Ashley F. Sullivan
Harvard University
174 Papers
619 Citations
Ashley F. Sullivan is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Emergency department. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 157 publications.
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Papers
A profile of freestanding emergency departments in the United States, 2007.
Ashley F. Sullivan,Chethan Bachireddy,Anne P Steptoe,Justin Oldfield,Taneisha Wilson,Carlos A. Camargo +5 more
TL;DR: Freestanding Emergency Departments in the United States represent <2% of US EDs, with satellite EDs comprising a majority of all FSEDs and mostFSEDs are located in urban areas.
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The National Emergency Department Safety Study: Study Rationale and Design
Ashley F. Sullivan,Carlos A. Camargo,Paul D. Cleary,James Gordon,Edward Guadagnoli,Rainu Kaushal,David J. Magid,Sowmya R. Rao,David Blumenthal +8 more
TL;DR: NEDSS is the first comprehensive national study of the frequency and types of medical errors in EDs, and the methods used to develop and implement the study are described.
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Comparison of US emergency department acute asthma care quality: 1997-2001 and 2011-2012
Kohei Hasegawa,Ashley F. Sullivan,Yusuke Tsugawa,Stuart J. Turner,Susan Massaro,Sunday Clark,Chu-Lin Tsai,Carlos A. Camargo,Marc Investigators +8 more
TL;DR: Emergency asthma care became more concordant with level A recommendations at both the patient and ED levels over these 16 years, and greater concordance with guideline-recommended management might reduce unnecessary hospitalizations.
Association of Insurance Status with Severity and Management in ED Patients with Asthma Exacerbation
Kohei Hasegawa,Samantha J. Stoll,Jason Ahn,Rashid F. Kysia,Ashley F. Sullivan,Carlos A. Camargo +5 more
TL;DR: This multicenter observational study of ED patients with acute asthma found significant discrepancies in chronic asthma severity and management by insurance status, and there were no differences in acute asthma management among the insurance groups.
Quality of Care for Acute Myocardial Infarction in 58 U.S. Emergency Departments
Chu-Lin Tsai,David J. Magid,Ashley F. Sullivan,James Gordon,Rainu Kaushal,P. Michael Ho,Pamela N. Peterson,David Blumenthal,Carlos A. Camargo +8 more
TL;DR: Overall ED concordance with guideline-recommended processes of care was low to moderate, and emergency physicians should continue to work with other stakeholders in AMI care, such as emergency medical services (EMS) and cardiologists, to develop strategies to improve care processes.
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