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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
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Journal ArticleDOI

Recent trends in high-volume Medicare stroke thrombectomy provider characteristics

TL;DR: High-volume providers of MT services for Medicare beneficiaries represent a dynamic and rapidly expanding subset of physicians with diverse specialty backgrounds that are increasingly indicated for use in acute ischemic stroke patients.
Posted ContentDOI

Use and Cost of Skin Biopsy Procedures in the Medicare Part B Fee-for-Service Population, 2017 to 2020

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined associations between billing code updates and skin biopsy utilization and reimbursement across provider specialties and found that after the code update, the non-facility national payment amount decreased for first tangential biopsy, but increased for first punch, first incisional, additional tangential, additional punch and additional incisionality.
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Are Academic Emergency Radiologists Systematically Disadvantaged Compared with Diagnostic Radiology Subspecialty Counterparts When it Comes to Promotion?

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors identify academic radiology departments likely containing emergency radiology divisions by inclusively merging three lists: Doximity's top 20 radiology programs, the top 20 NIH ranked radiology department, and all departments offering emergency radiiology fellowships.
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Abstract No. 39 Contemporary Management and Outcomes of Blunt Splenic Trauma: An Analysis of the Trauma Quality Improvement Program Registry

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors evaluated the outcomes of management strategies among adult patients with blunt traumatic splenic injuries, including nonoperative management (NOM), embolization, surgery, or combination therapy (embolization and surgery).