April 25th 2025
As the Affordable Care Act passed its 15th anniversary this year, Supreme Court Justices continue to deliberate the fate of its preventive services mandate in Kennedy v Braidwood.
A new Texas law ending abortions after 6 weeks takes effect, angering the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists; the CDC says mortality rates may not go back to normal until 2023; a Senate version of a bill aimed at lowering drug prices would only impact Medicare.
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Key Issues Influencing 2022 Employer Health Care Strategy and Plan Design
August 31st 2021On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with Ellen Kelsay, president and CEO of the Business Group on Health, on the findings from her organization's 2022 Large Employers’ Health Care Strategy and Plan Design Survey.
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Reckoning With the Repercussions of Worsening Climate Change on Health Systems
August 24th 2021On this episode of Managed Care Cast, Laalitha Surapaneni, MD, MPH, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota, describes her work in bringing awareness to the health impacts of climate change.
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Health Officials Lay Out Plan for US COVID-19 Booster Shots in General Public
August 18th 2021Top US health officials outlined plans for rolling out COVID-19 booster shots to all American adults beginning in September, while CMS announced that nursing homes will be required to implement mandatory vaccinations for staff.
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Impact of COVID-19 on Disparities in Cancer Outcome Spans Various Groups of Patients
August 13th 2021Recent research showed that patients with Medicaid are more likely than commercially insured patients to have worsened end-of-life experience and that Black patients with breast cancer fare worse than other ethnic groups when it comes COVID-19 outcomes.
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CDC Advisory Committee Endorses Booster Shot for Immunocompromised
August 13th 2021The meeting comes a day after the FDA approved a third dose of a COVID-19 vaccine from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna in people who have received organ transplants or have other conditions that have damaged their immune systems.
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Changes in Marketplace Competition and Television Advertising by Insurers
This study provides the first evidence on how Marketplace insurers are altering their marketing in response to changes in competitive pressure over time.
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What We’re Reading: 70% of US Vaccinated; CMS Payment Rules Released; Alcohol Consumption and Cancer
August 3rd 2021Seventy percent of Americans have received at least 1 dose of a COVID-19 vaccine; CMS releases payment rules for fiscal year 2022; alcohol linked to over 700,000 new cancer diagnoses in 2020.
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Internal CDC Report Underscores Delta Dangers, COVID-19 Communication Woes
July 30th 2021A newly released internal CDC report shows the agency's communication struggles and its challenges in combatting the virulent delta variant, acknowledges the need for universal masking, and illustrates the effectiveness of vaccines in preventing more severe illness and death in those who are inoculated.
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Telehealth Has a Place in Rheumatology, but It Also Has Limits, Study Finds
July 29th 2021When a New Zealand health care network switched to telehealth visits, its rheumatology patients had more health care interactions, but they had fewer changes in care and were less likely to be categorized as having active disease.
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Citing Nature of Delta Variant, CDC Tells the Vaccinated to Resume Masking in Hot Spots
July 27th 2021Saying that in rare cases vaccinated people can spread COVID-19 due to the unique behavior of the delta variant, the CDC Tuesday recommended that vaccinated individuals revert to indoor mask wearing in hot-spot areas, including in schools this fall.
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Alliance for Patient Access Releases Paper on Biosimilar Best Practices in Oncology
July 26th 2021Two oncologists dive into the reasons behind physician hesitancy and unwillingness to prescribe biosimilars to patients with cancer and make suggestions on how to increase confidence in these agents.
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Medical Groups Call for Mandatory COVID-19 Vaccinations for Health Care Staff
July 26th 2021With nearly all parts of the country seeing a steady increase in COVID-19 infection, health care and medical groups are calling for mandatory vaccinations of their staff, and on Monday, the Department of Veterans Affairs, New York City, and California also announced vaccine requirements for workers.
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