NAU publications by CHER
Faculty & staff publications
NAU faculty and staff have the opportunity to publish their findings and knowledge as authors. CHER has many researchers that have been cited multiple times in major publications for their great work. The Center for Health Equity Research has accumulated all faculty publications into one, easy to navigate database.
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Camplain, Ricky; Kucharska-Newton, Anna; Loehr, Laura; Keyserling, Thomas C; Layton, Bradley J; Wruck, Lisa; Folsom, Aaron R; Bertoni, Alain G; Heiss, Gerardo Accuracy of self-reported heart failure. The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study Journal Article Journal of Cardiac Failure, 23 (11), pp. 802-808, 2017. @article{Camplain2017c, title = {Accuracy of self-reported heart failure. The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study}, author = {Ricky Camplain and Anna Kucharska-Newton and Laura Loehr and Thomas C Keyserling and Bradley J Layton and Lisa Wruck and Aaron R Folsom and Alain G Bertoni and Gerardo Heiss}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1071916417311673?via%3Dihub}, year = {2017}, date = {2017-11-01}, journal = {Journal of Cardiac Failure}, volume = {23}, number = {11}, pages = {802-808}, abstract = {Objective The aim of this work was to estimate agreement of self-reported heart failure (HF) with physician-diagnosed HF and compare the prevalence of HF according to method of ascertainment. Methods and Results ARIC cohort members (60–83 years of age) were asked annually whether a physician indicated that they have HF. For those self-reporting HF, physicians were asked to confirm their patients' HF status. Physician-diagnosed HF included surveillance of hospitalized HF and hospitalized and outpatient HF identified in administrative claims databases. We estimated sensitivity, specificity, positive predicted value, kappa, prevalence and bias–adjusted kappa (PABAK), and prevalence. Compared with physician-diagnosed HF, sensitivity of self-report was low (28%–38%) and specificity was high (96%–97%). Agreement was poor (kappa 0.32–0.39) and increased when adjusted for prevalence and bias (PABAK 0.73–0.83). Prevalence of HF measured by self-report (9.0%), ARIC-classified hospitalizations (11.2%), and administrative hospitalization claims (12.7%) were similar. When outpatient HF claims were included, prevalence of HF increased to 18.6%. Conclusions For accurate estimates HF burden, self-reports of HF are best confirmed by means of appropriate diagnostic tests or medical records. Our results highlight the need for improved awareness and understanding of HF by patients, because accurate patient awareness of the diagnosis may enhance management of this common condition.}, keywords = {}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } Objective The aim of this work was to estimate agreement of self-reported heart failure (HF) with physician-diagnosed HF and compare the prevalence of HF according to method of ascertainment. Methods and Results ARIC cohort members (60–83 years of age) were asked annually whether a physician indicated that they have HF. For those self-reporting HF, physicians were asked to confirm their patients' HF status. Physician-diagnosed HF included surveillance of hospitalized HF and hospitalized and outpatient HF identified in administrative claims databases. We estimated sensitivity, specificity, positive predicted value, kappa, prevalence and bias–adjusted kappa (PABAK), and prevalence. Compared with physician-diagnosed HF, sensitivity of self-report was low (28%–38%) and specificity was high (96%–97%). Agreement was poor (kappa 0.32–0.39) and increased when adjusted for prevalence and bias (PABAK 0.73–0.83). Prevalence of HF measured by self-report (9.0%), ARIC-classified hospitalizations (11.2%), and administrative hospitalization claims (12.7%) were similar. When outpatient HF claims were included, prevalence of HF increased to 18.6%. Conclusions For accurate estimates HF burden, self-reports of HF are best confirmed by means of appropriate diagnostic tests or medical records. Our results highlight the need for improved awareness and understanding of HF by patients, because accurate patient awareness of the diagnosis may enhance management of this common condition. |
2017 |
Camplain, Ricky; Kucharska-Newton, Anna; Loehr, Laura; Keyserling, Thomas C; Layton, Bradley J; Wruck, Lisa; Folsom, Aaron R; Bertoni, Alain G; Heiss, Gerardo Accuracy of self-reported heart failure. The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study Journal Article Journal of Cardiac Failure, 23 (11), pp. 802-808, 2017. @article{Camplain2017c, title = {Accuracy of self-reported heart failure. The atherosclerosis risk in communities (ARIC) study}, author = {Ricky Camplain and Anna Kucharska-Newton and Laura Loehr and Thomas C Keyserling and Bradley J Layton and Lisa Wruck and Aaron R Folsom and Alain G Bertoni and Gerardo Heiss}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1071916417311673?via%3Dihub}, year = {2017}, date = {2017-11-01}, journal = {Journal of Cardiac Failure}, volume = {23}, number = {11}, pages = {802-808}, abstract = {Objective The aim of this work was to estimate agreement of self-reported heart failure (HF) with physician-diagnosed HF and compare the prevalence of HF according to method of ascertainment. Methods and Results ARIC cohort members (60–83 years of age) were asked annually whether a physician indicated that they have HF. For those self-reporting HF, physicians were asked to confirm their patients' HF status. Physician-diagnosed HF included surveillance of hospitalized HF and hospitalized and outpatient HF identified in administrative claims databases. We estimated sensitivity, specificity, positive predicted value, kappa, prevalence and bias–adjusted kappa (PABAK), and prevalence. Compared with physician-diagnosed HF, sensitivity of self-report was low (28%–38%) and specificity was high (96%–97%). Agreement was poor (kappa 0.32–0.39) and increased when adjusted for prevalence and bias (PABAK 0.73–0.83). Prevalence of HF measured by self-report (9.0%), ARIC-classified hospitalizations (11.2%), and administrative hospitalization claims (12.7%) were similar. When outpatient HF claims were included, prevalence of HF increased to 18.6%. Conclusions For accurate estimates HF burden, self-reports of HF are best confirmed by means of appropriate diagnostic tests or medical records. Our results highlight the need for improved awareness and understanding of HF by patients, because accurate patient awareness of the diagnosis may enhance management of this common condition.}, keywords = {}, pubstate = {published}, tppubtype = {article} } Objective The aim of this work was to estimate agreement of self-reported heart failure (HF) with physician-diagnosed HF and compare the prevalence of HF according to method of ascertainment. Methods and Results ARIC cohort members (60–83 years of age) were asked annually whether a physician indicated that they have HF. For those self-reporting HF, physicians were asked to confirm their patients' HF status. Physician-diagnosed HF included surveillance of hospitalized HF and hospitalized and outpatient HF identified in administrative claims databases. We estimated sensitivity, specificity, positive predicted value, kappa, prevalence and bias–adjusted kappa (PABAK), and prevalence. Compared with physician-diagnosed HF, sensitivity of self-report was low (28%–38%) and specificity was high (96%–97%). Agreement was poor (kappa 0.32–0.39) and increased when adjusted for prevalence and bias (PABAK 0.73–0.83). Prevalence of HF measured by self-report (9.0%), ARIC-classified hospitalizations (11.2%), and administrative hospitalization claims (12.7%) were similar. When outpatient HF claims were included, prevalence of HF increased to 18.6%. Conclusions For accurate estimates HF burden, self-reports of HF are best confirmed by means of appropriate diagnostic tests or medical records. Our results highlight the need for improved awareness and understanding of HF by patients, because accurate patient awareness of the diagnosis may enhance management of this common condition. |