November 21st 2024
Despite significant progress in expanding health insurance coverage since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was enacted, millions of Americans still face critical gaps in access to and affordability of health care.
Medicare Advantage Enrollees’ Use of Nursing Homes: Trends and Nursing Home Characteristics
August 13th 2018The share of Medicare Advantage (MA) beneficiaries in the nursing home (NH) population has been steadily rising, while MA plans appear to be increasingly concentrating beneficiaries in select NHs with better performance on quality measures.
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ASCO: Proposed Medicare Payment Changes Could Hurt Quality Cancer Care
August 12th 2018A new rule in the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act’s 2019 Quality Payment Program and the proposed 2019 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule could negatively affect the quality of cancer care for Medicare beneficiaries, according to the American Society of Clinical Oncology.
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Evaluating HCV Screening, Linkage to Care, and Treatment Across Insurers
August 10th 2018An optimized hepatitis C virus screening and linkage-to-care process reduces the number of patients lost to follow-up and improves linkage to care for Medicare, Medicaid, and commercially insured patients.
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CMS Plans to Overhaul MSSP Program to Force More Risk on ACOs
August 10th 2018CMS is proposing an overhaul for accountable care organizations (ACOs) participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program by reducing the amount of time an ACO can stay in a 1-sided risk arrangement to 2 years. CMS said it expects to save about $2.24 billion over 10 years even as the number of ACOs drop. CMS is renaming the program "Pathways to Success."
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Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vermont, has claimed his Medicare-for-all plan will cut healthcare spending by $2 trillion, but fact checking shows that's unlikely; CVS' CEO defends its pharmacy benefit manager against claims rebates are driving up drug prices; researchers have found that immigrants have healthcare costs that are half to two-thirds of the costs of people born in the United States.
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Express Scripts Makes LifeScan the Preferred Meter, Test Strips for People With Diabetes
August 7th 2018LifeScan, the diabetes division that Johnson & Johnson shed after ending US sales of its Animas insulin pump, will be the sole preferred provider of meters and testing strips for Express Scripts members in 2019.
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Larger Practices Spend More on, Have Higher Readmission Rates for Medicare Beneficiaries
August 7th 2018Despite the presumption that larger practices that have more resources and are therefore better at providing care and improving outcomes, new research shows that they spend more on and have higher readmission rates for Medicare beneficiaries than smaller practices.
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Verma Paints Future of Idyllic Interoperability That Is Far From Today's Reality
August 7th 2018If patients want to be empowered to control their healthcare and if the United States wants healthcare to be economically efficient, then interoperability is critical, said Don Rucker, MD, the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (IT), during the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT’s 2nd Interoperability Forum. He was followed by CMS Administrator Seema Verma, who disparaged the current technological situation and painted a future where health data followed the patient and can be shared at the press of a button.
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One of the reasons why hospital readmissions for the elderly are remaining high may be posthospital syndrome; priority review vouchers, which can be awarded by the FDA to 1 company and sold for a hefty price to another, are commanding a lower price than in past years; almost 8 months after Amazon, JP Morgan Chase, and Berkshire Hathaway announced their joint healthcare venture, there is little public information about it.
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BPCI Participation Not Linked With Significant Changes in Payments or Readmission
August 5th 2018A new study found hospital participation in 5 common medical bundles under the Bundled Payments for Care Improvement initiative was not associated with significant changes in Medicare payments, clinical complexity, length of stay, emergency department use, hospital readmission, or mortality.
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Allowing Medicare to Negotiate Prices for Most Common Drugs Could Save $2.8 Billion
August 3rd 2018If Medicare was allowed to negotiate drug prices, the Medicare Part D program could save $2.8 billion in 1 year on the 20 most commonly prescribed drugs alone, according to a new report from Senator Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, the top-ranking Democrat on the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.
