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    Date Issued2001 (2)Author
    Hill, Jerrold (2)
    Allison, Jeroan J. (1)Andrade, Susan E. (1)Black, Steven B. (1)Cernieux, Jackie (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Quantitative Health Sciences (1)Meyers Primary Care Institute (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordHealth Services Research (2)Humans (2)Adult (1)Bioinformatics (1)Biostatistics (1)View MoreJournalThe Journal of rheumatology (1)The Pediatric infectious disease journal (1)

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    Variations in glucocorticoid induced osteoporosis prevention in a managed care cohort

    Mudano, Amy S.; Allison, Jeroan J.; Hill, Jerrold; Rothermel, Todd; Saag, Kenneth G. (2001-06-21)
    OBJECTIVE: To characterize glucocorticoid use and patterns of osteoporosis prevention therapies among a large US national cohort. METHODS: Health maintenance organization (HMO) members who were receiving chronic glucocorticoid therapy (> 90 day supply) within a 3 year observation period were identified along with their prescribing physicians. Receipt of anti-osteoporotic prescription therapies and bone mass measurement was determined. Multivariable analyses were used to define significant predictors of these preventive interventions. RESULTS: We identified 2378 HMO members who filled prescriptions for at least a 90 day supply of glucocorticoids, but had not filled a glucocorticoid prescription in the prior 90 days. In women over age 50, use of anti-osteoporotic therapies and bone mass measurement was 41% and 16%, respectively. Glucocorticoid-prescribing physicians were identified for 878 (37%) of these glucocorticoid users, and internal medicine specialists (39%) and rheumatologists (20%) wrote the majority of the prescriptions for glucocorticoids. Women age 50 and over were most likely to receive a prescription anti-osteoporotic preventive therapy (OR 4.0; 95% CI 1.5-10.8). Patients with a rheumatologist prescribing their glucocorticoids were more likely than those of internists to have a bone mass measurement (OR 2.2; 95% CI 1.3-3.6) and receive bisphosphonates (OR 1.9; 95% CI 1.1-3.1), but were not more likely to receive preventive treatment overall. CONCLUSION: Although better than in several prior studies, we identified low levels of selected preventive care measures for chronic glucocorticoid users in a large population based cohort. Significant demographic and practice pattern variation suggests opportunities for targeted preventive interventions.
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    Population-based study of rotavirus vaccination and intussusception

    Kramarz, Poitr; France, Eric K.; Destefano, Frank; Black, Steven B.; Shinefield, Henry; Ward, Joel I.; Chang, Emily J.; Chen, Robert T.; Shatin, Deborah; Hill, Jerrold; et al. (2001-04-03)
    BACKGROUND: During the first year that the rhesus rotavirus tetravalent vaccine (RRV-TV) was licensed, the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System received several reports of intussusception after vaccination. To evaluate the risk of intussusception, we conducted a retrospective cohort study in ten managed care organizations. METHODS: Cases of intussusception were identified by searching electronic databases for diagnoses of intussusception (ICD-9 Code 560.0) in infants 1 to 11 months of age and confirmed by medical chart review. Vaccination and enrollment data were obtained from administrative databases. Incidence rate ratios (RR) of intussusception were computed by dividing incidence rates in prespecified risk intervals after vaccination by the background rate of intussusception and adjusted for age by Poisson regression. Cox proportional hazard regression was used to evaluate risk by vaccine dose. RESULTS: Of 463,277 children 56,253 had been vaccinated with a total of 91 371 doses of RRV-TV. The incidence rate of intussusception was 25/100,000 person years among unexposed infants and 340/100,000 person years 3 to 7 days postvaccination. In the interval 3 to 7 days after vaccination, the age-adjusted RR was 16.0 (95% confidence interval, 5.5 to 46.7) for all doses combined and 30.4 (95% confidence interval, 8.8 to 104.9) after the first dose. RRs for the 8- to 14- and 15- to 21-day risk intervals were >1.0, but the confidence intervals substantially overlapped 1.0. The attributable risk was one case of intussusception per 11 073 children vaccinated. CONCLUSIONS: RRV-TV is associated with an increased risk of intussusception. The risk is greatest 3 to 7 days after the first vaccination dose.
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