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The Heart Of The Matter: The Relationship Between Communities, Cardiovascular Services, And Racial And Ethnic Gaps In Care, Marsha Regenstein, Holly Mead, Anthony Lara Oct 2006

The Heart Of The Matter: The Relationship Between Communities, Cardiovascular Services, And Racial And Ethnic Gaps In Care, Marsha Regenstein, Holly Mead, Anthony Lara

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Racial and ethnic disparities in cardiovascular care are greatly influenced by market factors and how the health care system is organized. This study examines key health system factors that contribute to disparities in cardiac care among racial and ethnic minorities in the United States. A market assessment, consisting of site visits, interviews, and data collection from key health care providers in 10 communities, was undertaken to identify common characteristics in the health care markets and to explore how these factors may drive disparities in cardiac care.


Health Information Technology In The United States: The Information Base For Progress, David Blumenthal, Catherine M. Desroches, Karen Donelan, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Timothy Ferris Oct 2006

Health Information Technology In The United States: The Information Base For Progress, David Blumenthal, Catherine M. Desroches, Karen Donelan, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Timothy Ferris

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Health information technology (HIT) has the potential to advance health care quality by helping patients with acute and chronic conditions receive recommended care, diminishing disparities in treatment and reducing medical errors. Nevertheless, HIT dissemination has not occurred rapidly, due in part to the high costs of electronic health record (EHR) systems for providers of care—including the upfront capital investment, ongoing maintenance and short-term productivity loss. Also, many observers are concerned that, if HIT follows patterns observed with other new medical technologies, HIT and EHRs may diffuse in ways that systematically disadvantage vulnerable patient populations, thus increasing or maintaining existing disparities …


Payments To Medicare Advantage Plans Exceed Fee-For-Service Costs: Options For Medicare Savings From 2007 Through 2011, Brian Biles, Emily Adrion Sep 2006

Payments To Medicare Advantage Plans Exceed Fee-For-Service Costs: Options For Medicare Savings From 2007 Through 2011, Brian Biles, Emily Adrion

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

The Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (MMA) and the Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) of 2005 include provision intended to increase the role of private health plans in Medicare. These provisions set Medicare Advantage plan payment rates at levels higher than average costs would be in tradition free-for-service Medicare in every county in the nation. The total amount of extra payments to Medicare Advantage plans resulting from these provisions is projected at $5.7 billion in 2007 and nearly $30 billion over the five year period, 2007 to 2011.

This briefing paper outlines the specific MMA and DRA provisions that generate these …


Update On The Status Of The Medicaid Prospective Payment System In The States, Roger Schwartz, Peter Shin, Megan Reilly Sep 2006

Update On The Status Of The Medicaid Prospective Payment System In The States, Roger Schwartz, Peter Shin, Megan Reilly

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

The Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000 replaced the traditional cost-based reimbursement system for federally-qualified health centers (FQHCs) with a new prospective payment system. States were also allowed to implement an alternative payment methodology (APM) as long as it did not pay less than what FQHCs would have received under PPS and the affected FQHC agreed to the APM. Although changes in payment policies were to take effect in 2001, states were slow to implement them and most only did so after one or two years. With little or no oversight by the federal government, the National Association of …


International Medical Graduates In Family Medicine In The United States Of America: An Exploration Of Professional Characteristics And Attitudes, Amanda L. Morris, Robert L. Phillips, George E. Fryer, Larry A. Green, Fitzhugh Mullan Jul 2006

International Medical Graduates In Family Medicine In The United States Of America: An Exploration Of Professional Characteristics And Attitudes, Amanda L. Morris, Robert L. Phillips, George E. Fryer, Larry A. Green, Fitzhugh Mullan

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Background

The number of international medical graduates (IMGs) entering family medicine in the United States of America has steadily increased since 1997. Previous research has examined practice locations of these IMGs and their role in providing care to underserved populations. To our knowledge, research does not exist comparing professional profiles, credentials and attitudes among IMG and United States medical graduate (USMG) family physicians in the United States. The objective of this study is to determine, at the time when a large influx of IMGs into family medicine began, whether differences existed between USMG and IMG family physicians in regard to …


Managed Care And Medi-Cal Beneficiaries With Disabilities: Assessing Current State Practice In A Changing Federal Policy Environment, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Sara E. Wilensky, Peter Shin, Ramona Whittington Jun 2006

Managed Care And Medi-Cal Beneficiaries With Disabilities: Assessing Current State Practice In A Changing Federal Policy Environment, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Sara E. Wilensky, Peter Shin, Ramona Whittington

