75 results match your criteria: "City University of New York at Hunter College[Affiliation]"
J Gen Intern Med
October 2024
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, NY, USA.
Ann Am Thorac Soc
October 2024
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, United States.
JAMA Intern Med
October 2024
Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Importance: Decades-old data indicate that people imprisoned in the US have poor access to health care despite their constitutional right to care. Most prisons impose co-payments for at least some medical visits. No recent national studies have assessed access to care or whether co-pays are associated with worse access.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Intern Med
July 2024
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, New York; and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Netw Open
January 2024
School of Urban Public Health, City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, New York.
Importance: Health care administrative overhead is greater in the US than some other nations but has not been assessed in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA).
Objective: To compare administrative staffing patterns in the VHA and private (non-VHA) sectors.
Design, Setting, And Participants: This cross-sectional study was conducted using US employment data from 2019, prior to pandemic-related disruptions in health care staffing, and was carried out between January 14 and August 10, 2023.
JAMA Surg
January 2024
Division of Vascular Surgery, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Importance: Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) have been found to be associated with health outcome disparities in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). However, the association of specific components of SDOH and amputation has not been well described.
Objective: To evaluate whether individual components of SDOH and race are associated with amputation rates in the most populous counties of the US.
N Engl J Med
September 2023
From the Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital (N.U.), and Harvard Medical School (N.U., S.W., D.U.H.), Boston, and Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge (S.W., D.U.H.) - all in Massachusetts; and City University of New York at Hunter College, New York (S.W., D.U.H.).
Am J Public Health
June 2023
Adam Gaffney and Danny McCormick are with the Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, MA, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA. David Himmelstein and Steffie Woolhandler are with City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, NY; Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance; Harvard Medical School; and Public Citizen Health Research Group, Washington, DC.
To assess the risk of COVID-19 by occupation and industry in the United States. Using the 2020-2021 National Health Interview Survey, we estimated the risk of having had a diagnosis of COVID-19 by workers' industry and occupation, with and without adjustment for confounders. We also examined COVID-19 period prevalence by the number of workers in a household.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Soc Determinants Health Health Serv
July 2023
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, NY, USA.
Over the past two centuries, progressive scholars have highlighted the health-harming effects of oppressive living and working conditions. Early studies delineated the roots of inequities in these social determinants of health in capitalist exploitation. Analyses in the 1970s and 1980s that adopted the social determinants of health framework emphasized the deleterious effects of poverty but rarely explored its origins in capitalist exploitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Care
April 2023
Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge.
Int J Soc Determinants Health Health Serv
October 2023
University of California San Francisco School of Medicine, San Francisco, California, USA.
U.S. hospitals provide large amounts of low-value care and devote inordinate resources to administration, while some hospitals leverage market power to realize large profits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
November 2022
School of Urban Public Health, City University of New York at Hunter College, New York.
Importance: Some worry that immigrants burden the US economy and particularly the health care system. However, no analyses to date have assessed whether immigrants' payments for premiums and taxes that fund health care programs exceed third-party payers' expenditures on their behalf.
Objective: To assess immigrants' net financial contributions to US health care programs.
Importance: Cost barriers discourage many US residents from seeking medical care and many who obtain it experience financial hardship. However, little is known about the association between medical debt and social determinants of health (SDOH).
Objective: To determine the prevalence of and risk factors associated with medical debt and the association of medical debt with subsequent changes in the key SDOH of food and housing security.
JAMA Netw Open
June 2022
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, New York.
Importance: In the US, Black people receive less health care than White people. Data on long-term trends in these disparities, which provide historical context for interpreting contemporary inequalities, are lacking.
Objective: To assess trends in Black-White disparities in health care use since 1963.
J Gen Intern Med
December 2022
Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Background: People with limited English proficiency (LEP) face greater barriers to accessing medical care than those who are English proficient (EP). Language-related differences in the use of outpatient care across the full spectrum of physician specialties have not been studied.
Objective: To compare outpatient visit rates to physicians in 28 specialties by people with LEP vs EP.
J Gen Intern Med
April 2022
Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med
October 2022
Planned Parenthood South Texas, San Antonio, TX, USA.
J Gen Intern Med
March 2022
Cambridge Health Alliance, 1493 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA.
Am J Med
April 2022
School of Public Urban Health, City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, NY; Lecturer, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.
Ann Intern Med
January 2022
Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Background: Enhancing primary care is a promising strategy for improving the efficiency of health care. Previous studies of primary care's effects on health expenditures have mostly relied on ecological analyses comparing region-wide expenditures rather than spending for individual patients.
Objective: To compare overall medical expenditures for individual patients enrolled vs.
EClinicalMedicine
September 2021
City University of New York at Hunter College, New York, USA.
Background: Because Forced Vital Capacity (FVC) is reduced in Black relative to White Americans of the same age, sex, and height, standard lung function prediction equations assign a lower "normal" range for Black patients. The prognostic implications of this race correction are uncertain.
Methods: We analyzed 5,294 White and 3,743 Black participants age 20-80 in NHANES III, a nationally-representative US survey conducted 1988-94, which we linked to the National Death Index to assess mortality through December 31, 2015.
J Gen Intern Med
November 2021
Cambridge Health Alliance, Cambridge, MA, USA.