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Richard G. Frank
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 409
Citations - 23979
Richard G. Frank is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Health care. The author has an hindex of 71, co-authored 399 publications receiving 22928 citations. Previous affiliations of Richard G. Frank include New York University & Norwalk Hospital.
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Journal Article
Life stress and psychologic adjustment following spinal cord injury.
TL;DR: Patients who were experiencing higher subjective levels of life stress displayed more distress than those reporting lower levels oflife stress, and the findings were not mediated by the passage of time since injury.
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Impact of Full Mental Health and Substance Abuse Parity for Children in the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program
Susan T. Azrin,Susan T. Azrin,Haiden A. Huskamp,Vanessa Azzone,Howard H. Goldman,Howard H. Goldman,Richard G. Frank,M. Audrey Burnam,M. Audrey Burnam,Sharon-Lise T. Normand,M. Susan Ridgely,M. Susan Ridgely,Alexander S. Young,Alexander S. Young,Alexander S. Young,Colleen L. Barry,Colleen L. Barry,Alisa B. Busch,Alisa B. Busch,Garrett Moran,Garrett Moran +20 more
TL;DR: Full mental health and substance abuse parity for children can achieve equivalence of benefits in health insurance coverage and improve financial protection without adversely affecting health care costs but may not expand access for children who need these services.
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Long-term Care Financing in the United States: Sources and Institutions
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of existing literature on U.S. financing of long-term services and supports and use it to analyze the economic, policy and behavioral forces that underpin the observed equilibrium.
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The Impact of Nursing Home Pay‐for‐Performance on Quality and Medicare Spending: Results from the Nursing Home Value‐Based Purchasing Demonstration
David C. Grabowski,David G. Stevenson,Daryl J. Caudry,A. James O'Malley,Lisa Green,Julia Doherty,Richard G. Frank +6 more
TL;DR: The Federal nursing home pay-for-performance demonstration had little impact on quality or Medicare spending, and it was concluded that the observed savings likely reflected regression to the mean rather than true savings.
Journal ArticleDOI
Estimating Costs of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Coverage
TL;DR: The recent experience with national health care reform offers a case study in cost estimation for mental health and substance abuse coverage and draws lessons for estimating future costs of policy initiatives.