R
Richard Duszak
Researcher at Emory University
Publications - 391
Citations - 5265
Richard Duszak is an academic researcher from Emory University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Health care. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 356 publications receiving 4173 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard Duszak include Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania & Carolinas Medical Center.
Papers
More filters
Book ChapterDOI
From Volume to Outcomes: The Evolution of Pay for Performance in Medical Imaging
Richard Duszak,Ezequiel Silva +1 more
TL;DR: Trends, challenges and possible innovations in pay for performance programs, particularly as they relate to the physician component of medical imaging, are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Changes in Current Procedural Terminology Coding and Its Effect on Specialty-Level Utilization of Musculoskeletal Ultrasound.
Robert J. French,David A. Rosman,Tina D. Tailor,Jennifer Hemingway,Danny R. Hughes,Richard Duszak,Andrew B. Rosenkrantz +6 more
TL;DR: Prior rapid growth in extremity nonvascular US for podiatrists slowed considerably following CPT code separation in 2011, and subsequent service growth has largely been related to less costly, focused examinations performed by radiologists.
Journal ArticleDOI
So, You Think That Procedure Is a Money Loser? Wrong–Value Assessment for the Private Practitioner
Journal ArticleDOI
COVID-19 Pandemic-Associated Changes in the Acuity of Brain MRI Findings: A Secondary Analysis of Reports Using Natural Language Processing
Taejin L. Min,Liyan Xu,Jinho D. Choi,Ranliang Hu,Jason W. Allen,Christopher Reeves,Derek Hsu,Richard Duszak,Jeffrey M. Switchenko,Gelareh Sadigh +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors aimed to assess early COVID-19 pandemic-associated changes in brain MRI examination frequency and acuity of imaging findings acuity using a natural language processing model, and retrospectively categorized reported findings of 12,346 brain MRI examinations performed during 6-month pre-pandemic and early pandemic time periods across a large metropolitan health system into three acuity levels.