May 6th 2025
The 18-meter walk test (18MWT) effectively evaluates disease severity and predicts clinical outcomes in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), enhancing traditional assessment methods.
Some Glitches Reported, But Year 2 of ACA Enrollment Seems Off to a Smoother Start
November 17th 2014After last year's disastrous start, the first day of open enrollment in year 2 of the Affordable Care Act had fewer hiccups. HHS Secretary Sylvia Mathew Burwell was reporting success from this weekend.
Read More
Nearly Half of Uninsured Don't Understand Basic Health Insurance Concepts
November 12th 2014Although open enrollment for the Affordable Care Act's insurance Marketplaces is almost here, a 10-question survey from Kaiser Family Foundation found that the health law's target audience still struggles with understanding insurance coverage.
Read More
New and Improved HealthCare.gov Site Reopens, With Subsidies for Now
November 10th 2014More than a year after its disastrous debut, the federal website HealthCare.gov reopened last night, giving shoppers a few days to browse ahead of the November 15 start date for open enrollment, when consumers will have 60 days to make changes or, for some, select first-time coverage under the Affordable Care Act.
Read More
Establishing Value in Hepatology Care
November 9th 2014Amidst discussions on liver care, transplants, and infections was a session on Value-Based Medicine in Hepatology, on the third day at The Liver Meeting 2014, an annual event by the American Association for the Study of Liver Disease, held in Boston, Massachusetts, from November 7 to 11, 2014. Presenters saw a huge turnout for the session, a sign of increased interest in value-based care.
Read More
Of All ACA Elements, Medical Device Tax Seems Most Endangered
November 7th 2014Three days after the Republican Party gained control of the US Senate and rose to 250 seats in the House of Representatives, the airwaves are filled with bluster aimed at respective bases over what will become of the Affordable Care Act (ACA). While experts from both sides of the aisle agree that a full repeal is unlikely, 1 item has shown up on almost every early list of elements unlikely to survive the next Congress: the medical device tax.
Read More
Obama Admin Goes After Plans that Lack Hospital Coverage
November 4th 2014Large employer health plans will now be required to cover in-patient hospitalization services, according to a notice from the Treasury Department and HHS on Tuesday morning. The final regulation will be issued next year.
Read More
Supreme Court Passes on ACA Subsidy Case-For Now
November 3rd 2014At this time, the Supreme Court of the United States has declined to hear an appeal of one of the cases challenging the legality of making subsidies under the Affordable Care Act available to consumers on the federally run health insurance exchanges.
Read More
Limited Literacy, Numeracy Hurts Those the ACA Is Meant to Help
November 2nd 2014The Affordable Care Act expanded healthcare coverage to many low-income Americans, but this same demographic has a low health literacy that makes it difficult for them to navigate program eligibility systems, according to a study from The Urban Institute.
Read More
The toughest topics in cancer care will be on tap November 13-14, 2014, in Baltimore, Maryland, when AJMCLive presents Patient-Centered Oncology Care. If you've followed the discussion among pharmaceutical leaders, oncologists, and payers over access to care, you'll want to join stakeholders to discuss how to ensure patients get what they need while controlling costs.
Read More
Friction Between Health Plans, Pharma Grows Over Specialty Drugs
October 28th 2014The war of words between managed care and pharmaceutical manufacturers, which began when Gilead set the price for its drug to treat the hepatitis C virus (HCV), has taken off in October with the reclassification of a trio of cancer drugs from Genentech. Growth in the "specialty pharma" sector, where prices are rising much faster than drug prices generally, has drawn concern from payers and the umbrella group that represents them, while the trade group that represents drugmakers is pushing back against critics, saying that it faces challenges in bringing life-saving therapies to market.
Read More
$840M Plan Unveiled to Boost Transitions to Outcome-Based Healthcare
October 24th 2014US Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell announces new progams and financial incentives to help accountable care organizations (ACOs) and professional medical associations make the transition from fee-for-service to value-based healthcare delivery.
