Author

Stephen T Parente

University of Minnesota - Cited by 3,379 - Health economics - public policy

Biography

Stephen T. Parente is an American health economist. He currently serves as a Professor of Finance and the Minnesota Insurance Industry Chair at the Carlson School of Management and Finance at the University of Minnesota. In April 2017, President Donald Trump nominated Parente to be Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation in the United States Department of Health and Human Services
Title
Cited by
Year
Health information technology and patient outcomes: the role of information and labor coordination
JS McCullough, ST Parente, R TownThe RAND Journal of Economics 47 (1), 207-236, 2016201
99
2016
Scope-of-practice laws for nurse practitioners limit cost savings that can be achieved in retail clinics
J Spetz, ST Parente, RJ Town, D BazarkoHealth Affairs 32 (11), 1977-1984, 2013201
94
2013
Health information technology and patient outcomes: The role of organizational and informational complementarities
JS McCullough, S Parente, R TownNational Bureau of Economic Research, 2013201
75
2013
Healthcare claims fraud, waste and abuse detection system using non-parametric statistics and probability based scores
RJ Freese, AP Jost, BK Schulte, WA Klindworth, ST ParenteUS Patent App. 15/216,133, 2017201
50
2017
Prices for common medical services vary substantially among the commercially insured
D Newman, ST Parente, E Barrette, K KennedyHealth Affairs 35 (5), 923-927, 2016201
41
2016
Comparing efficiency of health systems across industrialized countries: a panel analysis
BK Frogner, HE Frech, ST ParenteBMC health services research 15 (1), 1-12, 2015201
39
2015
Does primary care diabetes management provided to Medicare patients differ between primary care physicians and nurse practitioners?
MN Lutfiyya, L Tomai, B Frogner, F Cerra, D Zismer, S ParenteJournal of advanced nursing 73 (1), 240-252, 2017201
35
2017
The demand for health care workers post-ACA
BK Frogner, J Spetz, ST Parente, S OberlinInternational Journal of Health Economics and Management 15, 139-151, 2015201
33
2015
Returns to specialization: evidence from the outpatient surgery market
EL Munnich, ST ParenteJournal of health economics 57, 147-167, 2018201
31
2018
Trends underlying employer-sponsored health insurance growth for Americans younger than age sixty-five
CN Herrera, M Gaynor, D Newman, RJ Town, ST ParenteHealth Affairs 32 (10), 17-1722, 2013201
15
2013
The economics of US health care policy
CE Phelps, ST ParenteRoutledge, 2017201
13
2017
Overcoming barriers to a research-ready national commercial claims database.
D Newman, CN Herrera, ST ParenteThe American journal of managed care 20 (11 Spec No. 17), eSP25-30, 2014201
12
2014
Wage growth for the health care workforce: projecting the Affordable Care Act impact
ST Parente, R Feldman, J Spetz, B Dowd, EE BaggettHealth services research 52 (2), 741-762, 2017201
9
2017
Insurer Payment Lags to Physicia n Practices: An Opportunity to Finance EMR Adoption
M Ramlet, D Randall, ST ParenteJ Healt Med Informat 4, 16, 20120
3
2013
Do physicians warm up to higher medicare prices? Evidence from Alaska
AJ Chen, EL Munnich, ST Parente, MR RichardsJournal of Policy Analysis and Management 41 (2), 94-425, 2022202
3
2022
Medicaid Expansion and the use o f Account-based Health Plans
D Randall, ST Parente, R AbujamraHealth Care Curr Rev 3, 134, 01501
2
2015