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Frank Stetzer

Researcher at University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

Publications -  12
Citations -  420

Frank Stetzer is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicaid. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 12 publications receiving 380 citations. Previous affiliations of Frank Stetzer include University of Missouri & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Severe fatigue and depressive symptoms in lower-income urban postpartum women.

TL;DR: Severe fatigue and depressive symptomatology often co-exist for months after childbirth and future research should examine whether interventions to targeting severe postpartum fatigue in lower-income urban women may also effectively reduce depressive symptoms.
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Quantifying care coordination using natural language processing and domain-specific ontology

TL;DR: This research identified specific care coordination activities used by Aging in Place (AIP) nurse care coordinators and home healthcare (HHC) nurses when coordinating care for older community-dwelling adults and suggests a method to quantify care coordination.
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The relationship of community-based nurse care coordination to costs in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

TL;DR: Controlling for high resource use on admission, monthly Medicare costs were lower in the 12 months of NCC intervention while Medicaid costs were higher for the NCC group when compared to the costs of MCO group.
Journal Article

Comparing Aging in Place to Home Health Care: Impact of Nurse Care Coordination On Utilization and Costs.

TL;DR: This study supports that long-term care coordination supplied by nurses outside of a primary medical home can positively influence functional, cognitive, and health care utilization for frail older people.
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Cost analysis of a home-based nurse care coordination program

TL;DR: To determine whether a home‐based care coordination program focused on medication self‐management would affect the cost of care to the Medicare program and whether the addition of technology, a medication‐dispensing machine, would further reduce cost, a large number of patients were surveyed.