April 25th 2025
Expanding Medicare coverage for glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists could significantly reduce obesity-related health issues, but it also risks adding tens of billions in new costs, highlighting the need for smart policy strategies to ensure access, affordability, and long-term sustainability.
Medical Technology Use Spurs New C-Suite Titles, Which Bring Opportunity and Risk
September 7th 2016The C-suite of the healthcare industry has grown dramatically over the last several years, and has been spurred by legislation that ties reimbursement rates under Medicare and Medicaid to the use of technology in medicine.
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What We're Reading: Taxpayers Cover 70% of California's Healthcare Costs
September 2nd 2016What we're reading, September 2, 2016: California taxpayers will cover 70% of the state's healthcare costs in 2016; President Barack Obama supports recommendations to reform the Veterans Affairs healthcare system; and California is close to criminalizing undercover stings against Planned Parenthood.
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Study of Diabetes Self-Management Program Finds Parity Between In-Person, Digital Formats
September 1st 2016A diverse group of 1242 patients received diabetes self-management education either in-person or online and achieved lowered blood glucose and depression levels, had fewer symptoms of hypoglycemia, and exercised more.
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EpiPen Saga Shines Light on "Shell Game" of Drug Discounts
September 1st 2016Democratic lawmakers who signed a letter to Mylan this week say that the practice of offering coupons masks the high drug prices that are paid by commercial health plans. The practice is not allowed in Medicare or Medicaid.
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COA-Commissioned Report Blames PBMs for Restricting Physician Dispensing
August 31st 2016A new report by the law firm Frier Levitt, commissioned by the Community Oncology Alliance, has found that restrictive tactics by pharmacy benefit managers, particularly in the specialty pharmacy arena, could restrict patient access to much needed medications.
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What We're Reading: Americans Have a Mostly Negative View of Pharma Industry
August 31st 2016What we're reading, August 31, 2016: 51% of Americans have a negative view of the pharmaceutical industry; the CDC is running out of funds to fight the Zika virus; and Pennsylvania chooses 3 private companies to manage Medicaid plans.
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What We're Reading: Investigation Finds Overcharging by Medicare Advantage Plans
August 29th 2016What we're reading, August 29, 2016: Audit finds Medicare Advantage plans overcharged the government; enrollment on the Affordable Care Act's exchanges less than half of initial prediction; and California bill to protect consumers from surprise medical bills divides physicians.
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Berwick Tells AJMC Healthcare Spending Can Be 15% of GDP, "Without a Hint of Rationing"
August 26th 2016Healthcare as we have known it doesn’t work cooperatively, which is one reason it costs way too much, according to Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP, president emeritus and senior fellow of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and co-originator of the term the Triple Aim. Berwick spoke with The American Journal of Managed Care as it publishes reports on Aligning Forces for Quality, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
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Pioneering Healthcare Quality: How Margaret O'Kane and NCQA Changed the Landscape
August 26th 2016Margaret E. O'Kane has been making lasting impacts on healthcare quality measurement for years. But when she founded the National Committee for Quality Assurance, the organization was sometimes underestimated and not taken seriously.
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Modest Impact Forecasted for Most Hospitals in CMS' Cardiac Bundled Payment Plan
August 24th 2016A majority of hospitals that may be required to participate in the new Medicare cardiac bundled payment models would not experience losses or gains over $500,000 per year, according to a recent analysis by Avalere Health.
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Improve Medicare Policy to Remove Barriers to Bone Marrow and Cord Blood Transplants
August 19th 2016Reducing barriers to hematopoetic stem cell (HPC) transplant is critical to supporting patients with one of the more than 70 blood cancers and other blood disorders (such as leukemia, lymphoma, and myloplastic dysplasia) for which a transplant may be the only therapy remaining with curative intent.
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AJMC Review Finds Drug Exclusions May Cut Costs Without Harming Patients
August 17th 2016As the nation's largest pharmacy benefit managers leave more therapies off formularies, some ask: are patients harmed? A new review in The American Journal of Managed Care, covering 26 studies about drug exclusions, found that most policies saved money without fallout for patients-but there were some exceptions.
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AADE Seeks to Tap Existing Network to Deliver Diabetes Prevention Program
August 15th 2016More than 3500 sites offer diabetes self-management education, and speakers at the annual meeting of the American Association of Diabetes Educators discussed how this system could be engaged to bring the Diabetes Prevention Program to all 50 states.
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Medicare Advantage VBID Model to Cover More States, Add Dementia and Rheumatoid Arthritis
August 11th 2016Adding more states and conditions to the Medicare Advantage value-based insurance design model will allow CMS to reach a more diverse group of plans and patients, in both rural and urban settings.
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Infographic: 5 Key Healthcare Differences Between Clinton and Trump
August 8th 2016Healthcare may not be the leading focus in the 2016 presidential race, but the candidates agree that there are issues that need to be addressed. This infographic breaks the difference between health policy proposals from Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton.
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What We're Reading: Medicare Law Notifies About Loophole in Nursing Home Coverage
August 8th 2016What we're reading, August 8, 2016: a new Medicare law would require hospitals to notify patients about loopholes in nursing home coverage; e-cigarette makers flooded the market ahead of new regulation implementation; and California bill on nurse-midwife independents causes controversy.
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5 Key Differences Between the Candidates on Healthcare
August 5th 2016The 2016 presidential race has been mostly about the candidates' personal qualities and less about their policies. But that doesn't mean Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton don't have debate-worthy ideas in their healthcare platforms.
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What We're Reading: More Than Half of Hospitals Will Be Penalized for Readmissions
August 3rd 2016What we're reading, August 3, 2016: Medicare penalties for hospital readmissions reach a new high; the importance of down-ballot races this election; and Virginia's Bureau of Insurance comes out against the Anthem-Cigna merger.
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