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Health Law and Policy Commons

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Health Law and Policy

Medicare

Case Western Reserve University School of Law

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Health Law and Policy

Countering Pay-For-Performance's Unintended Consequences By Rethinking The Physician's Duty To Disclose, Mariah Dick Jan 2018

Countering Pay-For-Performance's Unintended Consequences By Rethinking The Physician's Duty To Disclose, Mariah Dick

Health Matrix: The Journal of Law-Medicine

The article highlights the features of the U.S. Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015 (MACRA) and identify those attributes that make it vulnerable to the same types of unintended behaviors that have plagued pay-for-performance models in other industries. Topics discussed include unintended consequences associated with pay-for-performance in non-health care industries; physician disclosure standards; and need of laws for patient-centered care and patient autonomy.


Step Therapy: Legal And Ethical Implications Of A Cost-Cutting Measure, Sharona Hoffman Jan 2018

Step Therapy: Legal And Ethical Implications Of A Cost-Cutting Measure, Sharona Hoffman

Faculty Publications

The very high and ever-increasing costs of medical care in the United States are well-recognized and much discussed. Health insurers have employed a variety of strategies in an effort to control their expenditures, including one that is common but has received relatively little attention: step therapy. Step therapy programs require patients to try less expensive treatments and find them to be ineffective or otherwise problematic before the insurer will approve a more high-priced option. This Article is the first law journal piece dedicated to analyzing this important cost control measure.

The Article explores the strengths and weaknesses of step therapy …


Modernizing The Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act To Harmonize With The Affordable Care Act To Improve Equality, Quality And Cost Of Emergency Care, Katharine A. Van Tassel Jan 2015

Modernizing The Emergency Medical Treatment & Labor Act To Harmonize With The Affordable Care Act To Improve Equality, Quality And Cost Of Emergency Care, Katharine A. Van Tassel

Faculty Publications

The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA) is a federal statute passed almost 30 years ago which was designed to ensure equal access to emergency treatment and to halt the practice of “patient dumping.” Patient dumping is a situation where some patients—typically uninsured, disabled, and minority individuals—receive inferior emergency medical care or are denied emergency medical treatment altogether. The goal of EMTALA is to ensure that everyone coming to the emergency room will receive equal care.

Unfortunately, despite EMTALA, the practice of patient dumping has continued to this day. The most recent case in the news is the …


Section 4507 And The Importance Of Private Contracts, Thomas W. Greeson, Heather L. Gunas Jan 2000

Section 4507 And The Importance Of Private Contracts, Thomas W. Greeson, Heather L. Gunas

Health Matrix: The Journal of Law-Medicine

No abstract provided.


The Tortuous History Of The Kyl Amendment, Marilou M. King Jan 2000

The Tortuous History Of The Kyl Amendment, Marilou M. King

Health Matrix: The Journal of Law-Medicine

No abstract provided.


Introduction - Kyl Amendment Symposium, Maxwell J. Mehlman Feb 1997

Introduction - Kyl Amendment Symposium, Maxwell J. Mehlman

Faculty Publications

Introduction to the Symposium: Medicare Private Contracting (The KYL Amendment), Cleveland, Ohio, 2000.