Russell Scott Phillips

Russell Scott Phillips, M.D.

William Applebaum Professor of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Professor of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Director of the Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care, Harvard Medical School

Russell S. Phillips, M.D., is director of the Center for Primary Care and the William Applebaum Professor of Medicine and professor of Global Health and Social Medicine. He is a devoted primary care general internist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) where he cares for more than 250 patients, many of whom he has known for more than 20 years. Within the Center, he leads programs that are transforming education and care systems, developing entirely new approaches to improving primary care and health, and performing research on high performing health systems and practices. He is also researching the impact of changes in payment and primary care practice structure on the finances of primary care practices. He is principal investigator of an AHRQ-funded R18 grant to use system engineering to close the loop on referrals, test results and symptom follow-up in primary care practices, and is principal investigator of a HRSA-funded grant to improve systems in primary care in behavioral health integration, oral health integration, and use of community health workers to address social determinants of care.

At BIDMC, he co-led a task force to improve transitions in care, co-led a working group to develop new sustainable practice models for primary care, and led efforts to develop strategies for care management for high-risk patients to address the triple aim of improved patient experience, population health, and cost reduction.

Dr. Phillips seeks to integrate lessons from global health into innovations for advancing primary care. For more information, see his webpage.

Dr. Phillips’ research focuses on quality of care and patient safety, disparities in care, and innovations to improve quality and value in health care. He uses the methods of clinical epidemiology, health services research, and qualitative research and work collaboratively with research teams that often include health economists, statisticians, and health service researchers.

Mentoring matters. Mentoring and career preparation in internal medicine residency training.
Authors: Authors: Ramanan RA, Taylor WC, Davis RB, Phillips RS.
J Gen Intern Med
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Breast cancer risk and provider recommendation for mammography among recently unscreened women in the United States.
Authors: Authors: Sabatino SA, Burns RB, Davis RB, Phillips RS, McCarthy EP.
J Gen Intern Med
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Complementary and alternative medical therapy use among Chinese and Vietnamese Americans: prevalence, associated factors, and effects of patient-clinician communication.
Authors: Authors: Ahn AC, Ngo-Metzger Q, Legedza AT, Massagli MP, Clarridge BR, Phillips RS.
Am J Public Health
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Systematic review of the effects of ginseng on cardiovascular risk factors.
Authors: Authors: Buettner C, Yeh GY, Phillips RS, Mittleman MA, Kaptchuk TJ.
Ann Pharmacother
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Beyond the comfort zone: residents assess their comfort performing inpatient medical procedures.
Authors: Authors: Huang GC, Smith CC, Gordon CE, Feller-Kopman DJ, Davis RB, Phillips RS, Weingart SN.
Am J Med
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Herb use among health care professionals enrolled in an online curriculum on herbs and dietary supplements.
Authors: Authors: Gardiner P, Legedza A, Woods C, Phillips RS, Kemper KJ.
J Herb Pharmacother
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Interpreter services, language concordance, and health care quality. Experiences of Asian Americans with limited English proficiency.
Authors: Authors: Green AR, Ngo-Metzger Q, Legedza AT, Massagli MP, Phillips RS, Iezzoni LI.
J Gen Intern Med
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Mentorship in academic general internal medicine. Results of a survey of mentors.
Authors: Authors: Luckhaupt SE, Chin MH, Mangione CM, Phillips RS, Bell D, Leonard AC, Tsevat J.
J Gen Intern Med
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Lack of herbal supplement characterization in published randomized controlled trials.
Authors: Authors: Wolsko PM, Solondz DK, Phillips RS, Schachter SC, Eisenberg DM.
Am J Med
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What can hospitalized patients tell us about adverse events? Learning from patient-reported incidents.
Authors: Authors: Weingart SN, Pagovich O, Sands DZ, Li JM, Aronson MD, Davis RB, Bates DW, Phillips RS.
J Gen Intern Med
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