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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library, The George Washington University

Health Administration/Organization

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Coordinating And Integrating Care For Safety Net Patients: Lessons From Six Communities, Leighton C. Ku, Marsha Regenstein, Peter Shin, Holly Mead, Alice R. Levy, Kate Buchanan, Fraser Rothenberg Byrne May 2012

Coordinating And Integrating Care For Safety Net Patients: Lessons From Six Communities, Leighton C. Ku, Marsha Regenstein, Peter Shin, Holly Mead, Alice R. Levy, Kate Buchanan, Fraser Rothenberg Byrne

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

This report examines efforts to improve the coordination of health care among safety net providers in six communities (Austin, TX; Brooklyn, NY; Indianapolis, IN; Marshfield, WI; San Francisco, CA; and St. Louis, MO), based on case study site visits and a roundtable discussion. Across the communities, we identified three approaches to improving coordination: (1) collaboration of providers using a coordinating organization, (2) coordination facilitated by Medicaid managed care plans, and (3) development of highly integrated care systems. These represent models that could be used by different communities, based on their local circumstances. Successful development of coordination approaches involved shared commitment …


Post-Hmo Health Care: Are Acos The Answer?, Zachary F. Meisel, Jesse M. Pines May 2011

Post-Hmo Health Care: Are Acos The Answer?, Zachary F. Meisel, Jesse M. Pines

Health Policy and Management Informal Communications

"Remember the 1990s" retrospective lists always include Nirvana, Monica Lewinsky and Wayne's World, but leave out another major product that defined American life in the '90s: the health maintenance organization, or HMO — that nefarious health-insurance plan that seemed expressly designed to prevent you from seeing the doctor of your choice or receiving the treatments recommended by doctors, all under the guise of lowering costs and "improving" medical care. Of course HMOs are still around, but they are no longer central to the national discussion on health care. Why? For the most part, HMOs have eased limits on patient choice …


Paying Medicare Advantage Plans By A Blend-Based System: Where Are The Gains And Losses?, Brian Biles, Jonah Pozen, Grace Arnold Nov 2009

Paying Medicare Advantage Plans By A Blend-Based System: Where Are The Gains And Losses?, Brian Biles, Jonah Pozen, Grace Arnold

Health Policy and Management Issue Briefs

Medicare Advantage (MA) plans are now paid $11 billion a year and $150 billion over 10 years more than costs in fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare. In the past two years there have been discussions about reducing MA payments to the level of FFS costs and using the savings to offset the costs of new Federal initiatives such as health care reform. These discussions have included a number of options on the specific new approach to pay plans including: average FFS costs in each county; a blend of local county FFS costs and national FFS average costs; and a regional system based …


Vaccines And Autism: The Evidence And The Law, Alexandra M. Stewart Mar 2009

Vaccines And Autism: The Evidence And The Law, Alexandra M. Stewart

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

A potential link between the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine and autism was dismissed by a federal vaccine court in February 2009. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said the findings demonstrate a lack of medical evidence for any association, while Autism Speaks, a patient advocacy group, said questions remain about potential risks for certain subgroups.

Other legal actions are pending as the scientific and patient advocacy communities debate the need to conduct further research on the vaccine-autism link. Meanwhile, public health advocates worry that continuing concerns about the safety of vaccines may depress the population immunization rate. A small rise …


Diagnosing Death: Why Does It Remain "Well Settled And Persistently Unresolved"?, Melissa M. Goldstein Dec 2008

Diagnosing Death: Why Does It Remain "Well Settled And Persistently Unresolved"?, Melissa M. Goldstein

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

For ten days after Motl Brody had been declared dead by physicians, the 12-year-old boy lay in an intensive-care unit of Children's National Medical Center, sustained by drugs and a ventilator. His Orthodox Jewish parents insisted that, according to religious law, Motl remained alive because his heart continued to beat. District of Columbia law said he did not.

Although statutes on the books of every U.S. state allow a determination of death when all functions of the brain, including the brain stem, have irreversibly ceased, there is continued debate, especially in religious, philosophical, and bioethics contexts, about how, or even …


Harnessing Knowledge To Ensure Food Safety: Opportunities To Improve The Nation's Food Safety Information Infrastructure, Michael R. Taylor, Michael B. Batz May 2008

Harnessing Knowledge To Ensure Food Safety: Opportunities To Improve The Nation's Food Safety Information Infrastructure, Michael R. Taylor, Michael B. Batz

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

Those working in the food industry face an abundance of information generated by diverse institutions and individuals.

Ensuring the safety of food is critically important to the public's health and a challenge for policy-makers seeking to enhance the government's role in this arena. Although the food industry has an inherent duty to make food safe, the effectiveness of what they do is highly dependent on the quality of the information they receive on potential hazards and good practices.

In this context, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded a project under the auspices of the Food Safety Research Consortium to examine …


Mental Illness And Addiction Disorder Treatment And Prevention, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin, Marcie Zakheim, Karen Shaw, Joel B. Teitelbaum, Kay Johnson Mar 1998

Mental Illness And Addiction Disorder Treatment And Prevention, Sara J. Rosenbaum, Peter Shin, Marcie Zakheim, Karen Shaw, Joel B. Teitelbaum, Kay Johnson

Health Policy and Management Faculty Publications

This Special Report of Negotiating the New Health System: A Nationwide Study of Medicaid Managed Care Contracts (2d Ed.) analyzes Medicaid managed care contract provisions related to mental illness and addiction disorders (MI/AD). The analysis is based on 54 contracts and related documents (including 12 managed behavioral health care contracts) which were in effect as of the beginning of 1997. While this Special Report considers Medicaid contracts, its findings have implications for other public purchasers of managed care services for persons with MI/AD because, like Medicaid, other sources of third-party financing have traditionally supported services and activities that may not …