John E. Kralewski
University of Minnesota
78 Papers
1.3K Citations
John E. Kralewski is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Managed care. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 78 publications. Previous affiliations of John E. Kralewski include University of the Sciences.
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Papers
Medical Groups' Adoption Of Electronic Health Records And Information Systems Practices are encountering greater-than-expected barriers to adopting an EHR system, but the adoption rate continues to rise.
David N Gans,John E. Kralewski,Terry Hammons,Bryan E Dowd +3 more
- 01 Jan 2005
TL;DR: Adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) is progressing slowly, at least in smaller practices, although a number of group practices plan to implement an EHR within the next two years.
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•Journal Article
The effects of medical group practice and physician payment methods on costs of care.
TL;DR: This study indicates that payment methods at both the medical group practice and physician levels influence the cost of care, however, the methods by which that influence is manifest is not clear.
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Assessing the Culture of Medical Group Practices
TL;DR: This study was designed to identify the relevant components of the organizational culture of medical group practices and to develop an instrument to measure those cultures, developing a 35-item instrument through an iterative process with more than 100 medical groups.
•Journal Article
Constructing episodes of care from encounter and claims data: Some methodological issues
TL;DR: A computerized approach for developing episodes of care from encounter and claims data is presented and it is found that the 31 illnesses that incur the majority of expenses for a health maintenance organization can be group into five generic types of episodes of Care.
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Effects of HMOs on the creation of competitive markets for hospital services
TL;DR: Four staff-network plans in a study of six HMOs in four large metropolitan areas in 1986 do shop for hospital services on the basis of price more than was generally believed, but two independent practice association plans use more hospitals in the community and do not concentrate patients effectively at hospitals that offer the lowest prices.
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