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CMS Updates Payment Policies for Medicare Hospice Providers
August 2nd 2018Two days after a critical report into the quality and care of hospices caring for Medicare beneficiaries, CMS released a final payment rule for 2019, giving providers an increase of $340 million, and said it will update the information on its Hospice Compare website.
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Transitional Care Management Services Lower Costs, Mortality Rates Among Medicare Patients
August 1st 2018Researchers have found that transitional care management (TCM) services are associated with reductions in mortality and total Medicare costs; however, adoption of these services has remained low since the implementation of TCM payment codes in 2013.
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What We're Reading: Part D Premiums; US Healthcare Spending; Consequences of Sudden Inactivity
August 1st 2018For the second year in a row, the average basic premium for a Medicare Part D plan will decline; a series of charts in The Wall Street Journal highlights what is driving US healthcare spending; taking a break from exercising can have metabolic consequences that linger for some people even after they return to their normal levels of exercise.
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Report Finds Medicare Hospice Program Beset With Quality, Care Issues
August 1st 2018A report from the Office of Inspector General (OIG) at HHS synthesized 10 years of research about the Medicare Hospice Program and found deficiencies in patient care, inappropriate billing, and even fraud. Patients went without pain medicine, hospices did not always provide the right level of care or provided poor quality care, billed for unnecessary care, enrolled people who were not eligible for care, or billed for services that were never provided.
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Medicare has lowered its star ratings for staffing levels in 1 out of 11 nursing homes; the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America has donated to a lobbying group running a "dark money" campaign in favor of repealing and replacing the Affordable Care Act; a libertarian policy center funded by the conservative Koch brothers found that Senator Bernie Sanders's Medicare for All plan would cost $32.6 trillion over 10 years.
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5 Things About Meal Delivery Programs to Improve Health
July 27th 2018The cost of food insecurity in excess healthcare costs has been listed at $77 billion a year. Implementing meal delivery programs to improve health outcomes and lower costs has gained traction nationwide. Here are 5 things to know.
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Patient Groups Express Frustration With ACA Navigator Cuts in Letter to HHS, CMS
July 26th 2018Close to 200 organizations wrote to CMS and HHS this week to express concerns with the Trump administration’s plans to cut millions of dollars from the Affordable Care Act’s marketing and outreach budget, saying that they are “frustrated by CMS’ assertions that the need for these services has decreased as the number of uninsured or underinsured Americans continues to grow.”
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CMS Expands Site-Neutral Payments, Extends 340B Drug Discounts
July 26th 2018CMS announced a raft of proposed changes, including expanding its site-neutral payments between what Medicare pays for at physicians’ offices and off-campus hospital clinics, where rates are higher because of added hospital facility fees. The agency is also extending 340B drug discounts to off-site hospital clinics.
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The Trump administration is proposing to pay doctors who take Medicare basically the same amount for office visits regardless of reason; the pending sale of Mission Health to HCA Healthcare reflects a national trend as hospitals consolidate at an accelerating pace and the cost of healthcare continues to rise; a closer look at 5 ideas in President Trump's plan to lower drug prices.
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Examining Differential Performance of 3 Medical Home Recognition Programs
We examine utilization, quality, and expenditures among Medicare beneficiaries receiving care at federally qualified health centers and compare outcomes among those attributed to 1 of 3 recognition programs versus none.
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Medicare Chemo Costs Are Lower in Hospital Clinics Once Cancer Type is Considered, AJMC® Study Finds
July 19th 2018Critics of healthcare consolidation have cited higher costs of chemotherapy administration as an example of how mergers drive up costs. A new study in The American Journal of Managed Care®finds that while drug administration costs in hospitals are higher, chemotherapy drug spending among Medicare patients is lower, driven by less frequent use of therapy.
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Differences in Spending on Provider-Administered Chemotherapy by Site of Care in Medicare
July 19th 2018Spending on chemotherapy drugs was lower among Medicare beneficiaries who received chemotherapy in hospital outpatient departments than among comparable beneficiaries receiving chemotherapy in physician offices.
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