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.
HHS Final Rule Sets ICD-10 Switch for Oct. 1, 2015
August 1st 2014In a final rule (PDF) issued Thursday afternoon, HHS formally set an Oct. 1, 2015, compliance date for conversion to ICD-10 diagnostic and procedure codes, incorporating the absolute minimum delay imposed by Congress when it ordered HHS to roll back the conversion date previously set for Oct. 1, 2014.
Read More
HealthCare.gov Has Already Cost $840 Million
August 1st 2014HealthCare.gov, the federal health-exchange website plagued with glitches at its launch, has already cost $840 million to build, according to a Government Accountability Office (GAO) review of two task orders and one contract related to building the system.
Read More
Without Medicaid,Hospitals May Pay Patient Premiums
July 25th 2014Uncompensated care was supposed to be a thing of the past, but it's persisting in many states not expanding Medicaid eligibility. As an alternative, for some high-cost uninsured patients, hospitals are turning to a new option.
Read More
Dual-Eligibles Not Opting Into State Care Coordination Programs
July 24th 2014To better align the care of beneficiaries insured under both the Medicaid and Medicare programs, CMS invited states to participate in a 3-year demonstration project. However, it seems that many beneficiaries have opted out of these care coordination programs that are offered across the country.
Read More
Simple Errors in Interpretation and Publication Can Be Costly
A recent AJMC study contained overstatements and small but importantly placed errors that have the potential to cause unwarranted on-the-ground cost problems.
Read More
Personalized Medicine: It May be High Cost, but It's Higher Value
July 18th 2014Personalized medicine will be expensive in these early days of pioneering and planning. But individual genomic testing is not going to be exorbitant forever — and the ROI is gonna be big, both in patient outcomes and dollars saved.
Read More
Clinical Documentation Improvement Helps Providers with ICD-10 Transition
July 14th 2014Most providers associate clinical documentation improvement (CDI) with the transition to ICD-10 coding, however, CDI - a process in which care providers receive feedback from specialists who review clinical documents - may also deliver clinical and financial benefits for healthcare organizations.
Read More
Hospitals, Regulators Spar Over In-Patient Care Policy
July 14th 2014Fewer patients linger for days in hospitals without being admitted because of a new federal rule, but hospital and consumer groups are suing the government because they say the policy compromises Medicare patients' care, and patients are often stuck with costly, unexpected bills.
Read More
Insurer's New Payment Model Saved Millions for Oncology Groups
July 11th 2014One insurer's experimental reimbursement model proved to lower the total costs of care for patients with 3 types of cancer. As an alternative to the traditional fee-for-service payment model, the episode payment model-which reimburses physicians on a fixed-price, based on episodes of best-practices and patient outcomes-provided encouraging findings in the battle against the rising costs of cancer care in the United States.
Read More
Wearable Devices, mHealth Can Lead to True Patient Engagement
June 26th 2014Smart watches, mHealth apps, and Bluetooth scales may just be edging into the social consciousness as a viable way to monitor personal health and manage chronic diseases, but EHR developers have been eyeing these technologies for some time, seeing them as valuable tools in the struggle to engage patients, prevent unnecessary readmissions, reduce costs, and promote long-term health.
Read More
Hospital Outpatient Prices Sharply Higher than Docs', Study Finds
June 26th 2014Hospital outpatient prices for standard blood tests, cancer screening and other services varied widely and were sharply higher, on average, than prices charged by ambulatory clinics and independent doctors, an analysis of autoworker health-plan spending across 18 cities has found.
Read More
Value-Based Contracting-A 2014 Managed Market Strategy
June 24th 2014Terri Bernacchi, strategic consultant, audit and risk assessment, CIS, identified value-based contracting (VBC) as a forward-thinking approach for pricing and market needs. She discussed how VBC can improve formulary access, how it can impact the healthcare insurance exchanges, and how it can influence provider/payer reimbursement models.
Read More
Shifting to a Value-Based Approach
June 24th 2014What is value and how do we define it? In a panel discussion led by moderator Jean-Paul Gagnon, former senior director, Sanofi-Aventis, participants were asked to analyze the ways in which healthcare can shift from a fee-for-service model to one that focuses on value.
Read More
Optimizing Specialty Pharma Product Access and Reimbursement Support Services
June 23rd 2014Jeffrey Albright, director national accounts, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, said that many patients' access to specialty pharmaceutical products can be limited as health plans struggle to control costs. He provided important insight into pharmaceutical manufacturers' strategies, which aim to optimize appropriate patient access to the medications and products they need through various services that can provide reimbursement support.
Read More
Value Equation 2.0: Succeeding in the New Order of Value Driven Healthcare
June 23rd 2014While the fee-for-service reimbursement model has long been accepted as the standard model in healthcare, it must shift to one that focuses on value. Value-based reimbursement will encourage stakeholders to achieve the triple aim: improve patient experience, better manage population health, and reduce per-capita costs of healthcare so that patients receive more for the dollar spent, said Dan Sontupe, executive vice president, payer marketing & market access, The Cement Bloc.
Read More
As Sequencing Moves into Clinical Use, Insurers Balk
June 19th 2014Once strictly the domain of research labs, gene-sequencing tests increasingly are being used to help understand the genetic causes of rare disease, putting insurance companies in the position of deciding whether to pay the $5,000 to $17,000 for the tests.
Read More
Comparison Between Guideline-Preferred and Nonpreferred First-Line HIV Antiretroviral Therapy
June 19th 2014Initiation of guideline-preferred first-line antiretroviral therapy (ART) was associated with better ART adherence and persistence and similar total healthcare expenditures among Medicaid-insured HIV patients.
Read More
The Value of Specialty Pharmaceuticals - A Systematic Review
This study examines whether patients treated with specialty pharmaceuticals have improved outcomes compared with patients treated with conventional therapies, and evaluates costs associated with these treatments.
Read More
Hospitals Take Various Steps in Hopes of Decreasing "ER Frequent Fliers"
June 19th 2014As the bill for providing healthcare in the United States continues to grow, hospitals are finding that many of their expenses can be chalked up to patients with chronic illnesses such as diabetes and heart failure taking avoidable trips to the emergency room (ER).
Read More