Author Archives: Scott S. Husak

Eileen Seeholzer, MD, co-authors article on preparing physicians to counsel patients on obesity, nutrition and physical activity

By | May 23, 2018

An article co-authored by Eileen Seeholzer, MD, has been selected for the inaugural edition of “The Best of Health Promotion Practice.” The article focuses on a study conducted by Dr. Seeholzer and other medical professionals on how primary care residency programs are preparing physicians to counsel patients about obesity, nutrition and physical activity (ONPA). The study identified widespread expectations that primary care physicians should counsel their overweight and obese patients, but few residency programs provide the training to support such counseling. MetroHealth’s OB/GYN, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine residency program participated in the study.

To read the article, click here.

Thomas Love wins Diekhoff Award for Graduate Teaching at CWRU

By | May 15, 2018

Thomas E. Love, PhD, Director Biostatistics and Evaluation at the Center for Health Care Research and Policy, as well as Professor of Medicine, and Population & Quantitative Health Sciences at Case Western Reserve University, and Chief Data Scientist for Better Health Partnership, is a 2018 recipient of The John S. Diekhoff Award for teaching. This prestigious award is presented to full-time faculty making exemplary contributions to the education and development of graduate students at CWRU. Congratulations Dr. Love!

Read more at the Case Daily article

New Study Reports on Importance of Repeating Blood Pressure

By | April 20, 2018

A study published on-line in the April 16, 2018 issue of JAMA Internal Medicine reports the effect of repeating an initially elevated blood pressure (BP) on final blood pressure control.  Funded by grants from the Centers for Disease Control and the Mount Sinai Foundation,  faculty member Douglas Einstadter was lead author on the investigation alongside other faculty and Senior Scholars of the Case Western Reserve University-MetroHealth System Center for Health Care Research and Policy, including Shari Bolen, James Misak, David Bar-Shain, and Randall Cebul. The study examined more than 38,000 patients with hypertension who made over 86,000 visits to the primary care clinics at MetroHealth during 2016. Across all visits, re-measuring an initially elevated BP was associated with a median 8 mm Hg drop in the systolic BP.  Among those with a repeat BP, the final BP readings were <140/90 mm Hg 36% of the time.  Overall, repeating an initially elevated BP increased the overall rate of good BP control from 61% to 73%.  While much of the change in systolic blood pressure may be attributed to regression to the mean, the observed decrease remains clinically important, comparable with that associated with addition of an antihypertensive medication. The full article is available here https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2678452 .

Drs. Sehgal and Gunzler receive $3.3 million grant to study depression in kidney dialysis patients

By | April 17, 2018


Ashwini Sehgal, MD, and Douglas Gunzler, PhD, were awarded a $3.3 million NIH R01 grant to study depression among patients receiving kidney dialysis. Many dialysis patients have depression that is difficult to diagnose and treat due in part to the overlap between depressive symptoms (e.g. appetite change, trouble sleeping, feeling tired) and symptoms related to kidney dialysis treatment (e.g. nausea, nocturnal cramps, feeling washed out after treatment). The goal of this project is to develop a screening instrument to improve diagnosis and to test the value of weekly directly observed antidepressant treatment in managing depression. Innovative features of the proposed project include the use of advanced statistical techniques to address overlap, administration of a long-acting weekly antidepressant, directly observed treatment, and a rigorous randomized controlled trial design. Dr. Sehgal is the Duncan Neuhauser Professor of Community Health Improvement and Professor of Medicine, Bioethics and Population and Quantitative Health Services. Dr. Gunzler is Assistant Professor of Medicine and Population and Quantitative Health Sciences.

A. James O’Malley, Ph.D., Visit to Cleveland and Metro on April 19 and 20, 2018.

By | April 16, 2018

James O’Malley, PhD is Professor of Biostatistics at The Dartmouth Institute and the Department of Biomedical Data Science at the Geisel School of Medicine. He will be giving his main talk from 9:00-10:30 AM on Friday April 20 at the Center for Health Care Research and Policy at MetroHealth Medical Center, entitled “A précis of key types of social network analyses and recent applications involving physician networks” (PDF of slides | PDF article on social network methods).

