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Jeannette Rogowski

Researcher at University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

Publications -  48
Citations -  2189

Jeannette Rogowski is an academic researcher from University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. The author has contributed to research in topics: Self-insurance & Low birth weight. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 48 publications receiving 2136 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeannette Rogowski include RAND Corporation & Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics.

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Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996.

TL;DR: An Act to improve portability and continuity of health insurance coverage in the group and individual markets, to combat waste, fraud, and abuse in health insurance and health care delivery, to promote the use of medical savings accounts, to improve access to long-term care services and coverage.
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Marginal Increase in Cost and Excess Length of Stay Associated with Nosocomial Bloodstream Infections in Surviving Very Low Birth Weight Infants

TL;DR: NBIs are associated with increased hospital treatment costs and LOS but by varying amounts depending on the BW, and preventing a single NBI could reduce the treatment costs of a VLBW infant by at least several thousand dollars.
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Health Insurance and Retirement Behavior: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Survey

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that access to post-retirement health insurance has a large effect on retirement, and that in retirement models, when retiree health benefits are controlled for, the effects of pension coverage are reduced, suggesting that these effects may have been overestimated in the prior literature.
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Fetal infants: the fate of 4172 infants with birth weights of 401 to 500 grams--the Vermont Oxford Network experience (1996-2000).

TL;DR: A review was conducted of demographic and clinical data of infants who had birth weight 401 to 500 g and were entered in the Vermont Oxford Network Database between 1996 and 2000, finding an appreciable number of marginally viable fetal infants survive.
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Indirect vs Direct Hospital Quality Indicators for Very Low-Birth-Weight Infants

TL;DR: Volume cannot prospectively identify high-quality providers and direct measures based on patient outcomes are more useful quality indicators for the purposes of selective referral, as they are better predictors of future mortality rates among providers and could save more lives.