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Papers by Richard Lieberman
The American journal of managed care, 2009
To assess the effects of Hurricane Katrina on mortality, morbidity, disease prevalence, and servi... more To assess the effects of Hurricane Katrina on mortality, morbidity, disease prevalence, and service utilization during 1 year in a cohort of 20,612 older adults who were living in New Orleans, Louisiana, before the disaster and who were enrolled in a managed care organization (MCO). Observational study comparing mortality, morbidity, and service use for 1 year before and after Hurricane Katrina, augmented by a stratified random sample of 303 enrollees who participated in a telephone survey after Hurricane Katrina. Sources of data for health and service use were MCO claims. Mortality was based on reports to the MCO from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; morbidity was measured using adjusted clinical groups case-mix methods derived from diagnoses in ambulatory and hospital claims data. Mortality in the year following Hurricane Katrina was not significantly elevated (4.3% before vs 4.9% after the hurricane). However, overall morbidity increased by 12.6% (P <.001) compare...
... of Hurricane Katrina. ... Lori Uscher-Pines, PhD, MSc 1 , Richard Lieberman 2 , Lynda Burton,... more ... of Hurricane Katrina. ... Lori Uscher-Pines, PhD, MSc 1 , Richard Lieberman 2 , Lynda Burton, ScD 3 , Elizabeth Skinner, MSW 3 , and Jonathan Weiner, DrPH 3 . (1) Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 1358 Indian Creek Dr, Wynnewood, PA ...
Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection & Critical Care, 2009
The American journal of managed care, 2009
To assess the effects of Hurricane Katrina on mortality, morbidity, disease prevalence, and servi... more To assess the effects of Hurricane Katrina on mortality, morbidity, disease prevalence, and service utilization during 1 year in a cohort of 20,612 older adults who were living in New Orleans, Louisiana, before the disaster and who were enrolled in a managed care organization (MCO). Observational study comparing mortality, morbidity, and service use for 1 year before and after Hurricane Katrina, augmented by a stratified random sample of 303 enrollees who participated in a telephone survey after Hurricane Katrina. Sources of data for health and service use were MCO claims. Mortality was based on reports to the MCO from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services; morbidity was measured using adjusted clinical groups case-mix methods derived from diagnoses in ambulatory and hospital claims data. Mortality in the year following Hurricane Katrina was not significantly elevated (4.3% before vs 4.9% after the hurricane). However, overall morbidity increased by 12.6% (P <.001) compare...
... of Hurricane Katrina. ... Lori Uscher-Pines, PhD, MSc 1 , Richard Lieberman 2 , Lynda Burton,... more ... of Hurricane Katrina. ... Lori Uscher-Pines, PhD, MSc 1 , Richard Lieberman 2 , Lynda Burton, ScD 3 , Elizabeth Skinner, MSW 3 , and Jonathan Weiner, DrPH 3 . (1) Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 1358 Indian Creek Dr, Wynnewood, PA ...
Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection & Critical Care, 2009