J
Jeffrey L. Schnipper
Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital
Publications - 245
Citations - 12346
Jeffrey L. Schnipper is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 211 publications receiving 10642 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey L. Schnipper include University of California, San Francisco & Harvard University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Clinical pharmacists and inpatient medical care : A systematic review
TL;DR: The addition of clinical pharmacist services in the care of inpatients generally resulted in improved care, with no evidence of harm, and future studies should include multiple sites, larger sample sizes, reproducible interventions, and identification of patient-specific factors that lead to improved outcomes.
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Role of Pharmacist Counseling in Preventing Adverse Drug Events After Hospitalization
Jeffrey L. Schnipper,Jennifer L. Kirwin,Michael C. Cotugno,Stephanie A. Wahlstrom,Brandon A. Brown,Emily Tarvin,Allen Kachalia,Mark S. Horng,Christopher L. Roy,Stephen McKean,David W. Bates +10 more
TL;DR: Pharmacist medication review, patient counseling, and telephone follow-up were associated with a lower rate of preventable ADEs 30 days after hospital discharge, and medication discrepancies before and after discharge were common targets of intervention.
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Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: A review of key issues for hospitalists
TL;DR: Key challenges to providing high-quality care as patients leave the hospital are reviewed, including the discontinuity between hospitalists and primary care physicians, changes to the medication regimen, new self-care responsibilities that may stress available resources, and complex discharge instructions.
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Potentially Avoidable 30-Day Hospital Readmissions in Medical Patients Derivation and Validation of a Prediction Model
TL;DR: This simple prediction model identifies before discharge the risk of potentially avoidable 30-day readmission in medical patients and has potential to easily identify patients who may need more intensive transitional care interventions.
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Hospital-based medication reconciliation practices: a systematic review
TL;DR: R rigorously designed studies comparing different inpatient medication reconciliation practices and their effects on clinical outcomes are scarce and higher-quality studies are needed to determine the most effective approaches.