2 results match your criteria: "US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services[Affiliation]"

Few Disparities in Baseline Laboratory Testing After the Diuretic or Digoxin Initiation by Medicare Fee-For-Service Beneficiaries.

Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes

November 2016

From the Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, NC (M.L.M.); Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine (M.L.M., L.H.C.) and Duke Clinical Research Institute (X.M., L.H.C., B.G.H.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC; National Committee for Quality Assurance, Washington, DC (J.N.); and Office of Minority Health, US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, Baltimore, MD (S.C.H.).

Background: Despite the persistence of significant disparities, few evaluations examine disparities in laboratory testing by race/ethnicity, age, sex, Medicaid eligibility, and number of chronic conditions for Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries' newly prescribed medications. In Medicare beneficiaries initiating diuretics or digoxin, this study examined disparities in guideline-appropriate baseline laboratory testing and abnormal laboratory values.

Methods And Results: To evaluate guideline-concordant testing for serum creatinine and serum potassium within 180 days before or 14 days after the index prescription fill date, we constructed retrospective cohorts from 10 states of 99 711 beneficiaries who had heart failure or hypertension initiating diuretic in 2011 and 8683 beneficiaries who had heart failure or atrial fibrillation initiating digoxin.

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Laboratory testing is important for the safety of older adults initiating statins, but there has been little examination of laboratory testing disparities by race/ethnicity, age, gender, Medicaid eligibility, and multimorbidity. The study's purpose was to examine disparities in guideline-concordant baseline laboratory testing and abnormal laboratory values among a retrospective cohort of 76,868 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries from 10 states in the eastern United States who had dyslipidemia and initiated a statin from July 1 to November 30, 2011. Guideline-concordant assessment of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) was defined as evidence of an outpatient claim for either test within 180 days before or 14 days after the date of the index statin fill.

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