J
Joachim Roski
Researcher at Brookings Institution
Publications - 6
Citations - 620
Joachim Roski is an academic researcher from Brookings Institution. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Performance measurement. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 6 publications receiving 595 citations. Previous affiliations of Joachim Roski include National Committee for Quality Assurance.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A National Strategy To Put Accountable Care Into Practice
TL;DR: This paper proposes a national strategy to identify and expand successful approaches to accountable care implementation, and seeks to clarify definitions and key principles of these approaches.
Journal Article
Benchmarking Physician Performance: Reliability of Individual and Composite Measures
Sarah Hudson Scholle,Joachim Roski,Joachim Roski,John L. Adams,Daniel L. Dunn,Eve A. Kerr,Donna Pillittere Dugan,Roxanne E. Jensen +7 more
TL;DR: In typical health plan administrative data, most physicians do not have adequate numbers of quality events to support reliable quality measurement, and the reliability of quality measures should be taken into account when quality information is used for public reporting and accountability.
Journal Article
Availability of data for measuring physician quality performance.
Sarah Hudson Scholle,Joachim Roski,Joachim Roski,Dunn Dl,John L. Adams,Donna Pillittere Dugan,Pawlson Lg,Eve A. Kerr +7 more
TL;DR: Efforts are needed to develop consensus on assigning measure accountability and to expand information available for each physician, including accessing electronic clinical data, exploring composite measures of performance, and aggregating data across public and private health plans.
Journal ArticleDOI
Measuring health care performance now, not tomorrow: essential steps to support effective health reform.
Joachim Roski,Mark McClellan +1 more
TL;DR: An overall framework for achieving a "distributed data approach" to computing performance results while protecting patients' privacy is introduced, and a set of steps to accelerate and expand the availability of performance measures to improve care now are described.
Journal ArticleDOI
Resource use and associated care effectiveness results for people with diabetes in managed care organizations.
TL;DR: Quality and resource use for managed care populations with diabetes may vary considerably and be largely independent factors in health care delivery.