Laura is the vice president of content for The American Journal of Managed Care® (AJMC®) and all its brands, including Population Health, Equity & Outcomes; Evidence-Based Oncology™; and The Center for Biosimilars®. She has been working on AJMC since 2014 and has been with AJMC’s parent company, MJH Life Sciences®, since 2011.
She has an MA in business and economic reporting from New York University. You can connect with Laura on LinkedIn or Twitter.
CMS Finalizes New Structure to Move Home Health to Value-Based Payment
November 28th 2018CMS is moving home health agencies away from a volume-based payment model and to a new value-based payment system. The Patient-Driven Groupings Model would focus on patient needs and rely more heavily on patient characteristics in order to pay for home health services.
Humana's Investment in Holistic, Value-Based Care Improves Care and Health of MA Members
November 23rd 2018Chronic diseases remain a significant challenge for older Americans, and Humana is using a holistic approach, leveraging value-based reimbursement models, to improve health outcomes and quality measures for the insurer’s Medicare Advantage (MA) members, according to a new Humana report, “The Intersection of Health + Care.”
Co-occurrence of Certain Migraine Symptoms Indicates a Common Pathophysiology
November 21st 2018Patients who have migraine often suffer from coexisting issues, such as sleep difficulties, vertigo, and dizziness. A study evaluating the presence of certain symptoms in patients with migraine indicated that some may have a common pathophysiology.
Investigational Drug Gives Hope to Patients With Rare but Aggressive Blood Disease
November 20th 2018A new investigational drug has demonstrated high response rates in patients with a rare but highly aggressive blood disease that currently has no approved therapies, according to new research led by investigators at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Azar: CMMI Will Get More Involved in Addressing Social Needs Driving Health Issues
November 16th 2018HHS Secretary Alex Azar plans to ensure his agency handles both the health and the human services, as stated in its name, of Americans. In a recent speech, he hinted that the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation will be doing more work in areas adjacent to healthcare, such as food insecurity, and housing, utility, and transportation needs.
Cost Burden for Patients With Blood Cancers Eclipses the Burden in Other Cancers
November 13th 2018Patients with blood cancers are burdened with higher costs than patients with other cancers, and spending in blood cancers does not return to precancer levels, according to a new study from the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.
Data and Collaboration Are Key for Value-Based Care Success
November 11th 2018Data and collaboration are necessary ingredients to succeed in the transition to value-based care models, and the money saved under these models will create room to pay for unconventional therapies and services in healthcare, according to panelists at The Institute for Value-Based Medicine meeting in Seattle, Washington.
Health Progress Slowed Down Globally Amid Growth in Noncommunicable Diseases
November 10th 2018Progress in health around the globe has stagnated in some countries and gotten worse in others as the world faced increases in conflict and terrorism, epidemics, and noncommunicable diseases, according to global disease estimates published in The Lancet.
5 Healthcare-Related Ballot Measures From the 2018 Midterm Elections
November 9th 2018In addition to voting for representatives whom people thought would align with their healthcare views, voters in multiple states were faced with ballot measures related to healthcare on November 6. Here are 5 healthcare ballot measures and how they fared in the 2018 midterm elections.
Early Access to Daratumumab Confirms Safety in Relapsed/Refractory Multiple Myeloma
November 7th 2018Daratumumab, a human CD38-directed monoclonal antibody, has been confirmed as safe in a population of heavily pretreated patients with multiple myeloma who received access to the treatment before the medication was commercially available, according to an early access treatment protocol study published in Cancer.
Care Coordination Model With Bundled Interventions Dramatically Improved Care in East Baltimore
November 6th 2018Effective care coordination can improve health outcomes for patients with chronic conditions, and a new study found that partnering such a model with bundled interventions can lower spending, as well as improve outcomes, for patients in an urban environment.
New Melanoma Guidelines Identify Recommended Treatments, Weigh In on Genetic Testing
November 1st 2018New guidelines released by the American Academy of Dermatology will help physicians provide the best treatment for more than 1 million Americans living with melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer. The guidelines also highlight the importance of discussions between physicians and patients.
Implications of OCM Reports and the Future of the Program
October 29th 2018Lalan Wilfong, MD, moderated a conversation between Robert E. Baird, MD, CEO of Dayton Physicians Network, and Sarah Cevallos, chief revenue cycle officer for Florida Cancer Specialists and Research Institute, about current and future strategies for Oncology Care Model (OCM) participation, as well as key lessons from the OCM and how they can be applied in other reform models.
AMA–RAND Report Outlines Persistent Challenges With APMs
October 26th 2018A report from RAND Corporation and the American Medical Association (AMA) describes how alternative payment models (APMs) are affecting multiple aspects of physician practice and offers guidance for efforts to improve APMs and help practices succeed in them.
Trump Proposes Allowing Medicare to Base Drug Prices on What Other Countries Pay
October 25th 2018President Donald Trump unveiled the latest steps his administration is taking to help Medicare drive down the costs of prescription drugs with a plan to allow CMS to determine the price it pays for certain drugs based on the prices that other countries pay.
Changing Behavior and Reinstating Trust to Improve Healthcare Delivery
October 24th 2018Speakers at the National Committee for Quality Assurance’s Quality Talks meeting discussed challenges to improving healthcare delivery, such as changing behaviors, moving care outside of institutions, and rebuilding trust among marginalized populations.
Payments Are Increasingly Tied to Value, but More Risk-Based Models Needed
October 23rd 2018Approximately one-third of all US healthcare payments in 2017 were tied to alternative payment models, with the remaining still tied to fee for service. The findings of the Health Care Payment Learning and Action Network report highlighted that even as payments move to value-based models, more spending in models with risk is needed.
ACO Engagement With Urologists Can Reduce Overtreatment of Prostate Cancer
October 21st 2018Accountable care organizations (ACOs) in the Medicare Shared Savings Program vary considerably in how they treat men with newly diagnosed prostate cancer, according to a study that assessed whether the level of engagement in ACOs by urologists could affect rates of treatment, overtreatment, and spending in prostate cancer care.
Value-Based Payment Success Hinges on a Holistic Strategy for Changes
October 17th 2018Piecemeal solutions to implement value-based payment arrangements will not be able to effectively enact change. Authors in The New England Journal of Medicine argue that a range of complementary solutions need to be pursued simultaneously based on previously successful tactics on a smaller scale.