In a peer exchange moderated by Dr. Peter Salgo, Hugh Fatodu and Drs. Patrick F. Fogarty, Maria Lopes, and Michelle Petri share their insights on the evolving dynamics of rare diseases in contemporary healthcare and managed care, and specifically address the implications for hemophilia and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). In the US, a rare disease is defined as a condition that affects than 200,000 persons. However, despite the 25 million American lives currently affected by more than 7,000 identified rare diseases, the patient and provider communities are still plagued by a general lack of awareness, a high risk for misdiagnosis, and a scarcity of treatment options. There is an acknowledgement among the panelists that the early recognition of diseases such as hemophilia and SLE has “very significant” implications for therapy, perhaps life-changing and even life-saving.
Dr Dalia Rotstein: Physicians Must Be Aware MS Affects People of All Backgrounds
April 24th 2024Dalia Rotstein, MD, MPH, emphazises the importance of awareness that multiple sclerosis (MS) impacts patients from various backgrounds as clinicians think through ways to improve access to care and research efforts in MS.
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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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The Federal Trade Commission's (FTC's) vote to ban most employers from issuing and enforcing noncompete clauses could have varying impacts on the health care workforce; federal regulators vastly under-enforced antitrust laws in the hospital sector during the last 2 decades, resulting in increased health costs; the FDA recently found genetic evidence of the H5N1 bird flu virus in pasteurized commercially purchased milk.
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Navigating Health Literacy, Social Determinants, and Discrimination in National Health Plans
February 13th 2024On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we're talking with the authors of a study published in the February 2024 issue of The American Journal of Managed Care® about their findings on how health plans can screen for health literacy, social determinants of health, and perceived health care discrimination.
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What We’re Reading: Abortion Privacy Rules; Alzheimer Drug Hurdles; Nursing Home Staffing Overhaul
April 23rd 2024New health privacy rules aim to protect patients and providers in an evolving abortion landscape; some physicians express concerns about efficacy, risks, and entrenched beliefs in treating Alzheimer disease; CMS addresses longstanding staffing deficits in nursing homes.
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