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.
Rick Doubleday Discusses Bringing the Dexcom CGM to Medicare Beneficiaries
January 4th 2018Rick Doubleday is the executive vice president, and chief commercial officer at Dexcom. He is responsible for the sales, marketing and customer service functions. Previously, Doubleday led all sales and marketing functions for the company, driving the acceleration of worldwide awareness and adoption of Dexcom continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). Doubleday visited The American Journal of Managed Care® this fall to discuss bringing the Dexcom G5 to Medicare beneficiaries.
Watch
What We're Reading: Hospital Penalization; New APMs; EHR Challenges
December 26th 2017More than 700 hospitals were penalized for having the highest rates of patient injuries; the Physician-focused Payment Technical Advisory Committee backed 2 new alternative payment models; and experts outline the biggest challenges of implementing and maintaining electronic health records going into the new year.
Read More
Average Profit Margin on Oncology Drugs for 340B Hospitals Nears 50%
December 16th 2017"The Oncology Drug Marketplace: Trends in Discounting and Site of Care," commissioned by the Community Onoclogy Alliance and conducted by Berkley Research Group, found that 340B hospitals have a clear financial incentive to expand oncology services; 340B hospitals receive over one-third of all Part B oncology drug reimbursement; a disproportionate share of the shift in site of care is attributable to 340B hospitals; and between 2010 and 2015, statutory discounts and rebates paid by manufacturers have almost tripled and put upward pricing pressure on drugs.
Read More
What We're Reading: Medicare Lab Testing; CHIP Deadline; AMA Expands Diabetes Efforts
December 15th 2017Medicare is alleging laboratories improperly billed the government for improper tests; time is running out for children receiving healthcare from CHIP; the AMA extends its diabetes prevention model to Maryland and other states.
Read More
Researchers Say Medicare Advantage Plans Need Better Incentives to Meet Future Demand
December 13th 2017Commonwealth Fund researchers said Medicare Advantage plans will need enhanced incentives to make sure that high-quality care is provided at lower cost, as the number of beneficiaries in these plans is expected to climb by 2027.
Read More
Implications of DRG Classification in a Bundled Payment Initiative for COPD
Diagnosis-related group coding determines eligibility for many Medicare bundled payment initiatives. This approach excluded many patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease likely to benefit while including others without the disease.
Read More
What We're Reading: Entitlement Reform; Medicaid Surplus in La.; Pace of ACA Sign-Ups
December 7th 2017House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, is eyeing spending cuts to Medicare and Medicaid; Louisiana's Medicaid program reported lower-than-expected spending and a potential surplus; ACA enrollment continues to climb, but expected to fall short of 2017 due to shorter enrollment period.
Read More
The rate of healthcare spending in the United States slowed down last year to levels previously seen between 2008-2015, driven by much slower growth in spending for retail prescription drugs, as well as hospital care and physician and clinical services. Private payers, Medicaid, and Medicare­ also saw lower rates of spending growth.
Read More
What We're Reading: More Healthcare Mergers; Expedited FDA Review; $102M CMS Billing Issue
December 6th 2017Humana may also make an acquisition deal and UnitedHealth buys a unit of DaVita; a look at the FDA's expedited review programs; how a billing code discrepancy may have cost taxpayers up to $102 million in Medicare payments to hospitals.
Read More
Who's Dying in Hospitals From Opioids? Major Study Says Disabled, Low-Income Whites on Medicare
December 5th 2017Mortality rates from opioid-driven hospitalizations in the United States quadrupled over 2 decades, especially among older, white, low-income populations, according to a study published in Health Affairs. The analysis showed that people enrolled in Medicare, and not those in Medicaid, accounted for the fastest-growing share of opioid and heroin poisoning.
Read More
Congressional GOP Gets to Work Reconciling Tax Bill With Healthcare Implications
December 4th 2017Republican leaders begin work Monday reconciling the differences in the Senate and House tax legislation, hoping to send a final bill to President Trump before Christmas. Senate Republicans passed the bill by 51-49 just before 2 am on Saturday.
Read More
Verma's Vision for CMS: Going Digital and Less Regulatory Burden
December 2nd 2017CMS is focusing on patient empowerment and unburdening physicians, said CMS Administrator Seema Verma during her keynote speech at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology’s Annual Meeting.
Read More
CMS Finalizes Changes to Joint Replacement Bundles; Verma Promises Shift to Voluntary Models
December 1st 2017Scaling back the Comprehensive Care for Joint Replacement model and canceling an expansion proposed under the Obama administration represents a shift in philosophy from mandatory to voluntary bundled payment models. But some say that commercial payers and employers will demand change no matter what CMS does.
Read More
CMS Proposed Rule Allows Greater Flexibility for VBID in Medicare Advantage
November 25th 2017A recently remeleased rule proposal for Medicare Advantage would give plans greater flexibiilty around the uniformity requirement and allow for the implementation of value-based insurance design principles.
Read More
This Week in Managed Care: November 24, 2017
November 24th 2017This week, the top managed care stories included a new rule from CMS to address drug costs for seniors; a campaign to get payers to fund the artificial pancreas is working; and a new survey identifies how Americans prefer to treat pain.
Read More