What we're reading, October 28, 2015: Ben Carson plans to replace the Affordable Care Act, Medicaid, and Medicare; a homeless shelter utilizes telemedicine to alleviate emergency department visits; and researchers uncover gender gap in post-heart attack treatment.
Ben Carson’s Radical Health Reform Plan
Presidential candidate Ben Carson is now leading the polls for the Republican presidential nomination, and he has a very disruptive plan to reform healthcare in the United States. The New York Times’ The Upshot has outlined Carson’s plan, which replaces Medicare, Medicaid, and the Affordable Care Act with a “universal, cradle-to-grave annual cash allowance for health spending.”
Homeless Shelter Uses Telemedicine to Cut ED Visits
Using telemedicine consults in a homeless shelter has reduced emergency department visits and calls to 911. Several of the guests at the homeless shelter had been using the emergency department for primary care visits, but the program, which includes consults 2 days a week, alleviates that utilization, reported HealthData Management.
Research Finds Gender Gap in Post-Heart Attack Treatment
A new study has uncovered a gender gap in medication use post-heart attack. While 75% of men younger than the age of 55 had started cardioprotective treatment after a heart attack, only 65% of women in the same age group received the same treatment, according to researchers.
Read more in Circulation: Cardiovasular Quality and Outcomes.
Standard Criteria for Loss of Ambulation Needed in DMD
April 19th 2024A recent study suggests the differences between ambulation definitions for patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) can impact the identification of ambulant vs nonambulant individuals, and standard criteria across settings are needed.
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Navigating Health Policy in an Election Year: Insights From Dr Dennis Scanlon
April 2nd 2024On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with Dennis Scanlon, PhD, the editor in chief of The American Journal of Accountable Care®, about prior authorization, price transparency, the impact of health policy on the upcoming election, and more.
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Early Involvement Critical in Treating Immunotherapy-Induced Overlap Syndrome
April 19th 2024A series of case studies reveals the importance of early diagnosis and involvement of special teams of clinicians when dealing with potential cases of overlap syndrome, which encompasses myocarditis, myasthenia gravis, and immune checkpoint inhibitor–related myositis.
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Exploring Medicare Advantage Prior Authorization Variations
March 26th 2024On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with the authors of a study published in the March 2024 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® about their findings on variations in prior authorization use across Medicare Advantage plans.
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Government agencies have created an online portal for the public to report potential anticompetitive practices in health care; there are changes coming to the “boxed warning” section for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapies (CAR T) to highlight T-cell blood cancer risk; questions about the safety of obesity medications during pregnancy have arisen in women on them who previously struggled with fertility issues.
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