This year, the most read articles from The American Journal of Accountable Care® explored how healthcare providers and payers have implemented innovative ideas to reduce spending while maintaining or increasing the quality of care.
The American Journal of Accountable Care® (AJAC®) publishes research and analysis that encourages the sharing of best practices to ensure the improvement of healthcare quality. This year, papers explored pathways toward success in accountable care organizations (ACOs), new interventions that reduced hospital readmissions or facilitated discharges, and much more.
These 5 articles exploring the meaning of quality and how to achieve it were the most read from AJAC® in 2016.
5. A Hospital Discharge Navigation Program: The Positive Impact of Facilitating the Discharge Navigation Process
A program that used navigators to help patients through a standardized discharge process resulted in those patients being discharged in less time and earlier in the day, according to researchers from Geisinger Medical Center. Their readmission rates were similar to those of patients without the discharge navigators.
4. Top 10 Ways to Improve Your Physician Quality Reporting System/Group Practice Reporting Option
Quality measures like the Physician Quality Reporting System and the Group Practice Reporting Option allow physician reimbursement to be tied to performance. Authors Amy Holm, MHA, and Hymin Zucker, MD, suggested 10 proactive ways practitioners can improve these metrics, which are essential for practices competing in the value-based healthcare landscape.
3. Health Plan—Provider Accountable Care Partnerships: How Have They Evolved?
A study combining qualitative interviews and surveys found that providers within private sector ACOs have demonstrated improvements in quality of care and a greater readiness to assume downside risk over time. However, further work must be done to include smaller practices in alternative payment and delivery models.
2. Cognitive Impairment and Reduced Early Readmissions in Congestive Heart Failure
In a study at Henry Ford Hospital, congestive heart failure patients who were identified as at risk for cognitive impairment and received a health psychology-based intervention while hospitalized had significantly lower readmission rates than their counterparts who received standard cardiology care only. The intervention included strategies to provide destigmatized education on cognitive impairment to patients and their families.
1. The Ingredients of Success in a Medicare Accountable Care Organization
The Hackensack Alliance ACO provides an excellent example of an organization that has cut costs while continuing to provide high quality care to the Medicare patients it serves. In this article, experts from within the ACO and outside of it identified the keys to this success, including the patient-centered medical home model and increased utilization of nurse care coordinators.
Varied Access: The Pharmacogenetic Testing Coverage Divide
February 18th 2025On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with the author of a study published in the February 2025 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® to uncover significant differences in coverage decisions for pharmacogenetic tests across major US health insurers.
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More Care Doesn't Equal Happier Patients in Traditional Medicare
March 17th 2025Data on care satisfaction, ease managing care, and out-of-pocket spending were the outcomes of interest for this new analysis that investigated the relationship between healthcare utilization and beneficiary experience within traditional Medicare.
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Oz Confirmation Hearing Probes Vision for Medicaid but Coalesces Around Well-Being
March 14th 2025Mehmet Oz, MD, the nominee to lead CMS under the Trump administration, testified in a confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee, where he found common ground on improving outcomes through healthier lifestyle choices but encountered repeated questions on potential Medicaid cuts.
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