:44-55. 2009..The most common use of such measures is at the population level to gauge satisfaction with care long after it has been provided. This article examines barriers and solutions to including patient-reported measures at the point of care...
CARE Vital Signs supports patient-centered, collaborative careJohn H Wasson
Centers for Health and Aging, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, NH
J Ambul Care Manage 32:56-71. 2009..This article describes the rationale for CARE Vital Signs and the ways it can be used for the greatest benefit...
Patients use the internet to enter the medical homeJohn H Wasson
Departmentof Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 34:38-46. 2011..We also find that current PCMH performance across this sample of 69 clinical settings is highly variable and still leaves a great deal of room for improvement...
Resource planning for patient-centered, collaborative careJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:207-14. 2006..We conclude that modern technologies and related approaches make resource planning for patient-centered, collaborative care feasible and desirable...
Patients report positive impacts of collaborative careJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:199-206. 2006..Some preventive actions were better, and some adverse economic impacts of illness were mitigated...
Routine, single-item screening to identify abusive relationships in womenJ H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Dartmouth Primary Care Cooperative Information and Research Network, Department of Community and Family Medicine, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 3862, USA
J Fam Pract 49:1017-22. 2000..Abusive relationships are associated with several demographic factors and many clinical problems in women. However, practices often do not screen for abuse...
Prostate biopsies in men with limited life expectancyJohn H Wasson
Center for the Aging, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, NH 03755 3862, USA
Eff Clin Pract 5:137-42. 2002..Authorities discourage prostate screening in men who are likely to die from causes other than prostate cancer...
Microsystems in health care: Part 4. Planning patient-centered careJohn H Wasson
Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
Jt Comm J Qual Saf 29:227-37. 2003..CONCLUSION: Excellent planned services and planned care are attainable today in microsystems that understand what really matters to a patient and family and have the capacity to provide services to meet the patient's needs...
Streamlining nutritional care for the physician's officeJ H Wasson
The COOP project, Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755 3862, USA
Eur J Clin Nutr 53:S97-100. 1999..Nutritional care needs are overlooked in clinical practice. We review nutritional needs and describe an approach for improving nutritional care in clinical practice...
Implementation of Web-based interaction technology to improve the quality of a city's health careJ H Wasson
Center for Aging, Dartmouth COOP Project, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 24:1-9. 2001..But why stop at the door of the clinic, school, or workplace when Internet technology can extend to an entire community the benefits of health assessment and feedback?..
Microsystems in health care: Part 1. Learning from high-performing front-line clinical unitsEugene C Nelson
Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, One Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA
Jt Comm J Qual Improv 28:472-93. 2002..They are the place where patients and providers meet. The quality and value of care produced by a large health system can be no better than the services generated by the small systems of which it is composed...
Clinical microsystems, part 1. The building blocks of health systemsEugene C Nelson
Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth Medical School, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA
Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 34:367-78. 2008....
Microsystems in health care: Part 3. Planning patient-centered servicesMarjorie M Godfrey
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire, USA
Jt Comm J Qual Saf 29:159-70. 2003..CONCLUSION: The design of services leads to critical analysis of the resources needed for the right person to deliver the right care, in the right way, at the right time...
A controlled trial of methods for managing pain in primary care patients with or without co-occurring psychosocial problemsTim A Ahles
Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH, USA
Ann Fam Med 4:341-50. 2006..Pain, a common reason for visits to primary care physicians, is often not well managed. The objective of this study was to determine the effectiveness of pain management interventions suitable for primary care physicians...
Ongoing distress from emotional trauma is related to pain, mood, and physical function in a primary care populationJanette L Seville
Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, NH 03756, USA
J Pain Symptom Manage 25:256-63. 2003..However, the report that one continued to be bothered by thoughts of a trauma was associated with greater impairments in functioning...
Psychometric update of the Functional Interference Estimate: a brief measure of pain functional interferenceRobert J Ferguson
Department of Psychiatry, Behavioral Medicine Section, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire 03756, USA
J Pain Symptom Manage 28:389-95. 2004..g., SF-36 and Dartmouth COOP Charts). Because of its brevity and flexibility, the FIE may be a useful self-report measure of pain functional interference in clinical research on pain...
An introduction to technology for patient-centered, collaborative careL Gordon Moore
Ideal Medical Care of Brighton, Rochester, NY, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:195-8. 2006..The articles are practical. The results are persuasive. It is worth the climb!..
The emergence of Ideal Micro Practices for patient-centered, collaborative careL Gordon Moore
Ideal Medical Care of Brighton, Rochester, NY, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 29:215-21. 2006..In addition, these practices are working collaboratively to standardize their approaches and make the essential elements of Ideal Micro Practice replicable...
Technology for community health alliancesPeggy Luce
Chicagoland Chamber of Commerce, Chicago, Ill, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 27:366-74. 2004....
Why isn't it better?John H Wasson
Ann Fam Med 2:292-3. 2004
Implementing a new payment system for primary care physicians: a response to Schoenbaum et al and other feedbackNorbert Goldfield
3M Health Information Systems, Wallingford, CT 06492, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 31:154-60. 2008
The ideal medical practice model: improving efficiency, quality and the doctor-patient relationshipL Gordon Moore
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, NY, USA
Fam Pract Manag 14:20-4. 2007
Show me the way--health care innovation in the heartlandJeanne B Thoma
Ideal Missouri Practice, St. Louis Area Business Health Coalition, St. Louis, Missouri, USA
Mo Med 105:111-3. 2008
Reforming the primary care physician payment system: eliminating E & M codes and creating the financial incentives for an "advanced medical home"Norbert Goldfield
3M Health Information Systems, Wallingford, Conn 06492, USA
J Ambul Care Manage 31:24-31. 2008..This article offers a very different approach to paying primary care physicians that will result in both significantly higher incomes for these underpaid professionals together with incentives for creating a medical home...
