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Paul A. Fishman

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  60
Citations -  1498

Paul A. Fishman is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicare Advantage. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 60 publications receiving 1316 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul A. Fishman include Group Health Cooperative & Group Health Research Institute.

Papers
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Journal Article

Patient-centered medical home demonstration: a prospective, quasi-experimental, before and after evaluation.

TL;DR: A PCMH redesign can be associated with improvements in patient experience, clinician burnout, and quality without increasing overall cost.
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Group Health Cooperative’s Transformation Toward Patient-Centered Access

TL;DR: Patients reported higher satisfaction with certain aspects of access to care, providers reported improvements in the quality of service given to patients, and enrollment in Group Health stayed aligned with statewide trends in health care coverage in the 2 years following the redesign.
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Patient ability and willingness to participate in a web-based intervention to improve hypertension control

TL;DR: Older age, lower socioeconomic status, and lower levels of education were associated with decreased access to and willingness to participate in a Web-based intervention to improve hypertension control and failure to ameliorate this may worsen health care disparities.
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Cost of Breast-related Care in the Year Following False Positive Screening Mammograms

TL;DR: The direct costs for breast-related procedures following false positive screening mammograms may contribute substantially to US healthcare spending.
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Electronic communications and home blood pressure monitoring (e-BP) study: design, delivery, and evaluation framework.

TL;DR: If this model of patient-centered care that leverages Web communications, self-monitoring, and collaborative care management improves hypertension control proves successful and cost-effective, similar interventions could be used to improve the care of large numbers of patients with uncontrolled hypertension.