Publications by authors named "Jennifer Kohn"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aims to evaluate how educational seminars led by pharmacists affect participants' views on pharmacists' roles in women's health education and perceived benefits of the information shared.
  • The research was conducted at a homeless women's shelter in Phoenix, Arizona, where pharmacists and pharmacy students held 10 seminars over 11 months, with participants surveyed before and after the sessions.
  • Results showed a marked increase in participants' willingness to consult pharmacists, their self-rated knowledge on health topics, and a strong desire for further education, highlighting the effectiveness of pharmacist-led initiatives in enhancing health literacy among this population.
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The dynamic evolution of health and persistent relationship status pose econometric challenges to disentangling the causal effect of relationships on health from the selection effect of health on relationship choice. Using a new econometric strategy we find that marriage is not universally better for health. Rather, cohabitation benefits the health of men and women over 45, being never married is no worse for health, and only divorce marginally harms the health of younger men.

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We explore whether medical care use is persistent over a long panel using 18 waves of the British Household Panel Survey. Of particular interest is high medical care use because a few high users account for a disproportionate amount of use while many individuals use no medical care in a given year. If health is a primary driver of medical care demand, and we control for health, then past medical care use should be uninformative for future use.

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The authors assessed the costs of hospital-acquired infections using rigorous econometric methods on publicly available data, controlling for the interdependency of length of stay and the incidence of hospital acquired infection, and estimated the cost shares of different payers. They developed a system of equations involving length of stay, incidence of infection, and the total hospital care cost to be estimated using simultaneous equations system. The main data came from the State of New Jersey UB 92 for 2004, complimented with data from the Annual Survey of Hospitals by the American Hospital Association and the Medicare Cost Report of 2004.

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