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

This analysis, prepared for The California Endowment, is a follow-on report to our earlier work that raised issues to be considered before moving persons with disabilities into compulsory Medicaid managed care plans and reviewed the extent to which California's legal framework addressed the concerns identified. In this report, the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services examines how other states have addressed issues that arise in designing, implementing and overseeing compulsory managed care systems for persons with disabilities and serious and chronic health conditions. The experiences of other states that have developed these types of arrangements offer …


Laying The Foundation: Health System Reform In New York State And The Primary Care Imperative, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin, Ramona Whittington Jun 2006

Laying The Foundation: Health System Reform In New York State And The Primary Care Imperative, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin, Ramona Whittington

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

New York State has embarked on a substantial effort to restructure its health care system as a result of rapidly escalating health care expenditures, especially with respect to Medicaid expenditures for institutional health care. But it is impossible to alter these high cost health expenditures without strengthening and expanding the primary care foundation on which New York's health system rests.


Language Barriers To Health Care Access Among Medicare Beneficiaries, Ninez A. Ponce, Leighton C. Ku, William E. Cunningham, E. Richard Brown Apr 2006

Language Barriers To Health Care Access Among Medicare Beneficiaries, Ninez A. Ponce, Leighton C. Ku, William E. Cunningham, E. Richard Brown

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

This study examined language barriers to health care access among a population-based sample of Medicare seniors in California in 2001 and 2003. Results indicate that Medicare beneficiaries with limited English proficiency (LEP) had less access to a usual source of care and were less likely to receive preventive cancer screening tests. LEP Medicare beneficiaries who also were covered by Medicaid tended to fare better than those without Medicaid. This could be due to federal civil rights rules that require Medicaid health care providers to offer free language assistance, but exclude from these requirements physicians who provide only Medicare services. Findings …


Health Centers Reauthorization: An Overview Of Achievements And Challenges, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin Mar 2006

Health Centers Reauthorization: An Overview Of Achievements And Challenges, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Since the establishment of the first health center in 1965, health centers have evolved into an essential component of the health care safety net. Today, over 1,000 federally funded and "look-alike" health centers serve 14.3 million people, three-quarters of whom are uninsured or covered by Medicaid. As the nation's largest primary care system, health centers care for one in five low-income uninsured persons and one in nine Medicaid beneficiaries.


Medicaid And Health Information: Current And Emerging Legal Issues, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Patricia Mactaggart, Phyllis Borzi Jan 2006

Medicaid And Health Information: Current And Emerging Legal Issues, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Patricia Mactaggart, Phyllis Borzi

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Legal questions are an inevitable byproduct of significant technology change in health care such as that underway as a result of health information technology (HIT). This article examines several important existing and emerging legal questions in a Medicaid context. First, do the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and State Medicaid agencies, have a fiduciary obligation to adopt and fully use health information technology given its potential to improve health care quality while reducing racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in health and health care? Second, how can Medicaid privacy standards be reconciled with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability …


Race, Ethnicity, And Language Of Patients: Hospital Practices Regarding Collection Of Information To Address Disparities In Health Care, Marsha Regenstein, Donna Sickler Jan 2006

Race, Ethnicity, And Language Of Patients: Hospital Practices Regarding Collection Of Information To Address Disparities In Health Care, Marsha Regenstein, Donna Sickler

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

2003 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care, identified strong evidence of disparities in the health care of racial and ethnic minorities not explained by differences in health insurance coverage and income. Among ways to eliminate these inequalities the IOM report recommended enhanced collection of patient race and ethnicity data. National Public Health and Hospital Institute researchers surveyed 500 non-federal acute care hospitals on their collection of patient race, ethnicity and preferred language information to understand data collection practices in the U.S. hospital industry. The researchers also surveyed 64 safety net hospitals …


A Dose Of Reality: Assessing The Federal Trade Commission/Department Of Justice Report In An Uninsured, Underserved, And Vulnerable Population Context, Sara J. Rosenbaum Jan 2006

A Dose Of Reality: Assessing The Federal Trade Commission/Department Of Justice Report In An Uninsured, Underserved, And Vulnerable Population Context, Sara J. Rosenbaum

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Despite the size of their report, the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice pay virtually no attention to tens of millions of uninsured and underinsured persons. By focusing on an increasingly rarified group of health care customers—healthy, affluent, and highly insured—the report takes on an untethered quality, with only the slightest tip of the hat to its own limitations. Furthermore, the report overstates the extent of legal constraints on the market, in particular, the degree to which the market is free to select its customers and tailor its goods and services to the best risks. By miscasting the legal …


Designing Employer-Sponsored Mental Health Benefits, Rachel Sethi, Joanne Jee, Lisa Chimento, D. Richard Mauery Jan 2006

Designing Employer-Sponsored Mental Health Benefits, Rachel Sethi, Joanne Jee, Lisa Chimento, D. Richard Mauery

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.