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Peter A. Margolis
Researcher at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Publications - 111
Citations - 6992
Peter A. Margolis is an academic researcher from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 102 publications receiving 6130 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter A. Margolis include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill & University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Coproduction of healthcare service
Maren Batalden,Paul B. Batalden,Peter A. Margolis,Michael Seid,Gail Armstrong,Lisa Opipari-Arrigan,Hans Hartung +6 more
TL;DR: The coproduction principle is used to examine the roles, relationships and aims of this interdependent work, and the principle's implications and challenges for health professional development, for service delivery system design and for understanding and measuring benefit in healthcare services.
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The Influence of Context on Quality Improvement Success in Health Care: A Systematic Review of the Literature
Heather C. Kaplan,Patrick W. Brady,Michele C. Dritz,David K. Hooper,W. Matthew Linam,Craig M. Froehle,Peter A. Margolis +6 more
TL;DR: Several contextual factors were shown to be important to QI success, although the current body of literature lacks adequate definitions and is characterized by considerable variability in how contextual factors are measured across studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Model for Understanding Success in Quality (MUSIQ): building a theory of context in healthcare quality improvement
TL;DR: The specificity of MUSIQ and the explicit delineation of relationships among factors allows a deeper understanding of the mechanism of action by which context influences QI success.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of patient reminder/recall interventions on immunization rates: A review.
Peter G. Szilagyi,Clayton Bordley,Julie C. Jacobson Vann,Ann Chelminski,Ronald M. Kraus,Peter A. Margolis,Lance E. Rodewald +6 more
TL;DR: All types of reminders were effective in improving immunization rates, with telephone reminders being most effective but costliest, and primary care physicians should use patient reminders to improve immunization delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Decreasing PICU catheter-associated bloodstream infections: NACHRI's quality transformation efforts.
Marlene R. Miller,Michael Griswold,J. Mitchell Harris,Gayane Yenokyan,W. Charles Huskins,Michele Moss,Tom B. Rice,Debra Ridling,Deborah Campbell,Peter A. Margolis,Stephen E. Muething,Richard J. Brilli,Richard J. Brilli +12 more
TL;DR: In contrast with adult ICU care, maximizing insertion-bundle compliance alone cannot help PICUs to eliminate CA-BSI rates, and additional research is needed to define the optimal maintenance bundle that will facilitate elimination ofCA-BSIs for children.