J
Jonathan C. Joseph
Researcher at Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
Publications - 14
Citations - 11143
Jonathan C. Joseph is an academic researcher from Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Verbal autopsy & Health care. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 12 publications receiving 9308 citations. Previous affiliations of Jonathan C. Joseph include University of Washington.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Collecting verbal autopsies: improving and streamlining data collection processes using electronic tablets
Abraham D. Flaxman,Andrea Stewart,Jonathan C. Joseph,Nurul Alam,Sayed Saidul Alam,Hafizur Rahman Chowdhury,Meghan D. Mooney,Rasika Rampatige,Hazel Remolador,Diozele Sanvictores,Peter T. Serina,Peter Kim Streatfield,Veronica Tallo,Christopher J L Murray,Bernardo Hernández,Alan D. Lopez,Ian Riley +16 more
TL;DR: As countries increase verbal autopsy surveillance, it is important to consider the best way to design sustainable systems for data collection, and electronic data capture has the potential to greatly reduce the time and costs associated with data collection.
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessing the Complex and Evolving Relationship between Charges and Payments in US Hospitals: 1996 - 2012.
Hannah Hamavid,Maxwell Birger,Anne Bulchis,Liya Lomsadze,Jonathan C. Joseph,Ranju Baral,Anthony L. Bui,Cody Horst,Elizabeth Johnson,Joseph L Dieleman +9 more
TL;DR: The relationship between charges and payments in the inpatient hospital setting in the US varies significantly across three dimensions: payer, year, and cause, and the amount paid per charge fluctuates significantly depending on the cause of a health care encounter and the primary payer.
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Adjusting health spending for the presence of comorbidities: an application to United States national inpatient data
Joseph L Dieleman,Ranju Baral,Elizabeth Johnson,Anne Bulchis,Maxwell Birger,Anthony L. Bui,Madeline Campbell,Abigail Chapin,Rose Gabert,Hannah Hamavid,Cody Horst,Jonathan C. Joseph,Liya Lomsadze,Ellen Squires,Martin Tobias +14 more
TL;DR: This study applies a regression-based framework for spending adjustment to the National Inpatient Survey data in the United States for years 1996-2012 to generate comorbidity-adjusted health care spending estimates for 154 causes of illness by age and sex.
Journal ArticleDOI
Implementing the PHMRC shortened questionnaire: Survey duration of open and closed questions in three sites.
Abraham D. Flaxman,Andrea Stewart,Jonathan C. Joseph,Nurul Alam,Saidul Alam,Hafizur Rahman Chowdhury,Saman Gamage,Hebe N. Gouda,Hebe N. Gouda,Hebe N. Gouda,Rohina Joshi,Marilla G. Lucero,Meghan D. Mooney,Devarsetty Praveen,Rasika Rampatige,Hazel Remolador,Diozele Sanvictores,Peter T. Serina,Peter Kim Streatfield,Veronica Tallo,Nandalal Wijesekera,Christopher J L Murray,Bernardo Hernández,Alan D. Lopez,Ian Riley +24 more
TL;DR: The length of time required to complete the interview was short enough for large-scale routine use and provided useful information which can be used to increase the accuracy of the predictions of the cause of death.
Journal ArticleDOI
A de-identified database of 11,979 verbal autopsy open-ended responses.
TL;DR: This database will be the source of innovations that increase knowledge about the causes of ill health and, through this knowledge, produce improvements in health for individuals and populations.