April 29th 2025
At Asembia’s AXS25 Summit, industry experts explored how pharmacy is evolving to meet rising patient expectations and navigate a shifting health care environment.
Two-Year Adherence and Costs for Biologic Therapy for Rheumatoid Arthritis
Adherence to newly initiated biologic therapy for rheumatoid arthritis is important for long-term adherence.
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Reducing Hospital Readmissions Through a High-Touch Customer Service Model
July 9th 2018Two years after initiating a high-touch customer model to better serve their members, WEA Trust has achieved a 31% reduction in readmission rates, resulting in savings of $1.9 million, as well as a 7.1% reduction in emergency room use, translating to $2.4 million in savings.
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Medical Group Endorses 14 Quality Measures to Streamline Reporting, Reduce Burden
June 29th 2018The American Medical Group Association has endorsed a set of 14 value measurements to streamline the reporting process and reduce costs while also improving care by offering a standard set of measures for value-based contracts with payers.
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Ellen Miller Sonet: The Importance of Cancer Care Providers Informing Patients of Treatment Costs
June 17th 2018Cancer patients are agreeing to treatment plans lacking a fundamental understanding of the impacts on their finances, explained Ellen Miller Sonet, MBA, JD, chief strategy and policy officer, CancerCare.
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Panelists Give Payer, Patient, and Economist Perspectives on High-Cost Drugs for Rare Diseases
May 23rd 2018Advances in medicine have produced breakthroughs in the treatment of a number of rare diseases, but these advances often come at a high cost. A multi-stakeholder panel at the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research 23rd Annual International Meeting, in Baltimore, Maryland, addressed the question of how to define value in the always evolving and ever more expensive treatment landscape.
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Value Assessments Are Just One Tool in the Decision-Maker's Toolkit, Panel Says
May 21st 2018In a Monday panel convened at the International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research (ISPOR) 23rd Annual International Meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, stakeholders grappled with the role that value assessments play—or should play—in US private payer coverage and formulary decisions.
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Hemophilia: Treatment Landscape, Costs, and Disease Management
April 26th 2018At the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy’s Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy Annual Meeting, experts addressed the cost of treating patients with hemophilia and the importance of care coordination to ensure a more holistic approach toward caring for these patients.
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Gene Therapy in Community Practices—Administering CAR T Therapies
April 13th 2018How are community practices coping with administering chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T treatments? At the 2018 Community Oncology Conference hosted by the Community Oncology Alliance, Houston Holmes, MD, MBA, FACP, Texas Oncology, shared his experience with administering CAR T-cells in a community cancer center–based setting.
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Nongroup Enrollees Plan to Continue Purchasing Coverage Despite Repeal of Individual Mandate
April 3rd 2018Nine in 10 people with non-group health insurance will continue buying coverage despite the repeal of the individual mandate and express worry over future availability and price of health coverage, according to a health tracking poll from Kaiser Family Foundation. The poll also found that for the uninsured, the main reason for not purchasing coverage is that it is too expensive.
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Making Progress, or Headed for Crisis? NCCN Keynotes Offer Contrasting Views of US Cancer Care
March 24th 2018The second day of the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) 23rd Annual Conference in Orlando, Florida, opened with a dual keynote presentation on transforming cancer care in the United States.
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AMA Survey: Prior Authorizations Delay Access, Negatively Impact Clinical Outcomes
March 20th 2018Prior authorizations delay care, have a significant negative impact on clinical outcomes, and place a high burden on providers, according to a physician survey conducted by the American Medical Association (AMA).
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Maryland All-Payer Hospital Model Reduces Costs, Lowers Readmissions
March 20th 2018In 2014, Maryland and CMS entered a 5-year agreement employing the All-Payer Hospital Model in the state to cut costs while improving quality. According to the year 3 performance data, Maryland has met or is on track to meet all model requirements, saving hundreds of millions of dollars as it lowers hospital readmissions and steers the state away from a volume-based system.
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The Shift From Episodic to Continuous Care: Wearable Technology and Telemedicine in Cardiology
March 9th 2018Discussing the integration of data from wearable technology into the electronic health record and utilizing telemedicine as a way to promote greater collaboration between the patient and their physician and health system with Jagmeet P. Singh, MD, PhD, FACC, deputy editor of JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology, and Fred Bove, MD, MACC, editor-in-chief of Cardiology magazine.
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The Fallacy of Estimating OCM Target Prices
January 22nd 2018Estimating episodic target prices for each patient in the Oncology Care Model (OCM) can be challenging and time consuming. Applying that time to quality-focused care management tactics, based on observed utilization and patient outcomes, may wind up being more valuable, and help to reduce unnecessary spending.
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Psychologist Barkley Says Life Expectancy Slashed in Worst Cases for Those With ADHD
January 14th 2018Using a large database created by a center for actuarial studies, a psychologist and researcher is positing that people with the worst cases of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) will see a 25-year reduction in life expectancy, according to a presentation made Saturday at the annual meeting of the American Professional Society of ADHD and Related Disorders.
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When patients with rheumatoid arthritis experience failure of an anti–tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF) therapy, clinical guidelines support either cycling to a different anti-TNF agent or switching to a treatment with a different method of action (MOA). However, payers often require cycling of anti-TNF options before they will reimburse for treatments with a different MOA.
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Black Patients More Likely to Receive High-Cost Care at End of Life
December 21st 2017Multiple studies have demonstrated that black Americans tend to receive more intensive, higher-cost care at the end of life, and have higher rates of hospitalization and lower rates of hospice enrollment. A new study sought to determine whether racial variation exists among hospice enrollees in rates of hospitalization and hospice disenrollment, and whether that variation could be explained by systematic differences in hospice provider patterns.
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High-Impact Workflow Changes for Value-Based Care Success
December 19th 2017As oncology practices transition to value-based care, they are challenged to take on more holistic responsibility for their patient. Fortunately, the examples of practices participating in CMS’ Oncology Care Model can offer valuable insight into the most impactful workflow changes providers can implement as they strive to achieve cost and quality improvements.
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Conceptual Paper Proposes Four Cost-Reducing Interventions for In Vitro Diagnostics
December 14th 2017US healthcare spending is on the rise, and is expected to comprise over 20% of the gross domestic product by 2025. Current expenditures are expected to double by 2060 if the pace of spending in the past decade continues. In this healthcare landscape, in vitro diagnostics (IVD) have increasingly become the subject of scrutiny, as IVDs are perceived as contributing to soaring costs.
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The Switch From Filgrastim to a Cheaper Alternative: Tbo-Filgrastim
December 1st 2017With the increasing emergence of less expensive biologic alternatives, some health systems are making the switch. For a large healthcare system, the arrival of a cheaper alternative to filgrastim prompted the conversion to using tbo-filgrastim as the preferrred granulocyte-colony stimulating factor. The results were shared in a study published by the Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy.
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