Read More
Impacts on Premiums, Enrollment If the ACA Is Modified
October 22nd 2014Ending the subsidies offered under the Affordable Care Act would sharply increase costs for consumers, according to a study from the RAND Corporation. Furthermore, without the subsidies, more than 11 million Americans will lose their health insurance.
Read More
JAMA Article Outlines the Growing Pains of Pioneer ACOs
October 22nd 2014An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association outlines what both CMS and the Pioneer ACOs have learned in the early years of the program, such as the importance of engaging primary care physicians, not growing too quickly, and the need to find better ways to count which patients are in the ACO.
Read More
AJMC's Dr Fendrick Elected to Institute of Medicine
October 21st 2014The Institute of Medicine announced yesterday that A. Mark Fendrick, MD, co-editor-in-chief of The American Journal of Managed Care and a national leader in efforts to reform healthcare reimbursement strategies, is among 70 new members elected to the prestigious body.
Read More
Nine in 10 Uninsured Don't Know When Open Enrollment Begins
October 21st 2014Congressional candidates may be still be talking about the Affordable Care Act, but a majority of the uninsured are still unaware of main components of the law, according to a poll from the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Read More
How Do Today's ACOs Differ From '90s Managed Care?
October 20th 2014As accountable care organizations, or ACOs, proliferate across the United States, a question arises for both veteran healthcare leaders and consumers: is the ACO something new, or just a relabeling of managed care vehicles created during the last wave of healthcare reform? A well-run ACO offers something better than the managed care of prior years, according to presenters at the gathering of the ACO and Emerging Healthcare Coalition, which took place October 16-17, 2014, in Miami, Florida.
Read More
Repeal or Replace: Healthcare on the Mind as Midterm Elections Approach
October 17th 2014Despite continued Republican opposition to the Affordable Care Act, sentiment is shifting from repeal to replace. Still, the fact that open enrollment on HealthCare.gov begins after the midterm elections does not seem like a coincidence to the GOP.
Read More
A majority of Americans covered by the Affordable Care Act are expecting to change plans for 2015, which may be a smart move, according to industry experts. People who simply re-enroll may not realize they are no longer among the lowest costing plans, which will affect how much their subsidies pay for.
Read More
A Look at Coverage Eligibility in Medicaid Nonexpansion States
October 14th 2014In states that chose not to expand Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, residents with a median income of less than $800 a month are now ineligible for coverage assistance while those with more than $2000 a month are eligible for subsidies, according to a report from the Urban Institute.
Read More
Survey of Anticipated FY 2015 Medicaid Growth Finds More Expected in States that Approved Expansion
October 14th 2014A survey by Kaiser Family Foundation projects 13.2% overall growth in Medicaid through fiscal year 2015, but the difference between states that expanded the program and those that did not will be stark. The survey of state Medicaid directors also finds 23 states plan expansion of managed care in the next year.
Read More
Price Tags On Healthcare? Only In Massachusetts
October 11th 2014Without much fanfare, Massachusetts launched a new era of healthcare shopping last week. Anyone with private health insurance in the state can now go to his or her health insurer's website and find the price of everything from an office visit to an MRI to a Cesarean section. For the first time, healthcare prices are public.
Read More
Low-Income Adults View Medicaid as Comparable to Private Insurance
October 9th 2014The majority of low-income adults in 3 states favored Medicaid expansion, but knowledge about their states' plans for the program under the Affordable Care Act was low, according to a report from the Commonwealth Fund.
Read More
Near-Term Pressures Will Hold Healthcare Spending in Check, According to NEJM
October 9th 2014Even though roughly 9 million Americans have gained healthcare coverage, other forces related to the "anemic recovery" will keep healthcare spending under control, at least in the short term, writes Charles Roehrig, PhD, in a commentary published online yesterday in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Read More