We will also hold a workshop session over lunch from 12-1 on Friday April 20 in Rammelkamp R219 at Metro (view PDF), where interested faculty, staff and students can hear more about some of James’ work in comparative effectiveness research, health services research and other areas, and talk about some of their own work.

James’ methodological interests encompass statistical inference for social networks, comparative effectiveness research including causal inference for both randomized and observational studies, Bayesian statistics, and multivariate hierarchical models. His subject matter research interests include the relationship between health and social networks, evaluation/estimation of variations in health quality and outcomes, vascular surgery, cardiology, shared decision making and risk communication with patients, and evaluation of medical devices. Specific research projects are typically motivated by problems encountered in his collaborative work with physicians, sociologists, health economists, health services researchers, epidemiologists and others.

James is the recipient of numerous awards and honors for his research and service to the academic community, including the Mid-Career Excellence Award from the American Statistical Association’s Health Policy Statistics Section.

Thomas Love Ph.D. Invited to Speak for National Public Health Week at Case Western Reserve University

By | April 10, 2018

On Thursday, April 5th, Thomas Love, Ph.D., spoke at a Lunch-and-Learn session at Case Western Reserve University for National Public Health Week concerning electronic health records and their impact on the health of adults living in Northeast Ohio. The topic was, “Adventures at Better Health Partnership: Learning as a community (aided by electronic health records) to make an impact on the health of Northeast Ohio adults”.

Click here to access the slides of the session. To listen to the audio click here.

Thomas Love Received a 2018 Scholarship in Teaching Award from the Case School of Medicine

By | March 5, 2018

Thomas E. Love, Ph.D. is a recipient of the 2018 Scholarship in Teaching award from CWRU School of Medicine for his work on “Foundations of Data Science for Biological, Medical and Health Research: Teaching Reproducible Research with Modern Tools.” This work is part of his ongoing teaching of a two-semester core sequence in statistics and data science for the Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences at CWRU. Many of the course materials from the Fall 2017 version of the course are available online at at https://github.com/THOMASELOVE/431. Dr. Love also won CWRU’s Scholarship in Teaching award in 2005, 2009 and 2010, and the Best Educational Contribution award in 2004. He will give a seminar at the Center on some related issues on Friday, March 16, 2018.

Better Health Study Topic of Tonight’s Ideas on WVIZ

By | February 9, 2018

Rita Horwitz

JT Tanenbaum

February 8, 2018
Better Health Partnership President and CEO Rita Horwitz and JT Tanenbaum, MD-PhD candidate in the Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences, and School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University and lead-author of the study published in this month’s Health Affairs will be guests on Ideas tonight on WVIZ at 7:30pm to discuss Better Health’s hand in the decline of hospitalizations as it relates to better care and cost savings in Northeast Ohio.

Study Finds Better Health Partnership Associated with Significant Improvement in Population Health and Cost Savings

By | February 6, 2018

A study published in the February 2018 issue of Health Affairs reports the association of Better Health Partnership, a collaboration of primary care providers and other stakeholders, with nearly $40 million in savings over six years by delivering better care to primary care patients with diabetes, high blood pressure, and heart failure in Cuyahoga County, avoiding an estimated almost 6,000 costly hospitalizations.  Funded by a training grant from the National Institutes of Health, MD-PhD candidate JT Tanenbaum was lead author on the investigation alongside faculty of the Case Western Reserve University-MetroHealth System Center for Health Care Research and Policy, including Douglas Einstadter,  Mark Votrbua, and past Center director Randall Cebul.   The report estimates that 5,764 more hospitalizations in Cuyahoga County were averted as compared with other large Ohio counties from 2009 through 2014. For a limited time, you may read the full publication in the current issue of Health Affairs.    Click here to read more.