E
Eugene C. Nelson
Researcher at The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice
Publications - 206
Citations - 11904
Eugene C. Nelson is an academic researcher from The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Patient satisfaction. The author has an hindex of 53, co-authored 194 publications receiving 11225 citations. Previous affiliations of Eugene C. Nelson include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & Boston University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The Medical Outcomes Study. An application of methods for monitoring the results of medical care
Alvin R. Tarlov,John E. Ware,Sheldon Greenfield,Eugene C. Nelson,Edward B. Perrin,Michael Zubkoff +5 more
TL;DR: The Medical Outcomes Study was designed to determine whether variations in patient outcomes are explained by differences in system of care, clinician specialty, and clinicians' technical and interpersonal styles and develop more practical tools for the routine monitoring of patient outcomes in medical practice.
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Patient reported outcome measures in practice
Eugene C. Nelson,Elena Eftimovska,Cristin Lind,Andreas Hager,John H. Wasson,Staffan Lindblad +5 more
TL;DR: Examples where these tools are used in primary and secondary care are described and a call is made for their wider uptake to improve quality of care.
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Variations in Resource Utilization Among Medical Specialties and Systems of Care: Results From the Medical Outcomes Study
Sheldon Greenfield,Eugene C. Nelson,Michael Zubkoff,Willard G. Manning,William H. Rogers,Richard L. Kravitz,Adam Keller,Alvin R. Tarlov,Alvin R. Tarlov,John E. Ware +9 more
TL;DR: Although variations in patient mix should be a major determinant of variations in resource use, the independent effects of specialty training, payment system, and practice organization on utilization rates need further explication.
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Assessment of function in routine clinical practice: description of the COOP Chart method and preliminary findings.
Eugene C. Nelson,John H. Wasson,J. Kirk,Adam Keller,Donald Clark,Allen J. Dietrich,Anita L. Stewart,Michael Zubkoff +7 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that new measures are needed to assess function in a busy office practice and that the COOP Chart system represents one promising strategy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Microsystems in health care: Part 1. Learning from high-performing front-line clinical units.
Eugene C. Nelson,Paul B. Batalden,Thomas P. Huber,Julie J. Mohr,Julie J. Mohr,Marjorie M. Godfrey,Linda A. Headrick,Linda A. Headrick,John H. Wasson +8 more
TL;DR: A seamless, patient-centered, high-quality, safe, and efficient health system cannot be realized without the transformation of the essential building blocks that combine to form the care continuum.