Value-Based Pricing: The Role of Outcomes Data in Pricing Models
January 29th 2014Data about escalating prices for cancer drugs laid the groundwork for the panel that followed, where Michael E. Chernew, PhD, Harvard health economist and co-editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Managed Care, outlined how changing the paradigm will require a different kind of shopping.
Measures That Improve Quality Must Be Nimble if Imperfect, UnitedHealthcare's Newcomer Explains
January 29th 2014Lee N. Newcomer, MD, MHA, senior vice president for Oncology, Genetics and Women's Health at UnitedHealthcare, spoke on Defining and Measuring Quality Outcomes in Oncology.
Can Clinical Pathways Change the 'Culture' in Cancer Care?
January 29th 2014Bruce A. Feinberg, DO, of Cardinal Health Specialty Solutions, published results in Evidence-Based Oncology1 showing that Cardinal's deployment of pathways had achieved measurable savings across a diverse set of healthcare providers, with an actuary's validation.
Will Shifts in Oncology Outpatient Points of Care Lead to More Profits or Savings?
January 29th 2014To begin the session entitled Oncology Practice in the Era of PCMHs and ACOs: Square Pegs or Round Holes?, Peter B. Bach, MD, MAPP, outlined how new payment models are changing the settings of oncology practice.
Putting the 'Economics' Back Into Health Economics Outcomes Research
January 29th 2014From his vantage point as director of the Cancer Technology Assessment Group at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle, Washington, Scott D. Ramsey, MD, PhD,sees the financial fallout of cancer care like few do.
Grappling With the Fallout of Genetic Testing, in Oncology and Beyond
January 29th 2014Moving beyond the topic, Companion Diagnostics in Targeted Treatment, the panel took on the unregulated nature of testing in the wake of the June 2013 US Supreme Court ruling against Myriad Genetics, which ended the company's BRCA testing monopoly.
Payer Perspectives in Genetic Counseling
January 29th 2014Precision Medicine, examined how care targeted at the individual can hold down costs while improving quality. This includes matching the right drug to the right patient, and genetic testing is a tool for doing that.