November 21st 2024
Women living with HIV can reduce their risk of cervical cancer using a human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine that is both cost-effective and effective in preventing the virus.
November 20th 2024
Trends and Drug Launches Impacting the US Health Care Market in 2021-2022
March 31st 2022While the pandemic will have lasting impacts on the US health care market, much of it has bounced back and returned to normal, said Doug Long, MBA, of IQVIA, during the Thursday keynote at the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy annual meeting.
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What We’re Reading: CMS Hospice Payment Rate Rule; COVID-19 Funding; FDA Votes on ALS Treatment
March 31st 2022CMS-1773-P will establish a budget-neutral payment policy to smooth year-to-year changes in the hospice wage index; President Joe Biden pushes for $22 billion in COVID-19 funding from Congress; an FDA advisory panel said there is not enough evidence supporting the efficacy of the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) treatment AMX0035.
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Severe Uncontrolled Asthma Results in Higher Economic Burden Despite Treatment With Biologics
March 31st 2022Patients with severe asthma continue to have residual disease despite initiating treatment with biologics, and severe uncontrolled asthma is associated with higher economic burden compared with controlled asthma, according to 2 posters.
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Contributor: COVID-19 Pandemic’s Impact on Health Care System Documented in FAIR Health Report
March 31st 2022A new FAIR Health white paper containing the fifth annual edition of FH Healthcare Indicators and FH Medical Price Index was released, showing a dramatic increase in telehealth utilization from 2019 to 2020.
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What’s Coming Up Next in Interoperability With Dr Donald Rucker
March 29th 2022An unprecedented level of detail and robustness around interoperability standards is on its way, and on this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with Donald Rucker, MD, the former National Coordinator for Health Information Technology in HHS, about what the opportunities and responsibilities for payers are.
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What We’re Reading: Epilepsy Drug Approval; Free COVID-19 Testing Ends; EPA Sued
March 28th 2022The FDA approved a drug to treat a rare form of childhood epilepsy; uninsured Americans will no longer have access to free COVID-19 tests; a conservation group is suing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over failure to protect rivers from pollution.
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Infliximab Biosimilar Maintains Outcomes, Remission Status After Switch From Originator
March 24th 2022Patients switched from the originator product maintained their clinical outcomes and remissions status while biologic-naïve patients recorded positive responses and remission outcomes after initiating infliximab-dyyb.
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Removing Barriers to Rural Health Care Equity
March 22nd 2022On this episode of Managed Care Cast, Teresa Tyson, DNP, MSN, FNP-BC, FAANP, and Paula Hill-Collins, DNP, MSN, FAANP, discuss how The Health Wagon, a free mobile-based and nurse-managed clinic, provides accessible health care to rural residents in Virginia's Appalachian region.
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The Economic Impact of Conversion Therapy Harms in the US
March 15th 2022On this episode of Managed Care Cast, Anna Forsythe, PharmD, MSc, MBA, vice president of value and access at Cytel, explains the monetary and humanistic costs of conversion therapy among LGBTQ+ populations in the United States.
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Looking Beyond COVID-19, US Health Officials Outline Next Steps to Fight Disease
March 2nd 2022From one-stop testing and treatment sites to boosting research and surveillance, Biden administration health officials expanded on the COVID-19 plan the president announced in his State of the Union address Tuesday night, but the plan will require additional funding from Congress.
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Report: Economic Burden of Rare Diseases Is 10 Times Higher Than Mass Market Diseases
March 2nd 2022The economic burden of rare diseases based on direct, indirect, and mortality-related costs is 10 times greater than the burden for mass market diseases, such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and this burden increases when no treatment is available.
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