May 13th 2025
Covered California and Health Net’s novel data exchange initiative significantly improved quality measurement and potentially reduced costs by more than $640,000.
Impact of Formulary Restrictions on Medication Intensification in Diabetes Treatment
Formulary restrictions on brand name noninsulin antihyperglycemic drugs have little impact on treatment intensification patterns among low-income patients with diabetes in Medicare Part D.
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Blog Post Suggests Medicare Diabetes Prevention Program Capacity Crunch, but CMS Is Short on Details
May 3rd 2018CMS Administrator Seema Verma called on qualified providers of the National Diabetes Prevention Program to become Medicare suppliers. But in last year's rulemaking process, commenters warned that the program CMS had designed was too bureaucatic and did not pay enough upfront to attract small, community-based providers.
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Changes in Specialty Care Use and Leakage in Medicare Accountable Care Organizations
May 3rd 2018Reducing specialty leakage is promoted as crucial for accountable care organizations (ACOs). This study finds that Medicare ACOs had modest reductions in specialty use and minimal changes in leakage.
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Verma Highlights CMS Initiatives to Empower Patients and Promote Competition
May 1st 2018At the 15th Annual World Health Care Congress, CMS Administrator Seema Verma highlighted new policies and initiatives from CMS to ensure that programs are delivering high-quality care in a sustainable way as healthcare spending continues to grow at a faster rate than the overall US economy.
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California Foundation Promotes These 10 Questions for Better Senior Healthcare
April 28th 2018A California foundation recently released a policy brief about 10 questions it hopes will serve as a guide for the rest of the country seeking to improve care for older populations with complex health needs in Medicaid managed long-term services and supports programs.
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Market Access Teams Face New Challenges in Pharma
April 26th 2018There are 6 key issues that market access teams are facing amid evolving marketplace trends in the pharmaceutical industry, said Douglas Long, BS, MBA, vice president, industry relations, IQVIA, when speaking at the headline session of the Academy of Managed Care Pharmacy’s Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy Annual Meeting held April 23-26, in Boston, Massachusetts.
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Bundled Payments That Include Drug Costs Would Penalize Practices Based on Patient Mix
April 18th 2018An analysis of a hypothetical bundled payment that included drug costs would unfairly penalize practices based on patient mix and could destabilize the cancer care delivery environment, according to research published in the Journal of Oncology Practice.
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What We're Reading: Trump on Drug Pricing; MedPAC Looks at Fee Cut; Nursing Homes and MAT
April 17th 2018President Donald Trump will deliver his first major speech on drug prices on April 26; a recent Medicare Payment Advisory Commission proposal would cut Medicare payment rates by 30% for some services at hospital-affiliated free-standing emergency departments; nursing homes routinely turn away patients seeking care if they are using medication-assisted treatment to treat substance use disorder for opioids.
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Study Suggests Cost-Effectiveness of CGM Will Rise as Technology Improves
April 16th 2018Researchers found that cost-effectiveness calculations shifted dramatically when they assumed people with diabetes used continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) sensors for 10 days instead of 7 days. This is significant because Dexcom just received approval for a next-generation CGM system with a factory-calibrated 10-day sensor.
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Care Coordination for Children With Special Needs in Medicaid: Lessons From Medicare
As increasing numbers of children with special healthcare needs move into Medicaid managed care, health plans can improve care coordination using evidence from Medicare.
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Ed Haislmaier on Efforts to Lower Drug Costs
April 15th 2018In order to make Medicare drug price negotiation a reality, the government has to have additional leverage to negotiate that it doesn't have, explained Ed F. Haislmaier, the Preston A. Wells Jr senior research fellow at the Institute for Family Community, and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation.
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This Week in Managed Care: April 13, 2018
April 13th 2018This week, the top managed care stories included President Donald Trump signing an executive order requiring the poor to get jobs or lose food and healthcare benefits; a CMS report found ethnic, racial, and gender disparities in Medicare Advantage plans; CDC highlighted the impact of HIV on America's youth.
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House Speaker Paul Ryan is leaving Congress at the end of the year without success on spending cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security; the FDA is conducting a criminal investigation into research by a Southern Illinois University professor who injected people with his unauthorized herpes vaccine; the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is "aggressively" looking into reports that it solicited funding from the alcohol industry for a study on the benefits of moderate drinking.
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Dexcom's Sayer Says G6 Will Be "Game Changer," but Will Medicare Budge on Phone Ban?
April 9th 2018President and CEO Kevin Sayer said the company will file for Medicare coverage of the G6, while it continues to work out an issue that prevents beneficiaries from using a feature that lets data be displayed or shared on cell phones.
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Home-Delivered Meals Keep Medicare, Medicaid Population Out of ED, Lower Costs
April 4th 2018With food insecurity attributing to $77 billion in excess healthcare expenditures annually, support services such as meal programs have been implemented. A study in Health Affairs found that meal delivery programs reduce the use of costly healthcare services, such as emergency department (ED) visits, and help cut costs for dually eligible Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries.
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Ed Haislmaier: Medicare Is "Stuck in a Time Warp"
April 4th 2018Government programs, especially Medicare, are stuck in the past and are not designed to accommodate advancements in modern technology, said Ed F. Haislmaier, the Preston A. Wells Jr senior research fellow at the Institute for Family Community, and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation.
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What We're Reading: Iowa's New Health Plan; Medical Meals and Health; CDC Probes Teen Suicide
April 3rd 2018The governor of Iowa signed a law allowing health plans that are not compliant with the Affordable Care Act; custom medically designed meals keep patients healthier, a study found; the CDC is probing a teen suicide outbreak in an Ohio county.
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CMS Raises Medicare Advantage Payments, Tweaks Opioid Language for Patients With Pain
April 3rd 2018CMS finalized its 2019 Medicare Advantage rates, raising payments it pays to insurers, and also made changes to a final rule aimed at curbing opioid misuse and abuse by Medicare beneficiaries. Payments to Medicare Advantage plans will rise an average of 3.4%, and with another 3.1% adjustment coming from a change in risk scores (which are a measure of the sickness or health of the population served) the payment increase could be as high as 6.5%.
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Medicare Readmission Program Helped Narrow Disparities but Gaps Remain, Study Says
April 3rd 2018Black–white disparities in hospital readmission rates in the United States narrowed after the introduction of the Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP), but hospitals that serve a large number of minority patients continue to disproportionately receive penalties for their readmission rates, a study published in Health Affairs said Monday.
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